"HISTORY OF INDONESIAN COUNTRY"
The
history of Indonesia has been shaped by its geographic
position, its natural resources, a series of human migrations and
contacts, wars and conquests, as well as by trade, economics and
politics.
Indonesia is an
archipelagic country of 17,508 islands (6,000 inhabited) stretching along the equator in
South East Asia.
The country's strategic sea-lane position fostered inter-island and
international trade; trade has since fundamentally shaped Indonesian
history. The area of Indonesia is populated by peoples of various
migrations, creating a diversity of
cultures,
ethnicities, and
languages.
The archipelago's landforms and climate significantly influenced
agriculture and trade, and the formation of states. The boundaries of
the state of Indonesia represent the twentieth century borders of the
Dutch East Indies.
Fossilised remains of
Homo erectus and his tools, popularly known as the "
Java Man", suggest the Indonesian archipelago was inhabited by at least 1.5 million years ago.
Austronesian people,
who form the majority of the modern population, are thought to have
originally been from Taiwan and arrived in Indonesia around 2000 BCE.
From the 7th century CE, the powerful
Srivijaya naval kingdom flourished bringing
Hindu and
Buddhist influences with it. The agricultural Buddhist
Sailendra and Hindu
Mataram dynasties subsequently thrived and declined in inland Java. The last significant non-Muslim kingdom, the Hindu
Majapahit kingdom, flourished from the late 13th century, and its influence stretched over much of Indonesia. The
earliest evidence of Islamised populations in Indonesia dates to the 13th century in northern
Sumatra; other Indonesian areas gradually adopted Islam which became the dominant religion in
Java
and Sumatra by the end of the 16th century. For the most part, Islam
overlaid and mixed with existing cultural and religious influences.
Europeans arrived in Indonesia from the 16th century seeking to monopolise the sources of valuable
nutmeg,
cloves, and
cubeb pepper in
Maluku. In 1602 the Dutch established the
Dutch East India Company
(VOC) and became the dominant European power by 1610. Following
bankruptcy, the VOC was formally dissolved in 1800, and the government
of the Netherlands established the
Dutch East Indies under government control. By the early 20th century, Dutch dominance extended to the current boundaries. The
Japanese invasion and
subsequent occupation
in 1942-45 during WWII ended Dutch rule, and encouraged the previously
suppressed Indonesian independence movement. Two days after the
surrender of Japan in August 1945, nationalist leader,
Sukarno, declared independence and became president. The Netherlands tried to reestablish its rule, but a
bitter armed and diplomatic struggle ended in December 1949, when in the face of international pressure, the Dutch formally recognised Indonesian independence.
An attempted coup in 1965 led to
a violent army-led anti-communist purge in which over half a million people were killed.
General Suharto politically outmanoeuvred President Sukarno, and became president in March 1968. His
New Order administration
garnered the favour of the West whose investment in Indonesia was a
major factor in the subsequent three decades of substantial economic
growth. In the late 1990s, however, Indonesia was the country hardest
hit by the
East Asian Financial Crisis which led to
popular protests and Suharto's resignation on 21 May 1998. The
Reformasi
era following Suharto's resignation, has led to a strengthening of
democratic processes, including a regional autonomy program, the
secession of
East Timor, and the first
direct presidential election in 2004.
Political and economic instability, social unrest, corruption, natural
disasters, and terrorism have slowed progress. Although relations among
different religious and ethnic groups are largely harmonious, acute
sectarian discontent and violence remain problems in some areas.
Prehistory
In 2007 analysis of cut marks on two bovid bones found in
Sangiran,
showed them to have been made 1.5 to 1.6 million years ago by clamshell
tools. This is the oldest evidence for the presence of early man in
Indonesia. Fossilised remains of
Homo erectus, popularly known as the "
Java Man" were first discovered by the Dutch anatomist
Eugène Dubois at
Trinil in 1891, and are at least 700,000 years old, at that time the oldest human ancestor ever found. Further
Homo erectus fossils of a similar age were found at
Sangiran in the 1930`s by the
anthropologist Gustav Heinrich Ralph von Koenigswald, who in the same time period also uncovered fossils at
Ngandong alongside more advanced tools, re-dated in 2011 to between 550,000 and 143,000 years old.
[1][2] In 1977 another
Homo erectus skull was discovered at Sambungmacan
[3]
In 2003, on the island of
Flores, fossils of a new small hominid dated between 74,000 and 13,000 years old and named "
Flores Man" (
Homo floresiensis) were discovered much to the surprise of the scientific community.
[4]
This 3 foot tall hominid is thought to be a species descended from Homo
Erectus and reduced in size over thousands of years by a well known
process called
island dwarfism. Flores Man seems to have shared the island with modern
Homo sapiens
until only 12,000 years ago, when they became extinct. In 2010 stone
tools were discovered on Flores dating from 1 million years ago, which
is the oldest evidence anywhere in the world that early man had the
technology to make sea crossings at this very early time.
[5]
The archipelago was formed during the thaw after the latest
ice age. Early humans to travelled by sea and spread from mainland
Asia eastward to
New Guinea and
Australia.
Homo sapiens reached the region by around 45,000 years ago.
[6] In 2011 evidence was uncovered in neighbouring
East Timor,
showing that 42,000 years ago these early settlers had high-level
maritime skills, and by implication the technology needed to make ocean
crossings to reach Australia and other islands, as they were catching
and consuming large numbers of big deep sea fish such as tuna.
[7]
Austronesian people
form the majority of the modern population. They may have arrived in
Indonesia around 2000 BCE and are thought to have originated in Taiwan.
[8] Dong Son culture spread to Indonesia bringing with it techniques of
wet-field rice cultivation, ritual buffalo sacrifice, bronze casting,
megalithic practises, and
ikat weaving methods. Some of these practices remain in areas including the
Batak areas of Sumatra,
Toraja in Sulawesi, and several islands in
Nusa Tenggara. Early Indonesians were animists who honoured the spirits of the dead as their souls or life force could still help the living.
Ideal agricultural conditions, and the mastering of wet-field rice cultivation as early as the 8th century BCE,
[9]
allowed villages, towns, and small kingdoms to flourish by the 1st
century CE. These kingdoms (little more than collections of villages
subservient to petty chieftains) evolved with their own ethnic and
tribal religions. Java's hot and even temperature, abundant rain and
volcanic soil, was perfect for wet rice cultivation. Such agriculture
required a well organised society in contrast to dry-field rice which is
a much simpler form of cultivation that doesn't require an elaborate
social structure to support it.
