TRANSMITTAL OF MS/[ ] CONTRIBUTION TO ORR PROJECT(Sanitized) SUMATRA

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
22
Document Creation Date: 
November 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 3, 2000
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 30, 1964
Content Type: 
MF
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6.pdf937.48 KB
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Approved For Relea-2000/05/15: CIA-RDP79T01049AO 0120001-6 MMORANDW THROUGH : AD/R,R THROUGH : ' ief, Ste: THROUGH : Chief, llf IBS ,r"Rm: Chief, !/OOM 25X1 C The subject A total of 80 hours were of this project. 25X1A Excluder ;, . r.a dark ?P& y-2 7__ 30 1 ` t 3 .Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6 Approved For Releg 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP79TO1049A00dI00120001-6 ilities in Sumatra 25X1 C ORR -4ect # .#2B3 27 Mrcbl Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Rele~ 200J LQ 15 :CIAyy-RDP79T01049AQ 120001-6 G. Telecaea,eattions The telecommunications systen of owned and operated the government and provides all civil t ?phone, telegraph, and radlQbroadcasting services. Telephone and/or telegraph service is available in all inhabited areas of Sumatra as is radiobroadcaating . Telephone and Tell Services and Facil (a) Domestic The Administration of Telegraphs, and Telephones (PTT) for Indonesia, subordinate to the Ministry of nunications, operates the telephone and telegraph systems. Tice services provided by the PTT are restricted by antiquated facilities and adverse climatic and topographical conditions. There are 20,000 telephones in use in Sumatra, me third of which are automatic. More than forty per cent of the total number of telephones are located in .an.. Padang, and. Palembang. Conventional telegregah service is provided throughout Sumatra. The larger cities have automatic subscriber telegraph (TELEX) exchange facilities, used principally by business an government, which afford direct connections with Djkarta. Interurban telephone and telegraph connections are made by open wireline and high frequency (m') and very high frequency (vnF) radio facilities. (See map, Figure 1.) (b) International The only direct international circuit -- a HP radiotelegraph connection between Medan and Singapore -- c is not in operation. All international Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Releft 55-: CIA:RDP79T01049A0 0120001-6 connections are a thxou&i Djs"fta. Bx astin1 Facilities and rvices M tilY~ The l .o Republic amnesia (MU) broadcastij syoto , which is controlled by the Minist 2M,0radiobroedeaot receivers service is furnished by t at Sibolge (1 kw) 7.5 kw, and 1 kw),, Padmg (10 kw,, 10 kw, eat 1 kw),, 1 kw). In addition, local service (.3 kw WA ularly bra service to 4VrO I awtelr ungpirs g (5 kw an 1 kw .I kw): end Inionesian with the exception of Kutar dje which r ? .a At jehue- operates its asap tropospheric sea and Java Is under constructi Palembang Djkarts is to be coapl ate p: (10 kv and in 1965, the :n 1966 or 1967. local bx eaeting setts L"kw7, Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Rel00 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP79T01049AO 0120001-6 rd-r- (b) Aeronautical The Department of Civil AvistI.Oft (pCA) MA the Air Force operate HF point-to-point and VHF ground-to?air radio facilities at Sumatra. (tee map, Figure 1. ) maritime Maritime radiotelegraph and the PTT, the Navy, the Caltex Pacific on Company (CALTi ), and the Petroleum Meats?hsppij (mm). (see (d) Police The State Police operate HF raii legraph facilities that connect major i s in Sumatra. VHF radiotelephone facilities are used for city, mobile, and marine service. (See map, Figure (e) other ephone service is pivvided by 1.) airports in The Standard-Vacs Petroleum Coopmy (STANVA C) and 4 have radio- telephone connections between their raf at Swagsi and Pledju 25X1 C respectively, and oilfields in South and Central Sumatra. CALTEX has radio- telephone facilities in its Central Sumatra oilfields. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6 25X1C Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For RelcW 2000/ I ~rC~A-RDP79TO1049A 1'gure 1 Uff Sumatra: Main lee~ication Faeilitie, 1964. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For RelS 2Y 6i i OM51d15 : CIA-RDP79TO1.049AQ 0120001-6 s =:.J ... e a Fh E, a=7 1. Open wirelines along Kisaaran 23 km south of Medan. 2. Open wirelines along lulu highway and railroad route, 186 km from Palembang. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Relee 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO0 00a 20001-6 Figure 0 transmitting station near the Medan airport. 4. PTT radio receiving station near aizport. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Rel4W 20Q t5 CIA:-RDP79T01049Q'qW 120001-6 Figure 2 XU transmitting anted at Medan, along the him to Bind jai . 6. E& station buildings at Medan, along the highway to Bindjai. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Re0e 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP79T01049A,000120001-6 1 ogranhy DOD. Trip Report of South and Centres Sumatra, OUSA-M4A, Indonesia, 2845017763, 18 October 1963, Official Use Only. ITU. Alphabetical List of Call Signs of Stations Used by the Maritime Mobile Service, second ec.ition,. November 1963, Geneva, U. ITU. List of Fixed S ions, Vols. I and II, March 1959, Geneva, U. 0. Lund Johansen Ltd. World Radio TV 1 ndbook, Hellerup, Denmark, 1964. U. State. Djkarta, A-595. 