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Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies

The Empire of Japan occupied the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) during World War II from March 1942 until after the end of the war in September 1945. It was one of the most crucial and important periods in modern Indonesian history.

Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies
蘭領東印度 (Japanese)
Pendudukan Jepang di Hindia-Belanda (Indonesian)
1942–1945
Motto: Hakkō ichiu
(八紘一宇)
Anthem: Kimigayo

Indonesia Raya (unofficial)
The former Dutch East Indies (dark red) within the Empire of Japan (light red) at its furthest extent
StatusMilitary occupation
by the Empire of Japan
CapitalDjakarta
Common languagesJapanese, Indonesian
GovernmentMilitary occupation
Emperor 
• 1942–1945
Hirohito
Historical eraWorld War II
8 March 1942
1941–1945
27 February 1942
1 March 1942
• Pontianak incidents (Pontianak massacres)
1943–1944
14 February 1945
15 August 1945
17 August 1945
CurrencyNetherlands Indian roepiah
Today part ofIndonesia
East Timor

In May 1940, Germany occupied the Netherlands, and martial law was declared in the Dutch East Indies. Following the failure of negotiations between the Dutch authorities and the Japanese, Japanese assets in the archipelago were frozen. The Dutch declared war on Japan following the 7 December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. The Japanese invasion of the Dutch East Indies began on 10 January 1942, and the Imperial Japanese Army overran the entire colony in less than three months. The Dutch surrendered on 8 March. [1] Initially, most Indonesians welcomed the Japanese as liberators from their Dutch colonial masters. The sentiment changed, however, as between 4 and 10 million Indonesians were recruited as forced labourers (romusha) on economic development and defense projects in Java. Between 200,000 and 500,000 were sent away from Java to the outer islands, and as far as Burma and Siam. Of those taken off Java, not more than 70,000 survived the war.[2] Four million people died in the Dutch East Indies as a result of famine and forced labour during the Japanese occupation, including 30,000 European civilian internee deaths.[3]

In 1944–1945, Allied troops largely bypassed the Dutch East Indies and did not fight their way into the most populous parts such as Java and Sumatra. As such, most of the Dutch East Indies was still under occupation at the time of Japan's surrender in August 1945.

The invasion and occupation was the first serious challenge to Dutch colonial rule and brought about changes so extensive the subsequent Indonesian National Revolution became possible.[4] Unlike the Dutch, the Japanese facilitated the politicisation of Indonesians down to the village level.[citation needed] The Japanese educated, trained and armed many young Indonesians and gave their nationalist leaders a political voice.[citation needed] Thus, through both the destruction of the Dutch colonial regime and the facilitation of Indonesian nationalism, the Japanese occupation created the conditions for the proclamation of Indonesian independence within days of the Japanese surrender in the Pacific.[citation needed] However, the Netherlands sought to reclaim the Indies, and a bitter five-year diplomatic, military and social struggle ensued, resulting in the Netherlands recognising Indonesian sovereignty in December 1949.

Background edit

The Dutch East India Company and Japanese samurai they hired as mercenaries committed genocide against Muslim Bandanese on the Banda islands, quartering in their mosques, humiliating their women and beheading their orang kaya in the conquest of the Banda Islands.[5][6][7][8][9]

After the Meiji Restoration of 1868, the Nanshin-ron policy came to be advanced with the southern regions as a focus for trade and emigration.[10] During the early Meiji period, Japan derived economic benefits from Japanese emigrants to Southeast Asia, among which there were prostitutes (Karayuki-san)[11] who worked in brothels in the Dutch East Indies[12] and other western colonies in Southeast Asia.

Lowland Chinese in 1904 sold Beaumont and Winchester rifles in Sumatra to Bataks who were attacking and fighting the Dutch.[13][14]

The Chinese in Indonesia had a hostile relationship with Dutch colonialists from the Java War (1741–1743) to the Kongsi Wars like the Expedition to the West Coast of Borneo, Expedition against the Chinese in Montrado and the Mandor rebellion.

Until 1942, what is now Indonesia was a colony of the Netherlands and was known as the Dutch East Indies. In 1929, during the Indonesian National Awakening, Indonesian nationalist leaders Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta (later founding president and vice president, respectively), foresaw a Pacific War and that a Japanese advance on the Dutch East Indies might be advantageous for the independence cause.[15]

 
Map prepared by the Japanese during World War II, depicting Java, the most populous island in the Dutch East Indies

The Japanese spread the word that they were the "Light of Asia". Japan was the only Asian nation that had successfully transformed itself into a modern technological society at the end of the 19th century, and it remained independent when most Asian countries had been under European or American power, and had beaten a European power, Russia, in war.[16] Following its military campaign in China, Japan turned its attention to Southeast Asia, advocating to other Asians a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, which they described as a type of trade zone under Japanese leadership. The Japanese had gradually spread their influence through Asia in the first half of the 20th century and during the 1920s and 1930s had established business links in the Indies. These ranged from small town barbers, photographic studios and salesmen, to large department stores and firms such as Suzuki and Mitsubishi becoming involved in the sugar trade.[17]

The Japanese population in Indonesia peaked in 1931 with 6,949 residents before starting a gradual decrease, largely as a result of economic tensions between Japan and the Netherlands Indies government.[18] Many Japanese had been sent by their government to establish links with Indonesian nationalists, particularly with Muslim parties, while Indonesian nationalists were sponsored to visit Japan. Such encouragement of Indonesian nationalism was part of a broader Japanese plan for an "Asia for the Asians".[19] While most Indonesians were hopeful for the Japanese promise of an end to the Dutch racially based system, Chinese Indonesians, who enjoyed a privileged position under Dutch rule, were less optimistic.[19] Japanese aggression in Manchuria and China in the late 1930s caused anxiety amongst the Chinese in Indonesia who set up funds to support the anti-Japanese effort. Dutch intelligence services also monitored Japanese living in Indonesia.[19]

In November 1941, Madjlis Rakjat Indonesia, an Indonesian organisation of religious, political and trade union groups, submitted a memorandum to the Dutch East Indies Government requesting the mobilisation of the Indonesian people in the face of the war threat. The memorandum was rejected because the Government did not consider the Madjlis Rakyat Indonesia to be representative of the people. Less than four months later, the Japanese had occupied the archipelago.[20]

Invasion edit

 
Map of the Japanese administrative areas after April 1943

On 8 December 1941, the Dutch government-in-exile declared war on Japan.[21] In January 1942 the American-British-Dutch-Australian Command was formed to co-ordinate Allied forces in Southeast Asia, under the command of General Archibald Wavell.[22] In the weeks leading up to the invasion, senior Dutch government officials went into exile, taking political prisoners, family, and personal staff to Australia. Before the arrival of Japanese troops, there were conflicts between rival Indonesian groups where people were killed, vanished or went into hiding. Chinese- and Dutch-owned properties were ransacked and destroyed.[23]

The invasion in early 1942 was swift and complete. By January 1942, parts of Sulawesi and Kalimantan were under Japanese control. By February, the Japanese had landed on Sumatra where they had encouraged the Acehnese to rebel against the Dutch.[24] On 19 February, having already taken Ambon, the Japanese Eastern Task Force landed in Timor, dropping a special parachute unit into West Timor near Kupang, and landing in the Dili area of Portuguese Timor to drive out the Allied forces which had invaded in December.[25]

On 27 February, the Allied navy's last effort to contain Japan was swept aside by their defeat in the Battle of the Java Sea.[24] From 28 February to 1 March 1942, Japanese troops landed on four places along the northern coast of Java almost undisturbed.[26] The fiercest fighting had been in invasion points in Ambon, Timor, Kalimantan, and on the Java Sea. In places where there were no Dutch troops, such as Bali, there was no fighting.[27] On 8 March, Japanese soldiers seized the NIROM radio station in Batavia and ordered broadcasts to continue. The radio employees defiantly played Het Wilhelmus which resulted in the Japanese executing 3 of them.[28] On 9 March, the Dutch commander surrendered along with Governor General Jonkheer A.W.L. Tjarda van Starkenborgh Stachouwer.[24]

The Japanese occupation was initially greeted with optimistic enthusiasm by Indonesians who came to meet the Japanese army waving flags and shouting support such as "Japan is our older brother" and "banzai Dai Nippon".[29] As the Japanese advanced, rebellious Indonesians in virtually every part of the archipelago killed groups of Europeans (particularly the Dutch) and informed the Japanese reliably on the whereabouts of larger groups.[30] As famed Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer noted: "With the arrival of the Japanese just about everyone was full of hope, except for those who had worked in the service of the Dutch.[31]

Japanese administration edit

Expecting that Dutch administrators would be kept by the Japanese to run the colony, most Dutch had refused to leave. Instead, they were sent to detention camps and Japanese or Indonesian replacements were installed in senior and technical positions.[32] Japanese troops took control of government infrastructure and services such as ports and postal services.[27] In addition to the 100,000 European (and some Chinese) civilians interned, 80,000 Dutch, British, Australian, and US Allied troops went to prisoner-of-war camps where the death rates were between 13 and 30 percent.[24] The Indonesian ruling class (composed of local officials and politicians who had formerly worked for the Dutch colonial government) co-operated with the Japanese military authorities, who in turn helped to keep the local political elites in power and employ them to supply newly arrived Japanese industrial concerns and businesses and the armed forces (chiefly auxiliary military and police units run by the Japanese military in the Dutch East Indies). Indonesian co-operation allowed the Japanese military government to focus on securing the large archipelago's waterways and skies and using its islands as defense posts against any Allied attacks (which were assumed to most likely come from Australia).[33]

 
Ching Nan Shrine in Malang, East Java. One out of 11 Shinto shrines built in Indonesia.[34]

The Japanese divided Indonesia into three separate regions; Sumatra (along with Malaya) was placed under the 25th Army, Java and Madura were under the 16th Army, while Borneo and eastern Indonesia were controlled by the 2nd South Fleet of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) based in Makassar. The 16th Army was headquartered in Jakarta and the 25th Army was based in Singapore until April 1943, when its command was narrowed to just Sumatra and the headquarters moved to Bukittinggi.[4][35]

In Java, the 16th Army had planned to manage Java as a single entity. However the army had not brought enough administration experts to set up a separate body. A large number of Japanese residents in Java, who could have advised the occupiers, were taken to Australia at the outbreak of war, while a group of civilian administrators were killed in the Battle of the Java Sea. Problems were compounded by the fact that very few Indonesians spoke Japanese. In August 1942 that the administration was formally separated from the army command. The military government (Japanese: 軍政, romanizedgunsei) was then headed by the 16th Army chief of staff (Japanese: 軍政官, romanizedgunseikan). His deputy headed the most important section of the administration, the Department of General Affairs (Japanese: 総務部, romanizedsōmubu), which acted as a secretariat and issued policies. There were three Gunseikan for Java during the occupation:[36][37][38]

Sumatra also had a Gunseikan. In the region controlled by the navy, the plan was to turn to area into a permanent colony administered by civilian Japanese bureaucrats, but still subordinate to the navy. Therefore, the IJN brought administrators with them. The chief civil administrator (Japanese: 総官, romanizedsōkan) reported directly to the commander of the Southwest Area Fleet. Under the Sōkan were three regional administrative departments based in Makassar, Banjarmasin, and Ambon.[39][40]

Treatment of the Indonesian population edit

Experience of the occupation varied considerably, depending upon location and social position. Many who lived in areas considered important to the war effort experienced torture, sex slavery, arbitrary arrest and execution, and other war crimes. Many thousands of people were taken away from Indonesia as forced labourers (romusha) for Japanese military projects, including the Burma-Siam and Saketi-Bayah railways, and suffered or died as a result of ill-treatment and starvation. Between 200,000 and 500,000 romusha recruited from Java were forced to work by the Japanese military.[3]