Hindu-Buddhist civilizations
Early kingdoms
1600-year-old stone inscription from the era of Purnawarman, king of
Tarumanagara, founded in Tugu sub-district of
Jakarta.
References to the Dvipantara or
Jawa Dwipa Hindu kingdom in
Java and
Sumatra appear in Sanskrit writings from 200 BCE.
[citation needed] The earliest archeological relic discovered in Indonesia is from the Ujung Kulon National Park, West Java, where an early
Hindu statue of
Ganesha
from the 1st century CE was found on the summit of Mount Raksa in
Panaitan Island. There is also archeological evidence of a kingdom in
Sunda territory in West Java dating from the 2nd century, and according
to Dr Tony Djubiantono, the head of Bandung Archeology Agency,
Jiwa Temple in
Batujaya, Karawang,
West Java was also built around this time.
A number of
Hindu and
Buddhist states flourished and then declined across Indonesia. By the time of the European
Renaissance,
Java and
Sumatra had already seen over a millennium of civilization and two major empires. One such early kingdom was
Tarumanagara, which flourished between 358 and 669 CE. Located in
West Java close to modern-day
Jakarta, its 5th-century king, Purnawarman, established the earliest known inscriptions in
Java, the Ciaruteun inscription located near
Bogor.
On this monument, King Purnavarman inscribed his name and made an
imprint of his footprints, as well as his elephant's footprints. The
accompanying inscription reads, "Here are the footprints of King
Purnavarman, the heroic conqueror of the world". This inscription is in
Sanskrit
and is still clear after 1500 years. Purnawarman apparently built a
canal that changed the course of the Cakung River, and drained a coastal
area for agriculture and settlement. In his stone inscriptions,
Purnawarman associated himself with
Vishnu, and
Brahmins ritually secured the hydraulic project.
[10]
Three rough plinths dating from the beginning of the 4th century are found in
Kutai,
East Kalimantan, near
Mahakam River. The plinths bear an inscription in the
Pallava script of India reading "A gift to the
Brahmin priests".
The political history of Indonesian archipelago during the 7th to 11th centuries was dominated by
Srivijaya based in Sumatra, also
Sailendra that dominated central Java and constructed
Borobudur,
the largest Buddhist monument in the world. The history of the 14th and
15th centuries is not well known due to scarcity of evidence. Two major
states dominated this period;
Majapahit in East Java, the greatest of the pre-Islamic Indonesian states, and
Malacca on the west coast of the
Malay Peninsula, arguably the greatest of the Muslim trading empires.
[11]
Medang
Prambanan in
Java; built during the Sanjaya dynasty of Mataram, it is one of the largest Hindu temple complexes in south-east Asia.
Main article:
Medang Kingdom
Medang or previously known as
Mataram was an
Indianized kingdom based in Central Java around modern-day
Yogyakarta between the 8th and 10th centuries. The center of the kingdom was moved from central Java to east Java by
Mpu Sindok. An eruption of
Mount Merapi volcano or a power struggle may have caused the move.
The first king of
Mataram was
Sri Sanjaya and left inscriptions in stone.
[12] The monumental Hindu temple of
Prambanan in the vicinity of Yogyakarta was built by
Daksa.
Dharmawangsa ordered the translation of the
Mahabharata into
Old Javanese in 996.
The kingdom collapsed into chaos at the end of Dharmawangsa's reign under military pressure from
Srivijaya. One of the last major kings of Mataram was
Airlangga who reigned from 1016 until 1049.
[13] Airlangga was a son of
Udayana of
Bali and a relative of Dharmawangsa re-established the kingdom including Bali under the name of Kahuripan.
Srivijaya
Srivijaya was an
ethnic Malay kingdom on Sumatra which influenced much of the
Maritime Southeast Asia. From the 7th century CE, the powerful
Srivijaya naval kingdom flourished as a result of trade and the influences of Hinduism and Buddhism that were imported with it.
[14]
As early as the 1st century CE Indonesian vessels made trade voyages as far as Africa. Picture: a ship carved on
Borobudur, circa 800 CE.
Srivijaya was centred in the coastal trading centre of present day
Palembang.
Srivijaya was not a "state" in the modern sense with defined boundaries
and a centralized government to which the citizens own allegiance.
[15] Rather Srivijaya was a confederacy form of society centered on a royal heartland.
[16] It was a
thalassocracy
and did not extend its influence far beyond the coastal areas of the
islands of Southeast Asia. Trade was the driving force of Srivijaya just
as it is for most societies throughout history.
[17] The Srivijayan navy controlled the trade that made its way through the
Strait of Malacca.
[15]
By the 7th century, the harbors of various vassal states of Srivijaya lined both coasts of the Straits of Melaka.
[16] Around this time, Srivijaya had established
suzerainty over large areas of Sumatra, western Java, and much of the
Malay Peninsula. Dominating the Malacca and
Sunda straits, the empire controlled both the
Spice Route
traffic and local trade. It remained a formidable sea power until the
13th century. This spread the ethnic Malay culture throughout Sumatra,
the Malay Peninsula, and western
Borneo. A stronghold of
Vajrayana Buddhism, Srivijaya attracted pilgrims and scholars from other parts of Asia.
A series of Chola raids in the 11th century weakened the Srivijayan
hegemony and enabled the formation of regional kingdoms based, like
Kediri, on intensive agriculture rather than coastal and long distance
trade. Srivijayan influence waned by the 11th century. The island was in
frequent conflict with the Javanese kingdoms, first
Singhasari and then
Majapahit. Islam eventually made its way to the
Aceh region of Sumatra, spreading its influence through contacts with
Arabs and
Indian traders. By the late 13th century, the kingdom of
Pasai in northern Sumatra converted to Islam. At that time Srivijaya was briefly a tributary of the
Khmer empire and later the
Sukhothai kingdom[citation needed].
The last inscription dates to 1374, where a crown prince,
Ananggavarman, is mentioned. Srivijaya ceased to exist by 1414, when
Parameswara, the kingdom's last prince, converted to Islam and founded the
Sultanate of Malacca on the Malay peninsula.
