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Anarchism in Indonesia

Anarchism in Indonesia has its roots in the anti-colonial struggle against the Dutch Empire. It became an organized movement at the behest of Chinese anarchist immigrants, who played a key part in the development of the workers' movement in the country. The anarchist movement was suppressed, first by the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies, then by the successive regimes of Sukarno and Suharto, before finally re-emerging in the 1990s.

Anarchist Movement in Jakarta

History edit

Dutch East Indies edit

 
Ernest Douwes Dekker, an early leader of the Indonesian anti-colonialist movement and one of the country's first anarchists.

The first evidence of anarchism in the Dutch East Indies was present in the anti-colonial writings of Eduard Douwes Dekker, who denounced the Dutch colonial administration over Indonesia, raising public awareness of the brutality inflicted against the Indonesian people. His works, including the well-known satirical novel Max Havelaar, were particularly influential among early Dutch anarchist circles.[1] His grandnephew Ernest Douwes Dekker became a leading figure in the Indonesian anti-colonialist movement during the early 20th century. Ernest established contact with other radical anti-colonial activists, including the Indian anarchists Shyamji Krishna Varma and Har Dayal, whose work was published in Dekker's publication Het Tijdschrift. Dekker aligned himself against parliamentarism, due to the suppression of workers' rights that was carried out systematically by European parliaments. He also advocated for both violent and non-violent means of resisting colonialism, which he believed was a moral duty, and was sympathetic to the revolutionary strategy of syndicalism, as opposed to reformism.[2] Dekker was widely considered to be an anarchist himself and was the first native Indonesian to be known as such.[3] He later went on to found the Indische Party, one of the first political organizations established during the Indonesian National Awakening.

The organized anarchist movement edit

Dutch Christian anarchists, including Dirk Lodewijk Willem van Mierop, conducted propaganda work in the Dutch East Indies - publishing the periodical Levenskracht, which advocated for non-violence, natural living and vegetarianism. While agitating in the Dutch East Indies, van Mierop even established a local branch of the Union of Religious Anarcho-Communists.[4] Chinese anarchists also conducted propaganda work there, with Zhang Ji traveling to Java in 1907, where he translated a book on the history of Chinese resistance to Dutch Colonial rule.[5] From 1909, Chinese reading houses began to open around Indonesia, being a means of political education and organization for those resisting both Dutch colonial and Chinese imperial rule.[6] After the 1911 Revolution overthrew the Qing dynasty, Chinese anarchists remaining in Indonesia channeled their efforts into the labour movement, organizing the country's first workers' organizations in Makassar, Batavia, Surabaya and Kupang.[7] Anarchist cells began to arise between 1914 and 1916, distributing Liu Shifu's newspaper Minsheng among the populace.[8]

Indonesian trade unions also began to emerge around that time, many of them influenced by Marxism. They were particularly active in organizing within the ranks of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army, establishing a soldiers' and sailors' union that coordinated resistance during World War I. On 7 May 1916, anarchist sailors in Surabaya organized a wildcat strike (without the union's approval) against their poor living and working conditions, coming into direct conflict with the military police. In the subsequent repression, 5 people were injured, 47 sailors were dismissed and one of the principle organizers was imprisoned for 8 months.[9] The union leadership criticized the local branch for its lack of opposition to the strike,[10] while the SDAP leadership declared it necessary to combat the "anarchist elements" within the union,[11] and the army's high command called for unions to be separated from the armed forces entirely.[12]

After the war ended in 1918, anarchist groups began to grow larger, publishing newspapers with a broad reach throughout the country. Liu Shixin formed the "Society of Truth" group to distribute anarchist propaganda throughout the archipelago,[13] publishing the Soematra Po,[14][6] in Medan.[15] but eventually Liu's activity came to the attention of the police, who arrested the group in March 1919,[16] labelling Liu and his comrades "Bushiwei".[17] Liu Shixin was subsequently deported to China, for his role in propagating anarcho-communist propaganda.[15] In April 1919, the Workers' Union was established by anarchists in Surabaya, growing to include branches in other cities.[18] The Union published the anarcho-communist publication Zhenli Bao in Semarang, edited by Bai Binzhou and Wang Yuting.[19] In September 1919, Binzhou and Yuting were both arrested and deported to Hong Kong.[19]

Throughout the 1920s, anarchist organizations organized plantation workers, with attacks against Dutch administrators coming alongside,[20] causing many problems for the Dutch authorities, which carried out extensive searches and property seizures, confiscating any documents they found.[18] Anarchists organized strikes against the Deli Railway Company, reaching their peak in September 1920, when over 15,000 railway workers joined the strike for an increased salary.[21] When some strikers called for reprisals against Dutch officials,[22] the armed forces were brought in to break the strike and cannons were aimed at a local workers' assembly, resulting in the arrest of hundreds of workers.[23] The Dutch authorities exiled Zhang Shimei, one of the main organizers of the strike, to New Guinea, later deporting him to Singapore.[22] Although syndicalist unions continued to operate into the late 1920s, the Chinese anarchist movement in Indonesia was largely suppressed by 1929.[24]

The League against Imperialism edit

 
Leaders of Perhimpoenan Indonesia. Left to right: Gunawan Mangunkusumo, Mohammad Hatta, Iwa Kusumasumantri, Sastro Mulyono, and R.M. Sartono
 
Sutan Sjahrir, the first Prime Minister of Indonesia and a resistance leader during the Japanese occupation. During his studies in the Netherlands, he became influenced by anarchism, though later moved towards democratic socialism.