Tens of thousands of Indonesians starved, worked as slave labourers, or were forced from their homes. In the National Revolution that followed, tens, even hundreds, of thousands, would die in fighting against the Japanese, Allied forces, and other Indonesians, before independence was achieved.[41][4] A later United Nations report stated that 4,000,000 people died in Indonesia as a result of famine and forced labour during the Japanese occupation, including 30,000 European civilian internee deaths.[3] A Dutch government study describing how the Japanese military recruited women as prostitutes by force in Indonesia concluded that among the 200 to 300 European women working in the Japanese military brothels, "some sixty five were most certainly forced into prostitution."[42][43] Other young women (and their families), faced with various pressures in the internment camps or in wartime society, agreed to offers of work, the nature of which was frequently not explicitly stated.[44][45]

War crimes edit

The Japanese brought Indonesian Javanese girls to British Borneo as comfort women to be raped by Japanese officers at the Ridge road school and Basel Mission Church, and the Telecommunication Center Station (former rectory of the All Saints Church) in Kota Kinabalu as well as ones in Balikpapan and Beaufort. Japanese soldiers raped Indonesian women and Dutch women in the Netherlands East Indies. Many of the women were infected with STDs as a result.[46][47][48] Sukarno prostituted Indonesian girls from ethnic groups like Minangkabau to the Japanese.[49][50][51][52][53] The Japanese destroyed many documents related to their rape of Indonesian Javanese girls at the end of the war so the true extent of the mass rape is uncountable, but testimony witnesses records the names and accounts of Indonesian Javanese comfort women.[54]

Japanese in one instance tried to disguise the Javanese comfort girls they were raping as red cross nurses with red cross armbands when they surrendered to Australian soldiers in Kupang, Timor.[55][56][57][58][59][60]

In addition to disguising the Java girls with Red Cross armbands some Dutch girls were also brought to Kupang and native girls from Kupang were also kidnapped by the Japanese while the native men were forced into hard labour.[61]

Indian and Javanese captives in Biak were freed from Japanese control by Allied forces.[62]

Only 70,000 Javanese survived out of 260,000 Javanese forced to labour on the death railway between Burma and Thailand.[63][64]

In August 1945 the Japanese were getting reading to execute female European internees by shooting in the Dutch East Indies and their plans were only stopped by the atomic bomb with the plans and list of detainees already written down.[65]

Francis Stanley (Frank) Terry, an Australian sailor on a naval vessel participated in the repatriation of Indonesian Javanese comfort women from islands across Indonesia back to their home.[66][67][68]

The Dutch royal family and government seized the money from Japanese comfort women prostitution in the Dutch East Indies territory for itself instead of compensating the women.[69][70]

The Japanese forced Javanese women to work in brothels and Javanese men to become forced labour at airstrips in Labuan, Borneo. The Javanese men were worked to starvation, resembling skeletons, barely able to move and were sick with beri beri by the time they were freed in June 1945 by Australians.[71][72] The Japanese reserved a house as a brothel and officer's club on Fox Road in Labuan.[73]

On 28 August 1945 the British and Australians gave medical treatment to 300 Javanese and Malay male slaves of the Japanese who were malnourished and starving from forced labour.[74][75]

Many Indonesian comfort women were reluctant to talk about their experiences due to shame. A 10 year old Indonesian girl named Niyem from Karamangmojo in Yogyakarta was repeatedly raped for 2 months by Japanese soldiers along with other Indonesian girls in West Java. She didn't tell her parents what the Japanese did to her when she managed to flee.[76]

The Japanese killed 4 million Indonesians.[77] After the defeat of Japan, the Dutch generally did not care about Japanese rape of non-white, native Indonesian Muslim girls and most of the time they only charged Japanese war criminals for rape of white Dutch women.[78][79][80]

As the Dutch implemented a war of attrition and scorch earth, they forced Chinese on Java to flee inland and the Dutch destroyed all important assets including Chinese factories and property. Local Indonesians joined in on the Dutch violence against the Chinese looting Chinese property and trying to attack Chinese. However, when the Japanese troops landed and seized control of Java from the Dutch, to people's surprise, the Japanese forced the native Indonesians to stop looting and attacking Chinese and warned the Indonesians they would not tolerate anti-Chinese violence in Java. The Japanese viewed the Chinese in Java and their economic power specifically as important and vital to Japanese war effort so they did not physically harm the Chinese of Java with no execution or torture of Chinese taking place unlike in other places. There was no violent confrontation between Japanese and Chinese on Java, unlike in British Malaya. The Japanese also allowed Chinese of Java in the Federation of Overseas-Chinese Associations (Hua Chiao Tsung Hui) to form the Keibotai, their own armed Chinese defence corps for protection with Japanese military instructors training them how to shoot and use spears. The Chinese viewed this as important to defending themselves from local Indonesians. The majority of Chinese of Java did not die in the war. It was only after the war ended when Japanese control fell and then the native Indonesians again started attacks against the Chinese of Java when the Japanese were unable to protect them.[81]

In Java, the Japanese heavily recruited Javanese girls as comfort women and brought them to New Guinea, Malaysia, Thailand and other areas foreign to Indonesia besides using them in Java itself. The Japanese brought Javanese women as comfort women to Buru island, and Kalimantan. The Japanese recruited help from local collaborator police of all ethnicities to recruit Javanese girls, with one account accusing Chinese recruiters of tricking a Javanese regent into sending good Javanese girls into prostitution for the Japanese in May 1942. The Japanese also lied to the Javanese telling them that their girls would become waitresses and actresses when recruiting them.[82] The Japanese brought Javanese women as comfort women prostitutes to Kupang in Timor while in East Timor the Japanese took local women in Dili. In Bali, the Japanese sexually harassed Balinese women when they came and started forcing Balinese women into brothels for prostitution, with Balinese men and Chinese men used as recruiters for the Balinese women. All of the brothels in Bali were staffed by Balinese women.[83] In brothels in Kalimantan, native Indonesian women made up 80% of the prostitutes.[83] Javanese girls and local girls were used in a Japanese brothel in Ambon in Batu Gantung. European Dutch women were overrepresented in documents on Dutch East Indies comfort women which didn't reflect the actual reality because the Dutch did not care about native Indonesian women being victimised by Japan, refusing to prosecute cases against them since Indonesia was not a UN member at the time.[84] Javanese comfort women who were taken by Japanese to islands outside Java were treated differently depending on whether they stayed on those islands or returned to Java. Since Javanese society was sexually permissive and they kept it secret from other Javanese, the Javanese women who returned to Java fared better, but the Javanese women who stayed on the islands like Buru were treated harsher by their hosts since they locals in Buru were more patriarchal.[85] The Japanese murdered Christians and forced girls into prostitution in Timor and Sumba, desecrating sacred vessels and vestments in churches and using the churches as brothels. Javanese girls were brought as prostitutes by the Japanese to Flores and Buru.[86] Eurasians, Indians, Chinese, Dutch, Menadonese, Bataks, Bugis, Dayaks, Javanese, Arabs and Malays were arrested and massacred in the Mandor affair.[87]

 
Netherlands Indian Gulden – the Japanese occupation currency

Underground resistance edit

 
Indonesian nationalist Amir Sjarifuddin organized an underground resistance against the Japanese occupation.

Next to Sutan Sjahrir who led the student (Pemuda) underground, the only prominent opposition politician was leftist Amir Sjarifuddin who was given 25,000 guilders by the Dutch in early 1942 to organize an underground resistance through his Marxist and nationalist connections. The Japanese arrested Amir in 1943, and he only escaped execution following intervention from Sukarno, whose popularity in Indonesia and hence the importance to the war effort was recognized by the Japanese. Apart from Amir's Surabaya-based group, the active pro-Allied activities were among the Chinese, Ambonese, and Manadonese.[88]

In September 1943 at Amuntai in south Kalimantan there was an attempt to establish an Islamic state, but this was soundly defeated.[89] In the 1943–1944 Pontianak incidents (also known as the Mandor Affair), the Japanese orchestrated a mass arrest of Malay elites and Arabs, Chinese, Javanese, Manadonese, Dayaks, Bugis, Bataks, Minangkabau, Dutch, Indians, and Eurasians in Kalimantan, including all of the Malay Sultans, accused them of plotting to overthrow Japanese rule, and then massacred them.[90][91] The Japanese falsely claimed that all of those ethnic groups and organisations such as the Islamic Pemuda Muhammadijah were involved in a plot to overthrow the Japanese and create a "People's Republic of West Borneo" (Negara Rakyat Borneo Barat).[92] The Japanese claimed "Sultans, Chinese, Indonesian government officials, Indians and Arabs, who had been antagonistic to each other, joined together to massacre Japanese", naming the Sultan of the Pontianak Sultanate as one of the "ringleaders" in the planned rebellion.[93] Up to 25 aristocrats, relatives of the Sultan of Pontianak, and many other prominent individuals were named as participants in the plot by the Japanese and then executed at Mandor.[94][95] The Sultans of Pontianak, Sambas, Ketapang, Soekadana, Simbang, Koeboe, Ngabang, Sanggau, Sekadau, Tajan, Singtan, and Mempawa were all executed by the Japanese, respectively, their names were Sjarif Mohamed Alkadri, Mohamad Ibrahim Tsafidedin, Goesti Saoenan, Tengkoe Idris, Goesti Mesir, Sjarif Saleh, Goesti Abdoel Hamid, Ade Mohamad Arif, Goesti Mohamad Kelip, Goesti Djapar, Raden Abdul Bahri Danoe Perdana, and Mohammed Ahoufiek.[96] They are known as the "12 Dokoh".[97] In Java, the Japanese jailed Syarif Abdul Hamid Alqadrie, the son of Sultan Syarif Mohamad Alkadrie (Sjarif Mohamed Alkadri).[98] Since he was in Java during the executions, the future Hamid II was the only male in his family not killed, while the Japanese beheaded all 28 other male relatives of Pontianak Sultan Mohammed Alkadri.[99]

Later in 1944, the Dayaks assassinated a Japanese man named Nakatani, who was involved in the incident and who was known for his cruelty. Sultan of Pontianak Mohamed Alkadri's fourth son, Pengeran Agoen (Pangeran Agung), and another son, Pengeran Adipati (Pangeran Adipati), were both killed by the Japanese in the incident.[100] The Japanese had beheaded both Pangeran Adipati and Pangeran Agung,[101] in a public execution.[102] The Japanese extermination of the Malay elite of Pontianak paved the way for a new Dayak elite to arise in its place.[103] According to Mary F. Somers Heidhues, during May and June 1945, some Japanese were killed in a rebellion by the Dayaks in Sanggau.[104] According to Jamie S. Davidson, this rebellion, during which many Dayaks and Japanese were killed, occurred from April through August 1945, and was called the "Majang Desa War".[105] The Pontianak Incidents, or Affairs, are divided into two Pontianak incidents by scholars, variously categorised according to mass killings and arrests, which occurred in several stages on different dates. The Pontianak incident negatively impacted the Chinese community in Kalimantan.[106][107]

The Acehnese Ulama (Islamic clerics) fought against both the Dutch and the Japanese, revolting against the Dutch in February 1942 and against Japan in November 1942. The revolt was led by the All-Aceh Religious Scholars' Association (PUSA), and was centred around Tjot Plieng village religious school. Japanese troops armed with mortars and machine guns were attacked by sword-wielding Acehnese led by Tengku Abdul Djalil. The Japanese suffered 18 dead in the uprising while over a hundred Acehnese died, and the school and village mosque were destroyed.[89][108]

Support for independence edit

 
Young Indonesian boys being trained by the Imperial Japanese Army

Before the war, the Dutch colonial authorities had successfully repressed the Indonesian nationalist movement.[109] In the initial stages of the occupation, the Japanese were completely opposed to independence because of possible disruption to the exploitation of the resources in the archipelago that were so important to the war effort. In contrast, the occupied Philippines and Burma were granted independence in 1943, and in March that year, the Japanese decided to include Indonesia within the Japanese Empire but to allow "political participation of the natives", a decision strongly opposed by the 25th Army in Sumatra and the Navy in the eastern islands.[110]

