Asking Jakarta Residents Outside The Region To Move Their ID Cards, DKI Provincial Government To Promise Free Revoke Vehicle Names

Head of the DKI Jakarta Population and Civil Registration Agency (Disdukcapil) Budi Awaluddin asked Jakarta residents living outside the area to immediately transfer their residence documents, especially ID cards.

This is in line with the plan to deactivate the population identification number (NIK) of Jakarta residents who have lived in other areas for years. The deactivation of the NIK, Budi acknowledged, had an impact on public services using the NIK.

To ease their burden, Budi admitted that the DKI Provincial Government had agreed with the Regional Revenue Agency (Bapenda) of West Java and Banten to eliminate the transfer duties of motorized vehicles (BBNKB) for residents affected by the deactivation of the NIK.

"We have collaborated with the West Java Bapenda, Banten and DKI for the transfer fee tax due to changes in asset domicile. The BBNKB will be zeroed," Budi told reporters, Friday, April 26.

Not only that, the DKI Provincial Government has also decided to exclude the deactivation of the NIK to Jakarta residents who are undergoing treatment using BPJS Kesehatan.

"For those affected by health services (BPJS), for people who are still under treatment such as dialysis, chemotherapy, and other routine treatments, they will be removed from the population document structuring and control program," he said.

The DKI Provincial Government has started the deactivation of the NIK with a target of 92 thousand Jakarta residents, with details of 81,119 NIK residents who died and 11,374 NIK residents in the Neighborhood Association (RT) who no longer exist.

Then, the deactivation of the NIK of Jakarta residents who already live outside the area will be carried out after the initial two categories have been deactivated.

In the process, the DKI Provincial Government mapped out residents affected by the deactivation of the NIK. Then, the data was submitted to the Ministry of Home Affairs (Kemendagri) to remove the NIK.

Then, in verifying and validating the objections of residents affected by the deactivation of the NIK, the DKI Provincial Government will submit a recommendation to the Ministry of Home Affairs as a follow-up to the elimination of the NIK.