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The Supreme Court has oversight over the high courts (Pengadilan Tinggi) and district courts (Pengadilan Negeri). There are about 68 high courts: 31 General Courts, [1] 29 Religious Courts, [2] 4 Administrative Courts [3] and 4 Military Courts. [4] There are around 250 district courts with additional district courts being created from time to ...
Peradilan Agama or the Religious Courts are for Muslim citizens to resolve civil matters, such as marriage, inheritance, and property donated for religious purposes . [8] They are the first-level Religious Court (Pengadilan Agama) and the second-level Religious High Court (Pengadilan Tinggi Agama). Despite the name, they do not hear cases ...
As of July 2021, there are 46 skyscrapers in Jakarta, which are taller than 200 meters. Jakarta has the highest numbers of 200-meter-plus skyscrapers among Southeast Asian cities. [7] Seven 200-meter-plus skyscrapers were completed in 2015 in Jakarta, which was the highest among the cities in the world during that year. [8]
East Jakarta (Indonesian: Jakarta Timur; Betawi: Jakarte Beletan), abbreviated as Jaktim, is the largest of the five administrative cities (kota administrasi) which form the Special Capital Region of Jakarta, Indonesia, with a land area of 188.03 km 2 (72.6 sq.miles).
The Attorney General's Office began at a time when the authority to prosecute and to adjudicate were unseparated. Its first office were shared with the first Supreme Court building complex in 2-4 Lapangan Banteng Timur street, nearby the Waterloosplein (now Lapangan Banteng, Jakarta).
District 8 Jakarta is a mixed development complex of 11 towers and a shopping mall named ASHTA at Sudirman Central Business District, and adjacent Senopati area in South Jakarta, Indonesia. The tallest building of this complex is Treasury Tower. [1] Total land area of the complex is about 4.8 hectares. [2]
Cengkareng Timur is a subdistrict in the Cengkareng district of Jakarta. It has postal code of 11740. See also
Royal Dutch East Indies Army bomber planes fly over Batavia Koningsplein in the 1930s.. In the late 18th century when the Dutch East Indies government moved their center of administration about 4 kilometres southward, from coastal old Batavia (now Kota) to Weltevreden (now Central Jakarta), they built several important buildings including the square. [10]