3 January 1964, Limited Official Use. Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6 r-.5.:~~ii_+~?,;. __.~~~ >.~~j.l:..,~: J;~.~+.,-.._~.ii:~._~.:a?.~i~ ~ .,.. dr~...~4!i;~:>terkt~.i.9t~..: x...;";i~~~ :`22^iJ9crx~ci~r.4_ ~~ _ Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 r+$: Chapter V - Economy Project No. 46.4283 16 April 1964 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 C}L v. Eeo F SUMTRA A. General Sumatra Is, economically the most important island of the Indonesian archipelago. The yields of its mineral resources, chiefly petroleum and tin, and agricultural estates contribute alMost 70 percent of total Indonesian foreign exchange earnings. Although the island is not as fully developed as the main Indonesian island of Java, its export earnings contribute signifi- cantly to the welfare of Java. The Sumatran economy is characterized by two distinct sectors +- the capital intensive market sector based largely on foreign capital and the labor intensive non-monetized peasant sector. Northern Sumatra has extensive agricultural estates, which were initially established with European capital. These estates continue to produce cash crops for export, such as rubber, tobacco, tea, coffee, palm oil, and cinchona bark (used. for quinine). Although foreign interests remain on the island, the Indonesian government is gradually lessening the influence of foreLgn enterprise throughout all of Indonesia. In 1958, a government decree was issued forbidding foreign interest from exploiting the bauxite and tin ieposite of the islands. British and US investment continues in the petroleum industry, but this will gradually be token over under an agreement signed between the government and the foreign oil companies which provides for the compensated nationalization of these holdi.ngse Dutch agricultural estates were taken over during 1957-58 at the Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 FLU same time other Dutch interests in the islands were seized. Currently, British eatates3 are being subjected. to threats of similar takeover actions. The peasant economy is dominated by labor intensive enterprise, primarily subsistence farming. Some of the peasants, however, have set aside small plots on which to grow cash crops. There is some cottage industry in the villages. Basically, however, the peasant economy is limited to agricultural pursuits. Although smallholder production is increasing in importance through- out the island and the rest of Indonesia, the estates continue to be the most efficient agricultural producers, and, their products continue to be of better quality than those produced by smallholders. The economic development of the Island has been hindered by inept government policies. Little progress has been made in the industrialization of the island or in the improvement of production techniques to exploit the island's natural resources. Under an 8-year plan of development, now largely abandoned, an effort was made to provide for some development of the outer is3lcnds3. The economic situation on Sumatra has been aggravated. by the current confrontation of the newly formed federation of Malaysia. This confrontation has cut off the Malaysian ports to which almost all of .:A Sumatra's exports were formerly shipped.. This has caused. severe problems because new markets and processing facilities must be sought to substitute for those in Singapore and Malaya and there has been a consequent disruption in the normal flow of trade. Approved.For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-I'M 77 049AO02900120001-6 n r Sl 3 ~ ~;,~ 7 i~ ..?1 i 1~ Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CI -R 01049A002900120001-6 B. Natural Recources Petroleum is Sumatra's most important natural resource. Total. Indonesian reserves are the largest in the Far East, and Sumatran reserves account for about 90 percent of all Indonesian reserves. Although most of the $250 million annual export production is controlled by foreign dominated companies -- Caltex, Stanvac, and. Shell Indonesian government firms are becoming more important in the industry. Three small government firms -- Permina, Pertemin and Per2nigan -- conduct operations in Sumatra. Indonesia is expected to continue to expand its activities in the oil industry as it continues a process of gradual compensated nationalization. Tin is mined on the islands of Bangka, Billiton and Singkep, off the southeast coast of Sumatra. Although tin accounts for less than 5 percent of total Indonesian exports, Indonesia rani as the third largest free world tin producer. Nationalization of the industry in 1958 led to great inef- ficiencies in production because of inept management and other consequences of the government's failure to establish a positive economic policy. Bauxite mines have shotim increasing production during recent years. Confined to the island of Bintan, Indonesian bauxite deposits are relatively insignificant as a world, source. There are two coal mining regions, one southeast of Palembang and the other at Ombilin, north of Bukittinggi, in central Sumatra. `.these mines do not fulfill Indonesia's requirements, and further rehabilitation is not likely to Increase production greatly. -3- Approved