Telkom Indonesia

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  Telkom is one of the world oldest telecommunication companies. The company can be traced to an establishment of the first electromagnetic telegraph  service in Indonesia on 23 October 1856, by the Dutch Colonial Government  to connecting Batavia (Jakarta) and Buitenzorg (Bogor). In 1884, the Dutch Colonial Government founded a private company to provide postal and domestic telegraph services and, later on, international telegraph services
  PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia (Persero) Tbk, commonly known as Telkom Indonesia (stylised as Telkom Indonesıa) or simply Telkom, is an Indonesian multinational telecommunication conglomerate. Telkom is a semi - privatised, majority state-owned  company listed on multiple exchanges. It has major businesses in fixed line telephony, internet  and data communication . It is operated as parent company of the Group, which is engaged in a broad range of businesses that consist of telecommunication, multimedia, property and finance services. Since 2008, Telkom Indonesia began changing its business focus, infrastructure, systems, organisation and human resources, as well as the corporate culture, as their effort facing rising competition.
  Since this privatisation in 1995, Telkom Indonesia total consumer 129.8 million at the end of December 2011 increased by 7.8 % from 2010, making the company the nation's largest telecommunication service provider by subscribers
  Early years Telephony services had been introduced to Indonesia in 1882 by privately owned companies under a 25 year government license. In 1906, all postal and telegraph services in Indonesia were taken over by the government as single, unified government agency named Posts Telegraafend Telefoon Diensts (PTT). In September 1945, roughly a month after Indonesian proclamation of independence, the agency headquarters in Bandung  were taken over by Indonesian nationalists. In December 1949, after years of national revolution war, the PTT was nationalised by Indonesian Government as part of Indonesian effort to oust the remaining Dutch and nationalise Dutch corporate assets.
  State owned company In 1961, PTT was converted from an official government agency into a newly established state owned company, the Postal and Telecommunications Services company. Four year later, on 6 July 1965, Indonesian Government separated this company into two state-owned companies, PN Pos Giro responsible for providing mail services and PN Telekomunikasi as telecommunications  services. The mail services PN Pos Giro developed over year, to become the Pos Indonesia  in 1995, which is still state-owned today and the official postal carrier for Indonesia 230 million people. 
  In 1974, PN Telekomunikasi was further divided into two state-owned companies. Perusahaan Umum Telekomunikasi (Perumtel) provided domestic and international telecommunications services, while PT Industri Telekomunikasi Indonesia  (PT INTI) manufactured telecommunications equipment. A further division in 1980 saw the international telecommunications business taken over by the newly established PT Indonesian Satellite Corporation  (Indosat).
  In 1991, Perumtel became a state owned limited liability corporation  and renamed to what is now Perusahaan Perseroan (Persero)PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia or Telkom. Until 1995, Telkom's operations were organised along twelve regional operating units known as Wilayah Telekomunikasi or Witel. Each Witel had full responsibility for all aspects of business and operations in their respective regions, such as telephone services, property management and security. In 1995, Telkom reorganised the twelve Witels into seven regional divisions and one network division. Under a series of Cooperation (KSO) Agreements, Telkom transferred the right to operate five of its seven regional divisions (I, III, IV, VI and VII) to private sector consortia. Under these agreements, the KSO partners manage and operate the regional division concerned for a fixed term, build a specified number of fixed lines and, at the end of the term, transfer the telecommunications facilities to Telkom for an agreed amount in compensation. Revenues from the KSO operations were shared between Telkom and the KSO partners.
  Privatization On 14 November 1995, Telkom became a privatised company when shares went on sale through an initial public offering on the Jakarta Stock Exchange and the Surabaya Stock Exchang (which merged in December 2007 to become the Indonesia Stock Exchange). Telkom's shares are also listed on the NYSE  and the LSE  in the form of American Depositary Shares (ADS), and were publicly offered without listing on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Telkom is now the largest company by market capitalisation in Indonesia, with a market capitalisation of approximately IDR  190.512 trillion as of 31 December 2009. The Government retains an aggregate interest of 51.19 % of the issued and outstanding shares of Telkom. The Government also holds one Dwiwarna, or golden share. 