In November 1943, the Japanese held a Greater East Asia Conference in Tokyo attended by the notionally independent countries of the Co-Prosperity Sphere, including Thailand, the Philippines and Burma, but no Indonesian representatives were invited. By way of compensation, pre-war independence figure Sukarno, Hatta and Hajar Dewantara were invited to Tokyo just after the conference, and were granted an audience with Emperor Hirohito and met Prime Minister Tojo. However, they were given no positive indications about future Indonesian independence, and there was to be no lifting of the ban on the flag or national anthem.[111]

As Japan's territorial expansion was halted, then reversed, Japan, the 16th Army in Java in particular, became more favorable to the idea of Indonesian involvement in the governance of Java. A Central Advisory Board was established, headed by pre-war independence figure Sukarno, with Indonesians appointed as advisors. In October 1943, the Japanese established a volunteer force to defend against a future allied invasion, the Defenders of the Homeland (Indonesian: Pembela Tanah Air, PETA; Japanese: 郷土防衛義勇軍, romanizedkyōdo bōei giyūgun) Then in 1944 the Java Service Association (Jawa Hokokai) was formed to mobilise the masses for Japanese interests.[112]

On 7 September 1944, Japanese Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso promised independence for the East Indies "in the future". The authorities in Java then allowed the flying of the Indonesian flag at Jawa Hokokai buildings. Naval liaison officer in Batavia Rear-admiral Tadashi Maeda provided official funds for tours around the archipelago by Sukarno and fellow independence activist Hatta, officially as part of their Jawa Hokokai responsibilities. In October 1944, Maeda established a Free Indonesia Dormitory to prepare youth leaders for an independent Indonesia. With the war situation becoming increasingly dire, in March 1945 the Japanese announced the formation of an Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence (BPUPK), comprising members of the older political generation, including Sukarno and Hatta. Chaired by Rajiman Wediodiningrat, in two sessions in May and June, it decided on the basis for an independent nation and produced a draft constitution. Meanwhile, the younger activists, known as the pemuda, wanted much more overt moves towards independence than the older generation were willing to risk, resulting in a split between the generations.[113][114]

1966 ABC report examining Sukarno's alliance between imperial Japan and the Indonesian nationalist movement

On 29 April 1945, Lt. Gen. Kumakichi Harada, the commander of the 16th Army in Java established the Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence (Indonesian: Badan Penyelidik Usaha Persiapan Kemerdekaan (BPUPK); Japanese: 独立準備調査会, Dokuritsu Junbi Chōsakai), as the initial stage of the establishment of independence for the area under the control of the 16th Army.[115]

End of occupation edit

 
Japanese commanders listening to the terms of surrender

General Douglas MacArthur wanted to fight his way with Allied troops to liberate Java in 1944–45 but was ordered not to by the Joint Chiefs and President Franklin Roosevelt. He did successfully conduct the Western New Guinea campaign in 1944 which liberated much of Dutch New Guinea. The U.S. built Naval Base Morotai, which opened in September 1944 after the Battle of Morotai, so they could use the facilities for the Philippines campaign. Some Australian bases were built during the war. The Borneo campaign between May and July 1945 was ordered by MacArthur to liberate British Borneo and Dutch Borneo. The Japanese occupation officially ended with the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, and two days later Sukarno declared Indonesian Independence; Indonesian forces spent the next four years fighting the Dutch for independence. According to historian Theodore Friend, American restraint from fighting their way into Java saved Japanese, Javanese, Dutch, and American lives, but also impeded international support for Indonesian independence.[116]

At the end of the war, there were around 300,000 Japanese civilian and military personnel in the East Indies. The Dutch East Indies, alongside French Indochina, were transferred from the American-led South West Pacific Area command to the UK-led South East Asia Command effective 15 August 1945. Consequently, the UK became the lead nation in the reoccupation of the territories.[117] The priorities for the UK occupation was to take the surrender of, and repatriate, Japanese forces, and also the Recovery of Allied Prisoners of War and Internees operation.[118] Repatriation of Japanese prisoners of war was delayed because of their low priority for sea-borne transport in the Allied Shipping Pool.[117] By April 1946, only 48,000 had been repatriated; the majority were evacuated in May and June.[117] However, around 100,000 Japanese prisoners of war were retained for use as labour until early 1946.[119] It was reported that approximately 25,000 Japanese soldiers allied themselves with Indonesian nationalists and were subsequently beyond Allied control.[117] Some eventually assimilated themselves into local communities. Many of these soldiers joined the TNI or other Indonesian military organizations, and some of these former Japanese soldiers died during the Indonesian National Revolution, such as Abdul Rachman (Ichiki Tatsuo).[120][121][122]

 
Japanese soldiers on trial

The final stages of warfare were initiated in October 1945 when, in accordance with the terms of their surrender, the Japanese tried to re-establish the authority they relinquished to Indonesians in the towns and cities. Japanese military police killed Republican pemuda in Pekalongan (Central Java) on 3 October, and Japanese troops drove Republican pemuda out of Bandung in West Java and handed the city to the British, but the fiercest fighting involving the Japanese was in Semarang. On 14 October, British forces began to occupy the city. Retreating Republican forces retaliated by killing between 130 and 300 Japanese prisoners they were holding. Five hundred Japanese and 2,000 Indonesians had been killed and the Japanese had almost captured the city six days later when British forces arrived.[123]

I, of course, knew that we had been forced to keep Japanese troops under arms to protect our lines of communication and vital areas ... but it was nevertheless a great shock to me to find over a thousand Japanese troops guarding the nine miles of road from the airport to the town.[124]

— Lord Mountbatten of Burma in April 1946 after visiting Sumatra, referring to the use of Japanese Surrendered Personnel.

