The Ministry Of Home Affairs Encourages The Acceleration Of Village Limit Affirmation Through The ILASPP Project
JAKARTA - The Ministry of Home Affairs hopes that all parties can accelerate the completion of village boundaries with the Implementation of Integrated Spatial Planning and Planning Projects or Integrated Land Administration and Spatial Planning Project (ILASPP).
In the Socialization and Technical Coordination Meeting of the ILASPP Village Limit Affirmation with the Regional Government of 2025 in Jakarta, Friday (21/11), the Director General of Village Administration Development of the Ministry of Home Affairs La Ode Ahmad Bolombo stated this because village boundaries are very important for development at the village, regional and national levels.
"Don't take the village boundary lightly. If the village boundary is problematic, it's not firm, it will have an impact on those who manage the above affairs, in districts/cities, provinces," said La Ode, quoted from ANTARA, Saturday, November 22.
La Ode explained that village boundaries are the basis for development planning in villages, support population administration regulations, and support the clarity of ownership of village, regional and community government assets.
He added that the affirmation of village boundaries also minimizes the potential for regional boundary conflicts and accelerates the settlement of sub-district, district/city and provincial administrative boundaries.
He said there are villages bordering villages, villages bordering sub-districts, villages bordering sub-districts and regions, and there are even villages bordering the state.
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Dalam ILASPP, Direktorat Jenderal Bina Pemdes Kemendagri menargetkan penyelesaian batas desa di 5.000 desa hingga tahun 2029.
Dalam penyelesaian tersebut, Ditjen Bina Pemdes Kemendagri berkolaborasi dengan Kementerian Agrarian dan Tata Spatial/Badan Pertanaan Nasional (ATR/BPN).
The output of the program is in the form of a draft regional head regulation (ranperkada) on village boundaries. The program will increase the number of villages that have definitive village boundaries.
Currently, there are 10,909 villages that already have village boundaries or about 14.4 percent of the total 75,266 villages in Indonesia.
La Ode added that the Ministry of Home Affairs has encouraged local governments to include the affirmation of village boundaries into the Regional Medium-Term Development Plan (RPJMD).
"If the village boundary is not clear, the regional development will not be linear," he said.