Shropshire Star

Dutch king apologises for colonial killings in Indonesia

King Willem-Alexander and his wife, Queen Maxima, are making a four-day state visit to the Southeast Asian country.

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Indonesia Netherlands

King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands has apologised for his country’s aggression during its colonial rule of Indonesia and formally recognised the Southeast Asian nation’s independence date, on his first state visit to the former Dutch colony.

The king’s apology was conveyed after he and Queen Maxima were hosted by Indonesian President Joko Widodo and his wife, Iriana, at an official ceremony in the ornate colonial-style presidential palace in Bogor, just outside the capital, Jakarta.

The Netherlands did not initially apologise for its 350 years of colonial rule and aggression until 2013, when the Dutch ambassador expressed remorse for a series of massacres carried out by the Dutch military to crush resistance against colonial rule in Java and Sulawesi islands after Indonesia’s 1945 declaration of independence.

That apology came only after the victims’ widows took the Dutch government to court.

Indonesia Netherlands
King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands and Queen Maxima are welcomed by Indonesian President Joko Widodo on their arrival at the presidential palace in Bogor, West Java (Adi Weda/AP)

At a joint news conference with Mr Widodo on Tuesday, the king said: “In line with the previous statement by my government, I would like to express my regret and apologise here for the excessive violence on the part of the Dutch in those years.

“I do so with full awareness that the pain and sorrow of the affected families will be felt for generations.”

Indonesia declared its independence from Dutch colonial rule on August 17 1945, but the Netherlands refused to acknowledge it and fought unsuccessfully to maintain control of the lucrative Asian outpost.

It finally recognised the country as an independent nation in December 1949.

Indonesian authorities claim some 40,000 people were killed during the fighting, while most Dutch historians estimate the dead at about 1,500.

A 1968 Dutch report acknowledged “violent excesses” in Indonesia but argued that Dutch troops were conducting a “police action” often incited by guerrilla warfare and terror attacks.

The Dutch government has never prosecuted any soldiers for the killings despite a UN report condemning the attacks as “deliberate and ruthless” as early as 1948.

The 2013 apology by the Dutch ambassador cleared the way for the biggest-ever Dutch trade mission to Indonesia in November 2013, led by Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

Indonesia Netherlands
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima are making a four-day state visit to Indonesia (Dita Alangkara/AP)

Subsequent apologies were made by Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders in 2016 and Mr Rutte late last year during visits in Indonesia. But unresolved demands from those affected by past war crimes still loom large over the monarch’s current visit.

“On August 17, it will be 75 years since Indonesia declared its proclamation, claiming its place among free and independent countries,” the king said on Tuesday. “Today, the Dutch government explicitly acknowledged it both politically and morally.”

The four-day state visit by the royal couple, who arrived in Jakarta on Monday, aims to deepen economic ties with Indonesia.

It is the first trip to Indonesia for the king since he ascended the throne in 2013, and the fourth for the queen, whose previous trips were part of her role as UN Secretary-General’s Special Advocate for Inclusive Finance for Development.

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King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands, accompanied by Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Bok, right, observe a moment of silence as during their visit to a Dutch war cemetery in Jakarta (Dita Alangkara/AP)

The king and queen started their busy day on Tuesday by laying a wreath at the Kalibata Heroes Cemetery to honour Indonesia’s war dead, especially those who fell during the War of Independence.

In the afternoon, the royal couple laid a wreath at Menteng Pulo Cemetery, the resting place of almost 4,300 Dutch soldiers who died during the Second World War and the independence war.

The king and Mr Widodo witnessed the signing of agreements for economic partnership in the areas of agriculture, healthcare, coastal protection and the maritime industry.

Under the Widodo administration, ties between the two countries have strengthened significantly.

“We certainly cannot erase our history, but we can learn from the past,” the president said. “We try to learn from history to strengthen our commitment to build an equal relationship that respects and benefits each other.”

Mr Widodo’s visit to the Netherlands in 2016 was the first by an Indonesian leader since Abdurraham Wahid in 2000.

In 2010, then-president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono cancelled a visit at the last minute amid moves by a separatist group to have him arrested for alleged human rights violations.

Indonesia Netherlands
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands with Indonesian President Joko Widodo and his wife Iriana (Achmad Ibrahim, Pool/AP)

The Dutch royal couple are scheduled to meet the Sultan of Yogyakarta on Wednesday.

On Thursday, the king and queen will visit Lake Toba in North Sumatra province, one of Indonesia’s “10 new Balis”, an ambitious plan to boost tourism and diversify Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

They will also visit Sebangau National Park on Borneo island on Thursday.

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