From 6 March 1946 to 24 December 1949, the returning Dutch authorities held 448 war crimes trials against 1,038 suspects. 969 of those were condemned (93.4%) with 236 (24.4%) receiving a death sentence.[125][126]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 323-325.
  2. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 337.
  3. ^ a b c Dower 1986, p. 296.
  4. ^ a b c Ricklefs 2008, p. 325.
  5. ^ Isnaeni, Hendri F. (5 April 2010). "The VOC Genocide – Historia". Histori Bersama.
  6. ^ Farid, Muhammad. "Commemorating the Banda genocide in 1621". Banda – PALA.
  7. ^ Kenji, Tsuchiya; Siegel, James (1990). "Invincible Kitsch or as Tourists in the Age of Des Alwi". Indonesia (50): 61–76. doi:10.2307/3351230. hdl:1813/53943. JSTOR 3351230.
  8. ^ Worrall, Simon (23 June 2012). "The world's oldest clove tree". BBC.
  9. ^ Clulow, Adam (2016). "Modern Painting of Massacre at Banda". The Amboyna Conspiracy Trial.
  10. ^ Mendl, Wolf (2001). Japan and South East Asia: From the Meiji Restoration to 1945. Vol. 1. Taylor & Francis. pp. 11–12. ISBN 9780415182058.
  11. ^ Matthiessen, Sven (2015). Japanese Pan-Asianism and the Philippines from the Late Nineteenth Century to the End of World War II: Going to the Philippines Is Like Coming Home?. Brill's Japanese Studies Library. BRILL. p. 16. ISBN 9789004305724.
  12. ^ Japanese Commodities and Formation of Japan Imagery in Colonial Indonesia: The Case Study of Jintan Pills and Its Trademark (PDF) (Dissertation). Keio University Graduate School of Sociology. 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  13. ^ Tagliacozzo, Eric (2008). Secret Trades, Porous Borders: Smuggling and States Along a Southeast Asian Frontier, 1865-1915. Yale Historical Publications Series (illustrated ed.). Yale University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0300128123.
  14. ^ "Document | PDF | Smuggling | Borneo". Scribd.
  15. ^ Friend 2003, p. 29.
  16. ^ Vickers 2013, pp. 86–87.
  17. ^ Vickers 2013, pp. 85–86.
  18. ^ Yamamoto 2000.
  19. ^ a b c Vickers 2013, p. 86.
  20. ^ Bidien 1945, pp. 345–346.
  21. ^ Ricklefs 2008, pp. 324–325.
  22. ^ War History Office 2015, p. 437.
  23. ^ Taylor 2003, pp. 310–311.
  24. ^ a b c d Vickers 2013, p. 90.
  25. ^ Horton 2007.
  26. ^ Pike 2016, pp. 322–333.
  27. ^ a b Taylor 2003, p. 310.
  28. ^ "Radio chief held at gun point". ABC Weekly. 29 June 1946. Retrieved 17 August 2023 – via Trove.
  29. ^ Mizuma 2013, pp. 49–68
  30. ^ Womack 2006, pp. 194–196.
  31. ^ Pramoedya Ananta Toer (1998, pp. 157–158) quoted in Vickers (2013, p. 85)
  32. ^ Cribb & Brown 1995, p. 13.
  33. ^ Taylor 2003, p. 311.
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  35. ^ Reid 1971, p. 22.
  36. ^ Benda 1956, p. 543.
  37. ^ Muhammad Abdul Aziz 2012, pp. 152–153.
  38. ^ Cribb & Kahin 2004, p. 465.
  39. ^ Muhammad Abdul Aziz 2012, pp. 152–154.
  40. ^ Post 2009, pp. 74–75.
  41. ^ Vickers 2013, p. 94.
  42. ^ Asian Women's Fund.
  43. ^ Soh 2008, p. 21.
  44. ^ Soh 2008, p. 22.
  45. ^ Poelgeest 1994, p. 2.
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  47. ^ "At the Mercy of the Enemy: the Record of a Japanese War Criminal" (PDF). 教育学論究. 29 (12): 29–40. 15 December 2020.
  48. ^ Salbiah bt Mohamed Salleh; Jamil bin Ahmad; Mohd Aderi bin Che Noh; Aminudin bin Hehsan (2018). "Profil Akhlak Guru Pendidikan Islam Di Malaysia". International Journal of Islamic and Civilizational Studies. 5 (1): 80–93. doi:10.11113/umran2018.5n2.187.
  49. ^ Penders, Christian Lambert Maria (1974). The Life and Times of Sukarno (illustrated ed.). Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 64. ISBN 0283484144. This impression is reinforced by Sukarno's own glowing reports26 of how he was successful in regulating rice supplies in Padang and in procuring prostitutes for the Japanese soldiers , activities which cannot exactly be described as ...
  50. ^ Friend, Theodore (2009). Indonesian Destinies (unabridged ed.). Harvard University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0674037359. Sukarno's first administrative act, he acknowledges, was to gather 120 prostitutes as "volunteers" to be penned in a special camp for service to Japanese soldiers. He congratulated himself on simultaneously enhancing the women's income, sating the lust of the invaders, and thereby protecting virtuous Minangkabau maidens.
  51. ^ Levenda, Peter (2011). Tantric Temples: Eros and Magic in Java. Nicolas-Hays, Inc. p. 52. ISBN 978-0892546015.
  52. ^ Geerken, Horst H. (2015). A Gecko for Luck: 18 years in Indonesia (2 ed.). BoD – Books on Demand. p. 145. ISBN 978-3839152485.
  53. ^ Krausse, Gerald H.; Krausse, Sylvia C. Engelen (1994). Indonesia (2nd ed.). Clio Press. p. xxviii. ISBN 1851091270. had to wear identification tags. Some 270,000 Indonesians were conscripted to work in Burma, but only 7,000 returned; many thousands were kept in Japan as prisoners of war and never came back. Indonesian women were routinely rounded up to serve as prostitutes in Japanese army camps.
  54. ^ Stetz, Margaret D.; Oh, Bonnie B. C. (2015). Legacies of the Comfort Women of World War II (illustrated ed.). Routledge. p. 61-64. ISBN 978-1317466253.
  55. ^ comfort women (2 October 1945). KOEPANG, TIMOR 1945-10-02. TIMFORCE. TWENTY SIX JAVANESE GIRLS WHO WERE LIBERATED AT KOEPANG FROM JAPANESE BROTHELS. JUST PRIOR TO THEIR RELEASE THE JAPANESE ISSUED THEM WITH RED CROSS ARM BANDS IN AN ATTEMPT TO CAMOUFLAGE THE FOUL MANNER IN WHICH THESE GIRLS HAD BEEN USED. YOUNG LADY IN CHIEF OF THE GIRLS IS KOMORIAH. SHE IS HOLDING THE DOLL SHE KEPT THROUGHOUT HER ENFORCED STAY IN JAPANESE HANDS. (PHOTOGRAPHER K. B. DAVIS). Australian War Memorial. 120083.
  56. ^ comfort women (2 October 1945). KOEPANG, TIMOR 1945-10-03. TIMFORCE. TWENTY SIX JAVANESE GIRLS WHO WERE LIBERATED AT KOEPANG FROM JAPANESE BROTHELS. JUST PRIOR TO THEIR RELEASE THE JAPANESE ISSUED THEM WITH RED CROSS ARM BANDS IN AN ATTEMPT TO CAMOUFLAGE THE FOUL MANNER IN WHICH THESE GIRLS HAD BEEN USED. THESE GIRLS WILL NOW BE CARED FOR BY THE NETHERLANDS INDIES CIVIL ADMINISTRATION. (PHOTOGRAPHER K. B. DAVIS). Australian War Memorial. 120087.
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  60. ^ Post 2009, p. 194.
  61. ^ Mackie, Vera (2017). "Gender, geopolitics and gaps in the records". In Reid, Kirsty; Paisley, Fiona (eds.). Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism: Approaching the Imperial Archive. Routledge Guides to Using Historical Sources (illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 140. ISBN 978-1351986632.
  62. ^ Boyer, Allen D (2017). Rocky Boyer's War: An Unvarnished History of the Air Blitz that Won the War in the Southwest Pacific. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1682470978.
  63. ^ Trevor, Malcolm (2001). Japan: Restless Competitor : the Pursuit of Economic Nationalism (illustrated ed.). Psychology Press. p. 124. ISBN 1903350026.
  64. ^ Trevor, Malcolm (2013). Japan - Restless Competitor: The Pursuit of Economic Nationalism. Routledge. p. 124. ISBN 978-1134278411.
  65. ^ Jennings, Captain Mick; Jennings, Margery (2021). Escape to Japanese Captivity: A Couple's Tragic Ordeal in Sumatra, 1942–1945. Pen and Sword Military. p. 168. ISBN 978-1526783127.
  66. ^ Terry, Francis Stanley (Frank) Roberts, Niall John (27 July 1995). F3781 Francis Stanley Terry as a cook; minesweeper HMAS Mercedes and corvette HMAS Warrnambool; Australian western approaches and northern and eastern waters; 1941-1946; interviewed by John Roberts (TDK D60 Cassette). Event occurs at ! Hour Australian War Memorial. S01794.
  67. ^ https://s3-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/awm-media/collection/S01794/document/1866247.PDF
  68. ^ Francis Stanley Terry (cook; minesweeper HMAS Mercedes and corvette HMAS Warrnambool; Australian western approaches and northern and eastern waters; 1941-1946), oral history interview, 27 July 1995, AWM, S01794.
  69. ^ Molemans, Griselda; Park, Hee Seok (15 August 2022). "Both the State and the royal family benefited from the earnings of Dutch East Indies 'comfort women'". Follow The Money.
  70. ^ Molemans, Griselda; Park, Hee Seok (15 August 2022). "Both the State and the royal family benefited from the earnings of Dutch East Indies 'comfort women'". Follow The Money.
  71. ^ slaves, Friend, Donald (1945). Javanese slaves in native compound sick ward. Australian War Memorial. C170219.
  72. ^ slaves, Friend, Donald (1945). Javanese slaves in native compound sick ward. Australian War Memorial. C170216.
  73. ^ brothel (1945). Labuan. September 1945. A private house in Fox Road used by the Japanese as an Officer's club and brothel. (Donor R. Fullford). Australian War Memorial. C375607.
  74. ^ Malay and Javanese (28 August 1945). MIRI, BORNEO. 1945-08-28. OVER 300 NATIVES, MALAY AND JAVANESE, ESCAPED FROM THE JAPANESE AND ARE NOW IN THE BRITISH BORNEO CIVIL ADMINISTRATION COMPOUND. SHOWN ABOVE, A GROUP OF MEN TYPICAL OF THE MALNUTRITION CASES BEING TREATED AT THE COMPOUND. Australian War Memorial. 115185.
  75. ^ Malay and Javanese (28 August 1945). MIRI, BORNEO. 1945-08-28. SOME OF THE 300 NATIVES, MALAY AND JAVANESE, WHO ESCAPED FROM THE JAPANESE AND ARE NOW IN THE BRITISH BORNEO CIVIL ADMINISTRATION COMPOUND. Australian War Memorial. 115187.
  76. ^ O'Neill, Claire (4 June 2011). "Comfort Women: Untold Stories Of Wartime Abuse". NPR.
  77. ^ Baird, J. Kevin (1 January 2016). "War Crimes in Japan-Occupied Indonesia: Unraveling the Persecution of Achmad Mochtar". Japan Focus: The Asia-Pacific Journal. 14 (1).
  78. ^ Tanaka, Yuki (2003). Japan's Comfort Women. Routledge. p. 78-82, 85, 86. ISBN 1134650124. As much as the Japanese were unconcerned about the exploitation of non-Europeans, the Dutch were equally indifferent to victims who were not white and Dutch. However, there were at least two exceptional cases brought by the Dutch ...
  79. ^ "Japan's Comfort Women (Asia's Transformations) [1 ed.] 0415194008, 9780415194006".
  80. ^ Stetz, Margaret D.; Oh, Bonnie B. C. (2015). Legacies of the Comfort Women of World War II (illustrated ed.). Routledge. p. 61-68. ISBN 978-1317466253. ... Japanese were unconcerned about the exploitation of non-Europeans, so too the Dutch were equally indifferent to victims who were not white and Dutch.
  81. ^ Touwen-Bouwsma, Elly (2013). "Four : Japanese Policy towards the Chinese on Java, 1942-1945: A Preliminary Outline". In Kratoska, Paul H. (ed.). Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire. Routledge. p. 57-61. ISBN 978-1136125065.
  82. ^ Post 2009, p. 191.
  83. ^ a b Post 2009, p. 193.
  84. ^ Post 2009, p. 195.
  85. ^ Post 2009, p. 196.
  86. ^ Hului, Patricia (19 July 2021). "The influence of Catholicism on Flores island during WWII". Kajo Mag.
  87. ^ Hului, Patricia (18 September 2019). "TThe Mandor Affair, the massacres in West Kalimantan during WWII". Kajo Mag.
  88. ^ Reid 1974, p. 12.
  89. ^ a b Ricklefs 2008, p. 331.
  90. ^ Heidhues 2003, p. 204.
  91. ^ Ooi 2013, p. 42.
  92. ^ Heidhues 2003, p. 205.
  93. ^ ed. Kratoska 2013, p. 160.
  94. ^ Davidson 2002, p. 79.
  95. ^ Davidson 2003, p. 9.
  96. ^ ed. Kratoska 2002, pp. 167–168.
  97. ^ Ooi 2013.
  98. ^ Ooi 2013, p. 176.
  99. ^ Zweers 2011, p. 6.
  100. ^ ed. Kratoska 2013, p. 168.
  101. ^ Heidhues 2003, p. 207.
  102. ^ Felton 2007, p. 86.
  103. ^ Davidson 2009, p. 37.
  104. ^ Heidhues 2003, p. 206.
  105. ^ Davidson 2003, p. 8.
  106. ^ Hui 2011, p. 42.
  107. ^ Baldacchino 2013, p. 75.
  108. ^ Reid 2013, p. 120.
  109. ^ Vickers 2013, p. 85.
  110. ^ Inomata 1997, pp. 97.
  111. ^ Inomata 1997, pp. 98.
  112. ^ Ricklefs 2008, pp. 334–336.
  113. ^ Ricklefs 2008, pp. 334–339.
  114. ^ Reid 1974, p. 14.
  115. ^ Kusuma & Elson 2011, p. 196.
  116. ^ Friend 2003, p. 33.
  117. ^ a b c d Dennis, Peter (1987). Troubled Days of Peace: Mountbatten and South East Asia Command, 1945–46. Manchester: Manchester University Press. p. 227. ISBN 0-7190-2205-3.
  118. ^ "Far East Prisoners of War History". 17 August 2021.
  119. ^ 'Concentration and Repatriation of JSP in SEAC: Briefs for SAC returning to London 30 May 1946, WO 172/1813.
  120. ^ Horton 2016, p. 127.
  121. ^ Gotō 1976, pp. 57–68.
  122. ^ McMillan 2006, p. 79.
  123. ^ Ricklefs 2008, p. 349.
  124. ^ Kibata 2000, p. 146.
  125. ^ Piccigallo 1979.
  126. ^ Borch 2017, p. 36.

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Further reading edit

  • Anderson, Ben (1972). Java in a Time of Revolution: Occupation and Resistance, 1944–1946. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-0687-4.
  • Hillen, Ernest (1993). The Way of a Boy: A Memoir of Java. Toronto: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-85049-5.
  • Zweers, Louis (Spring 2011). "The crown jewels lost and found" (PDF). The Newsletter. No. 56. International Institute for Asian Studies.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Japanese occupation of Indonesia at Wikimedia Commons