Singhasari and Majapahit
Wringin Lawang, the split gate shows the red brick construction, and
strong geometric lines of Majapahit architecture. Located at Jatipasar,
Trowulan,
East Java.
Main articles:
Singhasari and
Majapahit
Despite a lack of historical evidence, it is known that Majapahit was the most dominant of Indonesia's pre-Islamic states.
[18] The Hindu
Majapahit kingdom was founded in eastern Java in the late 13th century, and under
Gajah Mada it experienced what is often referred to as a "Golden Age" in Indonesian history,
[19] when its influence extended to much of southern Malay Peninsula, Borneo, Sumatra, and Bali
[citation needed] from about 1293 to around 1500.
The founder of the Majapahit Empire,
Kertarajasa, was the son-in-law of the ruler of the
Singhasari
kingdom, also based in Java. After Singhasari drove Srivijaya out of
Java in 1290, the rising power of Singhasari came to the attention of
Kublai Khan in China and he sent emissaries demanding tribute.
Kertanagara, ruler of the Singhasari kingdom, refused to pay tribute and the Khan sent a
punitive expedition which arrived off the coast of Java in 1293. By that time, a rebel from
Kediri, Jayakatwang, had killed Kertanagara. The Majapahit founder allied himself with the
Mongols
against Jayakatwang and, once the Singhasari kingdom was destroyed,
turned and forced his Mongol allies to withdraw in confusion.
Gajah Mada,
an ambitious Majapahit prime minister and regent from 1331 to 1364,
extended the empire's rule to the surrounding islands. A few years after
Gajah Mada's death, the Majapahit navy captured Palembang, putting an
end to the Srivijayan kingdom. Although the Majapahit rulers extended
their power over other islands and destroyed neighbouring kingdoms,
their focus seems to have been on controlling and gaining a larger share
of the commercial trade that passed through the archipelago. About the
time Majapahit was founded, Muslim traders and
proselytisers
began entering the area. After its peak in the 14th century, Majapahit
power began to decline and was unable to control the rising power of the
Sultanate of Malacca.
Dates for the end of the Majapahit Empire range from 1478 to 1520. A
large number of courtiers, artisans, priests, and members of the royal
family moved east to the island of
Bali at the end of Majapahit power.
The age of Islamic states
The spread of Islam
The earliest accounts of the Indonesian archipelago date from the
Abbasid Caliphate, according to those early accounts the Indonesian archipelago were famous among early
muslim sailors mainly due to its abundance of precious
spice trade commodities such as
nutmeg,
cloves,
galangal and many other spices.
[20]
Although Muslim traders first traveled through South East Asia early in the Islamic era, the
spread of Islam among the inhabitants of the Indonesian archipelago dates to the 13th century in northern
Sumatra.
[21]
Although it is known that the spread of Islam began in the west of the
archipelago, the fragmentary evidence does not suggest a rolling wave of
conversion through adjacent areas; rather, it suggests the process was
complicated and slow.
[21]
The spread of Islam was driven by increasing trade links outside of the
archipelago; in general, traders and the royalty of major kingdoms were
the first to adopt the new religion.
[22]
Other Indonesian areas gradually adopted Islam, making it the dominant religion in
Java
and Sumatra by the end of the 16th century. For the most part, Islam
overlaid and mixed with existing cultural and religious influences,
which shaped the predominant form of Islam in Indonesia, particularly in
Java.
[22] Only
Bali
retained a Hindu majority. In the eastern archipelago, both Christian
and Islamic missionaries were active in the 16th and 17th centuries,
and, currently, there are large communities of both religions on these
islands.
[22]
Sultanate of Mataram
The Sultanate of Mataram was the third Sultanate in Java, after the
Sultanate of Demak Bintoro and the Sultanate of Pajang.
According to Javanese records, Kyai
Gedhe Pamanahan became the ruler of the Mataram area in the 1570s with the support of the kingdom of
Pajang to the east, near the current site of
Surakarta (Solo). Pamanahan was often referred to as Kyai Gedhe Mataram after his ascension.
Pamanahan's son, Panembahan
Senapati Ingalaga,
replaced his father on the throne around 1584. Under Senapati the
kingdom grew substantially through regular military campaigns against
Mataram's neighbors. Shortly after his accession, for example, he
conquered his father's patrons in Pajang.
The reign of Panembahan
Seda ing Krapyak (
c. 1601–1613), the son of Senapati, was dominated by further warfare, especially against powerful
Surabaya, already a major center in East Java. The first contact between Mataram and the
Dutch East India Company
(VOC) occurred under Krapyak. Dutch activities at the time were limited
to trading from limited coastal settlements, so their interactions with
the inland Mataram kingdom were limited, although they did form an
alliance against Surabaya in 1613. Krapyak died that year.
Krapyak was succeeded by his son, who is known simply as
Sultan Agung ("Great
Sultan")
in Javanese records. Agung was responsible for the great expansion and
lasting historical legacy of Mataram due to the extensive military
conquests of his long reign from 1613 to 1646.
After years of war Agung finally conquered Surabaya. The city
surrounded by land and sea and starved it into submission. With Surabaya
brought into the empire, the Mataram kingdom encompassed all of central
and eastern Java, and
Madura; only in the west did
Banten and the Dutch settlement in
Batavia
remain outside Agung's control. He tried repeatedly in the 1620s and
1630s to drive the Dutch from Batavia, but his armies had met their
match, and he was forced to share control over Java.
In 1645 he began building
Imogiri,
his burial place, about fifteen kilometers south of Yogyakarta. Imogiri
remains the resting place of most of the royalty of Yogyakarta and
Surakarta to this day. Agung died in the spring of 1646, with his image
of royal invincibility shattered by his losses to the Dutch, but he did
leave behind an empire that covered most of Java and its neighboring
islands.
Upon taking the throne, Agung's son Susuhunan
Amangkurat I
tried to bring long-term stability to Mataram's realm, murdering local
leaders that were insufficiently deferential to him, and closing ports
so he alone had control over trade with the Dutch.
By the mid-1670s dissatisfaction with the king fanned into open revolt.
Raden Trunajaya, a prince from Madura, lead a revolt fortified by itinerant mercenaries from
Makassar
that captured the king's court at Mataram in mid-1677. The king escaped
to the north coast with his eldest son, the future king
Amangkurat II,
leaving his younger son Pangeran Puger in Mataram. Apparently more
interested in profit and revenge than in running a struggling empire,
the rebel Trunajaya looted the court and withdrew to his stronghold in
East Java leaving Puger in control of a weak court.