Indonesian students that were studying in the Netherlands, under the banner of Perhimpoenan Indonesia, formed contact with local left-wing groups, including the Dutch anarchist movement. They formed the Indonesian section of the League against Imperialism, where they met with anarchist anti-militarists.[25] A few students took an interest in anarchism, including Sutan Sjahrir, who had moved to the far-left after a short stay at an anarchist commune, although his ideology eventually evolved into democratic socialism - later founding the Socialist Party of Indonesia.[26] However, Indonesians were unable to find common ground with Dutch anarchists, whose anti-nationalism aligned them against the Indonesian desire for independence. At the 1927 Brussels Conference, attended by the Indonesians Mohammad Hatta and Achmad Soebardjo,[25] the anarcho-syndicalist Arthur Lehning warned colonized people against the creation of new states in the anti-imperialist struggle.[27] Similarly, at the 1929 Frankfurt Conference (attended by Hatta), the anarchist Bart de Ligt claimed that the construction of independent nation-states was in the interests of the colonized countries' ruling classes, who merely wished to continue their rule independently of their colonial authorities, advising instead that anti-colonialism should be bound together with anti-nationalism and anti-militarism.[28] The Frankfurt conference was also marred by a bitter division between European communists, who had taken up the party line against "social fascism" after the 6th World Congress of the Communist International, and the national liberationists including Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohammad Hatta, who were actively excluded from the League by the communists. The League eventually collapsed in the 1930s, in part due to its internal divisions.

Japanese occupation edit

The Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies brought with it a fierce repression of the labour movement, left-wing groups and the Indonesian national liberation struggle. The Japanese Empire brought millions of Indonesian workers into a system of forced labor, resulting in the deaths of approximately 4 million people during the occupation period. The Indonesian socialist activists Sutan Sjahrir and Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap led an underground resistance to Japanese Imperial rule in Java, aided by Chinese, Ambonese and Minahasan resistance groups. Sjarifuddin was arrested by the occupation forces in 1943, but he escaped execution due to the intervention of Sukarno, who was actively collaborating with the Japanese Empire.[29] When the Pacific War reached a turning point in 1944, the Japanese Empire began to seriously consider the prospect of Indonesian independence, encouraging Indonesian nationalism and laying the groundwork for the liberation struggle against the Dutch Colonial Empire.[30][31]

The Indonesian National Revolution edit

 
A demonstration by the Central All-Indonesian Workers Organization.

Two days after the surrender of Japan, Sukarno read out the proclamation of Indonesian Independence, marking the beginning of the Indonesian National Revolution. By this time the Indonesian anarchist movement had largely disappeared, after decades of repression by imperial powers. The newly established Republic of Indonesia, with Sukarno acting as the country's first President and Sutan Sjahrir as its first Prime Minister, set about repressing the nascent anarcho-syndicalist movement. Javanese workers had spontaneously expropriated and established workers' control over the country's railways, plantations and factories. Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta responded by openly attacking the syndicalist character of the new workers' movement,[32] actively repressing them and bringing their enterprises under state control by the spring of 1946.[33]

The SOBSI and Guided Democracy edit

The workers' movement was subsequently reorganized, largely into the Central All-Indonesian Workers Organization (SOBSI), which called for the unity of workers and the establishment of a socialist society.[34] After the suppression of the Madiun Affair, many of SOBSI's leaders went underground, into exile, were imprisoned or killed.[35] From May 1948, the SOBSI was reorganized and brought under the influence of the Communist Party. Between 1950 and 1952, the SOBSI attempted to mobilize militant actions for higher wages, increased social security and better workplace conditions,[36] launching a nationwide strike that forced the government to increase the minimum wage, block plans for layoffs and institute a non-contributory pension scheme.[37] However, this was followed by the Natsir Cabinet outlawing strikes in essential industries, forcing the SOBSI to turn to sabotage.[38] After another government crackdown, the Communist Party forced the SOBSI to moderate its policies, taking a conciliatory line towards the capitalist class.[39]

With the introduction of Guided Democracy, the SOBSI became the institutionalized representative of labor within the Sukarno government.[40] It oversaw nationalization efforts,[41] continuing the running of companies under state control.[42] These nationalizations drove SOBSI into a conflict with the armed forces, fighting for influence over the state controlled companies.[43][44] This conflict culminated in the Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66, in which the army massacred left-wing activists, feminists and ethnic and religious minorities, killing hundreds of thousands. The military leader Suharto rose to power, instituting a right-wing military dictatorship known as the New Order. The SOBSI was subsequently declared illegal by the new regime and many of its members and leaders were killed.[45]

Contemporary Indonesia edit

 
Rioters burning looted goods on the streets of Jakarta, during the May 1998 riots that led to the fall of Suharto.