japanese, occupation, dutch, east, indies, empire, japan, occupied, dutch, east, indies, indonesia, during, world, from, march, 1942, until, after, september, 1945, most, crucial, important, periods, modern, indonesian, history, japanese, occupied, dutch, east. The Empire of Japan occupied the Dutch East Indies now Indonesia during World War II from March 1942 until after the end of the war in September 1945 It was one of the most crucial and important periods in modern Indonesian history Japanese occupied Dutch East Indies蘭領東印度 Japanese Pendudukan Jepang di Hindia Belanda Indonesian 1942 1945Flag of the Empire of Japan amp Flag of Indonesia Imperial SealMotto Hakkō ichiu 八紘一宇 Anthem Kimigayo source source Indonesia Raya unofficial source source The former Dutch East Indies dark red within the Empire of Japan light red at its furthest extentStatusMilitary occupationby the Empire of JapanCapitalDjakartaCommon languagesJapanese IndonesianGovernmentMilitary occupationEmperor 1942 1945HirohitoHistorical eraWorld War II Dutch capitulation8 March 1942 Pacific War1941 1945 First Battle of the Java Sea27 February 1942 Second Battle of the Java Sea1 March 1942 Pontianak incidents Pontianak massacres 1943 1944 PETA insurgency14 February 1945 Surrender of Japan15 August 1945 Independence proclaimed17 August 1945CurrencyNetherlands Indian roepiahPreceded by Succeeded byDutch East IndiesPortuguese Timor IndonesiaDutch East IndiesPortuguese TimorToday part ofIndonesiaEast TimorIn May 1940 Germany occupied the Netherlands and martial law was declared in the Dutch East Indies Following the failure of negotiations between the Dutch authorities and the Japanese Japanese assets in the archipelago were frozen The Dutch declared war on Japan following the 7 December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor The Japanese invasion of the Dutch East Indies began on 10 January 1942 and the Imperial Japanese Army overran the entire colony in less than three months The Dutch surrendered on 8 March 1 Initially most Indonesians welcomed the Japanese as liberators from their Dutch colonial masters The sentiment changed however as between 4 and 10 million Indonesians were recruited as forced labourers romusha on economic development and defense projects in Java Between 200 000 and 500 000 were sent away from Java to the outer islands and as far as Burma and Siam Of those taken off Java not more than 70 000 survived the war 2 Four million people died in the Dutch East Indies as a result of famine and forced labour during the Japanese occupation including 30 000 European civilian internee deaths 3 In 1944 1945 Allied troops largely bypassed the Dutch East Indies and did not fight their way into the most populous parts such as Java and Sumatra As such most of the Dutch East Indies was still under occupation at the time of Japan s surrender in August 1945 The invasion and occupation was the first serious challenge to Dutch colonial rule and brought about changes so extensive the subsequent Indonesian National Revolution became possible 4 Unlike the Dutch the Japanese facilitated the politicisation of Indonesians down to the village level citation needed The Japanese educated trained and armed many young Indonesians and gave their nationalist leaders a political voice citation needed Thus through both the destruction of the Dutch colonial regime and the facilitation of Indonesian nationalism the Japanese occupation created the conditions for the proclamation of Indonesian independence within days of the Japanese surrender in the Pacific citation needed However the Netherlands sought to reclaim the Indies and a bitter five year diplomatic military and social struggle ensued resulting in the Netherlands recognising Indonesian sovereignty in December 1949 Contents 1 Background 2 Invasion 3 Japanese administration 4 Treatment of the Indonesian population 4 1 War crimes 4 2 Underground resistance 4 3 Support for independence 5 End of occupation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editThe Dutch East India Company and Japanese samurai they hired as mercenaries committed genocide against Muslim Bandanese on the Banda islands quartering in their mosques humiliating their women and beheading their orang kaya in the conquest of the Banda Islands 5 6 7 8 9 After the Meiji Restoration of 1868 the Nanshin ron policy came to be advanced with the southern regions as a focus for trade and emigration 10 During the early Meiji period Japan derived economic benefits from Japanese emigrants to Southeast Asia among which there were prostitutes Karayuki san 11 who worked in brothels in the Dutch East Indies 12 and other western colonies in Southeast Asia Lowland Chinese in 1904 sold Beaumont and Winchester rifles in Sumatra to Bataks who were attacking and fighting the Dutch 13 14 The Chinese in Indonesia had a hostile relationship with Dutch colonialists from the Java War 1741 1743 to the Kongsi Wars like the Expedition to the West Coast of Borneo Expedition against the Chinese in Montrado and the Mandor rebellion Until 1942 what is now Indonesia was a colony of the Netherlands and was known as the Dutch East Indies In 1929 during the Indonesian National Awakening Indonesian nationalist leaders Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta later founding president and vice president respectively foresaw a Pacific War and that a Japanese advance on the Dutch East Indies might be advantageous for the independence cause 15 nbsp Map prepared by the Japanese during World War II depicting Java the most populous island in the Dutch East IndiesThe Japanese spread the word that they were the Light of Asia Japan was the only Asian nation that had successfully transformed itself into a modern technological society at the end of the 19th century and it remained independent when most Asian countries had been under European or American power and had beaten a European power Russia in war 16 Following its military campaign in China Japan turned its attention to Southeast Asia advocating to other Asians a Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere which they described as a type of trade zone under Japanese leadership The Japanese had gradually spread their influence through Asia in the first half of the 20th century and during the 1920s and 1930s had established business links in the Indies These ranged from small town barbers photographic studios and salesmen to large department stores and firms such as Suzuki and Mitsubishi becoming involved in the sugar trade 17 The Japanese population in Indonesia peaked in 1931 with 6 949 residents before starting a gradual decrease largely as a result of economic tensions between Japan and the Netherlands Indies government 18 Many Japanese had been sent by their government to establish links with Indonesian nationalists particularly with Muslim parties while Indonesian nationalists were sponsored to visit Japan Such encouragement of Indonesian nationalism was part of a broader Japanese plan for an Asia for the Asians 19 While most Indonesians were hopeful for the Japanese promise of an end to the Dutch racially based system Chinese Indonesians who enjoyed a privileged position under Dutch rule were less optimistic 19 Japanese aggression in Manchuria and China in the late 1930s caused anxiety amongst the Chinese in Indonesia who set up funds to support the anti Japanese effort Dutch intelligence services also monitored Japanese living in Indonesia 19 In November 1941 Madjlis Rakjat Indonesia an Indonesian organisation of religious political and trade union groups submitted a memorandum to the Dutch East Indies Government requesting the mobilisation of the Indonesian people in the face of the war threat The memorandum was rejected because the Government did not consider the Madjlis Rakyat Indonesia to be representative of the people Less than four months later the Japanese had occupied the archipelago 20 Invasion editMain article Dutch East Indies campaign nbsp Map of the Japanese administrative areas after April 1943On 8 December 1941 the Dutch government in exile declared war on Japan 21 In January 1942 the American British Dutch Australian Command was formed to co ordinate Allied forces in Southeast Asia under the command of General Archibald Wavell 22 In the weeks leading up to the invasion senior Dutch government officials went into exile taking political prisoners family and personal staff to Australia Before the arrival of Japanese troops there were conflicts between rival Indonesian groups where people were killed vanished or went into hiding Chinese and Dutch owned properties were ransacked and destroyed 23 The invasion in early 1942 was swift and complete By January 1942 parts of Sulawesi and Kalimantan were under Japanese control By February the Japanese had landed on Sumatra where they had encouraged the Acehnese to rebel against the Dutch 24 On 19 February having already taken Ambon the Japanese Eastern Task Force landed in Timor dropping a special parachute unit into West Timor near Kupang and landing in the Dili area of Portuguese Timor to drive out the Allied forces which had invaded in December 25 On 27 February the Allied navy s last effort to contain Japan was swept aside by their defeat in the Battle of the Java Sea 24 From 28 February to 1 March 1942 Japanese troops landed on four places along the northern coast of Java almost undisturbed 26 The fiercest fighting had been in invasion points in Ambon Timor Kalimantan and on the Java Sea In places where there were no Dutch troops such as Bali there was no fighting 27 On 8 March Japanese soldiers seized the NIROM radio station in Batavia and ordered broadcasts to continue The radio employees defiantly played Het Wilhelmus which resulted in the Japanese executing 3 of them 28 On 9 March the Dutch commander surrendered along with Governor General Jonkheer A W L Tjarda van Starkenborgh Stachouwer 24 The Japanese occupation was initially greeted with optimistic enthusiasm by Indonesians who came to meet the Japanese army waving flags and shouting support such as Japan is our older brother and banzai Dai Nippon 29 As the Japanese advanced rebellious Indonesians in virtually every part of the archipelago killed groups of Europeans particularly the Dutch and informed the Japanese reliably on the whereabouts of larger groups 30 As famed Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer noted With the arrival of the Japanese just about everyone was full of hope except for those who had worked in the service of the Dutch 31 Japanese administration editExpecting that Dutch administrators would be kept by the Japanese to run the colony most Dutch had refused to leave Instead they were sent to detention camps and Japanese or Indonesian replacements were installed in senior and technical positions 32 Japanese troops took control of government infrastructure and services such as ports and postal services 27 In addition to the 100 000 European and some Chinese civilians interned 80 000 Dutch British Australian and US Allied troops went to prisoner of war camps where the death rates were between 13 and 30 percent 24 The Indonesian ruling class composed of local officials and politicians who had formerly worked for the Dutch colonial government co operated with the Japanese military authorities who in turn helped to keep the local political elites in power and employ them to supply newly arrived Japanese industrial concerns and businesses and the armed forces chiefly auxiliary military and police units run by the Japanese military in the Dutch East Indies Indonesian co operation allowed the Japanese military government to focus on securing the large archipelago s waterways and skies and using its islands as defense posts against any Allied attacks which were assumed to most likely come from Australia 33 nbsp Ching Nan Shrine in Malang East Java One out of 11 Shinto shrines built in Indonesia 34 The Japanese divided Indonesia into three separate regions Sumatra along with Malaya was placed under the 25th Army Java and Madura were under the 16th Army while Borneo and eastern Indonesia were controlled by the 2nd South Fleet of the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN based in Makassar The 16th Army was headquartered in Jakarta and the 25th Army was based in Singapore until April 1943 when its command was narrowed to just Sumatra and the headquarters moved to Bukittinggi 4 35 In Java the 16th Army had planned to manage Java as a single entity However the army had not brought enough administration experts to set up a separate body A large number of Japanese residents in Java who could have advised the occupiers were taken to Australia at the outbreak of war while a group of civilian administrators were killed in the Battle of the Java Sea Problems were compounded by the fact that very few Indonesians spoke Japanese In August 1942 that the administration was formally separated from the army command The military government Japanese 軍政 romanized gunsei was then headed by the 16th Army chief of staff Japanese 軍政官 romanized gunseikan His deputy headed the most important section of the administration the Department of General Affairs Japanese 総務部 romanized sōmubu which acted as a secretariat and issued policies There were three Gunseikan for Java during the occupation 36 37 38 Imamura Hitoshi Harada Kumakichi Yamamoto MoichiroSumatra also had a Gunseikan In the region controlled by the navy the plan was to turn to area into a permanent colony administered