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Días feriados en Indonesia

Paginas relatadas : Brunei Malasia Papúa-Nueva Guinea Singapur Timor
 

Esta lista de días feriados y días festivos y días de descanso obligatorio en 2012 para Indonesia, fue generada por Q++ Studio,  el software, utilizado por las más conocidas empresas editoras de agendas y calendarios del mundo. Si Usted tiene cualquier pregunta o comentario respecto a la información publicada en este sitio Web, por favor contáctanos.

 
Al pie de esta lista:   Prensa y Actualizaciones    Informaciones Adicionales    Footnotes    Disclaimer
 

Date in 2012

Holiday Name Observance*
Dom New Year's Day
Lun Chinese New Year (Imlek)
Dom The Prophet's Birthday (Maulidur Rasul)
Vie Hari Raya Nyepi Tahun Baru (Hindu New Year)
Vie Good Friday (Hari Raya Paskah)
Dom Waisak (Buddha Day)
Jue Ascension Day
* Vie Public Holiday (Cuti Bersama 2012) Government
Dom The Prophet's Ascension (Isra' Miraj Nabi)
* Mié Public Holiday (Jakarta Local Elections) Mun+Tentative
Vie Independence Day
Dom Hari Raya Idul Fitri (End of Ramadan)
Lun Idul Fitri Holiday
* Mar Public Holiday (Cuti Bersama 2012) Government
* Mié Public Holiday (Cuti Bersama 2012) Government
Vie Idul Adha (Feast of Sacrifice)
Jue Islamic New Year
* Vie Public Holiday (Cuti Bersama 2012) Government
* Lun Public Holiday (Cuti Bersama 2012) Government
Mar Christmas Day
* Lun New Year's Eve Bank Holiday Banks

 © 1989-2012 Alter Ego Services

Prensa y Actualizaciones

Estas noticias recientes sobre los días feriados en Indonesia, son in Ingles. Si tiene cualquiera pregunta sobre estos comentarios, por favor contáctanos.  30 Apr 2012 (The Jakarta Post-ANTARA) On the eve of this year's International Labour Day, Indonesia’s Home Minister, Gamawan Fauzi, has announced that the Indonesian government was deliberating whether to add May 1st as a new annual non-working public holiday (Hari Libur Nasional) in Indonesia.  05 Jan 2012 (The Jakarta Post-ANTARA) The Governor of Indonesia’s State of Bali, Made Mangku Pastika, has declared 18 additional state non-working public holidays "to allow resident Hindus to perform religious rituals" during the calendar year 2012.  16 Nov 2011 (Antara News Agency-Jakarta) Jakarta's General Elections Commission (KPU) has asked Jakarta Governor, Fauzi Bowo, to declare a one-off public holiday in Jakarta, Indonesia's political and economic Capital, on Wednesday, July 11, 2012, on the date of the upcoming Jakarta Regional Head election (Pemilukada).  20 Oct 2011 (The Jakarta Post-ANTARA) Indonesia’s second-largest Muslim organization, Muhammadiyah, has once again announced a different date for the upcoming Idul Adha (feast of sacrifice) than that announced in the official list of 2011 Indonesian public holidays.  14 Jul 2011 (Situs Resmi Kementerian Koordinator Bidang Kesejahteraan Rakyat-Jakarta) The government of Indonesia has issued a decree (Surat Keputusan Bersama tentang Hari Libur Nasional dan Cuti Bersama 2012) designating public holidays and collective leave days for the calendar year 2012, for both the private and public sectors.  23 May 2011 (Antara News Agency-Jakarta) Earlier this morning, the Indonesian government announced that it had decided to declare another one-off bridge public holiday (locally known as collective leave) for Friday, June 3, 2011, in conjunction with the already gazetted annual public holiday of Thursday, June 2, 2011.  13 May 2011 (The Jakarta Post-ANTARA) Earlier this morning, the Indonesian government declared an additional one-off bridge public holiday (locally known as collective leave) for Monday, May 16, 2011, ahead of the annual public holiday of Waisak on Tuesday, May 17, 2011.  10 Nov 2010 (Antara News Agency-Jakarta) Following a meeting at the Religious Affairs Department in Jakarta, the government of Indonesia announced that the upcoming Idul Adha public holiday would be on Wednesday, November 17, 2010.  09 Sep 2010 (Antara News Agency-Bali) Indonesian Minister of Religious Affairs, Suryadharma Ali, has announced that the current month of Ramadan would last 30 days, and therefore that the upcoming Idul Fitri public holiday would be on Friday, September 10, 2010.  15 Jun 2010 (Situs Resmi Kementerian Koordinator Bidang Kesejahteraan Rakyat-Jakarta) The government of Indonesia has issued a decree (Surat Keputusan Bersama (SKB) tentang Hari Libur Nasional dan Cuti Bersama 2011) designating public holidays and collective leave days for 2011.  More News Updates For the full version of the summarized news items above, and older news items not displayed above, go to the Indonesia public holidays news and updates page, or worldwide public holidays news and updates page, or subscribe to one of our free email newsletters.


