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In Jakarta, a large concentration of foreign embassies and missions are clustered around Central Jakarta (Menteng area and across Jalan MH Thamrin), and South Jakarta (across Jalan Jenderal Sudirman, Jalan H.R. Rasuna Said, and Mega Kuningan area).
At present, the capital city of Jakarta hosts 108 embassies. As Jakarta hosts the headquarters of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations , the city also hosts missions of both members and observers to the organization. In practice, missions to ASEAN could be integrated or separated from their respective embassies to Indonesia.
The Erasmus Huis is a building neighboring the Dutch embassy with a library, exhibition hall and auditorium. [citation needed]The current center was opened in 1981 and in 2018, the building was extensively renovated.
The original embassy was built in 1962, to the designs of Eric Bedford, Chief Architect at the Ministry of Public Building and Works. [2] It was ransacked on 16 September 1963 when anti-British sentiment led to attacks on both the British and Malaysian Embassies. [3]
The Apostolic Nunciature to Indonesia (Indonesian: Nunsiatur Apostolik untuk Indonesia), unofficially known as the Vatican Embassy in Jakarta (Indonesian: Kedutaan Besar Vatikan di Jakarta) is a diplomatic position within the Vatican, equivalent to an embassy. It is located at Jalan Merdeka Timur 18 in Central Jakarta.
Menteng Pulo War Cemetery, also Dutch Field of Honor Menteng Pulo (Dutch: Nederlands Ereveld Menteng Pulo, Indonesian: Makam Kehormatan Belanda di Menteng Pulo), is a war cemetery at Jl. Menteng Pulo RT. 3 RW. 12, Menteng Dalam, Tebet, Jakarta in Indonesia. It is one of two Dutch war cemeteries in Jakarta, the other one is Ancol War Cemetery at ...
A Chinese consulate general was already present in Jakarta (at that time Batavia) prior to Indonesian independence.By November 1909, negotiations between China and the Netherlands on consular rights were ongoing, and a letter from Chinese legate in The Hague, Lu Zhengxiang, indicated that the Dutch agreed to the opening of a Chinese consulate in the Dutch East Indies.
The Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia in Washington, D.C. (Indonesian: Kedutaan Besar Republik Indonesia di Washington, D.C.) is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of Indonesia to the United States. It is located at 2020 Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D.C., in the Embassy Row neighborhood. [2]