The anarchist movement re-emerged in the 1990s as part of the Indonesian punk subculture, the largest punk movement in Southeast Asia. Young people had created their own underground sub-culture of punk, which over time developed into a style that was completely different from the original movement.[46][47] Part of the punk movement began to move towards anti-fascist and anti-authoritarian ideology, in opposition to the New Order dictatorship of Suharto. In 1998, anarchist collectives began to form after the fall of Suharto, organizing discussions, publishing texts in the Indonesian language and forming non-hierarchical groups with which to conduct direct action. Some of the first groups of note were Food Not Bombs collectives, formed to distribute food to those in need.[48] Anti-fascist groups began to form, organizing solidarity actions with striking workers. In December 1999, anti-fascist collectives and individuals from all around the country converged on Yogyakarta to establish the nationwide Antifascist Network of Nusantar.[49]

For most of the early 2000s, the Indonesian anarchist movement remained dispersed and disconnected, with many of its groups being small and short-lived. This began to change with the organization of the 2007 May Day demonstrations, when various groups from around the country unified to form the Anti-authoritarian Network, gathering over 100 people in a May Day action, marking the anarchist movement's first large-scale appearance on the public stage and igniting an acceleration of the movement's growth.[48] The next May Day demonstration in 2008 attracted more than 200 people to protest in Jakarta, directing their action against corporate and political buildings in the city. The procession ended after clashes with police saw the arrest of many of the protest's participants. Although this repression brought a brief halt to the movement's growth, anarchist activists continued their agitation, so that by 2010 there were anarchists groups in Java, Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi and Bali.[48]

In 2011, a series of attacks against corporate buildings and ATMs in Sulawesi, Java and Sumatra were claimed by an Indonesian section of the Informal Anarchist Federation, bringing the tactics of insurrectionary anarchism to the country. The cell condemned peaceful protest, instead inciting direct action, often in the form of property destruction. Inspired by the actions, two anarchists Billy Augustian and Reyhard Rumbayan attacked an ATM in Yogyakarta, but were both quickly arrested after dropping incriminating evidence near the scene. Other insurrectionary anarchists of the "Long Live Luciano Tortuga" Cell in Sulawesi responded to their imprisonment with a series of attacks, including incendiary attacks on power stations and luxury cars. Further attacks from other FAI cells around Indonesia followed.[50]

The continuation of May Day events into the 2010s brought about a growth of interest in anarcho-syndicalism, leading to the establishment of the Workers' Power Syndicate in Surabaya, which went on to assist factory workers during industrial disputes with their employers.[51] This renewal of interest in trade unionism and syndicalism culminated on 3 October 2012, with the country's first general strike in 50 years.[52] In 2016, the Anarcho-Syndicalist Worker's Fraternity (Indonesian: Persaudaraan Pekerja Anarko Sindikalis, PPAS) was established and affiliated to the IWA-AIT, supported by the Australian Anarcho-Syndicalist Federation. It organizes according to the principles of decentralization, equality, direct action, internationalism, solidarity, mutual cooperation, independence and the rejection of capitalism and the state.[53] It participated in the continuing May Day demonstrations, as well as workers' protests for higher wages, growing to have branches in Jakarta and Surabaya. The PPAS also organized the Independent Union of Taxi Drivers (KUMAN), uniting over 500 drivers around Indonesia and entering into a strike against Uber for higher wages and improved working conditions.[54] In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the PPAS made demands and organized actions in order to protect workers from the effects of the virus.[55]

In 2020, the government of Indonesia initiated a crackdown on anarchist activity, during which social media accounts were hacked, anarchist activists were arrested, books were seized, detainees were isolated. Police claimed that anarchists were planning a campaign of mass looting[56][57] and forced a confession from a criminal in which he declared himself "the sole leader of the anarchists."[58] In what many Indonesian anarchists have described as a "witch hunt",[59][60] on 9 April, three anarchists from Tangerang were arrested for spraying graffiti that read "there's a crisis already, time to burn" and "fight or perish",[56][57] being charged with public provocation.[61] The detainees were tortured by the police and were put into isolation for a month, before their trial began on 15 June.[62] The Tangerang District Court found the defendants guilty on 28 September, sentencing two to 10 months in prison and the other to 8 months, in what the defense considered to be a dangerous precedent.[63] Anarchists were also reportedly among the active participants in the protests against the passage of the Omnibus Law on Job Creation, during which militants set fire to police stations, vandalized property and clashed with police on barricades in a number of Indonesian cities.[64] In a press conference, police announced they were investigating 6 protestors who they claimed were affiliated with the anarchist movement.[65]

See also edit

References edit

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  65. ^ "New Crackdown on Anarchists Following Anti-Omnibus Law Protests". Anarchists Worldwide. West Java. 15 August 2020. Retrieved 22 July 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Estrelita, Gloria Truly; Donaghey, Jim; Facal, Gabriel (December 19, 2022). "A Brief History of Anarchism in Indonesia". Anarchist Studies. Retrieved December 26, 2022.

