Jakarta: A pact to combat terrorism will be the centrepiece of up to 10 agreements that will be signed when Saudi Arabia’s king this week visits Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, the kingdom’s envoy to Indonesia said on Tuesday.
King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, who on Sunday kicked off a month-long Asian tour, lands in Indonesia on Wednesday with an entourage that local officials have said could number up to 1,500.
Billed as a “mega trip”, it would be a Saudi king’s first visit to Indonesia in nearly five decades.
Apart from a side-trip of several hours to Brunei, King Salman will be in Indonesia until March 12, spending much of the time on the resort island of Bali, ambassador Osama Mohammad Abdullah Al Shuaibi told Reuters in an interview.
“We know Indonesia has suffered from bombing and terrorism here,” he said, singling out Daesh for its “different ideology” and disrespect for human life.
“We will cooperate with the Indonesians on this field. We can exchange data, we can exchange experience, and we can defeat these people.” Authorities in officially secular Indonesia have grown increasingly concerned after a series of attacks over the past year blamed on supporters of Daesh.
Indonesian police killed a militant on Monday after he detonated a small bomb in the West Java city of Bandung.
Security officials said they were investigating whether he had links to a radical network sympathetic to Daesh.
Al Shuaibi said Saudi and Indonesian military officers are training in each other’s countries to counter Daesh.
Saudi Arabia is aiming to open more Islamic schools in Indonesia, which will teach religion using the Arabic language, and step up the number of scholarships for students, the envoy said.
The king’s visit to Indonesia comes as fringe Islamist groups grow in influence and Muslim leaders take an increasingly strict line on Islamic issues, which is at odds with Indonesia’s traditional brand of moderate “Islam Nusantara”.
Underpinning that is a growing conservatism among Indonesians, which analysts say is partly the result of foreign money being poured into the country over the past several decades to build mosques, schools and universities.
The ambassador said the visit could also lay the foundation for developing oil and gas projects and promoting tourism.
Oil giant Saudi Aramco, which has an existing agreement with Indonesian state energy firm Pertamina for a $5 billion refinery upgrade in Central Java, may take on more projects offered by Pertamina later this year, he said.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo is hoping the king’s visit will bring investment commitments worth up to $25 billion, Indonesian officials have previously said.
The king will visit Jakarta, the state palace in Bogor, a city south of the capital, and spend the last leg of his Indonesian trip in Bali, Al Shuaibi said.
Fact Box
According to reports in the Indonesian press, King Salman is expected to bring 459 metric tonnes of cargo with him on his trip – including two Mercedes-Benz S600 limousines and two electric elevators.
Adji Gunawan of the airfreight company PT Jasa Angkasa Semesta (JAS) told the Antara news agency that his company had been appointed to handle the cargo, which had already arrived in the country. Adji said that his company was employing a total of 572 workers to deal with the Saudi King’s luggage.
During his trip to Indonesia, the Saudi king will be accompanied by more than 900 people, including ministers, princes and service staff, Saudi ambassador Al Shuaibi said. Indonesian officials had earlier said the entourage could be up to 1,500 people.
The Jakarta Post reports that delegation will include 10 ministers, 25 princes and at least 100 security personnel.
Indonesia will assign at least 9,000 security personnel to protect the king’s entourage, the ambassador added.
While the Saudi king’s colossal cargo hold may seem large, it is not necessarily out of scale with other world leaders. When President Barack Obama visited sub-Saharan Africa in 2013, he was accompanied by 56 support vehicles, including 14 limousines, and hundreds of US Secret Service agents tasked with helping secure locations in Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania.
Even when Obama travelled less exotic locales, there were reports of a similarly high level of organisation: A 2014 visit to Brussels included a 900-person entourage and 45 vehicles, according to the Guardian. Though the White House later disputed that figure, it said it could not provide a more accurate one due to security concerns.
— Washington Post and Reuters
Fact Box
According to reports in the Indonesian press, King Salman is expected to bring 459 metric tonnes of cargo with him on his trip – including two Mercedes-Benz S600 limousines and two electric elevators.
Adji Gunawan of the airfreight company PT Jasa Angkasa Semesta (JAS) told the Antara news agency that his company had been appointed to handle the cargo, which had already arrived in the country. Adji said that his company was employing a total of 572 workers to deal with the Saudi King’s luggage.
During his trip to Indonesia, the Saudi king will be accompanied by more than 900 people, including ministers, princes and service staff, Saudi ambassador Al Shuaibi said. Indonesian officials had earlier said the entourage could be up to 1,500 people.
The Jakarta Post reports that delegation will include 10 ministers, 25 princes and at least 100 security personnel.
Indonesia will assign at least 9,000 security personnel to protect the king’s entourage, the ambassador added.
While the Saudi king’s colossal cargo hold may seem large, it is not necessarily out of scale with other world leaders. When President Barack Obama visited sub-Saharan Africa in 2013, he was accompanied by 56 support vehicles, including 14 limousines, and hundreds of US Secret Service agents tasked with helping secure locations in Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania.
Even when Obama travelled less exotic locales, there were reports of a similarly high level of organisation: A 2014 visit to Brussels included a 900-person entourage and 45 vehicles, according to the Guardian. Though the White House later disputed that figure, it said it could not provide a more accurate one due to security concerns.
— Washington Post and Reuters
Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.