Informaciones Adicionales

Estos comentarios, sobre los días feriados en Indonesia, son in Ingles. Si tiene cualquiera pregunta sobre estos comentarios, por favor contáctanos.  Governing Law: Official public holidays in Indonesia are announced in the summer of every year, for the following year, by a Joint Decree of the Minister of Religious Affairs, Minister of Manpower and Transmigration, and the State Minister for Enhancement of Efficiency of State Apparatuses, such as the No. 407/2005, No. KEP.185/MEN/VII/2005; No. SKB/02/M.PAN/7/2005 On Holidays and Collective Leave in 2006, and the National Holidays and Collective Leave in 2008 (No. 55/2007, No. KEP.222/MEN/V/2007 and No. SKB/03/M.PAN/5/2007.  Weekend Public Holidays: Public holidays that occur on a weekend remain on that date (ie. they are not moved to another date, such as the following Monday, for example).  Bridge Holidays: the government will regularly declare bridge holidays that extend from public holidays that fall on a Tuesday or Thursday to the nearest weekend. These bridge holidays are called Shared Holiday by Government Decree for an Extended Weekend, or cuti bersama.  More generally, Cuti Bersama ares officially declared long holidays established to stimulate national tourism and increase efficiency in the operation of government offices.  Chinese New Year: Until 1999, the celebration of Chinese New Year in public spaces was not permitted, and it has only been a national public holiday since 2003, following President, Megawati Sukarnoputri's announcement in February 2002.  Eid al Fitr is an official national public holiday for only the first two days. Banks close for the entire week. Many businesses close for at least the entire week, if not two. The days off can be leading up to, after, or a combination of both, depending on which day of the week Shawwal 1 is. This is the time of year when just about everyone travels back home.  Nyepi (the Balinese equivalent of the word for silence) is a national public holiday, but it is particularly strictly observed in the Island of Bali where the Balinese celebrate Nyepi as a day of absolute silence and meditation, which includes the shut down of the island's airport, for a 24 hour period. Most major hotels permit guests full use of hotel grounds and outlets with a tacit understanding that guests should not venture outside the property's bounds.  Ethnic Javanese make up roughly about 40 percent of the Indonesian population of 220 million people. The Javanese Calendar coincides with the Islamic year. New year's day in Javanese culture is marked with the cleansing of the spirit and starting of the coming year with fresh attitude and hope .


Footnotes
*

Acatamiento: Las notas que se incluyen en la columna Observance indican que, en Indonesia, el día feriado podría ser regional, no oficial, estar limitado a determinadas religiones o grupos lingüísticos o no comenzar a la medianoche. Para más información, consulte nuestras páginas sobre los calendarios religiosos del mundo. Aft=Afternoon, Arm=Armenian, Bah=Bahai, Bnk=Banks and most financial institutions, Bud=Buddhist, Cat=Catholic, Chr=Christian, Cop=Coptic, Eve=Evening, Gov=Government services and civil servants, Hin=Hindu, Jew=Jewish, Lin=Linguistic or ethnic groups, Mor=Morning, Mun=Municipal, Mus=Muslim, Orth=Orthodox, Othr=Miscellaneous partial observances (usually described in the Additional Information section of this page), Prt=Protestant, Reg=Regional, Rel=Other Religion, Sch=Schools and universities, Sik=Sikh.

**

Calendarios Religiosos: Los días feriados basados en ciertos calendarios religiosos están sujetos a variaciones locales producidas por diferentes interpretaciones entre las distintas autoridades religiosas o a modificaciones aparentemente arbitrarias en la fecha en que se celebra el día feriado por entrar en conflicto con otra festividad que se calcula de acuerdo con otro calendario, o porque el día del feriado se considera desfavorable (de mala suerte). Para más información sobre estas dudas, consulte la nota al pie de página sobre cada religión en específico.

(2)

Feriados Musulmanes : Las fechas des los días feriados y días festivos en Indonesia, utilizan las fechas oficiales del calendario MABIMS (Menteri Agama Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, dan Singapura). Para ver los cálculos del Salat (horarios de las oraciones), consulte la página Freeware.

(9)

Calendarios Lunisolares: En Indonesia, los cálculos de las fases lunares, de las salidas y puestas de la luna, y de las salidas y puestas del sol que se utilizan para establecer los días feriados y días festivos se basan en la posición geográfica de Jakarta (latitud 6,1°S, longitud 106,8°E, GMT+7,0 horas, sin horario de verano). Es importante aclarar que en varios países del sudeste de Asia se está cambiando progresivamente las normas que rigen los días feriados lunares o solares y se vuelcan por la opción de establecer fechas exactas de acuerdo con el calendario occidental (gregoriano). Por consiguiente, si bien la fechas que aquí se indican para el año 2013 y posterior, en este momento son correctas, es posible que las leyes que rigen estos días feriados cambien en los próximos años. Para más información sobre feriados lunares y solares, consulte lunisolar footnotes.


Disclaimer

Hemos hecho cada esfuerzo de presentar una lista exacta de los días feriados para 2012 en Indonesia. Pero no podemos aceptar ninguna responsabilidad de ningún error u omisión en los datos presentados arriba. Usted debería leer todos los comentarios y notas arriba. Además, en muchas partes del mundo, los días feriados están conforme a cambios arbitrarios. Estos cambios de última hora por autoridades locales no pueden ser predichos. Entonces, le recomendamos verificar las fechas antedichas con la embajada o el consulado de Indonesia, antes de planear cualquier viaje hasta Indonesia.



Animated flag graphics courtesy of 3DFlags.com.