General
Why some pockets of Indonesia remain COVID-free while the country’s cases continue to surge past 1 million

As the number of COVID-19 cases in Indonesia continues to grow, two remote traditional groups have yet to record a single case throughout the pandemic.
Key points:
- Visitors are not allowed to come to the village where Baduy people live in West Java
- The tribe is known for limiting interactions with people from outside their villages
- An epidemiologist suggested all Baduy people should get tested to ensure they are COVID-free
The country hit 1 million COVID-19 cases at the end of last month, almost two weeks after the vaccine developed by China’s CoronaVac was rolled out.
But among at least two tribes in West Java — the people of Baduy and Kasepuhan Ciptagelar — no positive cases have ever been detected.
Iron Rustandi, a health officer in…
-
General17 hours ago
Melbourne lawyer fled Australia with $1.2m after filing for bankruptcy, court case alleges
-
Noosa News19 hours ago
Wounding investigation, Mooloolaba – Sunshine Coast
-
Noosa News13 hours ago
Maroons name Gehamat Shibasaki for State of Origin debut against Blues, Josh Papali’i returns
-
Business14 hours ago
Can the Xero share price deliver a 17% return after the US acquisition?