  In mid-1997, Indonesia was badly affected by the Asian economic crisis  Among those impacted were certain KSO partners, who experienced difficulties in fulfilling their obligations to Telkom. Telkom eventually acquired control of its KSO partners in Regions I, III, and VI, and amended the terms of the KSO agreements with its KSO partners in Regions IV and VII to obtain legal rights to control the financial and operating decisions of those regions. Since 5 June 2014, Telkom shares are no longer traded on the London Stock Exchange (LSE), and since 16 May 2014, they cease to be registered on the Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) in Japan.
  Telecommunication deregulation In 1999, Indonesia passed a deregulating  telecommunication law that set in motion a sweeping array of reforms and enlivened competition policy, private investment, and long term industry direction. Among the proposed reforms was the progressive elimination of the joint ownership, by Telkom and Indosat, of most of the telecommunications companies in Indonesia. This was intended to promote a more competitive market. As a result, in 2001, Telkom acquired Indosat's 35.0% stake in Telkomsel, resulting in Telkom owning 77.7 % of the shares of Telkomsel, while Indosat acquired Telkom's 22.5 % interest in Satelindo and its 37.7 % stake in Lintasarta. In 2002, Telkom sold 12.7 % of Telkomsel to Singapore Telecom Mobile Pte Ltd (SingTel Mobile), reducing Telkom's ownership of Telkomsel to 65.0 %.
  On 1 August 2001, the Government terminated Telkom's exclusive right to provide ficed line  services in Indonesia and Indosat's right to provide international direct dial  services. Subsequently, Telkom's exclusive rights to provide domestic and long distance services were terminated in August 2002 and August 2003, respectively. On 7 June 2004, Telkom began to provide their own international direct dial  fixed line services. On 16 November 2005, the Telkom 2 satellite was launched to replace all satellite  transmission services that have been served by previous satellite, Palapa B-4.
  Transformations In 2009, Telkom started doing the business transformation of the only company in the field of telecommunications to broader range of business, the company expanded to the telecommunications, information technology services, media and edutainment. Telkom's decision to transform its business was prompted by the shift in customer lifestyles, and supported by advances in technology and regulatory changes that enabled service providers to deliver enhanced service to customers. With this new business transformation, Telkom also plans to conduct the acquisition of several companies that are in line with Telkom's transformation of the new business.
  In August 2012, the Telkom-3  satellite was lost in a launch failure; being placed into an unusably low orbit following the failure of the Briz-M upper stage of the Proton-M  rocket that had launched it. Its replacement, Telkom-3S successfully launched aboard an Ariane 5 rocket on 14 February 2017, 21:39 UTC.
  Telkom Indonesia is a dominant and largest provider of fixed line  services due to owning most of Indonesia's copper network.Telkom also runs telephone exchanges, trunk network adn local loop  connections for its fixed-line telephones. Currently Telkom is responsible for approximately 8.3 million telephone lines in Indonesia. And like most of the other state-ownership telecommunication company in the world, Telkom is obliged to provide public services such as public call boxes.
  Telkom Indonesia businesses are operated under government regulation by the Indonesian Ministry of Communication and Information. Telkom, as government-owned company, is required to comply with additional obligations such as provide telecommunication services and not to discriminate. As well as providing service in those regulated areas, Telkom has expanded into more profitable products and services where there is less government-owned-related regulation.
  Telkom Indonesia is the parent company of the Telkom Group, which is engaged in a wide range of businesses that consist of telecommunication, information, multimedia, property and finance services. Telkom mainly operates in fixed line telephony, internet and data communications  business, while other businesses are. Telkom Indonesia