by civilian Japanese bureaucrats but still subordinate to the navy Therefore the IJN brought administrators with them The chief civil administrator Japanese 総官 romanized sōkan reported directly to the commander of the Southwest Area Fleet Under the Sōkan were three regional administrative departments based in Makassar Banjarmasin and Ambon 39 40 Treatment of the Indonesian population editExperience of the occupation varied considerably depending upon location and social position Many who lived in areas considered important to the war effort experienced torture sex slavery arbitrary arrest and execution and other war crimes Many thousands of people were taken away from Indonesia as forced labourers romusha for Japanese military projects including the Burma Siam and Saketi Bayah railways and suffered or died as a result of ill treatment and starvation Between 200 000 and 500 000 romusha recruited from Java were forced to work by the Japanese military 3 Tens of thousands of Indonesians starved worked as slave labourers or were forced from their homes In the National Revolution that followed tens even hundreds of thousands would die in fighting against the Japanese Allied forces and other Indonesians before independence was achieved 41 4 A later United Nations report stated that 4 000 000 people died in Indonesia as a result of famine and forced labour during the Japanese occupation including 30 000 European civilian internee deaths 3 A Dutch government study describing how the Japanese military recruited women as prostitutes by force in Indonesia concluded that among the 200 to 300 European women working in the Japanese military brothels some sixty five were most certainly forced into prostitution 42 43 Other young women and their families faced with various pressures in the internment camps or in wartime society agreed to offers of work the nature of which was frequently not explicitly stated 44 45 War crimes edit The Japanese brought Indonesian Javanese girls to British Borneo as comfort women to be raped by Japanese officers at the Ridge road school and Basel Mission Church and the Telecommunication Center Station former rectory of the All Saints Church in Kota Kinabalu as well as ones in Balikpapan and Beaufort Japanese soldiers raped Indonesian women and Dutch women in the Netherlands East Indies Many of the women were infected with STDs as a result 46 47 48 Sukarno prostituted Indonesian girls from ethnic groups like Minangkabau to the Japanese 49 50 51 52 53 The Japanese destroyed many documents related to their rape of Indonesian Javanese girls at the end of the war so the true extent of the mass rape is uncountable but testimony witnesses records the names and accounts of Indonesian Javanese comfort women 54 Japanese in one instance tried to disguise the Javanese comfort girls they were raping as red cross nurses with red cross armbands when they surrendered to Australian soldiers in Kupang Timor 55 56 57 58 59 60 In addition to disguising the Java girls with Red Cross armbands some Dutch girls were also brought to Kupang and native girls from Kupang were also kidnapped by the Japanese while the native men were forced into hard labour 61 Indian and Javanese captives in Biak were freed from Japanese control by Allied forces 62 Only 70 000 Javanese survived out of 260 000 Javanese forced to labour on the death railway between Burma and Thailand 63 64 In August 1945 the Japanese were getting reading to execute female European internees by shooting in the Dutch East Indies and their plans were only stopped by the atomic bomb with the plans and list of detainees already written down 65 Francis Stanley Frank Terry an Australian sailor on a naval vessel participated in the repatriation of Indonesian Javanese comfort women from islands across Indonesia back to their home 66 67 68 The Dutch royal family and government seized the money from Japanese comfort women prostitution in the Dutch East Indies territory for itself instead of compensating the women 69 70 The Japanese forced Javanese women to work in brothels and Javanese men to become forced labour at airstrips in Labuan Borneo The Javanese men were worked to starvation resembling skeletons barely able to move and were sick with beri beri by the time they were freed in June 1945 by Australians 71 72 The Japanese reserved a house as a brothel and officer s club on Fox Road in Labuan 73 On 28 August 1945 the British and Australians gave medical treatment to 300 Javanese and Malay male slaves of the Japanese who were malnourished and starving from forced labour 74 75 Many Indonesian comfort women were reluctant to talk about their experiences due to shame A 10 year old Indonesian girl named Niyem from Karamangmojo in Yogyakarta was repeatedly raped for 2 months by Japanese soldiers along with other Indonesian girls in West Java She didn t tell her parents what the Japanese did to her when she managed to flee 76 The Japanese killed 4 million Indonesians 77 After the defeat of Japan the Dutch generally did not care about Japanese rape of non white native Indonesian Muslim girls and most of the time they only charged Japanese war criminals for rape of white Dutch women 78 79 80 As the Dutch implemented a war of attrition and scorch earth they forced Chinese on Java to flee inland and the Dutch destroyed all important assets including Chinese factories and property Local Indonesians joined in on the Dutch violence against the Chinese looting Chinese property and trying to attack Chinese However when the Japanese troops landed and seized control of Java from the Dutch to people s surprise the Japanese forced the native Indonesians to stop looting and attacking Chinese and warned the Indonesians they would not tolerate anti Chinese violence in Java The Japanese viewed the Chinese in Java and their economic power specifically as important and vital to Japanese war effort so they did not physically harm the Chinese of Java with no execution or torture of Chinese taking place unlike in other places There was no violent confrontation between Japanese and Chinese on Java unlike in British Malaya The Japanese also allowed Chinese of Java in the Federation of Overseas Chinese Associations Hua Chiao Tsung Hui to form the Keibotai their own armed Chinese defence corps for protection with Japanese military instructors training them how to shoot and use spears The Chinese viewed this as important to defending themselves from local Indonesians The majority of Chinese of Java did not die in the war It was only after the war ended when Japanese control fell and then the native Indonesians again started attacks against the Chinese of Java when the Japanese were unable to protect them 81 In Java the Japanese heavily recruited Javanese girls as comfort women and brought them to New Guinea Malaysia Thailand and other areas foreign to Indonesia besides using them in Java itself The Japanese brought Javanese women as comfort women to Buru island and Kalimantan The Japanese recruited help from local collaborator police of all ethnicities to recruit Javanese girls with one account accusing Chinese recruiters of tricking a Javanese regent into sending good Javanese girls into prostitution for the Japanese in May 1942 The Japanese also lied to the Javanese telling them that their girls would become waitresses and actresses when recruiting them 82 The Japanese brought Javanese women as comfort women prostitutes to Kupang in Timor while in East Timor the Japanese took local women in Dili In Bali the Japanese sexually harassed Balinese women when they came and started forcing Balinese women into brothels for prostitution with Balinese men and Chinese men used as recruiters for the Balinese women All of the brothels in Bali were staffed by Balinese women 83 In brothels in Kalimantan native Indonesian women made up 80 of the prostitutes 83 Javanese girls and local girls were used in a Japanese brothel in Ambon in Batu Gantung European Dutch women were overrepresented in documents on Dutch East Indies comfort women which didn t reflect the actual reality because the Dutch did not care about native Indonesian women being victimised by Japan refusing to prosecute cases against them since Indonesia was not a UN member at the time 84 Javanese comfort women who were taken by Japanese to islands outside Java were treated differently depending on whether they stayed on those islands or returned to Java Since Javanese society was sexually permissive and they kept it secret from other Javanese the Javanese women who returned to Java fared better but the Javanese women who stayed on the islands like Buru were treated harsher by their hosts since they locals in Buru were more patriarchal 85 The Japanese murdered Christians and forced girls into prostitution in Timor and Sumba desecrating sacred vessels and vestments in churches and using the churches as brothels Javanese girls were brought as prostitutes by the Japanese to Flores and Buru 86 Eurasians Indians Chinese Dutch Menadonese Bataks Bugis Dayaks Javanese Arabs and Malays were arrested and massacred in the Mandor affair 87 nbsp Netherlands Indian Gulden the Japanese occupation currencyUnderground resistance edit nbsp Indonesian nationalist Amir Sjarifuddin organized an underground resistance against the Japanese occupation Next to Sutan Sjahrir who led the student Pemuda underground the only prominent opposition politician was leftist Amir Sjarifuddin who was given 25 000 guilders by the Dutch in early 1942 to organize an underground resistance through his Marxist and nationalist connections The Japanese arrested Amir in 1943 and he only escaped execution following intervention from Sukarno whose popularity in Indonesia and hence the importance to the war effort was recognized by the Japanese Apart from Amir s Surabaya based group the active pro Allied activities were among the Chinese Ambonese and Manadonese 88 In September 1943 at Amuntai in south Kalimantan there was an attempt to establish an Islamic state but this was soundly defeated 89 In the 1943 1944 Pontianak incidents also known as the Mandor Affair the Japanese orchestrated a mass arrest of Malay elites and Arabs Chinese Javanese Manadonese Dayaks Bugis Bataks Minangkabau Dutch Indians and Eurasians in Kalimantan including all of the Malay Sultans accused them of plotting to overthrow Japanese rule and then massacred them 90 91 The Japanese falsely claimed that all of those ethnic groups and organisations such as the Islamic Pemuda Muhammadijah were involved in a plot to overthrow the Japanese and create a People s Republic of West Borneo Negara Rakyat Borneo Barat 92 The Japanese claimed Sultans Chinese Indonesian government officials Indians and Arabs who had been antagonistic to each other joined together to massacre Japanese naming the Sultan of the Pontianak Sultanate as one of the ringleaders in the planned rebellion 93 Up to 25 aristocrats relatives of the Sultan of Pontianak and many other prominent individuals were named as participants in the plot by the Japanese and then executed at Mandor 94 95 The Sultans of Pontianak Sambas Ketapang Soekadana Simbang Koeboe Ngabang Sanggau Sekadau Tajan Singtan and Mempawa were all executed by the Japanese respectively their names were Sjarif Mohamed Alkadri Mohamad Ibrahim Tsafidedin Goesti Saoenan Tengkoe Idris Goesti Mesir Sjarif Saleh Goesti Abdoel Hamid Ade Mohamad Arif Goesti Mohamad Kelip Goesti Djapar Raden Abdul Bahri Danoe Perdana and Mohammed Ahoufiek 96 They are known as the 12 Dokoh 97 In Java the Japanese jailed Syarif Abdul Hamid Alqadrie the son of Sultan Syarif Mohamad Alkadrie Sjarif Mohamed Alkadri 98 Since he was in Java during the executions the future Hamid II was the only male in his family not killed while the Japanese beheaded all 28 other male relatives of Pontianak Sultan Mohammed Alkadri 99 Later in 1944 the Dayaks assassinated a Japanese man named Nakatani who was involved in the incident and who was known for his cruelty Sultan of Pontianak Mohamed Alkadri s fourth son Pengeran Agoen Pangeran Agung and another son Pengeran Adipati Pangeran Adipati were both killed by the Japanese in the incident 100 The Japanese had beheaded both Pangeran Adipati and Pangeran Agung 101 in a public execution 102 The Japanese extermination of the Malay elite of Pontianak paved the way for a new Dayak elite to arise in its place 103 According to Mary F Somers Heidhues during May and June 1945 some Japanese were killed in a rebellion by the Dayaks in Sanggau 104 According to Jamie S Davidson this rebellion during which many Dayaks and Japanese were killed occurred from April through August 1945 and was called the Majang Desa War 105 The Pontianak Incidents or Affairs are divided into two Pontianak incidents by scholars variously categorised according to mass killings and arrests which occurred in several stages on different dates The Pontianak incident negatively impacted the Chinese community in Kalimantan 106 107 The Acehnese Ulama Islamic clerics fought against both the Dutch and the Japanese revolting against the Dutch in February 1942 and against Japan in November 1942 The revolt was led by the All Aceh Religious Scholars Association PUSA and was centred around Tjot Plieng village religious school Japanese troops armed with mortars and machine guns were attacked by sword wielding Acehnese led by Tengku Abdul Djalil The Japanese suffered 18 dead in the uprising while over a hundred Acehnese died and the school and village mosque were destroyed 