One of the leading figures of the Indonesian independence movement,
Komarudin (Korean name: Yang Chil-seong; ) was an ethnic Korean. The Korean presence in
Indonesia goes back several decades. The
Jakarta International Korean School in
East Jakarta opened on 1 February 1975, and as of 2007 enrolled 719 elementary school students, 357 middle school students, and 375 high school students. It is thus the largest Korean day school in
Southeast Asia, at more than twice the enrollment of the one in
Ho Chi Minh City. A
Koreatown began to form in
South Jakarta's
Kebayoran Baru subdistrict as early as 1982, when Kim Woo-jae opened a shop selling
kimchi and
doenjang. Between 2011 and 2013, their population increased by 11%. Nearly all (38,401, or 95%) are staying in Indonesia on ordinary residence visas. Other categories have shown rapid growth in recent years but remain small in absolute numbers: those on
international student visas number 664 people (up 137% since 2011), 814 (up 285%) have permanent residence status, and 405 (up 58%) have become
Indonesian citizens. The
sex ratio of the community is unbalanced, with 1.3 men for every woman, similar to the pattern seen in most South Korean migrant communities in
Southeast Asian countries besides
Malaysia and
Singapore; however, the imbalance has decreased from earlier years. Unlike
Japanese expatriates of earlier years, most South Korean expatriates come accompanied by their families. ==Business and employment==