External links edit

  • PPAS website
  • Indonesia section - The Anarchist Library
  • Indonesia section - Libcom.org

anarchism, indonesia, roots, anti, colonial, struggle, against, dutch, empire, became, organized, movement, behest, chinese, anarchist, immigrants, played, part, development, workers, movement, country, anarchist, movement, suppressed, first, japanese, occupat. Anarchism in Indonesia has its roots in the anti colonial struggle against the Dutch Empire It became an organized movement at the behest of Chinese anarchist immigrants who played a key part in the development of the workers movement in the country The anarchist movement was suppressed first by the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies then by the successive regimes of Sukarno and Suharto before finally re emerging in the 1990s Anarchist Movement in Jakarta Contents 1 History 1 1 Dutch East Indies 1 1 1 The organized anarchist movement 1 1 2 The League against Imperialism 1 2 Japanese occupation 1 3 The Indonesian National Revolution 1 4 The SOBSI and Guided Democracy 1 5 Contemporary Indonesia 2 See also 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksHistory editDutch East Indies edit nbsp Ernest Douwes Dekker an early leader of the Indonesian anti colonialist movement and one of the country s first anarchists The first evidence of anarchism in the Dutch East Indies was present in the anti colonial writings of Eduard Douwes Dekker who denounced the Dutch colonial administration over Indonesia raising public awareness of the brutality inflicted against the Indonesian people His works including the well known satirical novel Max Havelaar were particularly influential among early Dutch anarchist circles 1 His grandnephew Ernest Douwes Dekker became a leading figure in the Indonesian anti colonialist movement during the early 20th century Ernest established contact with other radical anti colonial activists including the Indian anarchists Shyamji Krishna Varma and Har Dayal whose work was published in Dekker s publication Het Tijdschrift Dekker aligned himself against parliamentarism due to the suppression of workers rights that was carried out systematically by European parliaments He also advocated for both violent and non violent means of resisting colonialism which he believed was a moral duty and was sympathetic to the revolutionary strategy of syndicalism as opposed to reformism 2 Dekker was widely considered to be an anarchist himself and was the first native Indonesian to be known as such 3 He later went on to found the Indische Party one of the first political organizations established during the Indonesian National Awakening The organized anarchist movement edit Dutch Christian anarchists including Dirk Lodewijk Willem van Mierop conducted propaganda work in the Dutch East Indies publishing the periodical Levenskracht which advocated for non violence natural living and vegetarianism While agitating in the Dutch East Indies van Mierop even established a local branch of the Union of Religious Anarcho Communists 4 Chinese anarchists also conducted propaganda work there with Zhang Ji traveling to Java in 1907 where he translated a book on the history of Chinese resistance to Dutch Colonial rule 5 From 1909 Chinese reading houses began to open around Indonesia being a means of political education and organization for those resisting both Dutch colonial and Chinese imperial rule 6 After the 1911 Revolution overthrew the Qing dynasty Chinese anarchists remaining in Indonesia channeled their efforts into the labour movement organizing the country s first workers organizations in Makassar Batavia Surabaya and Kupang 7 Anarchist cells began to arise between 1914 and 1916 distributing Liu Shifu s newspaper Minsheng among the populace 8 Indonesian trade unions also began to emerge around that time many of them influenced by Marxism They were particularly active in organizing within the ranks of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army establishing a soldiers and sailors union that coordinated resistance during World War I On 7 May 1916 anarchist sailors in Surabaya organized a wildcat strike without the union s approval against their poor living and working conditions coming into direct conflict with the military police In the subsequent repression 5 people were injured 47 sailors were dismissed and one of the principle organizers was imprisoned for 8 months 9 The union leadership criticized the local branch for its lack of opposition to the strike 10 while the SDAP leadership declared it necessary to combat the anarchist elements within the union 11 and the army s high command called for unions to be separated from the armed forces entirely 12 After the war ended in 1918 anarchist groups began to grow larger publishing newspapers with a broad reach throughout the country Liu Shixin formed the Society of Truth group to distribute anarchist propaganda throughout the archipelago 13 publishing the Soematra Po 14 6 in Medan 15 but eventually Liu s activity came to the attention of the police who arrested the group in March 1919 16 labelling Liu and his comrades Bushiwei 17 Liu Shixin was subsequently deported to China for his role in propagating anarcho communist propaganda 15 In April 1919 the Workers Union was established by anarchists in Surabaya growing to include branches in other cities 18 The Union published the anarcho communist publication Zhenli Bao in Semarang edited by Bai Binzhou and Wang Yuting 19 In September 1919 Binzhou and Yuting were both arrested and deported to Hong Kong 19 Throughout the 1920s anarchist organizations organized plantation workers with attacks against Dutch administrators coming alongside 20 causing many problems for the Dutch authorities which carried out extensive searches and property seizures confiscating any documents they found 18 Anarchists organized strikes against the Deli Railway Company reaching their peak in September 1920 when over 15 000 railway