Amangkurat I died just after his expulsion, making Amangkurat II king
in 1677. He too was nearly helpless, though, having fled without an
army or treasury to build one. In an attempt to regain his kingdom, he
made substantial concessions to the Dutch, who then went to war to
reinstate him. For the Dutch, a stable Mataram empire that was deeply
indebted to them would help ensure continued trade on favorable terms.
They were willing to lend their military might to keep the kingdom
together. Dutch forces first captured Trunajaya, then forced Puger to
recognize the sovereignty of his elder brother Amangkurat II. The
kingdom collapsed after a
two-year war, in which power plays crippled the Sunan.
The Sultanate of Banten
In 1524–25, Sunan Gunung Jati from Cirebon, together with the armies of
Demak Sultanate, seized the port of Banten from the
Sunda kingdom, and established
The Sultanate of Banten.
This was accompanied by Muslim preachers and the adoption of Islam
amongst the local population. At its peak in the first half of the 17th
century, the Sultanate lasted from 1526 to 1813 AD. The Sultanate left
many archaeological remains and historical records.
[23]
Colonial era
Beginning in the 16th century, successive waves of Europeans—the
Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch and British—sought to dominate the spice trade at its sources in
India and the 'Spice Islands' (
Maluku) of Indonesia. This meant finding a way to Asia to cut out Muslim merchants who, with their
Venetian outlet in the
Mediterranean,
monopolised spice imports to Europe. Astronomically priced at the time,
spices were highly coveted not only to preserve and make poorly
preserved meat palatable, but also as medicines and magic potions.
The arrival of Europeans in South East Asia is often regarded as the
watershed moment in its history. Other scholars consider this view
untenable,
[24]
arguing that European influence during the times of the early arrivals
of the 16th and 17th centuries was limited in both area and depth. This
is in part due to Europe not being the most advanced or dynamic area of
the world in the early 15th century. Rather, the major expansionist
force of this time was Islam; in 1453, for example, the
Ottoman Turks conquered
Constantinople, while Islam continued to spread through Indonesia and the
Philippines.
European influence, particularly that of the Dutch, would not have its
greatest impact on Indonesia until the 18th and 19th centuries.
The Portuguese
The
nutmeg plant is native to Indonesia's
Banda Islands. Once one of the world's most valuable commodities, it drew the first European colonial powers to Indonesia.
New found Portuguese expertise in navigation, ship building and
weaponry allowed them to make daring expeditions of exploration and
expansion. Starting with the first exploratory expeditions sent from
newly conquered
Malacca in 1512, the Portuguese were the first Europeans to arrive in Indonesia, and sought to dominate the sources of valuable spices
[25] and to extend the
Catholic Church's missionary
efforts. The Portuguese turned east to Maluku and through both military
conquest and alliance with local rulers, they established trading
posts, forts, and missions on the islands of
Ternate,
Ambon, and
Solor
among others. The height of Portuguese missionary activities, however,
came at the latter half of the 16th century. Ultimately, the Portuguese
presence in Indonesia was reduced to Solor,
Flores and
Timor
in modern day Nusa Tenggara, following defeat at the hands of
indigenous Ternateans and the Dutch in Maluku, and a general failure to
maintain control of trade in the region.
[26]
In comparison with the original Portuguese ambition to dominate Asian
trade, their influence on Indonesian culture was small: the romantic
keroncong guitar ballads; a number of Indonesian words which reflect
Portuguese’s role as the
lingua franca of the archipelago alongside
Malay;
and many family names in eastern Indonesia such as da Costa, Dias, de
Fretes, Gonsalves, etc. The most significant impacts of the Portuguese
arrival were the disruption and disorganisation of the trade network
mostly as a result of their conquest of
Malacca,
and the first significant plantings of Christianity in Indonesia. There
have continued to be Christian communities in eastern Indonesia through
to the present, which has contributed to a sense of shared interest
with Europeans, particularly among the Ambonese.
[27]
Dutch East-India Company
An early 18th-century Dutch map from a time when only the north coastal ports of Java were well known to the Dutch
In 1602, the Dutch parliament awarded the VOC a monopoly on trade and
colonial activities in the region at a time before the company
controlled any territory in Java. In 1619, the VOC conquered the West
Javan city of Jayakarta, where they founded the city of Batavia
(present-day
Jakarta). The VOC became deeply involved in the internal politics of
Java in this period, and fought in a number of wars involving the leaders of
Mataram and
Banten.
The Dutch followed the Portuguese aspirations, courage, brutality and
strategies but brought better organization, weapons, ships, and
superior financial backing. Although they failed to gain complete
control of the Indonesian spice trade, they had much more success than
the previous Portuguese efforts. They exploited the factionalisation of
the small kingdoms in Java that had replaced Majapahit, establishing a
permanent foothold in Java, from which grew a land-based colonial empire
which became one of the richest colonial possessions on earth.
[27]
Dutch state rule
After the VOC was dissolved in 1800 following bankruptcy,
[25] and after a short British rule under
Thomas Stamford Raffles, the Dutch state took over the VOC possessions in 1816. A Javanese uprising was crushed in the
Java War of 1825–1830. After 1830 a system of forced cultivations and indentured labour was introduced on Java, the
Cultivation System (in Dutch:
cultuurstelsel).
This system brought the Dutch and their Indonesian collaborators
enormous wealth. The cultivation system tied peasants to their land,
forcing them to work in government-owned plantations for 60 days of the
year. The system was abolished in
a more liberal period after 1870. In 1901 the Dutch adopted what they called the
Ethical Policy, which included somewhat increased investment in indigenous education, and modest political reforms.
The Dutch colonialists formed a privileged upper social class of
soldiers, administrators, managers, teachers and pioneers. They lived
together with the "natives", but at the top of a rigid social and racial
caste system.
[28][29]
The Dutch East Indies had two legal classes of citizens; European and
indigenous. A third class, Foreign Easterners, was added in 1920.
