Sabtu, 17 Ags 2019 22:57
Daerah : Jakarta
By Fardah
Jakarta, 17/8 (Antara) -
Some seven million Indonesians living overseas are a huge asset for
national development if they are synergized with the Indonesian
governments programs.
Supporting the Indonesian Vision of
President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) for his second term (2019-2024), the
Fifth Congress of Indonesian Diaspora (CID-5) was organized in Jakarta,
from Aug 10 to 13, 2019, by the Indonesian Diaspora Network-Global
(IDN-Global).
Themed Empowering Indonesia's Human Capital, the
congress discussed efforts to strengthen the role of the Indonesian
diaspora in improving the quality of human resources in their home
country.
"We chose this theme because human resource is the
Indonesian diasporas biggest strength. We believe human resource
development is the key to Indonesia's future," Gerald Eman, the
president of IDN-Global Mark told the press prior to the CID-5.
Dino
Patti Djalal, chairman of the Indonesian Diaspora Network-Global
(IDN-Global) Board of Trustees, believed that if the Indonesian Diaspora
is synergized with the governments programs, the impact would be
enormous.
"The diaspora can function as an accelerator for the
development of Indonesian human resources in the future and this could
be the key for Indonesia to become the giant of Asia," said Djalal, who
is also a senior diplomat and former Indonesian Ambassador to the United
States.
The CID-5 is a biannual event organized to connect
Indonesians living abroad and create a platform for them to contribute
to national development.
Some 5,000 participants comprising
Indonesian diaspora from around the world, government officials,
religious figures, politicians, celebrities, artists, athletes,
innovators, academics and youth leaders attended the event.
Chairman
of CID-5's Organizing Committee Iwan Sunito said he saw tremendous
potential in Indonesia's millennials and hoped for new ways to empower
them.
"This is the moment for Indonesia to dig deeper into the
potential of its diaspora, which in turn will help its human resource
development. Now is the time to capitalize on Indonesia's human
capital," Iwan said.
The congress discussed ways to empower
Indonesia's human capital, industry 4.0, city planning, access to health
facilities, and migrant worker protection.
In her opening
remarks during the congress, Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Retno
LP Marsudi voiced her optimism for the Indonesian diaspora that could
help the government develop the countrys human capital.
"Now,
how could the Indonesian Government collaborate with the diaspora? The
diaspora could become agents of Indonesian human capital development,"
the minister said.
The Indonesian Government has decided to
prioritize human resources development (HRD) in the next five years, and
the diaspora will make up a significant component of this, she noted.
"HRD
will become a priority of the Indonesian Government. I quote the
President as saying that human resources development is a key for the
Indonesian development in the future. Besides, there is an instruction
from the President to support the Indonesian diaspora," she said.
To involve the diaspora in human capital development in Indonesia, there should first be a database on them and their skills.
With
the help of the database, it would be easy to locate and identify
experts from among the diaspora that could help develop education and
particularly vocational schools in the country.
President
Jokowi is a strong believer in the fact that Indonesia will emerge as
one of the world's economic powers through mobilization of all its
resources.
"We prove that Indonesia is indeed worthy and able
to become one of the world's economic powers. We show that the
Indonesian economy can grow while providing a sense of justice. We
realize the Indonesian economy that brings prosperity to all Indonesian
people," Jokowi stated in his speech for the 2020 State Budget Draft at
the House of Representatives plenary meeting in Jakarta, August 16,
2019.
Inviting all elements of society to take a leap forward,
the President believed that the quality of human resources is one of
the keys to enter the era of digital economy.
"We have
prepared various programs for the development of human resources in an
effort to ensure the demographic bonus becomes a leap forward," he
affirmed.
Indonesia is the fourth-largest country in terms of
its population. He affirmed that youngsters constituted most of
Indonesia's population. The middle class is growing rapidly. Its
population with a productive age constitutes 68 percent of its total
population of 267 million.
The Indonesian Government has
allocated Rp1,162.83 trillion for four major projects to create
high-quality human resources under the National Mid-term Development
Plan (RPJMN) 2020-2024.
The four projects are acceleration of
efforts to reduce maternal mortality and stunting in children,
development of vocational education and training for Industry 4.0,
development of a science technopark by optimizing the Triple Helix
interactions of four major universities, and digitalization and
integration of social allowances.
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