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Apple's $1.37b plan not enough to lift Indonesia's iPhone 16 sale ban
The Straits Times
|January 10, 2025
Indonesia kept a ban on the sale of Apple's iPhone 16s, saying its US$1 billion (S$1.37 billion) plan that includes building an AirTag factory is insufficient to meet local investment requirements.
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Domestic content rules require Apple to produce part of its smartphones or components onshore, while the AirTag is only an accessory, Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita said in a briefing on Jan 8.
"As at this afternoon, the government does not have a basis for issuing the local content certificates" that Apple needs to sell its flagship device in Indonesia, he said. "Apple needs to negotiate with us so that we can issue a certificate."
Indonesia blocked iPhone 16 sales in October 2024, part of a strategy to persuade the US technology company to invest more in South-east Asia's largest economy.
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