89 108 Support for independence edit nbsp Young Indonesian boys being trained by the Imperial Japanese ArmyBefore the war the Dutch colonial authorities had successfully repressed the Indonesian nationalist movement 109 In the initial stages of the occupation the Japanese were completely opposed to independence because of possible disruption to the exploitation of the resources in the archipelago that were so important to the war effort In contrast the occupied Philippines and Burma were granted independence in 1943 and in March that year the Japanese decided to include Indonesia within the Japanese Empire but to allow political participation of the natives a decision strongly opposed by the 25th Army in Sumatra and the Navy in the eastern islands 110 In November 1943 the Japanese held a Greater East Asia Conference in Tokyo attended by the notionally independent countries of the Co Prosperity Sphere including Thailand the Philippines and Burma but no Indonesian representatives were invited By way of compensation pre war independence figure Sukarno Hatta and Hajar Dewantara were invited to Tokyo just after the conference and were granted an audience with Emperor Hirohito and met Prime Minister Tojo However they were given no positive indications about future Indonesian independence and there was to be no lifting of the ban on the flag or national anthem 111 As Japan s territorial expansion was halted then reversed Japan the 16th Army in Java in particular became more favorable to the idea of Indonesian involvement in the governance of Java A Central Advisory Board was established headed by pre war independence figure Sukarno with Indonesians appointed as advisors In October 1943 the Japanese established a volunteer force to defend against a future allied invasion the Defenders of the Homeland Indonesian Pembela Tanah Air PETA Japanese 郷土防衛義勇軍 romanized kyōdo bōei giyugun Then in 1944 the Java Service Association Jawa Hokokai was formed to mobilise the masses for Japanese interests 112 On 7 September 1944 Japanese Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso promised independence for the East Indies in the future The authorities in Java then allowed the flying of the Indonesian flag at Jawa Hokokai buildings Naval liaison officer in Batavia Rear admiral Tadashi Maeda provided official funds for tours around the archipelago by Sukarno and fellow independence activist Hatta officially as part of their Jawa Hokokai responsibilities In October 1944 Maeda established a Free Indonesia Dormitory to prepare youth leaders for an independent Indonesia With the war situation becoming increasingly dire in March 1945 the Japanese announced the formation of an Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence BPUPK comprising members of the older political generation including Sukarno and Hatta Chaired by Rajiman Wediodiningrat in two sessions in May and June it decided on the basis for an independent nation and produced a draft constitution Meanwhile the younger activists known as the pemuda wanted much more overt moves towards independence than the older generation were willing to risk resulting in a split between the generations 113 114 source source source source track 1966 ABC report examining Sukarno s alliance between imperial Japan and the Indonesian nationalist movementOn 29 April 1945 Lt Gen Kumakichi Harada the commander of the 16th Army in Java established the Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence Indonesian Badan Penyelidik Usaha Persiapan Kemerdekaan BPUPK Japanese 独立準備調査会 Dokuritsu Junbi Chōsakai as the initial stage of the establishment of independence for the area under the control of the 16th Army 115 End of occupation edit nbsp Japanese commanders listening to the terms of surrenderGeneral Douglas MacArthur wanted to fight his way with Allied troops to liberate Java in 1944 45 but was ordered not to by the Joint Chiefs and President Franklin Roosevelt He did successfully conduct the Western New Guinea campaign in 1944 which liberated much of Dutch New Guinea The U S built Naval Base Morotai which opened in September 1944 after the Battle of Morotai so they could use the facilities for the Philippines campaign Some Australian bases were built during the war The Borneo campaign between May and July 1945 was ordered by MacArthur to liberate British Borneo and Dutch Borneo The Japanese occupation officially ended with the Japanese surrender in the Pacific and two days later Sukarno declared Indonesian Independence Indonesian forces spent the next four years fighting the Dutch for independence According to historian Theodore Friend American restraint from fighting their way into Java saved Japanese Javanese Dutch and American lives but also impeded international support for Indonesian independence 116 At the end of the war there were around 300 000 Japanese civilian and military personnel in the East Indies The Dutch East Indies alongside French Indochina were transferred from the American led South West Pacific Area command to the UK led South East Asia Command effective 15 August 1945 Consequently the UK became the lead nation in the reoccupation of the territories 117 The priorities for the UK occupation was to take the surrender of and repatriate Japanese forces and also the Recovery of Allied Prisoners of War and Internees operation 118 Repatriation of Japanese prisoners of war was delayed because of their low priority for sea borne transport in the Allied Shipping Pool 117 By April 1946 only 48 000 had been repatriated the majority were evacuated in May and June 117 However around 100 000 Japanese prisoners of war were retained for use as labour until early 1946 119 It was reported that approximately 25 000 Japanese soldiers allied themselves with Indonesian nationalists and were subsequently beyond Allied control 117 Some eventually assimilated themselves into local communities Many of these soldiers joined the TNI or other Indonesian military organizations and some of these former Japanese soldiers died during the Indonesian National Revolution such as Abdul Rachman Ichiki Tatsuo 120 121 122 nbsp Japanese soldiers on trialThe final stages of warfare were initiated in October 1945 when in accordance with the terms of their surrender the Japanese tried to re establish the authority they relinquished to Indonesians in the towns and cities Japanese military police killed Republican pemuda in Pekalongan Central Java on 3 October and Japanese troops drove Republican pemuda out of Bandung in West Java and handed the city to the British but the fiercest fighting involving the Japanese was in Semarang On 14 October British forces began to occupy the city Retreating Republican forces retaliated by killing between 130 and 300 Japanese prisoners they were holding Five hundred Japanese and 2 000 Indonesians had been killed and the Japanese had almost captured the city six days later when British forces arrived 123 I of course knew that we had been forced to keep Japanese troops under arms to protect our lines of communication and vital areas but it was nevertheless a great shock to me to find over a thousand Japanese troops guarding the nine miles of road from the airport to the town 124 Lord Mountbatten of Burma in April 1946 after visiting Sumatra referring to the use of Japanese Surrendered Personnel From 6 March 1946 to 24 December 1949 the returning Dutch authorities held 448 war crimes trials against 1 038 suspects 969 of those were condemned 93 4 with 236 24 4 receiving a death sentence 125 126 See also edit nbsp Indonesia portal nbsp East Timor portal nbsp New Guinea portalBulu prison massacre Japanese colonial empire Japanese run internment campsNotes edit Ricklefs 2008 p 323 325 Ricklefs 2008 p 337 a b c Dower 1986 p 296 a b c Ricklefs 2008 p 325 Isnaeni Hendri F 5 April 2010 The VOC Genocide Historia Histori Bersama Farid Muhammad Commemorating the Banda genocide in 1621 Banda PALA Kenji Tsuchiya Siegel James 1990 Invincible Kitsch or as Tourists in the Age of Des Alwi Indonesia 50 61 76 doi 10 2307 3351230 hdl 1813 53943 JSTOR 3351230 Worrall Simon 23 June 2012 The world s oldest clove tree BBC Clulow Adam 2016 Modern Painting of Massacre at Banda The Amboyna Conspiracy Trial Mendl Wolf 2001 Japan and South East Asia From the Meiji Restoration to 1945 Vol 1 Taylor amp Francis pp 11 12 ISBN 9780415182058 Matthiessen Sven 2015 Japanese Pan Asianism and the Philippines from the Late Nineteenth Century to the End of World War II Going to the Philippines Is Like Coming Home Brill s Japanese Studies Library BRILL p 16 ISBN 9789004305724 Japanese Commodities and Formation of Japan Imagery in Colonial Indonesia The Case Study of Jintan Pills and Its Trademark PDF Dissertation Keio University Graduate School of Sociology 2017 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Tagliacozzo Eric 2008 Secret Trades Porous Borders Smuggling and States Along a Southeast Asian Frontier 1865 1915 Yale Historical Publications Series illustrated ed Yale University Press p 276 ISBN 978 0300128123 Document PDF Smuggling Borneo Scribd Friend 2003 p 29 Vickers 2013 pp 86 87 Vickers 2013 pp 85 86 Yamamoto 2000 a b c Vickers 2013 p 86 Bidien 1945 pp 345 346 Ricklefs 2008 pp 324 325 War History Office 2015 p 437 Taylor 2003 pp 310 311 a b c d Vickers 2013 p 90 Horton 2007 Pike 2016 pp 322 333 a b Taylor 2003 p 310 Radio chief held at gun point ABC Weekly 29 June 1946 Retrieved 17 August 2023 via Trove Mizuma 2013 pp 49 68 Womack 2006 pp 194 196 Pramoedya Ananta Toer 1998 pp 157 158 quoted in Vickers 2013 p 85 Cribb amp Brown 1995 p 13 Taylor 2003 p 311 中島 三千男 津田 良樹 稲宮 康人 20 March 2019 旧オランダ領東印度 現インドネシア共和国 に建てられた神社について 非文字資料研究センター News Letter in Japanese 41 17 23 ISSN 2432 549X Reid 1971 p 22 Benda 1956 p 543 Muhammad Abdul Aziz 2012 pp 152 153 Cribb amp Kahin 2004 p 465 Muhammad Abdul Aziz 2012 pp 152 154 Post 2009 pp 74 75 Vickers 2013 p 94 Asian Women s Fund Soh 2008 p 21 Soh 2008 p 22 Poelgeest 1994 p 2 Narayanan Arujunan 2002 Japanese war crimes and Allied crimes trials in Borneo during World War II PDF JEBAT 29 10 11 At the Mercy of the Enemy the Record of a Japanese War Criminal PDF 教育学論究 29 12 29 40 15 December 2020 Salbiah bt Mohamed Salleh Jamil bin Ahmad Mohd Aderi bin Che Noh Aminudin bin Hehsan 2018 Profil Akhlak Guru Pendidikan Islam Di Malaysia International Journal of Islamic and Civilizational Studies 5 1 80 93 doi 10 11113 umran2018 5n2 187 Penders Christian Lambert Maria 1974 The Life and Times of Sukarno illustrated ed Sidgwick amp Jackson p 64 ISBN 0283484144 This impression is reinforced by Sukarno s own glowing reports26 of how he was successful in regulating rice supplies in Padang and in procuring prostitutes for the Japanese soldiers activities which cannot exactly be described as Friend Theodore 2009 Indonesian Destinies unabridged ed Harvard University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0674037359 Sukarno s first administrative act he acknowledges was to gather 120 prostitutes as volunteers to be penned in a special camp for service to Japanese soldiers He congratulated himself on simultaneously enhancing the women s income sating the lust of the invaders and thereby protecting virtuous Minangkabau maidens Levenda Peter 2011 Tantric Temples Eros and Magic in Java Nicolas Hays Inc p 52 ISBN 978 0892546015 Geerken Horst H 2015 A Gecko for Luck 18 years in Indonesia 2 ed BoD Books on Demand p 145 ISBN 978 3839152485 Krausse Gerald H Krausse Sylvia C Engelen 1994 Indonesia 2nd ed Clio Press p xxviii ISBN 1851091270 had to wear identification tags Some 270 000 Indonesians were conscripted to work in Burma but only 7 000 returned many thousands were kept in Japan as prisoners of war and never came back Indonesian women were routinely rounded up to serve as prostitutes in Japanese army camps Stetz Margaret D Oh Bonnie B C 2015 Legacies of the Comfort Women of World War II illustrated ed Routledge p 61 64 ISBN 978 1317466253 comfort women 2 October 1945 KOEPANG TIMOR 1945 10 02 TIMFORCE TWENTY SIX JAVANESE GIRLS WHO WERE LIBERATED AT KOEPANG FROM JAPANESE BROTHELS JUST PRIOR TO THEIR RELEASE THE JAPANESE ISSUED THEM WITH RED CROSS ARM BANDS IN AN ATTEMPT TO CAMOUFLAGE THE FOUL MANNER IN WHICH THESE GIRLS HAD BEEN USED YOUNG LADY IN CHIEF OF THE GIRLS IS KOMORIAH SHE IS HOLDING THE DOLL SHE KEPT THROUGHOUT HER ENFORCED STAY IN JAPANESE HANDS PHOTOGRAPHER K B DAVIS Australian War Memorial 120083 comfort women 2 October 1945 KOEPANG TIMOR 1945 10 03 TIMFORCE TWENTY SIX JAVANESE GIRLS WHO WERE LIBERATED AT KOEPANG FROM JAPANESE BROTHELS JUST PRIOR TO THEIR RELEASE THE JAPANESE ISSUED THEM WITH RED CROSS ARM BANDS IN AN ATTEMPT TO CAMOUFLAGE THE FOUL MANNER IN WHICH THESE GIRLS HAD BEEN USED THESE GIRLS WILL NOW BE CARED FOR BY THE NETHERLANDS INDIES CIVIL ADMINISTRATION PHOTOGRAPHER K B DAVIS Australian War Memorial 120087 Tanaka Yuki 2003 Japan s Comfort Women Routledge p 81 ISBN 1134650124 Stetz Margaret D Oh Bonnie B C 2015 Legacies of the Comfort Women of World War II illustrated ed Routledge p 63 ISBN 978 1317466253 JPRI Critique A Publication of the Japan Policy Research Institute Volume 9 Japan Policy Research Institute p 1 Post 2009 p 194 Mackie Vera 2017 Gender geopolitics and gaps in the records In Reid Kirsty Paisley Fiona eds Sources and Methods in Histories of Colonialism Approaching the Imperial Archive Routledge Guides to Using Historical Sources illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis p 140 ISBN 978 1351986632 Boyer Allen D 2017 Rocky Boyer s War