workers joined the strike for an increased salary 21 When some strikers called for reprisals against Dutch officials 22 the armed forces were brought in to break the strike and cannons were aimed at a local workers assembly resulting in the arrest of hundreds of workers 23 The Dutch authorities exiled Zhang Shimei one of the main organizers of the strike to New Guinea later deporting him to Singapore 22 Although syndicalist unions continued to operate into the late 1920s the Chinese anarchist movement in Indonesia was largely suppressed by 1929 24 The League against Imperialism edit nbsp Leaders of Perhimpoenan Indonesia Left to right Gunawan Mangunkusumo Mohammad Hatta Iwa Kusumasumantri Sastro Mulyono and R M Sartono nbsp Sutan Sjahrir the first Prime Minister of Indonesia and a resistance leader during the Japanese occupation During his studies in the Netherlands he became influenced by anarchism though later moved towards democratic socialism Indonesian students that were studying in the Netherlands under the banner of Perhimpoenan Indonesia formed contact with local left wing groups including the Dutch anarchist movement They formed the Indonesian section of the League against Imperialism where they met with anarchist anti militarists 25 A few students took an interest in anarchism including Sutan Sjahrir who had moved to the far left after a short stay at an anarchist commune although his ideology eventually evolved into democratic socialism later founding the Socialist Party of Indonesia 26 However Indonesians were unable to find common ground with Dutch anarchists whose anti nationalism aligned them against the Indonesian desire for independence At the 1927 Brussels Conference attended by the Indonesians Mohammad Hatta and Achmad Soebardjo 25 the anarcho syndicalist Arthur Lehning warned colonized people against the creation of new states in the anti imperialist struggle 27 Similarly at the 1929 Frankfurt Conference attended by Hatta the anarchist Bart de Ligt claimed that the construction of independent nation states was in the interests of the colonized countries ruling classes who merely wished to continue their rule independently of their colonial authorities advising instead that anti colonialism should be bound together with anti nationalism and anti militarism 28 The Frankfurt conference was also marred by a bitter division between European communists who had taken up the party line against social fascism after the 6th World Congress of the Communist International and the national liberationists including Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohammad Hatta who were actively excluded from the League by the communists The League eventually collapsed in the 1930s in part due to its internal divisions Japanese occupation edit The Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies brought with it a fierce repression of the labour movement left wing groups and the Indonesian national liberation struggle The Japanese Empire brought millions of Indonesian workers into a system of forced labor resulting in the deaths of approximately 4 million people during the occupation period The Indonesian socialist activists Sutan Sjahrir and Amir Sjarifuddin Harahap led an underground resistance to Japanese Imperial rule in Java aided by Chinese Ambonese and Minahasan resistance groups Sjarifuddin was arrested by the occupation forces in 1943 but he escaped execution due to the intervention of Sukarno who was actively collaborating with the Japanese Empire 29 When the Pacific War reached a turning point in 1944 the Japanese Empire began to seriously consider the prospect of Indonesian independence encouraging Indonesian nationalism and laying the groundwork for the liberation struggle against the Dutch Colonial Empire 30 31 The Indonesian National Revolution edit nbsp A demonstration by the Central All Indonesian Workers Organization Two days after the surrender of Japan Sukarno read out the proclamation of Indonesian Independence marking the beginning of the Indonesian National Revolution By this time the Indonesian anarchist movement had largely disappeared after decades of repression by imperial powers The newly established Republic of Indonesia with Sukarno acting as the country s first President and Sutan Sjahrir as its first Prime Minister set about repressing the nascent anarcho syndicalist movement Javanese workers had spontaneously expropriated and established workers control over the country s railways plantations and factories Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta responded by openly attacking the syndicalist character of the new workers movement 32 actively repressing them and bringing their enterprises under state control by the spring of 1946 33 The SOBSI and Guided Democracy edit The workers movement was subsequently reorganized largely into the Central All Indonesian Workers Organization SOBSI which called for the unity of workers and the establishment of a socialist society 34 After the suppression of the Madiun Affair many of SOBSI s leaders went underground into exile were imprisoned or killed 35 From May 1948 the SOBSI was reorganized and brought under the influence of the Communist Party Between 1950 and 1952 the SOBSI attempted to mobilize militant actions for higher wages increased social security and better workplace conditions 36 launching a nationwide strike that forced the government to increase the minimum wage block plans for layoffs and institute a non contributory pension scheme 37 However this was followed by the Natsir Cabinet outlawing strikes in essential industries forcing the SOBSI to turn to sabotage 38 After another government crackdown the Communist Party forced the SOBSI to moderate its policies taking a conciliatory line towards the capitalist class 39 With the introduction of Guided Democracy the SOBSI became the institutionalized representative of labor within the Sukarno government 40 It oversaw nationalization efforts 41 continuing