|
|
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Acquitted
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978 |
|
[30th of 30]
|
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Assaults
|
18,562 |
|
[26th of 49]
|
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Car thefts
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29,061 |
|
[17th of 46]
|
|
Corruption > % of managers surveyed ranking this as a major business constraint
|
41.51 %
|
|
[10th of 39]
|
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Drug offences
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3.4 per 100,000 people |
|
[34th of 46]
|
|
Executions
|
1 executions |
|
[19th of 22]
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Illicit drugs illicit producer of cannabis largely for domestic use; producer of methamphetamine and ecstasy |
|
Jails
|
362 |
|
[10th of 80]
|
|
Manslaughters
|
420 |
|
[12th of 42]
|
|
Murders
|
2,204 |
|
[10th of 49]
|
|
Prisoners
|
84,357 prisoners |
|
[13th of 168]
|
|
Prisoners > Female
|
3.7% |
|
[75th of 134]
|
|
Prisoners > Foreign prisoners
|
0.5% |
|
[78th of 86]
|
|
Prisoners > Per capita
|
38 per 100,000 people |
|
[145th of 164]
|
|
Rapes
|
1,372 |
|
[21st of 50]
|
|
Robberies
|
61,260 |
|
[8th of 47]
|
|
Software piracy rate
|
84% |
|
[12th of 107]
|
Transnational Issues > Trafficking in persons > Current situation Indonesia is a source, transit, and destination country for women, children and men trafficked for the purposes of sexual exploitation and forced labor; Indonesian victims are trafficked to Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore; a significant number of Indonesian women who go overseas each year to work as domestic servants or "cultural performers" are subjected to conditions of involuntary servitude and commercial sexual exploitation; to a minimal extent, Indonesia is a destination for women from East Asia, Europe, and South America who are trafficked for sexual exploitation; there is extensive trafficking within Indonesia from rural to urban metropolitan areas particularly for sexual exploitation and involuntary domestic servitude |
Transnational Issues > Trafficking in persons > Tier rating Tier 2 Watch List - Indonesia is placed on the Tier 2 Watch List for its failure to provide evidence of increasing efforts to combat trafficking |
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Unpaid diplomatic parking fines
|
36.1 |
|
[24th of 143]
|
... View all Crime stats
SOURCES: The Eighth United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (2002) (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime Prevention); The Eighth United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (2002)
(United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime Prevention); World Development Indicators database; Amnesty International; All CIA World Factbooks 18 December 2003 to 18 December 2008; The Eighth United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (2002)
(United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime Prevention); International Centre for Prison Studies - World Prison Brief; Fifth Annual BSA and IDC Global Software Piracy Study; Cultures of Corruption: Evidence from Diplomatic Parking Tickets
Ray Fisman Edward Miguel
Columbia University and NBER University of California, Berkeley and NBER 2006
ALTERNATIVE NAMES:
Indonesia, Republic of Indonesia, Republik Indonesia
Related links:
More facts and figures on Indonesia
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