[30]
Upgrading the infrastructure of ports and roads was a high priority
for the Dutch, with the goal of modernizing the economy, pumping wages
into local areas, facilitating commerce, and speeding up military
movements. By 1950 Dutch engineers had built and upgraded a road network
with 12,000 km of asphalted surface, 41,000 km of metalled road area
and 16,000 km of gravel surfaces.
[31]
In addition the Dutch built 7,500 kilometers (4,700 mi) of railways,
bridges, irrigation systems covering 1.4 million hectares (5,400 sq mi)
of rice fields, several harbours, and 140 public drinking water systems.
These Dutch constructed public works became the economic base of the
colonial state; after independence they became the basis of the
Indonesian infrastructure.
[32]
For most of the colonial period, Dutch control over its territories
in the Indonesian archipelago was tenuous. In some cases, Dutch police
and military actions in parts of Indonesia were quite cruel. Recent
discussions, for example, of Dutch cruelty in
Aceh have encouraged renewed research on these aspects of Dutch rule.
[33]
It was only in the early 20th century, three centuries after the first
Dutch trading post, that the full extent of the colonial territory was
established and direct colonial rule exerted across what would become
the boundaries of the modern Indonesian state.
[34] Portuguese Timor, now
East Timor,
remained under Portuguese rule until 1975 when it was invaded by
Indonesia. The Indonesian government declared the territory an
Indonesian province but relinquished it in 1999.
The emergence of Indonesia
Indonesian National Awakening
Sukarno, Indonesian Nationalist leader, and later, first president of Indonesia
In October 1908, the first nationalist movement was formed,
Budi Utomo.
[35] On 10 September 1912, the first nationalist mass movement was formed--
Sarekat Islam.
[36] By December 1912, Sarekat Islam had 93,000 members.
[16]
The Dutch responded after the First World War with repressive measures.
The nationalist leaders came from a small group of young professionals
and students, some of whom had been educated in the Netherlands. In the
post–World War I era, the Indonesian communists who were associated with
the
Third International started to usurp the nationalist movement.
[37] The repression of the nationalist movement led to many arrests, including Indonesia's first president,
Sukarno (1901–70), who was imprisoned for political activities on 29 December 1929.
[38] Also arrested was
Mohammad Hatta, first Vice-President of Indonesia.
[39] Additionally, Sutan Sjahrir, who later became the first Prime Minister of Indonesia, was arrested on this date.
[40]
In 1914 the exiled Dutch socialist
Henk Sneevliet founded the
Indies Social Democratic Association. Initially a small forum of Dutch socialists, it would later evolve into the
Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) in 1924.
[41]
In the post–World War I era, the Dutch strongly repressed all attempts
at change. This repression led to a growth of the PKI. By December 1924,
the PKI had a membership of 1,140.
[16] One year later in 1925, the PKI had grown to 3,000 members.
[16]
In 1926 thru 1927, there was a PKI-led revolt against the Dutch
colonialism and the harsh repression based on strikes of urban workers.
[42] However, the strikes and the revolt was put down by the Dutch with some 13,000 nationalists and communists leaders arrested.
[16] Some 4,500 were given prison sentences.
[43]
Sukarno was released from prison in December 1931.
[44] However, Sukarno was re-arrested again on 1 August 1933.
[45]
Japanese occupation
The
Japanese invasion and
subsequent occupation during World War II ended Dutch rule,
[46] and encouraged the previously suppressed Indonesian independence movement. In May 1940, early in
World War II, the Netherlands was occupied by
Nazi
Germany. The Dutch East Indies declared a state of siege and in July
redirected exports for Japan to the US and Britain. Negotiations with
the Japanese aimed at securing supplies of aviation fuel collapsed in
June 1941, and the Japanese started their conquest of Southeast Asia in
December of that year.
[47]
That same month, factions from Sumatra sought Japanese assistance for a
revolt against the Dutch wartime government. The last Dutch forces were
defeated by Japan in March 1942.
In July 1942,
Sukarno accepted Japan's offer to rally the public in support of the Japanese war effort.
Sukarno and
Mohammad Hatta
were decorated by the Emperor of Japan in 1943. However, experience of
the Japanese occupation of Indonesia varied considerably, depending upon
where one lived and one's 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.
Thousands taken away from Indonesia as war labourers (romusha) suffered
or died as a result of ill-treatment and starvation. People of Dutch
and mixed
Dutch-Indonesian descent were particular targets of the Japanese occupation.
In March 1945 Japan organized an Indonesian committee (BPUPKI) on independence. At its first meeting in May,
Soepomo
spoke of national integration and against personal individualism; while
Muhammad Yamin suggested that the new nation should claim
Sarawak,
Sabah,
Malaya,
Portuguese Timor, and all the pre-war territories of the Dutch East
Indies. The committee drafted the 1945 Constitution, which remains in
force, though now much amended. On 9 August 1945 Sukarno, Hatta, and
Radjiman Wediodiningrat were flown to meet Marshal
Hisaichi Terauchi
in Vietnam. They were told that Japan intended to announce Indonesian
independence on 24 August. After the Japanese surrender however, Sukarno
unilaterally proclaimed
Indonesian independence on 17 August. A later UN report stated that four million people died in Indonesia as a result of the Japanese occupation.
[48]
Indonesian National Revolution
Indonesian flag raising shortly after the declaration of independence.
Under pressure from radical and politicised
pemuda ('youth') groups, Sukarno and Hatta proclaimed
Indonesian independence, on 17 August 1945, two days after the Japanese Emperor’s
surrender in the Pacific. The following day, the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP) declared Sukarno
President, and Hatta
Vice President.
[49]
Word of the proclamation spread by shortwave and fliers while the
Indonesian war-time military (PETA), youths, and others rallied in
support of the new republic, often moving to take over government
offices from the Japanese.
The Netherlands, initially backed by the British, tried to re-establish their rule,
[50]
and a bitter armed and diplomatic struggle ended in December 1949, when
in the face of international pressure, the Dutch formally recognised
Indonesian independence.
[51]
Dutch efforts to re-establish complete control met resistance. At the
end of World War II, a power vacuum arose, and the nationalists often
succeeded in seizing the arms of the demoralised Japanese. A period of
unrest with city guerrilla warfare called the
Bersiap
period ensued. Groups of Indonesian nationalists armed with improvised
weapons (like bamboo spears) and firearms attacked returning Allied
troops. 3,500 Europeans were killed and 20,000 were missing, meaning
there were more European deaths in Indonesia after the war than during
the war. After returning to Java, Dutch forces quickly re-occupied the
colonial capital of Batavia (now
Jakarta), so the city of
Yogyakarta
in central Java became the capital of the nationalist forces.
