The roadmap was signed by Indonesia’s Coordinating Economic Minister Airlangga Hartarto and Belarus Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Karankevich, according to a statement released Friday in Jakarta.
Hartarto said the roadmap would provide a measurable framework for expanding bilateral cooperation and support preparations for the Belarusian president’s planned visit to Indonesia.
“Indonesia views Belarus as a strategic partner in industrial cooperation, food security and technology-based manufacturing,” Hartarto said.
Belarus invited Indonesian businesses and stakeholders to explore opportunities in its agricultural, manufacturing and industrial sectors.
The two countries also discussed industrial and technological cooperation, including possible joint machinery assembly projects in Indonesia.
An Indonesia-Belarus Business Forum is planned to coincide with the Belarusian president’s expected visit to Indonesia.
Belarus said it was committed to expanding economic cooperation with Indonesia through investment, agriculture, industrial projects and trade connectivity.
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Karankevich said the planned Indonesia-Belarus Business Council would strengthen commercial ties as the Indonesia-Eurasian Economic Union free trade agreement nears ratification.
Bilateral trade between the two countries rose about 72.6 percent year-on-year to around US$221 million, according to the Indonesian government.
Indonesia sees Belarus as a strategic partner for market diversification and industrial cooperation, particularly in heavy equipment, agriculture and chemicals manufacturing.
Jakarta also pushed for joint ventures, local assembly projects, technology transfers and industrial capacity-building in heavy equipment, commercial vehicles, fertilizer and agricultural machinery.
In agriculture and food security, both sides discussed cooperation on farm mechanization and modern agricultural technology to improve productivity.
Indonesia also sought to expand exports of rubber, cocoa, coffee, fishery and manufactured products to Belarus and the Eurasian Economic Union.
The two countries further discussed cooperation in investment, healthcare, education, research, culture, sports and tourism.
“We believe this meeting will identify priority cooperation areas ahead of the Belarusian president’s planned visit to Indonesia in early July 2026,” Karankevich said.
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Translator: Bayu Saputra, Cindy Frishanti Octavia
Editor: Rahmad Nasution
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