the running of companies under state control 42 These nationalizations drove SOBSI into a conflict with the armed forces fighting for influence over the state controlled companies 43 44 This conflict culminated in the Indonesian mass killings of 1965 66 in which the army massacred left wing activists feminists and ethnic and religious minorities killing hundreds of thousands The military leader Suharto rose to power instituting a right wing military dictatorship known as the New Order The SOBSI was subsequently declared illegal by the new regime and many of its members and leaders were killed 45 Contemporary Indonesia edit nbsp Rioters burning looted goods on the streets of Jakarta during the May 1998 riots that led to the fall of Suharto The anarchist movement re emerged in the 1990s as part of the Indonesian punk subculture the largest punk movement in Southeast Asia Young people had created their own underground sub culture of punk which over time developed into a style that was completely different from the original movement 46 47 Part of the punk movement began to move towards anti fascist and anti authoritarian ideology in opposition to the New Order dictatorship of Suharto In 1998 anarchist collectives began to form after the fall of Suharto organizing discussions publishing texts in the Indonesian language and forming non hierarchical groups with which to conduct direct action Some of the first groups of note were Food Not Bombs collectives formed to distribute food to those in need 48 Anti fascist groups began to form organizing solidarity actions with striking workers In December 1999 anti fascist collectives and individuals from all around the country converged on Yogyakarta to establish the nationwide Antifascist Network of Nusantar 49 For most of the early 2000s the Indonesian anarchist movement remained dispersed and disconnected with many of its groups being small and short lived This began to change with the organization of the 2007 May Day demonstrations when various groups from around the country unified to form the Anti authoritarian Network gathering over 100 people in a May Day action marking the anarchist movement s first large scale appearance on the public stage and igniting an acceleration of the movement s growth 48 The next May Day demonstration in 2008 attracted more than 200 people to protest in Jakarta directing their action against corporate and political buildings in the city The procession ended after clashes with police saw the arrest of many of the protest s participants Although this repression brought a brief halt to the movement s growth anarchist activists continued their agitation so that by 2010 there were anarchists groups in Java Sumatra Kalimantan Sulawesi and Bali 48 In 2011 a series of attacks against corporate buildings and ATMs in Sulawesi Java and Sumatra were claimed by an Indonesian section of the Informal Anarchist Federation bringing the tactics of insurrectionary anarchism to the country The cell condemned peaceful protest instead inciting direct action often in the form of property destruction Inspired by the actions two anarchists Billy Augustian and Reyhard Rumbayan attacked an ATM in Yogyakarta but were both quickly arrested after dropping incriminating evidence near the scene Other insurrectionary anarchists of the Long Live Luciano Tortuga Cell in Sulawesi responded to their imprisonment with a series of attacks including incendiary attacks on power stations and luxury cars Further attacks from other FAI cells around Indonesia followed 50 The continuation of May Day events into the 2010s brought about a growth of interest in anarcho syndicalism leading to the establishment of the Workers Power Syndicate in Surabaya which went on to assist factory workers during industrial disputes with their employers 51 This renewal of interest in trade unionism and syndicalism culminated on 3 October 2012 with the country s first general strike in 50 years 52 In 2016 the Anarcho Syndicalist Worker s Fraternity Indonesian Persaudaraan Pekerja Anarko Sindikalis PPAS was established and affiliated to the IWA AIT supported by the Australian Anarcho Syndicalist Federation It organizes according to the principles of decentralization equality direct action internationalism solidarity mutual cooperation independence and the rejection of capitalism and the state 53 It participated in the continuing May Day demonstrations as well as workers protests for higher wages growing to have branches in Jakarta and Surabaya The PPAS also organized the Independent Union of Taxi Drivers KUMAN uniting over 500 drivers around Indonesia and entering into a strike against Uber for higher wages and improved working conditions 54 In response to the COVID 19 pandemic the PPAS made demands and organized actions in order to protect workers from the effects of the virus 55 In 2020 the government of Indonesia initiated a crackdown on anarchist activity during which social media accounts were hacked anarchist activists were arrested books were seized detainees were isolated Police claimed that anarchists were planning a campaign of mass looting 56 57 and forced a confession from a criminal in which he declared himself the sole leader of the anarchists 58 In what many Indonesian anarchists have described as a witch hunt 59 60 on 9 April three anarchists from Tangerang were arrested for spraying graffiti that read there s a crisis already time to burn and fight or perish 56 57 being charged with public provocation 61 The detainees were tortured by the police and were put into isolation for a month before their trial began on 15 June 62 The Tangerang District Court found the defendants guilty on 28 September sentencing two to 10 months in prison and the other to 8 months in what the defense considered to be a dangerous precedent 63 Anarchists were also reportedly among the active participants in the protests against the passage of the Omnibus Law on Job Creation during which militants set fire to