Widows of villagers executed by Dutch soldiers during Indonesia’s bloody battle for independence from colonial rule more than six decades ago quietly welcomed news they were entitled to compensation.
In a landmark ruling on Wednesday, a Dutch court said it was “unreasonable” for its government to argue that the statute of limitations had expired for the 1947 massacre that left an estimated 150 to 430 men from Rawagedeh village dead.
It said damages should be paid to the seven surviving widows.
On hearing the news, 90-year-old Cawi, worn down by life and time, simply said she felt “blessed” and “thankful.”
She was only 20 when Bitol — her husband of two years — left their house early to work in the rice paddies never to come home.
“It was hard for me to find his body,” she recalled quietly, saying it was tossed onto a heap of corpses.
Dutch troops arrived in Rawagedeh on Dec. 9, 1947 — two years before recognizing Indonesia’s independence following centuries of colonial rule — and demanded that residents tell them where they could find Lukas Kustaryo, a local soldier.
When they said they didn’t know, almost all the men in the village were lined up and shot.
“We, the women, saw all the dead bodies. We could not ask anyone to help us bury them,” Cawi said. “Because all the men were dead or had fled the village, we had to bury the bodies with our own bare hands.”
Despite a 1948 UN report condemning the attack as “deliberate and ruthless,” the Dutch government never prosecuted any soldiers for their roles in the killings.
A 1968 Dutch report acknowledged “violent excesses” in Indonesia, but argued that Dutch troops were carrying out a “police action” often incited by guerrilla warfare and terror attacks.
After a television documentary explored the bloodbath, the government conceded in 1995 that summary executions had taken place in Rawagedeh, now known as Balongsari, but said prosecutions were no longer possible.
It was not until 2005 that the government formally faced up to the past when former Dutch foreign minister Ben Bot expressed deep regret for offenses by Dutch forces throughout Indonesia in 1947.
The judgment paves the way for a case to establish the level of indemnities to be paid to the relatives.
It was not immediately clear how much compensation would be paid to the seven widows, but Cawi didn’t seem to care too much.
“I don’t have a house; I have to live with my grandson,” she said, adding that it would be nice if she could now afford to buy her own.
Meanwhile, the plaintiff’s lawyer, Liesbeth Zegveld, said the Hague Civil Court’s narrow focus on widows of massacre victims means it is unclear whether it will expose the Dutch state to a flood of compensation claims from other relatives of people killed during the Dutch fight to retain control over the Dutch East Indies, which became Indonesia in 1949.
In its written judgment, the court said the Netherlands “acted illegally” against the plaintiffs, “through the execution of their then-husbands” and said the state was liable to compensate them for “past and future suffering.”
In an initial reaction, government lawyer Bert-Jan Houtzagers said he was surprised by the ruling and would carefully study the 17-page judgment before deciding whether to appeal.
The court’s written ruling said that the statute of limitations normally expires after just five years, but it made an exception because of the seriousness of the offenses.
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