
Country Code: +62. Many hotel lobbies have public phones which take credit cards and phone cards. State-operated phone booths or offices (Telkom) and privately-owned companies (wartel, warpostel or warparpostel), which work on a pay-as-you-leave basis, can be found in towns and cities throughout the country.
Roaming agreements exist with most international mobile phone companies. Coverage may be limited to main towns and cities.
There are Internet cafés in all major cities and tourist destinations.
Media freedom increased considerably after the end of President Suharto's rule in 1998, during which the now-defunct Ministry of Information monitored and controlled domestic media and restricted foreign media.
Airmail to western Europe, the USA and Australia takes about 10 days. An express service is available.Mon-Fri 0800-1600, Sat 0800-1300 (hours may be longer in city centres).
• Kompas and Pos Kota are mass-circulation dailies.
• English-language newspapers include The Jakarta Post and the weekly Tempo magazine.
• Radio Republik Indonesia (RRI) is a public broadcaster that operates six national networks, regional and local stations, and the external service, Voice of Indonesia.