Stabroek News

Dutch king apologises for ‘excessive violence’ in colonial Indonesia

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- Dutch King Willem-Alexander apologized on Tuesday for the “excessive violence” inflicted on Indonesia during his country’s colonial rule, the monarchy’s first such admission of regret to the Southeast Asian nation.

The apology addressed the violence by Dutch forces during the period from Indonesia’s declaratio­n of independen­ce in 1945 until 1949, when the Netherland­s recognised it as an independen­t nation.

“I would like to express my regret and apologise for excessive violence on the part of the Dutch in those years,” King Willem-Alexander said at the presidenti­al palace in Bogor during a visit to Indonesia.

“I do so in the full realisatio­n that the pain and sorrow of the families affected continue to be felt today,” he said in his speech, a copy of which was posted on the website of the Royal House of the Netherland­s.

The Dutch government has previously apologized to Indonesia and paid some damages to survivors for violence carried out during colonial rule.

In 2011, Tjeerd de Zwaan, then the Dutch ambassador, apologized for killings in 1947 in a village in the province of West Java. Two years later, de Zwaan also apologized for killings in 1947 on the island of

Sulawesi. Last year, a Dutch appeals court in the Hague ordered the hearing of a lawsuit by five Indonesian­s who hold the Netherland­s responsibl­e for the execution of their fathers by Dutch soldiers in 1947.

During the four-day trip, the king and his wife Queen Maxima are set to visit the ancient capital of Yogyakarta and the Sebangau National Park in Indonesia’s province of Central Kalimantan on Borneo, according to the royal website. In his speech, the king also offered condolence­s for seven people killed when two boats collided in Central Kalimantan during preparatio­ns for the royal visit.

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