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Apple and Indonesian government have reached a deal to lift the iPhone 16 ban 

Apple and the Indonesian government have reached a deal to left the iPhone 16 ban in Indonesia, Bloomberg reports.

The agreement will purportedly be formalized later this week. Apple will apparently fork out in excess of US$1 billion to make this happen.

On October 8, 2024, it was reported that Indonesia was blocking the sale of the iPhone 16 line-up because Apple hadn’t compiled with local content regulations aimed at boosting the domestic industry. The tech giant had yet to fulfill its investment commitments in Indonesia and must renew its domestic component level (TKDN) license, Minister of Industry Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita said at the time.

“Apple’s iPhone 16 cannot be sold in Indonesia yet because the extension of the TKDN certification is still pending, awaiting further investment realization from Apple,” Agus said. The iPhone maker has only invested 1.48 trillion rupiah (about US$95 million) in Indonesia, he said, “falling short of its total commitment” of 1.71 trillion rupiah.”

Apple offered US$1 billion and a promise to build an AirTag Batam in Indonesia. The Batam facility is expected to initially employ 1,000 workers and will eventually account for 20% of global AirTag production.

Bloomberg reports that on top of the $1 billion investment, Apple will commit to training locals in research and development on the company’s products so they can then develop similar software and design their own goods.

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Article provided with permission from AppleWorld.Today
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