police stations vandalized property and clashed with police on barricades in a number of Indonesian cities 64 In a press conference police announced they were investigating 6 protestors who they claimed were affiliated with the anarchist movement 65 See also editAnarchism in China Anarchism in East Timor Anarchism in the Netherlands Anarchism in SingaporeReferences edit Welcker Johanna M 1992 Eduard Douwes Dekker in Dutch No 5 Biografisch Woordenboek van het Socialisme en de Arbeiderbeweging in Nederland pp 45 58 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 23 September 2002 van Dijk C 2007 The Netherlands Indies and the Great War 1914 1918 Leiden KITLV Press pp 47 50 ISBN 9789067183086 OCLC 182732078 Tichelman F 1985 Socialisme in Indonesia in Dutch Vol 1 De Indische Social Democratische Vereeniging 1897 1917 Dordrecht Dordrecht Foris Publications p 187 ISBN 9789067650717 OCLC 953665212 Hoekman Piet 1995 Dirk Lodewijk Willem van Mierop No 6 Biografisch Woordenboek van het Socialisme en de Arbeiderbeweging in Nederland pp 142 147 Karl Rebecca E 2002 Staging the World Chinese Nationalism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Asia Pacific Culture Politics and Society Duke University Press p 168 ISBN 9780822383529 OCLC 1235889073 a b Claver Alexander 2014 Dutch Commerce and Chinese Merchants in Java Colonial Relationships in Trade and Finance 1800 1942 Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal Land en Volkenkunde Leiden Brill Publishers pp 197 198 ISBN 9789004263239 OCLC 1162616054 Tichelman F 1985 Socialisme in Indonesia in Dutch Vol 1 De Indische Social Democratische Vereeniging 1897 1917 Dordrecht Dordrecht Foris Publications p 41 ISBN 9789067650717 OCLC 953665212 南洋無政府主義運動之概況 in Chinese Vol 2 no 1 Minsheng 25 January 1927 Archived from the original on 13 April 2012 Blom Ron Stelling Theunis 2004 Niet voor God en niet voor Vaderland Linkse soldaten matrozen en hun organisaties tijdens de mobilisatie van 14 18 Thesis in Dutch Amsterdam University of Amsterdam pp 741 743 ISBN 9059114671 OCLC 470386540 Blom Ron Stelling Theunis 2004 Niet voor God en niet voor Vaderland Linkse soldaten matrozen en hun organisaties tijdens de mobilisatie van 14 18 Thesis in Dutch Amsterdam University of Amsterdam pp 745 746 ISBN 9059114671 OCLC 470386540 Blom Ron Stelling Theunis 2004 Niet voor God en niet voor Vaderland Linkse soldaten matrozen en hun organisaties tijdens de mobilisatie van 14 18 Thesis in Dutch Amsterdam University of Amsterdam pp 780 782 ISBN 9059114671 OCLC 470386540 Blom Ron Stelling Theunis 2004 Niet voor God en niet voor Vaderland Linkse soldaten matrozen en hun organisaties tijdens de mobilisatie van 14 18 Thesis in Dutch Amsterdam University of Amsterdam p 809 ISBN 9059114671 OCLC 470386540 Gandini Jean Jacques 1986 Aux sources de la revolution chinoise les anarchistes in French Paris Distribution diffusion Alternative p 170 ISBN 9782905691088 OCLC 16226969 Various 1990 Huaqiao huaren baike quanshu xinwen chuban juan Vol 6 Beijing p 474 ISBN 7801202910 OCLC 928679244 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Yong C F 1997 The origins of Malayan communism Singapore Strategic Information and Research Development Centre p 15 ISBN 9789672165606 OCLC 1112676175 Bourne Kenneth Watt Donald Cameron Trotter Ann 1996 British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print Part II From the First to the Second World War Series E Asia 1914 1939 Vol 23 China January 1919 December 1920 Bethesda Maryland University Publications of America p 289 OCLC 769870825 Wuzhengfu zhui sixian ziliao xuan Vol 2 Beijing 1984 p 935 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Bourne Kenneth Watt Donald Cameron Trotter Ann 1994 Report respecting Bolshevism and Chinese Communism and Anarchism in the Far East British documents on foreign affairs reports and papers from the Foreign Office confidential print Part II From the First to the Second World War Series E Asia 1914 1939 Vol 26 October 1921 February 1922 Bethesda Maryland University Publications of America pp 72 74 OCLC 769893159 a b Yong C F 1997 The origins of Malayan communism Singapore Strategic Information and Research Development Centre p 19 ISBN 9789672165606 OCLC 1112676175 Stoler Ann Laura 1995 Capitalism and Confrontation in Sumatra s Plantation Belt 1870 1979 2 ed Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 62 63 ISBN 9780472082193 OCLC 1046338477 Yugo Vostochnaya Aziya ocherki ekonomiki i istorii Moscow 1958 p 157 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Yong C F 1997 The origins of Malayan communism Singapore Strategic Information and Research Development Centre p 17 ISBN 9789672165606 OCLC 1112676175 Zakaznikova Evgenija Petrovna 1971 Rabochiy klass i nacionalno osvoboditel noye dvizheniye v Indonezii Moscow Nauka p 91 OCLC 943698312 Staburova Elena J 1977 Anarhizm i rabocheye dvizheniye v Kitaye v nachale XX v In Lev Petrovich Deli u sin ed Kitaj gosudarstvo i obshestvo Thesis in Russian Moscow Nauka p 213 OCLC 562345712 a b Stutje Klaas 2013 Indonesian Identities Abroad International Engagement of Colonial Students in the Netherlands 1908 1931 BMGN Low Countries Historical Review 128 1 Royal Netherlands Historical Society 151 172 doi 10 18352 bmgn lchr 8359 ISSN 0165 0505 OCLC 6899857194 Mrazek Rudolf 1994 Sjahrir Politics and exile in Indonesia Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 59 61 ISBN 9781501718816 OCLC 1164781033 Muller Lehning Arthur April 1929 Der soziale und nationale Befreiungskampf Indonesiens in German No 6 Die Internationale pp 15 17 De Ligt Bart October 1929 Die wesentliche Einheit des Kampfes gegen soziale Unterdruckung mit dem Kampfe gegen Militarismus und Krieg in German No 12 Die Internationale pp 1 6 Reid Anthony 1973 The Indonesian National Revolution 1945 1950 Melbourne Longman Pty p 12 ISBN 978 0 582 71046 7 Kusuma A B Elson R E 2011 A note on the sources for the 1945 constitutional debates in Indonesia PDF Bijdragen tot de Taal Land en