Riau Islands

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Riau Islands Province
Provinsi Kepulauan Riau
Province
Other transcription(s)
 • Jawi كڤولاوان رياو
 • Chinese 廖内群岛
Great Mosque of Batam
Great Mosque of Batam
Official seal of Riau Islands Province
Seal
Motto: Berpancang Amanah Bersauh Marwah (Malay)
(With trust as foundation, and dignity as the anchor)
Location of Riau Islands in Indonesia
Location of Riau Islands in Indonesia
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country  Indonesia
Capital Lambang Kota Tanjung Pinang.png Tanjung Pinang
Largest city Lambang Kota Batam.png Batam
Government
 • Acting Governor Nurdin Basirun
Area
 • Total 8,201.72 km2 (3,166.70 sq mi)
Population (2015)[1]
 • Total 1,968,313
 • Density 240/km2 (620/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Ethnic groups Malays (35.6%)
Javanese (18.2%)
Chinese (14.3%)
Minangkabau (9.3%)
Batak (8.1%)
Buginese (2.2%)
Banjarese (0.7%)[2]
 • Religion Islam (70.34%)
Protestantism (11.17%)
Buddhist(9.09%)
Hinduism (4.65%)
Roman Catholicism (2.28%)
Confucianism (0.2%)
 • Languages Indonesian, Malay, Chinese
Time zone WIB (UTC+07)
Vehicle registration BP
HDI Increase 0.734 (High)
HDI rank 4th (2014)
Website kepriprov.go.id

Riau Islands Province (Indonesian; Provinsi Kepulauan Riau, acronym; Kepri, Jawi: كڤولاوان رياو‎, Chinese: 廖内群岛; pinyin: Liào nèi qúndǎo), is a province of Indonesia. It comprises the principal group of the Riau Archipelago, together with other island groups to the south, east and northeast. In Indonesian, Riau Islands and Riau Archipelago are synonymous and are distinguished by the word for province, "Provinsi".

Originally part of the Riau province, the Riau Islands were split off as a separate province in September 2002.

Geography and population

The island of Batam, which lies within the central core group of islands (the Riau Archipelago), contains a majority of the province's population. Since becoming part of a Demilitarized Zone with Singapore in 2006, it has experienced high population growth rates. Other highly populated islands in the Riau Archipelago include Bintan and Karimun, while the archipelago also includes islands such as Bulan and Kundur. There are around 3,200 islands in the province, which has its capital at Tanjung Pinang in the south of Bintan Island. The province includes the Lingga Islands to the south of the main Riau Archipelago, while to the northeast lies the Tudjuh Archipelago, between Borneo and mainland Malaysia; the Tudjuh Archipelago consists of four distinct groups — the Anambas Islands, Natuna Islands, Tambelan islands and Badas Islands — which were attached to the new province, though not geographically part of the Riau Archipelago. The 2015 census count was 1,968,313, less than estimated but nevertheless the 2nd fastest growing province in the nation.

Language

The language of the Riau Islands is known as Riau Malay. The Riau Islands are considered the birthplace of the modern Malay language, though it was the classical Malaccan Malay of the Johor court rather than Riau Malay that formed the basis of the standard language.[3]

History

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

From Srivijayan times until the 16th century, Riau was a natural part of greater Malay kingdoms or sultanates, in the heart of what is often called the Malay World, which stretched from eastern Sumatra to Borneo. The Malay-related Orang Laut tribes inhabited the islands and formed the backbone of most Malay kingdoms from Srivijaya to the Johor Sultanate for the control of trade routes going through the straits.

After the fall of Malacca in 1511, the Riau islands became the centre of political power of the mighty Sultanate of Johor or Johor-Riau, based on Bintan Island, and were for long considered the centre of Malay culture.[4]

But history changed the fate of Riau as a political, cultural or economic centre when European powers struggled to control the regional trade routes and took advantage of political weaknesses within the sultanate. Singapore island, that had been for centuries part of the same greater Malay kingdoms and sultanates, and under direct control of the Sultan of Johor, came under control of the British.

The creation of a European-controlled territory in the heart of the Johor-Riau natural boundaries broke the sultanate into two parts, destroying the cultural and political unity that had existed for centuries.[citation needed] The Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 consolidated this separation, with the British controlling all territories north of the Singapore strait and the Dutch controlling territories from Riau to Java.

After the European powers withdrew from the region, the new independent governments had to reorganise and find balance after inheriting 100 years of colonial boundaries. Before finding their current status, the territories of Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and Borneo struggled and even came into military conflict against each other, and the Riau islands once again found themselves in the middle of a regional struggle.

The strong cultural unity of the region with Riau in the heart of this region never returned, and the line drawn by the British in 1819 remained, dividing the area into three new countries in 1965: Singapore, the Malaysian federation in the north, and Indonesia in the south.

Some level of unity returned in the Riau region for the first time after 150 years, with the creation of the Sijori Growth Triangle in 1989. But while bringing back some economical wealth to Riau, the Sijori Growth Triangle somewhat further broke the cultural unity within the islands. With Batam island receiving most of the industrial investments and dramatically developing into a regional industrial centre, it attracted hundreds of thousands of non-Malay Indonesian migrants, changing forever the demographic balance in the archipelago.

However, the upside of this demographic shift is that Batam is more multi-cultural and civilized than how it was before, with a greater potential for better economic and educational development in future. Batam has become an industrial island with a booming tourism sector. Previously under the native population's administration, it was nothing more than an oversized fishing & farming village with a high level of illiteracy and economic stagnation.

There have been various attempts at both independence and autonomy for this part of Indonesia since the founding of Indonesia in 1945.[5]

Administrative divisions

This province is divided into five regencies (kabupaten) and two cities (kotamadya), listed below with their (provisional) populations at the 2010 Census:

Name Area (km2) Population
Census 2000
Population
Census 2010
Population
Est 2014
Capital Notes
Batam City 960.25 455,103 944,285 1,142,646 Batam includes Bulan, Galang and Rempang islands,
as well as all of Batam Island
Tanjung Pinang City 144.56 142,929 187,359 226,716 Tanjung Pinang on Bintan Island
Anambas Islands Regency
(Kepulauan Anambas)
590.14 28,510 37,411 45,270 Tarempa
Bintan Regency 1,318.21 110,068 142,300 172,192 Bandar Seri Bentan
Karimun Regency 912.75 171,405 212,561 257,212 Tanjung Balai including Karimun and Kundur Islands
Lingga Regency 2,266.77 79,451 86,244 104,361 Daik covering the Lingga Islands
Natuna Regency 2,009.04 52,741 69,003 83,498 Ranai

Hubs

As the closest neighbour of Singapore and to realise that Soekarno–Hatta International Airport is fully utilised, Lion Air is developing hangars in Batam Island and Garuda Indonesia is developing a new airport, with runway and maintenance facilities so as to make a new air hub in Bintan Island.[6]

References

  1. http://kepri.bps.go.id/brs/451?title=BRS-Profil-Kemiskinan-Kepri-Maret-2013
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Sneddon 2003, "The Indonesian Language: Its History and Role in Modern Society", p. 70
  4. The Riau Islands and economic cooperation in the Singapore Indonesian border zone Karen Peachey, Martin Perry, Carl Grundy-Warr, Clive H Schofield, University of Durham. International Boundaries Research Unit, illustrated, IBRU, 1997, ISBN 1-897643-27-6, ISBN 978-1-897643-27-3, pg. 6–10
  5. paper on the Riau Independence movement
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links