For Release 2000/05/15 CIA-RDP79T01049A002900120001-6 W1.. R y :SJ N 4e ..a +a A~_.aa~:~ Approved For Release 2000/05/15 CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 There are other mineral deposits which are not currently exploited, conanercially. Junong these are gold, silver, lead., copper, iron, antimony, cobalt, naptha, sulfur, alum, and. saltpeter. Iron deposits may be commercially exploited in the future when the Soviet-financed steel project at Tjilegon, Java, is completed. C. Industry and Electric Power There is little industrial activity in Sumatra. Industry is restricted. to the processing of primary commodities and. to the manufacture of cement, fertilizer, textiles, and various other consumer goods. Two important foreign owned petroleum refineries are the island's only heavy industry. Shell operates a refinery at Pladju, and. Stanvac operates a refinery at Sungai Gerong, both located in the Palembang area. There are several saw milling centers and rubber processing facilities. A hydroelectric power plant and aluminum project financed by the USSR is to be constructed on the upper Asshan River southeast of Lake Toba. In general, however, the central government has made little provision for the expansion of Industrial activity in Sumatra. Electric power facilities are limited. on the island of Sumatra. Total electrical generating capacity on the island is about 1/lath of the total capacity for all of Indonesia. Power facilities are found primarily in the Medan, Padang, and Palembang areas. Most of the electrical supply is generated by small therr.:al plants. Hydroelectric power generating potential exists in the uplands region of Sumatra especially in the Lake Toba region. This potential mna.' be developed under the 1960 Soviet credit described above. To Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RD '...-. '~i ~~-::.:_-_...~:..~~~m.,:. .- u~:.+.K;~i~~;~~ti+!Nib'~~i.i..ti1-.:~i?..M.:Y'::ik!~ll~;~Y'.I~'!~rou~i:t,.Y[ak'"``;"~.:.~~nbi_~_ ~ ..,._.~..._._.~....._---._ Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 date preliminary surveys have been made, but actual construction work on the Asahan project has been delayed until 1967. D. ricalture Agriculture in Su atra consists of three types -- peasant (subsistence), smallholder and estate. The peasants' main crop is rice, the staple food of the island. In spite of the peasant rice production, large quantities of rice must be imported annually to fulfil the needs of the population. Both wet land and dry land methods of cultivation are practiced.. Maize is also grown for home consumption. Smallholder crops include copra, spices (pepper, cloves, and nutmegs), coffee, tobacco, betelnuts, peanuts, coconuts and cotton. Estate agriculture, primarily European, is concentrated on the production of rubber, tobacco, tea, palm oil, and. fibers and to a lesser extent cinchona bark, coffee, g bier, and coca. The most extensively cultivated area is in northern Sumatra around Medan. Although grown throughout Sumatra and on Bangka, most of Sumatra's rubber yield comes from the large estates situated. in the eastern parts of Atjeh and Sumatra Utara provinces. Tobacco, oil palm, tea, and hard fibers are also grown on north Sumatran estates. Cinchona bark is grown by small- holders in L=mnpung province and on the west coast as far north as the Tapanuli region, Pepper is grown in the Lampung area, around Palembang, and. In Atjeh province. Minor smallholder crops grown throughout the island, include betelnuts, copra, nutmegs and cloves. - 5 - Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RT0049A002900120001-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIpT01049A002900120001-6 F. Fishing O l Forestry Fishing is important to the economy of Sumatra and provides the main source of animal protein in the Sumatran diet. Most fishing is done in coastal waters, although inland fishing is gaining in importance, especially in the laxge rivers of northern Sumatra and in Lake Toba. The largest coastal fishing port is t3agarssiapiapi. Other fishing centers are Sungsung, Lampung, Bangka, and lB:~.nkahula. Shell fish, trepangs (sea slugs) anti. praims are caught and dried. fish are exported. Liumati?a contains the finest timber producing forests in the Indonesian archipelago. About 60 percent of the island is covered with forests, containing hard wood and. soft wood. in great variety. Oak, chestnut, ebony, ironwood, camphorwood., and sandalwood as well as many species of resin and wild rubber producing trees arc found. Much of the timber, however, is difficult to obtain because of inaccost3ibility. loyi,tent and. Labor About 70 percent of the Sumatran labor force is engaged in agriculture. Although root peasants carry,_:on only subsistence agriculture, some --- par- ticularly in the northeastern and southern parts of the island --- reserve crall plots to grow cash crops. In addition to the peasants who devote small plots to cash crops, there are many smallholders who devote all their acreage to cash crops. Estate agriculture is also an important employer of Sumatran labor. Leas than 10 percent of the labor force is engaged in industrial activ- ities. Although industrial enterprises are very limited, Javanese laborers have -6- Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP TO1109A002900120001-6 .. M.Sy.~'..:.~ . ~.:. A, .~~r.,F i:!.t..:.'