Jakarta’s food stalls distribute free meals to low-income families

Go-Jek drivers, in pre-coronavirus times, wait for their orders at a food stall in Jakarta, Indonesia. (Reuters)
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Updated 12 April 2020
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Jakarta’s food stalls distribute free meals to low-income families

  • With subsidies of Rp15,000 ($0.91) per food package, traditional eateries distribute free meals to low-income families
  • The initiative is run by humanitarian organization Aksi Cepat Tanggap (ACT) and the national warteg community (Kowantara)

JAKARTA: Food stalls in Jakarta are distributing free meals to low-income families hit by the coronavirus outbreak. 

As of Friday the country had a total number of 3,512 cases and a death toll of 306, Reuters news agency reported a Health Ministry official as saying. 

The capital’s mosques, malls, restaurants and parks have closed and there are restrictions on traffic and public transport, according to press reports. There are also physical distancing measures in place. 

The eateries, known locally as wartegs, can be found on many of Jakarta’s streets and they cater to daily wage workers, motorcycle riders, public transport drivers as well as other customers. They are normally bustling but restrictions to contain the spread of the virus mean that customer numbers have dropped. The income of wartegs have fallen by 70 percent as a result. 

Humanitarian organization Aksi Cepat Tanggap (ACT) teamed up with a national warteg group called Kowantara to subsidize stalls and distribute food among low-income families.

The head of Kowantara, Mukroni, said the initiative started with 100 wartegs, which received a subsidy of IDR15,000 ($0.91) per food package. The amount is enough to prepare a meal comprising rice, eggs, vegetables and drinking water.

“Some wartegs also contribute to the packages if they can,” he told Arab News. “For example, a warteg would chip in IDR5,000 or IDR10,000 per package to add a piece of chicken or fish, so there is more variety in the menu.”

Wartegs have to adhere to coronavirus prevention measures and ensure people do not gather at their premises during the food distribution process in order to get the subsidy.

“We offer the aid so that the warteg owners can still operate their business, by also providing free food for the informal workers and those at the grassroots level,” ACT president Ibnu Khajar told Arab News.  “We will gradually add the number of beneficiaries to 1,000 wartegs.”

Warteg owners and workers are not always from Jakarta, coming to the city to earn a living. Most warteg operators originate from Tegal, a city on the north coast of Central Java that is hundreds of kilometers away from the capital.

ACT plans to keep the subsidy program running until the pandemic emergency ends, with Indonesian authorities expecting this to happen on May 29.

Caption: People queue in front of a Jakarta warteg that is taking part in an initiative to distribute free meals amid the coronavirus outbreak (Photo: Kowantara)


US begins large military drill with South Korea while waging war in the Middle East

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US begins large military drill with South Korea while waging war in the Middle East

  • The allies’ combined exercise comes amid South Korean media speculation that Washington is relocating some assets from South Korea to support fighting against Iran

SEOUL, South Korea: The United States began a large military exercise with South Korea involving thousands of troops Monday while also waging an escalating war in the Middle East.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff has said about 18,000 Korean troops will take part in Freedom Shield, which runs through March 19. US Forces Korea hasn’t confirmed the number of American troops participating in the training in South Korea.
The allies’ combined exercise comes amid South Korean media speculation that Washington is relocating some assets from South Korea to support fighting against Iran.
US Forces Korea said last week it would not comment on specific movements of military assets for security reasons. South Korean officials also declined to comment on the reports that some US Patriot anti-missile systems and other equipment were being moved to the Middle East, but they said there would be no meaningful impact on the allies’ combined defense posture.
Freedom Shield may trigger an irritated response from North Korea, which has long described the allies ‘ joint exercises as invasion rehearsals and used them as a pretext to ramp up its own military demonstrations and weapons tests. The allies say the drills are defensive in nature.
North Korea has suspended all meaningful dialogue with Washington and Seoul following the 2019 collapse of a summit between leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump during his first term. Tensions rose in recent years as Kim used Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a window to accelerate the development of his nuclear arsenal and increase his leverage by aligning militarily with Moscow, which has received thousands of North Korean troops and large weapons shipments to help fuel its warfighting.
The allies’ drills follow a major political conference in Pyongyang last month, where Kim confirmed his hard-line view of “enemy” Seoul but left the door open to talks with Washington, calling on the United States to drop its demand for North Korea’s denuclearization as a precondition for dialogue.
Freedom Shield is one of two annual “command post” exercises conducted by the allies; the other is Ulchi Freedom Shield, held in August. The drills are largely computer-simulated and designed to test the allies’ joint operational capabilities while incorporating evolving war scenarios and security challenges. As usual, the March drill will be accompanied by a field training program, called Warrior Shield, but the number of field exercises during the Freedom Shield period has declined to 22 compared to last year’s 51.
While US and South Korean militaries say field exercises are often spread out throughout the year, there’s speculation that the allies are seeking to tone down the spring drills to create conditions for dialogue with North Korea. Liberal South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has expressed a desire for diplomacy, and some of his top officials have voiced hope that Trump’s expected visit to China in late March or April could possibly create an opening with Pyongyang.