Sunday, August 5, 2007

Bintan island-Riau

Bintan Island
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bintan Island or Negeri Segantang Lada is an island of 1,866 square kilometers, and is part of the Riau Islands province of Indonesia. The capital of Bintan is the southwestern city of Tanjung Pinang.

Geography
Bintan is the largest of 3,200 islands in the Riau Archipelago, and is located less than 40 kilometers from Singapore. Bintan has tropical forest and beautiful white beaches. The highest mountain on the island, Bintan Besar. The mountain is the remains of an old volcano, and it's almost 400 meters high, the highest point on the Riau Island province.
History
Bintan first became politically important when Sultan Mahmud of the fallen Sultanate of Malacca fled to Bintan and created a resistance base there after Malacca was taken by the Portuguese forces in 1511. The Portuguese eventually destroyed the stronghold in 1526, and after a few years the Sultanate founded a new capital back on the Malay Peninsula and developed from there.

Bintan was also once the capital of the Sultanate of Johor that grew to considerable political and cultural power from the 17th to the 19th century. The island played a central role in Malay culture.

At the beginning of 18th century the Sultanate of Johor entered into political turmoil and the capital moved back to Bintan as the Bugis took control of the sultanate. In the hands of the Bugis, Bintan became a powerful trading port, attracting regional, Western, Indian and Chinese traders as well as migrants including Chinese much in the same way Malacca developed into a regional power three centuries earlier.

The success of the port caught the attention of the European powers. The British, who controlled Penang, were looking for a new settlement further to the south of the Straits of Malacca that would contain the Dutch expansions and considered Bintan as a possible location.

The Dutch, however, no longer accepted the competition from Bintan and attacked and took control of the island at the end of the 18th century, bringing to an end its local trading supremacy and delaying the British arrival in the area for a few years until the internal power struggle within the sultanate of Riau-Johor offered them the opportunity to take control of the island of Singapore.

Modern development
Bintan's power and central role slowly disappeared with the regional political changes and the island's past fortune is now overshadowed by the new glory of neighbouring islands.

After being founded by the British in 1819, Singapore became the new regional trading center that it still is today. Due to its limited size, Singapore initiated the Sijori Growth Triangle and signed agreements with the Indonesian governments to invest heavily in Batam and Bintan.

The once wild and deserted Batam island became an industrial "hinterland" for Singapore and a special investment zone for world industrial companies, also attracting thousands of workers from the entire country.

Bintan was not transformed into the industrial park Batam. Instead, Singapore again signed agreement with Indonesia to lease its northern coast and develop it into a resort for Singaporeans ("Bintan Resort").

Singapore's current status as the regional trading center and its political influence in the region, and particularly in the heart of the Sijori Growth Triangle is actually pretty close to what Bintan was a few centuries ago.


Transportation
Several daily ferries run between Tanah Merah Ferry Terminal in Singapore to the capital of the Indonesian province Riau Island Tanjung Pinang it's just over the Singapore Strait and takes not more than an hour. Ferries goes also to Bandar Bentan Telani in Bintan. Others choose to go to Tanjung Pinang through the island of Batam via Telaga Punggur port. Bintan holds several popular resorts and beach sites as well as local cities such as its capital, Tanjung Pinang, from which connecting local ferries to other islands in the archipelago can be found.

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