The Asian Age

Indonesia digs up cemetery for WWII sailors’ bones

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Brondong, Indonesia, Feb. 27: Indonesian authoritie­s have excavated a cemetery to try to recover the remains of Dutch and British sailors which were illegally removed from World War II shipwrecks.

Local officials, witnessed by representa­tives from the foreign affairs ministry and the Dutch embassy, dug up a cemetery at Brondong in East Java last week to search for the remains, which were dumped there after being taken from the shipwrecks.

Workmen earlier admitted they had been hired to salvage scrap from the wrecks of Dutch and British warships sunk during the 1942 Battle of the Java Sea.

“Before they cut up ( one of the ships), they cleaned it up and found human remains inside,” the chief of Brondong sub- district Sariono said on Tuesday.

The workers told officials they had buried some of the bones in the cemetery and threw the smaller pieces into the ocean.

“Based on their report, we dug up the cemetery on Thursday and found some bones, only enough to fill a small box,” Sariono added.

More than 900 Dutch and 250 Indo- Dutch sailors died during the Battle of the Java Sea, in which the Allied navies suffered a disastrous defeat by the Imperial Japanese Navy.

The discovery in 2016 that the shipwrecks had been targeted for scrap shocked the Dutch and British government­s, who urged Indonesia to investigat­e the issue.

Jakarta initially refused to take the blame for the missing ships, saying it had not been asked to protect the wrecks and therefore was not responsibl­e for them. But it later agreed to help with the Dutch investigat­ion.

 ?? — AFP ?? Family members pay their respects to the 915 Dutch soldiers killed in the battle of the Java Sea at the Dutch war cemetery Ereveld in Surabaya on Tuesday.
— AFP Family members pay their respects to the 915 Dutch soldiers killed in the battle of the Java Sea at the Dutch war cemetery Ereveld in Surabaya on Tuesday.

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