North Kabu

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Kabu Republic

Republik Kabu (Kabu)
ꦫꦼꦥꦸꦧ꧀ꦭꦶꦏ꧀ ꦏꦧꦸ
Flag of
Flag
Motto: Persatuan, Negara, Demokrasi, Kesejahteraan
"Unity, State, Democracy, Welfare!"
Land controlled by North Kabu shown in dark green, land claimed but not controlled shown in light green.
Land controlled by North Kabu shown in dark green, land claimed but not controlled shown in light green.
Capital
and largest city
Magelang
Official languagesKabu
Recognised regional languagesIlatbarat
Demonym(s)Kabu
Kabuese
North Kabuese
GovernmentUnitary semi-presidential republic
• President
Dian Suripto
• Premier
Kumat Dumarwulan
LegislatureSenate
Establishment
• Colony of Carolinian Islands
1797
• Start of Kabu Civil War
1941
• Treaty of City
1947
• Current Constitution
1990
Area
• Total
39,482 km2 (15,244 sq mi)
Population
• 2020 census
8,073,283
• Density
202.63/km2 (524.8/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2020 estimate
• Total
$121.3 billion
• Per capita
$15,023
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
$46.3 billion
• Per capita
$5,738
Gini (2020)37.2
medium
HDI (2020)0.751
high
CurrencyKabu shilling (RKS)
Internet TLD.rk

North Kabu (Kabu: Kabupik Utara), officially the Kabu Republic (Kabu: Republik Kabu) is a state in Southeast Coius. While officially claiming the whole of the Kabu archipelago, its control is limited to the northeastern half of the archipelago and its claims of sovereignty over the southwestern portion of the archipelago are not universally recognised, with many recognising South Kabu, which the country shares a de facto maritime border with. The country's de facto territory consists of sixty-one islands, yet the vast majority of the population is concentrated on the three Telung Sadulur islands in the south or the Sedulur Loro pair in the north.

Sublustrian peoples first settled the island chain during the middle of the first millenium, with evidence of cities built up around paddy fields existing in Sedulur Loro from the 7th century CE. Through contact and trade with Dezevau and other nations in which it was practised, the now-dominant Badi faith arrived in the islands in the 9th century, with elemental cults appearing across the islands. Badi kingdoms and empires would emerge in later centuries, with many of them spanning the whole island chain at their peaks and becoming prosperous over the spice trade. This spice trade, however, would lead to the interest in the islands by the Estmerish !East India Company, which would attempt to establish control over the islands in the 17th and 18th centuries in order to monopolise the trade.

As the Company became increasingly dominant, Estmerish control was cemented and in 1797 the islands were made into the nationalised colony of the Carolinian Isles. Colonial rule would persist for the next thirteen decades with little interruption, until the Gaullican occupation during the Great War led to an upsurge in support for anti-colonial movements, which would increase further after the war when Estmerish promises on self-government were not fulfilled. However, after moves were made to establish an independent state, tensions between nationalists and socialists led to the outbreak of the Kabu Civil War in 1941, with the modern state of North Kabu coming into being in 1947 after the Treaty of City split the archipelago between the two groups. Since then, the country has gone through two periods of authoritarian rule from 1947-1965 and 1978-1990, yet since 1990 the country has democratised and liberalised.

North Kabu is considered to be an middle-income country with one of the fastest growing economies in Coius, with the country boasting a rapidly expanding tertiary sector. Since the transition to democracy, governments have made it a priority to achieve universal literacy and healthcare, with the government aiming to achieve a literacy rate of 98% and a healthcare coverage rate of 95% by 2025.

History

Pre-colonial history

Estmerish colonisation

Kabu Civil War

North Kabu

  • State established after war as illiberal dominant-party state under League against Imperialism and Socialism (LAIS) and officially led by a three-man council largely dominated by former Civil War generals. Little opposition tolerated and economic policy remains autarkic and agrarian.
  • Protests break out in Magelang and other cities in the 60s over political repression, corruption, nepotism and lack of economic progress - while initially the government ignores them, eventually in 1965 it feels compelled to relax laws on political opposition and protest-affiliated pro-liberal democracy movement runs for office and shares power with LAIS.
  • Late 60s see the country adopt a more open stance, aiming to align itself with non-socialist Coius more generally and develop trading relationships with other nations - the government tries to start encouraging investment in industry and starting a manufacturing sector.
  • A broad conservative-liberal political system emerges, with conservatives emphasising a hard line on the Southern question, hardline anti-socialism, protectionism etc and liberals emphasising detente, internationalism, liberal democracy etc.
  • A liberal-aligned government elected in 1977 announced an intention to pursue negotiations with the South to end the division between the north and the south, which alarmed the military and led to tensions between the two ultimately leading to a coup in 1978.
  • While taking a hard line on the Southern issue and repressing domestic socialist and liberal movements, the resulting junta focuses on economic development and ramping up efforts to build up the manufacturing centre and attract foreign direct investment.
  • Junta works with rebel groups in South Kabu with the intent of destabilising and collapsing the country.
  • Transition back to democracy starts in 1990 as multi-party elections held - power split between president and parliament to act as a check on each other and stop a pro-detente government carrying too much power.
  • PRR and PRD become the two major parties representing the conservatives and the liberals respectively, and power alternates between them - both sides focus on continuing economic development started under junta and in 2010s focus starts on improving healthcare facilities and universal literacy.