Negotiations with the nationalists led to two major truce agreements,
but disputes about their implementation, and much mutual provocation,
led each time to renewed conflict. Within four years the Dutch had
recaptured almost the whole of Indonesia, but guerrilla resistance, led
on Java by commander
Nasution
persisted. On 27 December 1949, after four years of sporadic warfare
and fierce criticism of the Dutch by the UN, the Netherlands officially
recognised Indonesian sovereignty under the
federal structure of the
United States of Indonesia
(RUSI). On 17 August 1950, exactly five years after the proclamation of
independence, the last of the federal states were dissolved and Sukarno
proclaimed a single unitary Republic of Indonesia.
[52]
Sukarno's presidency
Democratic experiment
Campaign posters for the 1955 Indonesian election.
With the unifying struggle to secure Indonesia's independence over,
divisions in Indonesian society began to appear. These included regional
differences in customs, religion, the impact of Christianity and
Marxism, and fears of Javanese political domination. Following colonial
rule, Japanese occupation, and war against the Dutch, the new country
suffered from severe poverty, a ruinous economy, low educational and
skills levels, and authoritarian traditions.
[53] Challenges to the authority of the Republic included the militant
Darul Islam who waged a guerrilla struggle against the Republic from 1948 to 1962; the declaration of an independent
Republic of South Maluku by
Ambonese formerly of the Royal Dutch Indies Army; and rebellions in Sumatra and Sulawesi between 1955 and 1961.
In contrast to the
1945 Constitution, the
1950 constitution
mandated a parliamentary system of government, an executive responsible
to the parliament, and stipulated at length constitutional guarantees
for human rights, drawing heavily on the 1948
United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
[54]
A proliferation of political parties dealing for shares of cabinet
seats resulted in a rapid turnover of coalition governments including 17
cabinets between 1945 and 1958. The long-postponed parliamentary
elections were held in 1955; the
Indonesian National Party (PNI)—considered Sukarno's party—topped the poll, and the
Communist Party of Indonesia
(PKI) received strong support, but no party garnered more than a
quarter of the votes, which resulted in short-lived coalitions.
[55]
Guided Democracy
Coat of Arms of the Republic of Indonesia, adopted 1950
By 1956, Sukarno was openly criticising parliamentary democracy,
stating that it was "based upon inherent conflict" which ran counter to
Indonesian notions of harmony as being the natural state of human
relationships. Instead, he sought a system based on the traditional
village system of discussion and consensus, under the guidance of
village elders. He proposed a threefold blend of
nasionalisme ('nationalism'),
agama ('religion'), and
komunisme ('communism') into a co-operative '
Nas-A-Kom'
government. This was intended to appease the three main factions in
Indonesian politics — the army, Islamic groups, and the communists. With
the support of the military, he proclaimed in February 1957, '
Guided Democracy', and proposed a cabinet of representing all the political parties of importance (including the PKI).
[55]
The US tried and failed to secretly overthrow the President, while
Secretary of State Dulles declared before Congress that "we are not
interested in the internal affairs of this country."
[56]
Sukarno abrogated the
1950 Constitution on 9 July 1959 by a
decree dissolving the
Constitutional Assembly and restoring the 1945
Constitution.
[55]
The elected parliament was replaced by one appointed by, and subject to
the will of, the President. Another non-elected body, the Supreme
Advisory Council, was the main policy development body, while the
National Front was set up in September 1960 and presided over by the
president to "mobilise the revolutionary forces of the people".
[55] Western-style parliamentary democracy was thus finished in Indonesia until the 1999 elections of the
Reformasi era.
[55]
Sukarno's revolution and nationalism
Charismatic Sukarno spoke as a romantic revolutionary, and under his
increasingly authoritarian rule, Indonesia moved on a course of stormy
nationalism. Sukarno was popularly referred to as
bung ("older
brother"), and he painted himself as a man of the people carrying the
aspirations of Indonesia and one who dared take on the West.
[57]
He instigated a number of large, ideologically driven infrastructure
projects and monuments celebrating Indonesia's identity, which were
criticised as substitutes for real development in a deteriorating
economy.
[57]
Western New Guinea
had been part of the Dutch East Indies, and Indonesian nationalists had
thus claimed it on this basis. Indonesia was able to instigate a
diplomatic and military confrontation with the Dutch over the territory
following an Indonesian-Soviet arms agreement in 1960. It was, however,
United States pressure on the Netherlands that led to an Indonesian
takeover in 1963.
[58] Also in 1963, Indonesia commenced
Konfrontasi with the new state of Malaysia. The northern states of Borneo, formerly British
Sarawak and
Sabah, had wavered in joining Malaysia, whilst Indonesia saw itself as the rightful ruler of
Austronesian peoples and supported an unsuccessful revolution attempt in
Brunei.
[58]
Reviving the glories of the Indonesian National Revolution, Sukarno
rallied against notions of British imperialism mounting military
offensives along the Indonesia-Malaysia border in Borneo. As the PKI
rallied in Jakarta streets in support, the West became increasingly
alarmed at Indonesian foreign policy and the United States withdrew its
aid to Indonesia.
[58]
Indonesia's economic position continued to deteriorate; by the
mid-1960s, the cash-strapped government had to scrap critical public
sector subsidies, inflation was at 1,000%, export revenues were
shrinking, infrastructure crumbling, and factories were operating at
minimal capacity with negligible
investment. Severe poverty and hunger were widespread.
[58][59]
The New Order
Transition to the New Order
Described as the great
dalang ("puppet master"), Sukarno's
position depended on balancing the opposing and increasingly hostile
forces of the army and PKI. Sukarno's anti-imperial ideology saw
Indonesia increasingly dependent on Soviet and then communist China. By
1965, the PKI was the largest communist party in the world outside the
Soviet Union or China. Penetrating all levels of government, the party
increasingly gained influence at the expense of the army.
