Few villagers living near a half-built golf course in Indonesia's West Java province know the name Donald Trump, and fewer still are aware that one of his firms will be managing a six-star hotel and luxury resort in their backyard.
But in the capital, Jakarta, a growing number of Indonesians want the U.S. presidential candidate and his businesses banned from the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation after Trump pledged to temporarily bar Muslims from entering the United States if elected.
The anger simmering across the Pacific is a likely preview of the strained relations a Trump presidency could expect from the Muslim world.
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