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They weren't allowed to call it reparation money or a compensation payment and it had nothing to do with the 1947 massacre in Rawagede, but at the beginning of 2009, the then Development Cooperation Minister Bert Koenders earmarked €850,000 for Balongsari, a small county in Java, Indonesia. It was development aid money and ostensibly had nothing to do with the fact that the village of Rawagede is also in Balongsari County.
On 9
December 1947, Dutch troops rounded up and killed an estimated 431 men in the
Javanese village of Rawagede. It was one of the worst massacres during the
‘Dutch police action’ in the Dutch East Indies just after the Second World War.
It’s almost
64 years later and the Dutch government still shies away from any
acknowledgement of guilt or hint of responsibility. It’s purely development aid
money and not a reparations payment or compensation and it’s not for Rawagede,
it’s for the entire county. The €850,000 was supposed to fund a school, a
market and expand the hospital in the village.
Waiting
Some 30
months have elapsed since the money was allocated but almost nothing has been
accomplished. On the outskirts of the village, a rice paddy measuring around
one hectare has been cleared but the school still hasn’t been built. The local
authorities say the building plans are ready and they’re just waiting for the
money. Sukarman say construction will begin as soon as they get the money. He’s
the chairman of foundation that has already built one school in Rawagede; it
stands across the road from the cleared rice paddy and has some 800 students
already. Sukarman: “We built that school in just 3 months. The World Bank gave
the money to our local foundation and we could arrange everything directly”.
The Dutch
development aid money is taking a different route: it’s not going to Rawagede,
it’s not going to Balongsari, and it’s not even going to the district of
Karawang; it’s going to the interior ministry in Jakarta. The ministry is
responsible for deciding who can build a school and when. The Hague has signed
an agreement with the Ministry and a portion of the money was transferred last
December. The local authorities have still not received any notification from
Jakarta and they still have no idea when, or if, the project will be started.
The Dutch
embassy in Jakarta has defended the bureaucratic maze, calling it ‘due care and
attention’. Ambassador Annemieke Ruigrok: “All of the projects must have a
sustainable character and everything has to be carefully calibrated and the
individual projects need to be coordinated with each other. Due care and
attention take time.” She added that the ministry is currently “working out the
final details.”
Microcredit
It’s not
clear what "working out the details" means, nor is there any sign of
‘coordination’. Even though the local authorities have had their plans ready
and waiting for the past 2 years, the ministry still hasn’t made any contact
with them.
Not all of
the money that was allocated in 2009 is in Jakarta; €254,500 went to the Dutch
Hivos foundation. The organisation has used some of the money to fund
micro-credit loans in Rawagede. Hundreds of people in the village – and
hundreds of others in neighbouring villages – have taken advantage of the HIV
OS microcredit loans. A total of €106,533 has been lent so far, while the rest
of the €850,000 is doing nothing for the people of Rawagede.
Hivos has
set a cooperative up and it now has 1247 members. It is supposed to be running
an organic shop and the Dutch foundation has so far funded it to the tune of
€50,000. The head of the cooperative, Riyadi, acknowledges that the shop hasn’t
yet been set up although a small gas canister business has gotten off the
ground. According to Riyadi, the €50,000 has been sent spent on operational costs
and salaries.
Apology
Several
attempts to get compensation for the victims’ relatives were dismissed on the
grounds that the events took place so long ago that the charges had lapsed. On
Wednesday, judges will issue a ruling on a case brought by four relatives of
Rawagede victims; they are demanding an apology and compensation.
Their
lawyer, Liesbeth Zegveld, does not believe that the case has expired, saying
that the Netherlands still handles cases dating from World War Two. If the
judges rule in favour of the plaintiffs, it could have huge consequences for
the victims - and their relatives - of other Dutch ‘police actions’ as they
could also claim compensation.
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