Geography

Climate

Environment

Politics and Government

Dian Suripto
President
Kumat Dumarwulan
Premier

Since the enactment of the 1990 Constitution of the Kabu Republic following democratisation, North Kabu has been a unitary semi-presidential representative democratic republic, with the Constitution establishing four main institutions between which the powers of government are distributed: the President, the Government, the Senate and the Courts.

President

The President is established to be the head of state of North Kabu and is elected through universal suffrage through plurality voting to serve for a five year term. Intended to serve as a counterweight to the Government and to act as an oversight to their plans, the President is granted significant executive powers: serving as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces and as the chief diplomat of North Kabu, they have significant power over foreign and defence policy. Furthermore, they have the power to veto laws that have not gained an absolute majority of 55% of the Senate.

The current President is Dian Suripto, a member of the Republican People's Party who was first elected in 2014 and re-elected in 2018. He is the fifth President of North Kabu under the current Constitution and the fourth to come from the Republican People's Party - the only President not to come from the party was the Democratic Reform Party's Raharjo Suratman, who served between 2006 and 2010.

Government

The Government of North Kabu consists of the Premier, who serves as the nation's head of government, and his ministers. The Government is officially appointed by the President, yet it is required that the Government hold the confidence of the majority of the Senate and the Government can only be removed from office by a motion of no confidence within the Senate. Therefore, the Premier and his ministers are in practice chosen by the majority party or coalition within the Senate, yet due to the President's significant authority within foreign and defence policy it is common that they wield significant influence over the appointment of the Foreign Minister and Defence Minister.

As a result of the stalemate between left-leaning and right-leaning factions produced in the 2017 legislative election, a grand coalition between the Republican People's Party and the Democratic Reform Party was formed, with both parties taking an equal number of ministries and the position of Premier being held by independent politician and former economist Kumat Dumarwulan. However, in the runup to the 2021 election, Dumarwulan would officially join the PRD and lead it to victory in the election, leading to the formation of a PRD minority government.

Senate

The Senate of North Kabu carries the nation's supreme legislative power and is a unicameral body consisting of 175 members elected through a system of parallel voting for four-year terms. Ninety of its members are elected in single-member districts through plurality voting, while eighty-five are elected through a nationwide constituency under proportional representation. The Senate and its members have the ability to propose, pass, amend and reject legislation proposals, and also have the power to impeach a sitting President through a two-thirds majority, which results in their removal from office, yet this procedure has never been successfully utilised.

The Senate has largely been dominated by two main factions - the Patangist, conservative and Kabu nationalist Republican People's Party (PRR, Partai Rakyat Republik) and the liberal, progressive and pro-détente Democratic Reform Party (PRD, Partai Reformasi Demokratis). These two parties, founded during the 1988-90 transition to democracy, are the only two parties to have supplied a Premier, yet other more minor parties have played a role in the North Kabuese political protest, such as the national conservative National Front, the progressive Democratic Left, the economically liberal Innovation Party and the centrist Sotirian Association.

Law

North Kabu has a hybrid legal system of common and civil law heavily influenced by that of Estmere, with resulting influences from Solarian, Weranic and Gaullican legal traditions, with precedent and custom being recognised as sources of legal authority alongside codified legislation.

Notable differences exist, however, between the country's legal system and that of Estmere. Most notably, trial by jury was abolished in 1957 and the country still retains punishments since abolished in Estmere, with capital punishment still an active punishment used to punish murder, rape, treason, terrorism and drug trafficking and corporal punishment remaining as an occasionally used penalty for minor crimes such as petty theft. The methods used for these are normally hanging and caning respectively, and official government statistics state that over the 2010's about 19 people were sentenced to death.

The supreme court of North Kabu is the High Court of the Kabu Republic, which serves as the court of final appeal and has powers of judicial review. Underneath the court are provincial courts and then district courts, where cases are normally initiated.

