stexpanded

Indonesia is an archipelagic nation-state in Southeast Asia and Oceania on Earth, comprised of 17,508 islands. Jakarta is its capital and most populous city, located on the island of Java. People or things originating from Indonesia are described as Indonesian.

Time-travelers went back to 1825 to change events so that Dutch troops were overwhelmed by Javanese forces led by Pangeran (Prince) Diponegoro. This resulted in changes to the local economy and affected the future independence of Indonesia more than a century later. A Federation Department of Temporal Investigations/Starfleet team, originally tasked with observation, corrects the timeline. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station: "Ancient of Days")

For several months during the Eugenics Wars, forces loyal to Khan Noonien Singh kept hundreds of men and women prisoner, as a source for genetic experiments, on one of Indonesia's smaller islands. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station: Freedom's Just Another Word for Nothing Left to Lose)

During the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, 130,000 to 170,000 Indonesian citizens died, primarily in the provinces of Aceh and Sumatra. This was an event, occurrjng in multiple timelines, monitored by the Federation Department of Temporal Investigations. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station: "The Desperate and the Broken-Hearted")

Indonesia's primary industries during the 21st and 22nd centuries were tourism, pelagic farms, dilithium extraction, the manufacture of geothermal convertors, and consumer electronics. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station)

In the 21st century, an alliance was formed from democratic Muslim-majority nation-states called the Muslim Bloc. (Star Trek:The Lost Era novel: The Sundered) None of the nation-states were named in the novel. Indonesia, the largest Muslim-majority nation on Earth, may or may not have been a member.

By the 2060s, Indonesia and the Philippines were among the nations that seceded from the Eastern Coalition to form the short-lived Southeast Asian Confederacy. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station: "Soledad")

In 2063, the Indonesian Space Agency was one of the organizations who would have gone to great lengths to acquire the plans for Zefram Cochrane's warp drive. (Star Trek: First Contact novelization)

The existence of a successful space program may be an indicator that the impact of the Post-Atomic Horror was not as great on Indonesia as on other nations in the region.

An officer on the SS Valiant expedition of 2065 was surnamed Siregar, meaning they belonged to a clan of the Batak ethnic group that originated on the island province of Sumatra. (TNG novel: The Valiant)

Captain Ismail Supriyanto led Confrontation Group Aleph during the Battle of Donatu V. ("The USS Arcturus in History")

Admiral Amin Trenggono, a native of Semarang, Indonesia, was a superintendent of Starfleet Academy in the 2250s. ("A New Assignment")

Chulan Sukarnoputri, who was of Indonesian descent, graduated from Starfleet Academy class of 2254 with James T. Kirk, Lystra Davis, and Sarah Madison. (Orion Press: "It's Not Fair") He was later chief science officer of the USS Potemkin in the 2290s. (Project Potemkin: "The Void")

Namesake colonies and protectorates

The Jakarta Baru colony in the Theta Centauri system was named after Jakarta. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station: "Esteban") Yogyakarta Baru, founded in the 22nd century by people from Southeast Asia (not limited to Indonesia), was named for the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta. (Star Trek: Shadowstar Station)

Namesake stations

Two Saberhagen-class defense substations commissioned in the 2250s, Bandung and Jakarta, were named after Indonesian cities. (Reischl's Guide to Ships of the Fleet)

Namesake starships

22nd century

Two Amarillo-class cruisers were named UES Celebes (CC-40) and UES Jakarta (CC-46). (The Starfleet Museum: Amarillo-Class Cruisers)

Six Ocean-class transports were named after seas within Indonesian territory: Banda, Celebes, Java, Molucca, Savu and Timor. (The Starfleet Museum: Ocean-Class Transports)

23rd century

The following are from Star Trek: Shadowstar Station:

25th century

External links