Take Note! Do Not Arbitrarily Use 'RF' Number Plates, This Means

JAKARTA - Have you ever seen cars with police numbers (nopol) ending in the letters RFS, RFP, or RFD? So you know what the initials of the letters on the license plate mean?

For those who don't know, explain VOI. Generally, cars with RF nopoly are vehicles of echelon II state officials and above to the minister. Plates of this code are used in lieu of plates of official vehicles.

These number plates cannot be used by civilians carelessly. Because there are special regulations during the application process to the One-Stop One-Stop Administration System (Samsat), so it can only be used by certain officials in a government agency.

The abbreviation of the RF code on cars ending in the letters RFS, RFP, RFU, RFL, and RFD is 'Reformasi'. Then the last letter on the back is the initials of a particular institution or department.

For example, the RFS is for civilian officials, the RFP is for the Police, the RFD is for the Army, the RFL is for the Navy, and the RFU is for the Air Force. Meanwhile, the combination of the letters RFO, RFH, RFQ, and the like is generally used for officials below echelon II.

As for the National Police Regulation Number 3 of 2012 Article 6 states that secret STNK / TNKB are given to official motorized vehicles used by intelligence officers of the TNI, Polri, Attorney General's Office, State Intelligence Agency, and Investigators / Investigators.

Meanwhile, vehicles used by the President, Vice President, Ministers, members of the DPR, MPR and other high-ranking central officials will use a registration number with special numeric allocations with or without serial letters. Starting from R1 for the President, then continued up to R1 109 for BAPENAS.