Administrative divisions

North Kabu consists of thirteen subdivisions organised into two "circuits" - the Sedulur Loro circuit and the Telung Sadulur circuit, which correspond to the two island groups of North Kabu. The thirteen subdivisions in question are split into two types - rural provinces, of which there are seven, and metropolitan provinces, of which there are six.

Map Name Traditional script Circuit Population
(insert map here) Metropolitan province (Negara Kutha)
Magelang ꦩꦒꦼꦭꦁ Sedulur Loro 1,437,384
Mejayan ꦩꦼꦗꦪꦀ Sedulur Loro 854,204
Kalangang Satu ꦏꦭꦔꦁ ꦱꦠꦸ Telung Sadulur 657,195
Karangmangu ꦏꦫꦁꦩꦔꦸ Sedulur Loro 630,293
Kandangkuda ꦏꦀꦢꦁꦏꦹꦢ Sedulur Loro 554,947
Singgalan ꦱꦶꦁꦒꦭꦀ Sedulur Loro 433,085
Rural province (Negara Deso)
Marakarta ꦩꦫꦏꦂꦠ Sedulur Loro 1,041,604
Pasir Emas ꦥꦱꦶꦂ ꦌꦩꦱ꧀ Sedulur Loro 736,491
Lembeh North ꦭꦼꦀꦧꦺꦃ ꦈꦠꦫ Sedulur Loro 504,986
Pulau Mutiara ꦥꦸꦭꦻꦴ ꦩꦸꦠꦾꦫ Telung Sadulur 433,228
Pulau Pedhes ꦥꦸꦭꦻꦴ ꦥꦺꦝꦼꦱ꧀ Telung Sadulur 321,964
Lembeh South ꦭꦼꦀꦧꦺꦃ ꦏꦶꦢꦸꦭ꧀ Sedulur Loro 264,781
Pulau Klapa ꦥꦸꦭꦻꦴ ꦏ꧀ꦭꦥ Telung Sadulur 203,121

Foreign relations

North Kabu is often considered to play the role of a regional power with a fairly substantial role within the geopolitical scene of Southeast Coius and Bahia. It is known particularly for its staunch anti-socialist stance in foreign affairs and as a result is considered to be a strong ally of similarly anti-socialist states in Coius such as Garambura, Rwizikuru and Senria, with the nation being a member of the Senrian-led Council for Mutual Development alliance. It has also recently pursued relations with Euclean powers such as Estmere and Gaullica, with the nation possessing consulates in the two nations' nearby respective territories of Kingsport and Nouvel-Anglet and ending its longstanding claims on the territories after democratisation in the 1990s.

The nation has a strained relationship with South Kabu, its southern neighbour, as both states consider themselves to be the legitimate government of the entire Kabu archipelago. While since the conclusion of fighting in the six-year Kabuese Civil War through the 1947 Treaty of City the two nations have not actively fought each other, relations have remained particularly tense and as a result of the South's links to the socialist world, North Kabu possesses tense relationships with many of the world's constitutionally socialist powers who recognise the South's claims to the nation as a whole. However, attempts at détente have been made between the two nations to varying degrees of success, with reformist factions in both the north and south advocating for active negotiations between the two sides in order to reach a solution.

As a result of compromises established in (international treaty of some sort), despite the international controversy over the recognition of North and South Kabu, both nations have become members of the Community of Nations and the International Trade Organisation. Furthermore, North Kabu has been a member of the International Council for Democracy since the reintroduction of democracy in 1990.

Military

The Kabu Republican Army (Kabu: Tentara Republik Kabupik, TRK) serves as the armed forces of North Kabu. As a result of the tensions between the nation and the South, it maintains a large military budget - in 2018, the government spent 3% of GDP on defence. Furthermore, mandatory conscription has been in force for the Republic's entire existence, with the current 2019 laws requiring two years' service regardless of gender, yet allows for conscientious objectors to instead serve in public works projects.

The TRK is divided into land forces, a navy and an air force as in many other countries, with the Kabu Republican Land Forces, the Kabu Republican Naval Forces and the Kabu Republican Air Forces taking the role of each of these respectively. The Kabu Republican Naval Forces are by far the largest of these three forces as a result of North Kabu's maritime position, and as a result receive the bulk of the funding. Furthermore, as well as the standing forces of conscripts and post-conscription volunteers in these three branches, the nation retains a significant reserve force - after completing their mandatory military service conscripts are entered into the reserves for fifteen years and in the case of an invasion can be called up.

(there might be a Senrian military base somewhere in Kabu? specifics will need to be worked out)

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