Marchio Irfan Gorbiano
The Jakarta Post
Dutch King Willem-Alexander (second right) and Queen Maxima (right) return
after laying a wreath during their visit to the Heroes Cemetery in Jakarta on
March 10. King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands are on a
five-day visit to Indonesia, a former Dutch colony. ( AFP/BAY ISMOYO)
Dutch King Willem-Alexander has offered an apology over "excessive
violence" suffered by Indonesians during the early years of Indonesian
independence, acknowledging the period as a "painful separation".
The statement was conveyed by the king after he and Queen Maxima were
hosted by President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo in an official ceremony at
the Bogor Palace in West Java on Tuesday.
"In line with earlier statements by my government, I would like to
express my regret and apologies for the excessive violence on the part of the
Dutch in those years," Willem said during a joint press statement on
Tuesday.
"And I do so in the full realization that the pain and sorrow of the
families affected continue to be felt today."
Willem's statement reversed previous Dutch monarchs’ stance of refusing to
apologize for the nation’s past war crimes in the country. During the last
state visit by a Dutch monarch in 1995, Queen Beatrix was prevented by
then-prime minister Wim Kok from offering an apology, saying the Netherlands
was not ready.
Indonesia declared independence on Aug. 17, 1945, but the Dutch only
recognized its sovereignty on Dec. 27, 1949.
The Dutch government had apologized several times for its colonial troops’
war crimes conducted between 1945 and 1949 in Indonesia.
In 2013, then-Dutch ambassador to Indonesia Tjeerd de Zwaan addressed an
apology to 10 widows of men who were summarily executed in a series of mass
killings in South Sulawesi between December 1946 and February 1947 during
military operations by Dutch troops under Raymond Pierre Paul Westerling.
The king’s four-day state visit kicked off on Tuesday. It went ahead
despite the recent announcement of 19 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Indonesia.
The Dutch king also expressed his desire to see a stronger tie between
Indonesia and the Netherlands.
"Indonesia has a long tradition of religious tolerance and can play a
constructive part in this respect. It's important to continue working together
to foster peace, justice and the protection of minorities based on respect for
sovereignty and territorial integrity," King Willem-Alexander said.
"And we are keen to work together with you toward this end."
Speaking before Willem, Jokowi emphasized the need for the two countries to
forge ahead in a relationship of mutual respect.
"Of course, we cannot erase the history, but we can learn from the
past. It serves as a lesson for our commitment to grow a relationship that is
equal and with mutual respect and mutually-beneficial," the President
said.
https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/03/10/breaking-dutch-monarch-offers-apology-for-past-excessive-violence.html
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