On 30 September 1965, six of the most senior generals within the
military and other officers were executed in an attempted coup. The
insurgents, known later as the
30 September Movement,
backed a rival faction of the army and took up positions in the
capital, later seizing control of the national radio station. They
claimed they were acting against a plot organised by the generals to
overthrow Sukarno. Within a few hours,
Major General Suharto, commander of the Army Strategic Reserve (
Kostrad),
mobilised counteraction, and by the evening of 1 October, it was clear
the coup, which had little coordination and was largely limited to
Jakarta, had failed.
Complicated and partisan theories
continue to this day over the identity of the attempted coup's
organisers and their aims. According to the Indonesian army, the PKI
were behind the coup and used disgruntled army officers to carry it out,
and this became the official account of Suharto's subsequent
New Order administration. Most historians agree
[citation needed]that
the coup and the surrounding events were not led by a single mastermind
controlling all events, and that the full truth will never likely be
known.
The PKI was blamed for the coup, and anti-communists, initially following the army's lead went on a violent
anti-communist purge across much of the country. The PKI was effectively destroyed,
[60] and the most widely accepted estimates are that up to 500,000 were killed.
[61]
The violence was especially brutal in Java and Bali. The PKI was
outlawed and possibly more than 1 million of its leaders and affiliates
were imprisoned.
[62]
Throughout the 1965–66 period, President Sukarno attempted to restore
his political position and shift the country back to its pre-October
1965 position but his Guided Democracy balancing act was destroyed with
the PKI's destruction. Although he remained president, the weakened
Sukarno was forced to transfer key political and military powers to
General Suharto, who by that time had become head of the armed forces.
In March 1967, the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly (MPRS)
named General Suharto acting president. Suharto was formally appointed
president in March 1968. Sukarno lived under virtual house arrest until
his death in 1970.
Entrenchment of the New Order
Suharto was the military president of Indonesia from 1967 to 1998
In the aftermath of Suharto's rise, hundreds of thousands of people
were killed or imprisoned by the military and religious groups in a
backlash against alleged communist supporters.
[63] Suharto's administration is commonly called the
New Order era.
[64]
Suharto invited major foreign investment, which produced substantial,
if uneven, economic growth. However, Suharto enriched himself and his
family through business dealings and widespread corruption.
[65]
Annexation of West Irian
At the time of independence, the Dutch retained control over the western half of
New Guinea,
and permitted steps toward self-government and a declaration of
independence on 1 December 1961. After negotiations with the Dutch on
the incorporation of the territory into Indonesia failed, an Indonesian
paratroop invasion 18 December preceded armed clashes between Indonesian
and Dutch troops in 1961 and 1962. In 1962 the United States pressured
the Netherlands into secret talks with Indonesia which in August 1962
produced the
New York Agreement, and Indonesia assumed administrative responsibility for West Irian on 1 May 1963.
Rejecting UN supervision, the Indonesian government under Suharto
decided to settle the question of West Irian, the former Dutch New
Guinea, in their favor. Rather than a referendum of all residents of
West Irian as had been agreed under Sukarno, an "
Act of Free Choice"
was conducted 1969 in which 1,025 Papuan representatives of local
councils were selected by the Indonesians. After training in
Indonesian language they were warned to vote in favor of Indonesian integration with the group unanimously voting for integration with Indonesia.
[citation needed] A subsequent UN General Assembly resolution confirmed the transfer of sovereignty to Indonesia.
West Irian was renamed
Irian Jaya ('glorious Irian') in 1973. Opposition to Indonesian administration of Irian Jaya (later known as
Papua) gave rise to
guerrilla activity in the years following Jakarta's assumption of control.
Annexation of East Timor
In 1975, the
Carnation Revolution in Portugal caused authorities there to announce plans for decolonisation of
Portuguese Timor, the eastern half of the island of
Timor whose western half was a part of the Indonesian province of
East Nusa Tenggara. In the elections held in 1975,
Fretilin,
a left-leaning party and UDT, aligned with the local elite, emerged as
the largest parties, having previously formed an alliance to campaign
for independence from Portugal. Apodeti, a party advocating integration
with Indonesia, enjoyed little popular support.
Indonesia alleged that Fretilin was communist, and feared that an
independent East Timor would influence separatism in the archipelago.
Indonesian military intelligence influenced the break-up of the alliance
between Fretilin and UDT, which led to a coup by the UDT on 11 August
1975, and a month-long civil war. During this time, the Portuguese
government effectively abandoned the territory, and did not resume the
decolonisation process. On 28 November, Fretilin
unilaterally declared independence,
and proclaimed the 'Democratic Republic of East Timor'. Nine days
later, on 7 December, Indonesia invaded East Timor, eventually annexing
the tiny country of (then) 680,000 people. Indonesia was supported
materially and diplomatically by the United States, Australia and the
United Kingdom who regarded Indonesia as an anti-communist ally.
Following the 1998 resignation of Suharto, on 30 August 1999, the people of East Timor voted overwhelmingly for independence in
a UN-sponsored referendum.
About 99% of the eligible population participated; more than three
quarters chose independence despite months of attacks by the Indonesian
military and its militia. After the result was announced, elements of
the Indonesian military and its militia retaliated by killing
approximately 2,000 East Timorese, displacing two-thirds of the
population, raping hundreds of women and girls, and destroying much of
the country's infrastructure. In October 1999, the Indonesian parliament
(MPR) revoked the decree that annexed East Timor, and the
United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) assumed responsibility for governing East Timor until it officially became an independent state in May 2002.
Transmigration
The Transmigration program (
Transmigrasi) was a National Government initiative to move landless people from densely populated areas of
Indonesia (such as
Java and
Bali) to less populous areas of the country including
Papua,
Kalimantan,
Sumatra, and
Sulawesi.
The stated purpose of this program was to reduce the considerable
poverty and overpopulation on Java, to provide opportunities for
hard-working
poor people, and to provide a workforce to better utilise the resources
of the outer islands. The program, however, has been controversial with
critics accusing the Indonesian Government of trying to use these
migrants to reduce the proportion of native populations in receiving
areas, in order to weaken separatist movements. The program has often
been cited as a major and ongoing factor in controversies and even
conflict and violence between settlers and indigenous populations.
Reformation Era
Pro-democracy movement
University students and police forces clash in May 1998.
In 1996 Suharto undertook efforts to pre-empt a challenge to the New Order government. The
Indonesian Democratic Party
(PDI), a legal party that had traditionally propped up the regime had
changed direction, and began to assert its independence. Suharto
fostered a split over the leadership of PDI, backing a co-opted faction
loyal to deputy speaker of the
People's Representative Council Suryadi against a faction loyal to
Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of
Sukarno and the PDI's chairperson.
