Indonesia to make halal certification mandatory from October 

A worker walks out of a halal-certified cafe in Lumajang, East Java on Oct. 19, 2025. (Antara)
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Updated 15 January 2026
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Indonesia to make halal certification mandatory from October 

  • Indonesia’s halal certifying body has issued certification for 9.6 million products 
  • Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is seeking to become a global halal hub 

JAKARTA: Indonesia will enforce mandatory certification for all halal products from October 2026, the country's certifying body said, to increase its competitiveness in the global market. 

Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation and Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, is seeking to strengthen its role in the growing global market for halal products, which was worth about $2.43 trillion in 2023, according to the latest State of the Global Islamic Economy Report. 

Most consumer goods and restaurants in Indonesia, including imported products, are required to have halal labeling by Oct. 17. 

The regulation applies to all types of businesses, including small and medium companies, and covers food and beverage products, herbal medicines and health supplements, cosmetics, and a range of other everyday items. 

“Halal certification should be positioned as a competitive advantage, a pillar of consumer protection, and a driver of inclusive and sustainable economic growth,” Ahmad Haikal, chief of the halal certifying body BPJPH, said in a statement this week. 

“Halal is customer satisfaction. Halal represents product hygiene, health, safety and quality. As such, today halal is seen as a market requirement, not just a mere regulation.” 

The first phase of Indonesia’s halal certification requirement was enforced in October 2024 and initially applied only to big businesses, including major global food producers such as Unilever and Nestle. 

Under the law adopted in 2014, the compulsory halal certification will be expanded to include more types of drugs in the coming years, while products or restaurants without halal certification are required to declare they do not comply with Islamic law. 

Islamic law prohibits consumption of pork or intoxicants such as alcohol, while meat can only be eaten if the animals were slaughtered by prescribed methods. 

There are 9.6 million halal-certified products across Indonesia as of October last year, according to data from BPJPH. 

The halal certifying body has been working with its foreign counterparts, including in Russia, the US and China, to boost exports of Indonesian products and strengthen the global halal ecosystem, Haikal said. 

“The ultimate objective is to make Indonesian halal products more competitive in the global market and position Indonesia as the world’s halal hub.” 


After accepting US deportees, South Sudan wanted sanctions relief for top official, documents show

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After accepting US deportees, South Sudan wanted sanctions relief for top official, documents show

JUBA: After agreeing to accept deportees from the United States last year, South Sudan sent a list of requests to Washington that included American support for the prosecution of an opposition leader and sanctions relief for a senior official accused of diverting over a billion dollars in public funds.
The requests, contained in a pair of diplomatic communications made public by the State Department this month, offer a glimpse into the kind of benefits that some governments may have sought as they negotiated with the US over the matter of receiving deportees.
In the documents, the US expresses “appreciation” to South Sudan for accepting the deportees and details the names, nationalities and crimes for which each individual was convicted.
In July, South Sudan became the first African country to receive third-country deportees from the US Rwanda, Eswatini, Ghana and Equatorial Guinea have since received deportees.
The eight deportees to South Sudan included nationals of Mexico, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and South Sudan itself.
Contentious deportations
They arrived in the South Sudanese capital of Juba after spending weeks on a US military base in Djibouti, where they were held after a US court temporarily blocked their deportation. Six of the eight men remain at a residential facility in Juba under the supervision of security personnel.
South Sudanese national Dian Peter Domach was later freed, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, while Jesus Munoz-Gutierrez, a Mexican, was repatriated in September.
South Sudanese officials have not publicly said what long-term plan is in place for those still in custody. The third-country deportations were highly contentious, criticized by rights groups and others who expressed concern South Sudan would become a dumping ground.
Details of the deal between the US and South Sudan remain murky. It is still unclear what, if anything, South Sudan may have actually received or been promised. The documents only offer a glimpse into what the South Sudanese government hoped to get in return.
In other cases, Human Rights Watch said it saw documents showing the US agreed to pay Rwanda’s government around $7.5 million to take up to 250 deportees. The US will give Eswatini $5.1 million to take up to 160 deportees, according to the group.
For South Sudan, in one communication dated May 12 and marked confidential, South Sudan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs raised eight “matters of concern which the Government of South Sudan believes merit consideration.” These ranged from the easing of visa restrictions for South Sudanese nationals to the construction of a rehabilitation center and “support in addressing the problem of armed civilians.”
Request to lift sanctions
But an eye-catching ask was for the lifting of US sanctions against former Vice President Benjamin Bol Mel as well as Washington’s support for the prosecution of opposition leader Riek Machar, the now-suspended first vice president of South Sudan who faces treason, murder and other criminal charges in a controversial case.
The allegations against Machar stem from a violent incident in March, when an armed militia with historical ties to him attacked a garrison of government troops. Machar’s supporters and some activists describe the charges as politically motivated.
Bol Mel is accused of diverting more than a billion dollars earmarked for infrastructure projects into companies he owns or controls, according to a UN report. He wielded vast influence in the government and was touted by some as Kiir’s likely successor in the presidency until he was dismissed and placed under house arrest in November.
Bol Mel was also viewed as a key figure behind the prosecution of Machar, one of the historical leaders of South Sudan’s ultimately successful quest for independence from Sudan in 2011.
Machar was Kiir’s deputy when they fell out in 2013, provoking the start of civil war as government troops loyal to Kiir fought forces loyal to Machar.
A 2018 peace agreement brought Machar back into government as the most senior of five vice presidents. His prosecution has been widely criticized as a violation of that agreement, and has coincided with a spike in violence that the UN says killed more than 1,800 people between January and September 2025.
The UN has also warned that a resurgence of fighting has brought the country “back to the edge of a relapse into civil war.” Machar is under house arrest in Juba while his criminal trial proceeds slowly.
In its communications with the US, South Sudan also asked for sanctions to be lifted over South Sudanese oil companies “to encourage direct foreign investments,” and for the US to consider investing in other sectors including fossil fuels, minerals and agriculture.
When asked if the US government had provided or promised South Sudan anything in return for accepting the deportees, a State Department official said, “In keeping with standard diplomatic practice, we do not disclose the details of private discussions.”
A spokesman for South Sudan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Thomas Kenneth Elisapana, declined to comment.
US aid cuts
Despite accepting the US request to admit deportees, relations between the two governments have been strained in recent months.
In December, the US threatened to reduce aid contributions to the country, accusing the government of imposing fees on aid groups and obstructing their operations.
The US has historically been one of the largest donors to South Sudan, providing roughly $9.5 billion in aid since 2011. Over the years, South Sudan’s government has struggled to deliver many of the basic services of a state, and years of conflict have left the country heavily reliant on foreign aid.