Home > South-East Asia >> Indonesia

Indonesia: A ray of hope for communist purge victims

UCA News - December 11, 2017

Konradus Epa – Indonesian Aris Panji Irianto did not mind traveling from his home in Central Java to Jakarta to meet with fellow victims of the nation's bloody 1965-66 anti-Communist purge.

He came to the capital in October to learn more about 30,000 pages of official United States records relating to the bloody repression of that time.

Irianto believes the documentation confirms the extensive role of the Indonesia military during the purge that killed more than 500,000 people and imprisoned a million more.

Now aged 66, Irianto was a teenager at the time of the widespread violence that followed the murder of a group of army generals on Sept. 30, 1965.

He did not know then why members of his family were dragged away by anti-communists in his hometown of Kebumen in Central Java.

He was lucky to survive, but to this day he is branded a communist, resulting in social exclusion and a ban on government employment. Irianto is glad the stigma was not passed to his children.

New milestone

The U.S. documents counter military assertions that it was not involved in wholesale killings.

Irianto said the revelations brought new hope for victims by dispelling "black propaganda" under the 1967-1998 regime of the late President Suharto.

Bedjo Untung, 77, who suffered in the purge, told ucanews.com that he and other victims met members of Indonesia's National Commission on Human Rights to discuss the implications of the released records.

They were opened to the public by relevant U.S. security agencies and archives.

Untung called on the present Indonesian government to examine the records and take remedial action to help those who were mistreated.

Indonesian students have long been taught that military personnel were guardian angels who rescued the nation from communist subversives.

"In fact, the document shows that the military was involved," said Untung. He said new evidence included details of behind-the-scenes U.S. support for the purge.

The Indonesia military allegedly worked with several large Muslim organizations as well as recruiting and arming village anti-communist militias.

Untung called on the Indonesian government and the National Commission on Human Rights to act on the disclosures without giving in to military pressure.

Commission member Amiruddin Al Rahab said the U.S. documents would require further investigation before their validity could be accepted.

The Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs, Wiranto, who uses only one name, said that verification would be necessary before use could be made of the documents in any legal proceedings

"Thorough examination is necessary to establish whether the information contained in the archives was factually correct," Wiranto, a former military commander, told reporters recently.

History professor at the Sanata Dharma University in Yogyakarta, Jesuit Father Fransiskus Baskara Tulus Wardaya, said that the military and government must allow Indonesian citizens to learn the facts about the 1960s massacre.

"We should be open to historical documents, even if they come from outside Indonesia, so that we can know our history more completely and contextually," Father Wardaya said.

The priest admitted to studying some of the U.S. documents when he was conducting research back in the mid 2000s, but access had been on condition that he not make public the names of individuals while they were still alive.

Amnesty International Indonesia has also called the government to release all relevant historical documents.

Irianto, Untung and other victims are still fighting for truth to prevail.

Source: http://www.eurasiareview.com/11122017-indonesia-a-ray-of-hope-for-communist-purge-victims/.

See also:


Home | Site Map | Calender & Events | News Services | Links & Resources | Contact Us