After the Suryadi faction announced a party congress to sack Megawati would be held in
Medan
on 20–22 June, Megawati proclaimed that her supporters would hold
demonstrations in protest. The Suryadi faction went through with its
sacking of Megawati, and the demonstrations manifested themselves
throughout Indonesia. This led to several confrontations on the streets
between protesters and security forces, and recriminations over the
violence. The protests culminated in the military allowing Megawati's
supporters to take over PDI headquarters in Jakarta, with a pledge of no
further demonstrations.
Suharto allowed the occupation of PDI headquarters to go on for almost a month, as attentions were also on
Jakarta due to a set of high-profile
ASEAN
meetings scheduled to take place there. Capitalizing on this, Megawati
supporters organized "democracy forums" with several speakers at the
site. On 26 July, officers of the military, Suryadi, and Suharto openly
aired their disgust with the forums.
[66]
On 27 July, police, soldiers, and persons claiming to be Suryadi
supporters stormed the headquarters. Several Megawati supporters were
killed, and over two-hundred arrested and tried under the
Anti-Subversion and Hate-Spreading laws. The day would become known as
"Black Saturday" and mark the beginning of a renewed crackdown by the
New Order government against supporters of democracy, now called the
"Reformasi" or Reformation.
[67]
Economic crisis and Suharto's resignation
In 1997 and 1998, Indonesia was the country hardest hit by the
East Asian Financial Crisis,
[68]
which had dire consequences for the Indonesian economy and society, and
Suharto's presidency. At the same time, the country suffered a severe
drought and some of the largest forest fires in history burned in
Kalimantan and Sumatra. The
rupiah,
the Indonesian currency, took a sharp dive in value. Suharto came under
scrutiny from international lending institutions, chiefly the
World Bank,
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the United States, over longtime embezzlement of funds and some
protectionist policies. In December, Suharto's government signed a letter of intent to the IMF, pledging to enact
austerity measures, including cuts to public services and removal of
subsidies,
in return for receiving the aid of the IMF and other donors. Prices for
goods such as kerosene and rice, and fees for public services including
education rose dramatically. The effects were exacerbated by widespread
corruption. The
austerity measures approved by Suharto had started to erode domestic confidence with the New Order
[69] and led to
popular protests.
Suharto stood for re-election by parliament for the seventh time in
March 1998, justifying it on the grounds of the necessity of his
leadership during the crisis. The parliament approved a new term. This
sparked protests and riots throughout the country, now termed the
Indonesian 1998 Revolution. Dissent within the ranks of his own
Golkar party and the military finally weakened Suharto, and on 21 May he stood down from power.
[70] He was replaced by his deputy
Jusuf Habibie.
President Habibie quickly assembled a cabinet. One of its main tasks was to re-establish
International Monetary Fund
and donor community support for an economic stabilization program. He
moved quickly to release political prisoners and lift some controls on
freedom of speech and association. Elections for the national,
provincial, and sub-provincial parliaments were held on 7 June 1999. For
the national parliament,
Indonesian Democratic Party-Struggle (PDI-P, led by Sukarno's daughter
Megawati Sukarnoputri) won 34% of the vote;
Golkar (Suharto's party; formerly the only legal party of government) 22%;
United Development Party (PPP, led by
Hamzah Haz) 12%; and
National Awakening Party (PKB, led by
Abdurrahman Wahid) 10%.
Politics since 1999
Indonesian 2009 election ballot, since 2004 Indonesian vote their president directly.
In October 1999, the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR), which
consists of the 500-member Parliament plus 200 appointed members,
elected
Abdurrahman Wahid,
commonly referred to as "Gus Dur" as President, and Megawati
Sukarnoputri as Vice President, for 5-year terms. Wahid named his first
Cabinet in early November 1999 and a reshuffled, second Cabinet in
August 2000. President Wahid's government continued to pursue
democratization and to encourage renewed economic growth under
challenging conditions. In addition to continuing economic malaise, his
government faced regional, interethnic, and interreligious conflict,
particularly in
Aceh, the
Maluku Islands, and Irian Jaya. In
West Timor,
the problems of displaced East Timorese and violence by pro-Indonesian
East Timorese militias caused considerable humanitarian and social
problems. An increasingly assertive Parliament frequently challenged
President Wahid's policies and prerogatives, contributing to a lively
and sometimes rancorous national political debate.
During the People's Consultative Assembly's first annual session in
August 2000, President Wahid gave an account of his government's
performance. On 29 January 2001 thousands of student protesters stormed
parliament grounds and demanded that President Abdurrahman Wahid resign
due to alleged involvement in corruption scandals. Under pressure from
the Assembly to improve management and coordination within the
government, he issued a presidential decree giving Vice President
Megawati control over the day-to-day administration of government. Soon
after,
Megawati Sukarnoputri assumed the presidency on 23 July. In 2004,
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono won Indonesia's first direct
Presidential election and in
2009 he was elected to a second term.
Terrorism
As a multi-ethnic and multi-culture democratic country with majority
of moderate Muslim population, Indonesia faces the challenges to deal
with
terrorism that linked to global militant Islamic movement. The
Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) militant Islamic organization that aspired for the establishment of a Daulah Islamiyah
[71]
that encompassed whole Southeast Asia including Indonesia, is
responsible for series of terrorist attacks in Indonesia. This terrorist
organization that linked to
Al-Qaeda, was responsible for the
Bali bombings in 2002 and
2005, as well as
Jakarta bombings in 2003,
2004, and
2009. Indonesian government, people and authorities has ever since tried to crack down the terrorist cells in Indonesia.
Tsunami disaster and Aceh peace deal
On 26 December 2004, a massive
earthquake and tsunami devastated parts of northern
Sumatra, particularly
Aceh.
Partly as a result of the need for cooperation and peace during the
recovery from the tsunami in Aceh, peace talks between the Indonesian
government and the
Free Aceh Movement (GAM) were restarted. Accords signed in
Helsinki
created a framework for military de-escalation in which the government
has reduced its military presence, as members of GAM's armed wing
decommission their weapons and apply for amnesty. The agreement also
allows for Acehnese nationalist forces to form their own party, and
other autonomy measures.