Bill Gates meets Indonesian leader to discuss health and sustainable development initiatives
By NINIEK KARMINI and ACHMAD IBRAHIM Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year]
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Bill Gates arrived in Indonesia on Wednesday to discuss health and sustainable development initiatives with the leader of the world's fourth most populous country.
Gates met President Prabowo Subianto at the colonial-style Merdeka palace in Jakarta. They planned to discuss global health, nutrition, financial inclusion and public digital infrastructure, Indonesia's presidential office said in a statement ahead of the meeting.
Indonesia, a vast archipelago of 17,000 islands sprawled across three time zones with a population of more than 280 million, launched an ambitious project this year to fight malnutrition that aims to feed nearly 90 million children and pregnant women. The program is expected to cost 450 trillion rupiah ($28 billion) through 2029 and critics question whether it is affordable.
On Monday, Subianto said his meeting with Gates would focus on Gates' support for Indonesia's Free Nutritious Meals , known in Indonesia as the MBG program, a flagship initiative of his administration aimed at improving child nutrition and reducing poverty.
During his first in-person visit to the Indonesian capital, Gates is also scheduled to visit a primary school in eastern Jakarta where more than 500 students were taking part of the program.
The United Nations Children's Fund estimates that one in 12 Indonesian children younger than 5 suffers from low weight, while one in five is shorter than normal. Both conditions are caused by malnourishment.
Subianto's program has drawn criticism from investors and analysts over the scale of its logistics, the burden on state finances and the economy, and its relation to the interests of industrial lobby groups.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
39 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Airbus Sees Global Aircraft Fleet Doubling by 2044, Led by India
Airbus SE predicted the global commercial aircraft fleet will double in size to almost 50,000 planes over the next 20 years, spurred by rapid growth in markets like India, where a rising middle class increasingly takes to air travel. The global in-service fleet will swell by 24,480 units to 49,210 aircraft in 2044, Airbus predicted in its latest global market forecast that includes both its own planes and those of rivals like Boeing Co. Most of the growth will come from single-aisle aircraft like the Airbus A320 family or Boeing's 737, which form the backbone of many airlines' fleets, Airbus said.


Bloomberg
44 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Nuclear War's Too Serious for a Tulsi Gabbard Video
Is Tulsi Gabbard running for a new political office? Did she just discover the horrific potential of nuclear weapons and wants to share it with the world? Or has she been watching too much Russia Today? It's hard to know what to think after watching the US director of national intelligence's depictions of nuclear Armageddon. Gabbard's video clearly took preparation. She visited Hiroshima, in Japan, and the production values are top drawer. (One infelicitous exception: the word for Japan's nuclear survivors is hibakusha, not 'hibokusha.') She speaks earnestly to camera, stares pensively into the distance against beautiful vistas and shots of a nuclear bomb's terrifying consequences. The three big points she had to make were less impressive. The first was that a nuclear war would be really, really, really, bad. All too true, but hardly a discovery. The second assertion was that the world is closer to annihilation than at any time in its history, which is wrong on the facts. And finally, that a nuclear apocalypse looms ever closer because — unlike 'we the people' — global elites and warmongers have bunkers, which is just bonkers.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
China's Cheap Funding Breathes Life Into Leveraged Bond Trades
China's efforts to support the economy by keeping funding costs low are increasing lending among banks, in a sign they may be borrowing cheaply to buy bonds for a profit. The daily volume of overnight repurchase contracts, a popular funding tool for such leveraged bond purchases among financial institutions, rose to the highest since December on Wednesday, according to China Foreign Exchange Trade System data.