An Unvarnished History of the Air Blitz that Won the War in the Southwest Pacific Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1682470978 Trevor Malcolm 2001 Japan Restless Competitor the Pursuit of Economic Nationalism illustrated ed Psychology Press p 124 ISBN 1903350026 Trevor Malcolm 2013 Japan Restless Competitor The Pursuit of Economic Nationalism Routledge p 124 ISBN 978 1134278411 Jennings Captain Mick Jennings Margery 2021 Escape to Japanese Captivity A Couple s Tragic Ordeal in Sumatra 1942 1945 Pen and Sword Military p 168 ISBN 978 1526783127 Terry Francis Stanley Frank Roberts Niall John 27 July 1995 F3781 Francis Stanley Terry as a cook minesweeper HMAS Mercedes and corvette HMAS Warrnambool Australian western approaches and northern and eastern waters 1941 1946 interviewed by John Roberts TDK D60 Cassette Event occurs at Hour Australian War Memorial S01794 https s3 ap southeast 2 amazonaws com awm media collection S01794 document 1866247 PDF Francis Stanley Terry cook minesweeper HMAS Mercedes and corvette HMAS Warrnambool Australian western approaches and northern and eastern waters 1941 1946 oral history interview 27 July 1995 AWM S01794 Molemans Griselda Park Hee Seok 15 August 2022 Both the State and the royal family benefited from the earnings of Dutch East Indies comfort women Follow The Money Molemans Griselda Park Hee Seok 15 August 2022 Both the State and the royal family benefited from the earnings of Dutch East Indies comfort women Follow The Money slaves Friend Donald 1945 Javanese slaves in native compound sick ward Australian War Memorial C170219 slaves Friend Donald 1945 Javanese slaves in native compound sick ward Australian War Memorial C170216 brothel 1945 Labuan September 1945 A private house in Fox Road used by the Japanese as an Officer s club and brothel Donor R Fullford Australian War Memorial C375607 Malay and Javanese 28 August 1945 MIRI BORNEO 1945 08 28 OVER 300 NATIVES MALAY AND JAVANESE ESCAPED FROM THE JAPANESE AND ARE NOW IN THE BRITISH BORNEO CIVIL ADMINISTRATION COMPOUND SHOWN ABOVE A GROUP OF MEN TYPICAL OF THE MALNUTRITION CASES BEING TREATED AT THE COMPOUND Australian War Memorial 115185 Malay and Javanese 28 August 1945 MIRI BORNEO 1945 08 28 SOME OF THE 300 NATIVES MALAY AND JAVANESE WHO ESCAPED FROM THE JAPANESE AND ARE NOW IN THE BRITISH BORNEO CIVIL ADMINISTRATION COMPOUND Australian War Memorial 115187 O Neill Claire 4 June 2011 Comfort Women Untold Stories Of Wartime Abuse NPR Baird J Kevin 1 January 2016 War Crimes in Japan Occupied Indonesia Unraveling the Persecution of Achmad Mochtar Japan Focus The Asia Pacific Journal 14 1 Tanaka Yuki 2003 Japan s Comfort Women Routledge p 78 82 85 86 ISBN 1134650124 As much as the Japanese were unconcerned about the exploitation of non Europeans the Dutch were equally indifferent to victims who were not white and Dutch However there were at least two exceptional cases brought by the Dutch Japan s Comfort Women Asia s Transformations 1 ed 0415194008 9780415194006 Stetz Margaret D Oh Bonnie B C 2015 Legacies of the Comfort Women of World War II illustrated ed Routledge p 61 68 ISBN 978 1317466253 Japanese were unconcerned about the exploitation of non Europeans so too the Dutch were equally indifferent to victims who were not white and Dutch Touwen Bouwsma Elly 2013 Four Japanese Policy towards the Chinese on Java 1942 1945 A Preliminary Outline In Kratoska Paul H ed Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire Routledge p 57 61 ISBN 978 1136125065 Post 2009 p 191 a b Post 2009 p 193 Post 2009 p 195 Post 2009 p 196 Hului Patricia 19 July 2021 The influence of Catholicism on Flores island during WWII Kajo Mag Hului Patricia 18 September 2019 TThe Mandor Affair the massacres in West Kalimantan during WWII Kajo Mag Reid 1974 p 12 a b Ricklefs 2008 p 331 Heidhues 2003 p 204 Ooi 2013 p 42 Heidhues 2003 p 205 ed Kratoska 2013 p 160 Davidson 2002 p 79 Davidson 2003 p 9 ed Kratoska 2002 pp 167 168 Ooi 2013 Ooi 2013 p 176 Zweers 2011 p 6 ed Kratoska 2013 p 168 Heidhues 2003 p 207 Felton 2007 p 86 Davidson 2009 p 37 Heidhues 2003 p 206 Davidson 2003 p 8 Hui 2011 p 42 Baldacchino 2013 p 75 Reid 2013 p 120 Vickers 2013 p 85 Inomata 1997 pp 97 Inomata 1997 pp 98 Ricklefs 2008 pp 334 336 Ricklefs 2008 pp 334 339 Reid 1974 p 14 Kusuma amp Elson 2011 p 196 Friend 2003 p 33 a b c d Dennis Peter 1987 Troubled Days of Peace Mountbatten and South East Asia Command 1945 46 Manchester Manchester University Press p 227 ISBN 0 7190 2205 3 Far East Prisoners of War History 17 August 2021 Concentration and Repatriation of JSP in SEAC Briefs for SAC returning to London 30 May 1946 WO 172 1813 Horton 2016 p 127 Gotō 1976 pp 57 68 McMillan 2006 p 79 Ricklefs 2008 p 349 Kibata 2000 p 146 Piccigallo 1979 Borch 2017 p 36 References editAsian Women s Fund Women made to become comfort women Netherlands Digital Museum The Comfort Women Issue and the Asian Women s Fund Retrieved 14 July 2021 Baldacchino Godfrey ed 2013 The Political Economy of Divided Islands Unified Geographies Multiple Polities Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 02313 1 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Benda Harry S 1956 The Beginnings of the Japanese Occupation of Java The Far Eastern Quarterly 14 4 541 560 doi 10 2307 2941923 JSTOR 2941923 S2CID 155352132 Bidien Charles 5 December 1945 Independence the Issue Far Eastern Survey 14 24 345 348 doi 10 2307 3023219 ISSN 0362 8949 JSTOR 3023219 Borch Frederic L 2017 Military Trials of War Criminals in the Netherlands East Indies 1946 1949 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 877716 8 Cribb Robert Brown Colin 1995 Modern Indonesia A History Since 1945 Harlow Essex England Longman Group ISBN 978 0 582 05713 5 Cribb R B Kahin Audrey 2004 Historical Dictionary of Indonesia Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 4935 8 Davidson Jamie Seth 2002 Violence and Politics in West Kalimantan Indonesia University of Washington ISBN 978 0 493 91910 2 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Davidson Jamie S August 2003 Primitive Politics The Rise and Fall of the Dayak Unity Party in West Kalimantan Indonesia PDF Asia Research Institute Working Paper Series ARI Working Paper Asia Research Institute of the National University of Singapore 9 Retrieved 13 July 2021 Davidson Jamie Seth 2009 From Rebellion to Riots Collective Violence on Indonesian Borneo NUS Press ISBN 978 9971 69 427 2 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Dennis Peter 1987 Troubled Days of Peace Mountbatten and South East Asia Command 1945 46 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 2205 3 Dower John SW 1986 War Without Mercy Race and Power in the Pacific War Pantheon ISBN 0 394 75172 8 Federspiel Howard M 2007 Sultans Shamans and Saints Islam and Muslims in Southeast Asia illustrated ed University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3052 6 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Friend Theodore 2003 Indonesian Destinies The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01834 1 Gin Ooi Keat 2013 Post War Borneo 1945 1950 Nationalism Empire and State Building Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 05810 5 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Gotō Kenichi October 1976 Life and Death of Abdul Rachman 1906 49 One Aspect of Japanese Indonesian Relationships PDF Indonesia 22 22 57 68 doi 10 2307 3350977 JSTOR 3350977 Heidhues Mary F Somers 2003 Golddiggers Farmers and Traders in the Chinese Districts of West Kalimantan Indonesia Vol 34 of Southeast Asia publications series illustrated ed SEAP Publications ISBN 978 0 87727 733 0 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Horton William Bradley 2007 Ethnic Cleavage in Timorese Society The Black Columns in Occupied Portuguese Timor 1942 国際開発学研究 6 2 Horton William Bradley July 2016 History Unhinged World War II and the Reshaping of Indonesian History A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of Literature Waseda University ed Tokyo Waseda University Hui Yew Foong 2011 Strangers at Home History and Subjectivity Among the Chinese Communities of West Kalimantan Indonesia Brill ISBN 978 90 04 17340 8 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Inomata Aiko Kurasawa 1997 Indonesia Merdeka Selekas Lekasnya Preparations for Independence in the Last Days of Japanese Occupation In Taufik Abdullah ed The Heartbeat of Indonesian Revolution PT Gramedia Pustaka Utmama pp 97 113 ISBN 979 605 723 9 Jong Louis 2002 The collapse of a colonial society the Dutch in Indonesia during the Second World War Vol 206 of Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Nederlands Geologisch Mijnbouwkundig Genootschap Volume 206 of Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal Land en Volkenkunde illustrated ed KITLV Press ISBN 978 90 6718 203 4 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Kahin George McTurnan 1952 Nationalism and Revolution in Indonesia Ithaca New York Cornell University Press Kibata Yōichi 2000 Japanese Treatment of British Prisoners of War The Historical Context In Kosuge Margaret Towle Phillip Kibata Yōichi eds Japanese Prisoners of War Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 979 433 287 9 Kratoska Paul H 2013 Southeast Asian Minorities in the Wartime Japanese Empire Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 12506 5 Retrieved 10 March 2014 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 Martinkus John 2004 Indonesia s Secret War in Aceh illustrated ed Random House Australia ISBN 978 1 74051 209 1 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Mizuma Masanori 2013 ひと目でわかる アジア解放 時代の日本精神 Japanese spirit in the Liberation of Asia era that can be seen at a glance in Japanese PHP Institute ISBN 978 4 569 81389 9 McMillan Richard 2006 The British Occupation of Indonesia 1945 1946 Britain The Netherlands and the Indonesian Revolution Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 134 25427 9 Muhammad Abdul Aziz 2012 Japan s Colonialism and Indonesia Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 94 011 9233 0 Nasution Abdul Haris 1963 Tentara Nasional Indonesia Volume 1 Ganaco Retrieved 10 March 2014 Piccigallo Philip R 1979 The Japanese On Trial Allied War Crimes Operations in the East 1945 1951 University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 78033 0 Pike Frances 2016 Hirohito s War The Pacific War 1941 1945 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 350 02122 8 Poelgeest Bart van 24 January 1994 Report of a study of Dutch government documents on the forced prostitution of Dutch women in the Dutch East Indies during the Japanese occupation Unofficial Translation PDF Digital Museum The Comfort Women Issue and the Asian Women s Fund Retrieved 14 July 2021 Post Peter 2009 The Encyclopedia of Indonesia in the Pacific War Handbook of Oriental Studies Vol 19 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 19017 7 Pramoedya Ananta Toer 1998 The Mute s Soliloquy Translated by Willem Samuels Penguin ISBN 0 14 028904 6 Reid Anthony October 1971 The Birth of the Republic of Sumatra PDF Indonesia 12 12 21 4 doi 10 2307 3350656 JSTOR 3350656 Reid Anthony 1974 The Indonesian National Revolution 1945 1950 Melbourne Longman Pty ISBN 978 0 582 71046 7 Reid Anthony 2013 The Blood of the People Revolution and the End of Traditional Rule in Northern Sumatra University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 81 7835 776 8 Ricklefs Merle Calvin 2008 A History of Modern Indonesia Since c 1200 4th ed Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 14918 3 Sai Siew Min Hoon Chang Yau eds 2013 Chinese Indonesians Reassessed History Religion and Belonging Vol 52 of Routledge contemporary Southeast Asia series illustrated ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 60801 5 Retrieved 10 March 2014 Soh Chunghee Sarah 2008 The Comfort Women Sexual Violence and Postcolonial Memory in Korea and Japan University of Chicago Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 226 76777 2 Taylor Jean Gelman 2003 Indonesia Peoples and Histories New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10518 6 Vickers Adrian 2013 A History Modern of Indonesia 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 62445 0 War History Office of the National Defense College of Japan 2015 Remmelink Willem ed The Invasion of the Dutch East Indies PDF Leiden University Press doi 10 26530 OAPEN 595090 ISBN 978 94 006 0229 8 S2CID 163579476 Womack Tom 2006 The Dutch Naval Air Force against Japan The Defense of the Netherlands East Indies 1941 1942 McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 2365 1 Yamamoto Mayumi 2000 Spell of the Rebel Monumental Apprehensions Japanese Discourses On Pieter Erberveld PDF Indonesia 77 77 109 143 Pahlefi Riza 11 August 2022 BENGKALIS NEGERI JELAPANG PADI in Indonesian CV DOTPLUS Publisher ISBN 978 623 6428 59 7 Further reading editAnderson Ben 1972 Java in a Time of Revolution Occupation and Resistance 1944 1946 Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 0687 4 Hillen Ernest 1993 The Way of a Boy A Memoir of Java Toronto Viking ISBN 978 0 670 85049 5 Zweers Louis Spring 2011 The crown jewels lost and found PDF The Newsletter No 56 International Institute for Asian Studies External links edit nbsp Media related to Japanese occupation of Indonesia at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies amp oldid 1190132872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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