~~u:...i.~~;.iL....l.::~S3ii..~L'::li'.E!? h?.rl.Nh;:~ILYkX~i:tl.~Y:.._:s::'udaGtiu .. _ Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 been recruited to supplement the local labor force. The industrial labor force consists prim-u-11y of workers in oil refineries, textile mills and other light consumer goods industries. As in other parts of Indonesia, Sumatra has a severe shortage of capable rnFSna ers, administrators and technicians. During the colonial era, foreigners suprlied these talents. With the Indonesian desire to eliminate foreign influence, people with maa e.rial skills have also been elim!nated. The Chinese retain their place in small buziness ventures, but the government has imposed ri id controls over their activities. Lacking capable native managers anc7 entrepreneurs, many Sumatran enterprises formerly managed by foreigners hr.ve d.eteriorated. bore is an active, politically oriented. labor movement, in Sumatra. The unions have, in fact, mainly political functions, because strict government controls have 1:Lnited their economic bargaining powers. SOBSI is the most influentiaal labor federation, not only in Sumatra but in all of Indonesia. Sponzored by the Connunist party, SOBSI affiliates, including Sarbapri, the plantation workers union, have been active in the recent takeovers of British estates on Sumatra. G. Foram Trad.e The island of Sumatra contributes a major share to total Indonesian foreign e:-.change earnings. During 1961, Sumatra's exports \rere valued at $560 inilLon, more than 70 percent of total Indonesian e-:portE.. Important exports include rubber, petroleum, tin, bauxite, copra, tea, coffee, oil palm _7 - Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 and. tobacco. Sumatran imports, on the other hand, were 3 11~C) riillion, less than 20 percent of total Indonesian imports. These imports consisted primarily of consumer goods and foodstuffs, mostly rice. The Indonesian economic confrontation with Malaysia, which began when the latter was formed in September 1963, has had important consequences for the island of Sumatra and associated islands. Prior to confrontation a large share of the island's exports were transhipped. through Singapore or other Malaysian ports. Now, new markets and processing facilities, which could. substitute for those formerly provided by Malaysia, are being sought. Small- holder rubbcr producers have been seriously affected. by confrontation because the low quality of this rubber has made marketing --- except to the processors in Singapore --- difficult. High quality estate rubber has always been shipped direct to consumern, and thus confrontation has posed little problem for the estate rubber producers. Petroleum exports have been rerouted., but there has been a decline in the normal flow of exports. Tin ore exports have been shifted. from Penang to the Netherlands for smelting and re-export to Western European markets. Even if new markets can be found for Sumatran expcrts, the problem of adequate port and shipping facilities remains. one United States and. Great Britain remain among the most important consumers of Sumatran exports. The cc anunist countries' share of trade, although increF.sing, is only about 10 percent --- consisting primarily of rubber and. other tropical commodity exports in exchange for machinery and textiles . - 8 - Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RD 0 019AO02900120001-6 1-4.= r3tx%:*:}i:a_~e.t:1 Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RQ!R79LT01049A002900120001-6 if. Forei ;.n Loans C rid Aid Little foreign aid, has been contributed. for the economic dievelopment of the island o: Sutnatra. The limited amounts of aid. that have been granted are for the most part unused, and prospects for the early coicpletion of any major aid projects are faint. The most significant loans to the island are those of ti.c Soviet Bloc, primarily the USSR. The USSR agreed to build a lame hydroelectric power facility and aluminum project in the L Elie Toba region of Northern Sumatra. This project has been surveyed, but further progress has beon delayed. until 1967. Other Bloc projects scheduled on the island include the rehabilitation of the Ombilin coal mine and the con- struction of a cement plant in North Sumatra, a sugar refinery in Atjeh, and a soda ash plant in Palempang. Aid from western nations includes construction of a blast furnace at Lambung and a new tin smelter at Muntok, P.angk_a, both financed. by West Germany. Japan has cooperated. in a production sharing venture with the Indonesian oil industry. United States aid projects include diesel electrification projects, a fertilizer plant at Paler-bang, harbor developnent r nd. rehabilitation, malaria control programs and. agricultural extension >ervicec. As with welfare programs in Indonesia, the aid programs of Western and Bloc nations have been largely centered, on Java. The same in true for the government development plans, which consider the outer islands as produr--.ors of primary goods to provide the capital for the industrialization of Java. R'-ii s aspect of the plans has tended to alienate, many of the peoples in the outer islands and. especially those on Sumatra. 9 - Approved For Release 2000/05/1.5.: CIA- 1049A002900120001-6 25X1C Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2000/05/15 : CIA-RDP79TO1049AO02900120001-6