Volkenkunde 167 2 3 196 209 doi 10 1163 22134379 90003589 ISSN 0006 2294 archived PDF from the original on 9 February 2021 retrieved 7 February 2021 Vickers Adrain 2005 A History Modern of Indonesia Cambridge p 85 ISBN 978 0 521 54262 3 van Klinken Gerry 2003 Minorities Modernity and the Emerging Nation Christians in Indonesia a Biographical Approach Verhandelingen van het Instituut voor Taal Land en Volkenkunde Leiden KITLV Press p 193 ISBN 9789067181518 OCLC 474220066 Suryomenggolo Jafar 2011 Worker s Control in Java Indonesia 1945 1946 In Immanuel Ness ed Ours to Master and to Own Workers Control from the Commune to the Present Chicago Haymarket Books pp 210 222 ISBN 9781608461707 OCLC 746746703 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 143 144 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 21 113 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 141 142 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 50 148 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 49 341 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press pp 141 146 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 La Botz Dan 2001 Made in Indonesia Indonesian Workers Since Suharto Cambridge South End Press p 104 ISBN 9780896086425 OCLC 422002504 La Botz Dan 2001 Made in Indonesia Indonesian Workers Since Suharto Cambridge South End Press p 109 ISBN 9780896086425 OCLC 422002504 Hindley Donald 1964 The Communist Party of Indonesia 1951 1963 Berkeley University of California Press p 145 ISBN 9780520321663 OCLC 1198929073 Bourchier David Hadiz Vedi R 2003 Indonesian Politics and Society A Reader London RoutledgeCurzon p 5 ISBN 9780203987728 OCLC 1048427994 Hefner Robert W 2001 The Politics of Multiculturalism Pluralism and Citizenship in Malaysia Singapore and Indonesia Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 272 ISBN 9780824824440 OCLC 255106977 Hefner Robert W 2001 The Politics of Multiculturalism Pluralism and Citizenship in Malaysia Singapore and Indonesia Honolulu University of Hawaii Press p 270 ISBN 9780824824440 OCLC 255106977 Wallach Jeremy 2008 Living the Punk Lifestyle in Jakarta Ethnomusicology 52 1 98 116 doi 10 2307 20174568 ISSN 0014 1836 JSTOR 20174568 OCLC 6733342299 S2CID 194542403 Dunn Kevin 2013 One Punk s Travel Guide to Indonesia Razorcake No 76 ISSN 1533 7464 OCLC 45867013 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a b c Kalicha Sebastian 2010 Interview mit AnarchistInnen aus Indonesien Von Jakarta bis Johannesburg Anarchismus weltweit Munster pp 238 247 ISBN 9783897715066 OCLC 919085683 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Front Anti Fascist 2000 Crackdown in Indonesia Black Flag No 219 Bandung OCLC 181645375 Berger Dominic 12 October 2013 Indonesia s new anarchists No 113 Inside Indonesia Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Workers Power Syndicate 29 September 2012 Indonesian syndicalists fight for justice at PT Garmindo Jaya KNH Bogor libcom org Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Sprague Ted 2 October 2012 Indonesia First general strike in 50 years In Defence of Marxism International Marxist Tendency Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Anarcho Syndicalist Worker s Fraternity 2018 Persaudaraan Pekerja Anarko Sindikalis Jakarta Radical Guide Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Uber drivers strike in Indonesia libcom org 23 August 2017 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Anarcho Syndicalist Worker s Fraternity 27 March 2020 Sistem ini yang Membuat Kita Sakit in Indonesian IWA AIT Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a b Soeriaatmadja Wahyudi 12 April 2020 Coronavirus Police arrest five Indonesians attempting to instigate looting The Straits Times Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 a b Oktavianti Tri Indah 14 April 2020 Books seized five arrested as police claim anarcho syndicalists plan mass looting in Java The Jakarta Post Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Safehouse Infoshop Local Autonomous Network 6 May 2020 In Solidarity With Comrades Imprisoned in Malang and Tangerang Indonesia Bandilang Itim Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 The Individualist Circle 12 April 2020 About the Indonesian Anarchist Witch Hunt and the Normal Activist Mentality Anarchists Worldwide Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Circle of Marvelous Individualists 23 April 2020 The Continual Anarchist Witch Hunt amp the Scenario of State Incompetence Anarchists Worldwide Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Anti Feminist Feminist Club 29 June 2020 Solidarity with Anarchist Prisoners in Tangerang and Bekasi in Indonesia Bandilang Itim Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Anti authoritarian Federation 25 July 2020 Update on Anti Authoritarian Prisoners Involved in Vandalism Tangerang and Bekasi Indonesia Bandilang Itim Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Anti authoritarian Federation 13 October 2020 The Tangerang Vandalism Case The Court Decides Guilt Despite Torture and Inappropriate Application of Articles Bandilang Itim Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Police Posts Torched in Uprising against Omnibus Law in Indonesia Abolition Media Worldwide 10 October 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2021 New Crackdown on Anarchists Following Anti Omnibus Law Protests Anarchists Worldwide West Java 15 August 2020 Retrieved 22 July 2021 Further reading editEstrelita Gloria Truly Donaghey Jim Facal Gabriel December 19 2022 A Brief History of Anarchism in Indonesia Anarchist Studies Retrieved December 26 2022 External links editPPAS website Indonesia section The Anarchist Library Indonesia section Libcom org Portals nbsp Anarchism nbsp Indonesia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anarchism in Indonesia amp oldid 1209983883, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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