United States of Indonesia - Wikipedia
The United States of Indonesia Republik Indonesia Serikat |
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1949–1950 |
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Anthem: Indonesia Raya |
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Capital |
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Common languages |
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Government |
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• 1949–1950 |
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• 1949–1950 |
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History |
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• Independence from the Netherlands |
27 December 1949 |
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• Replaced by the Republic
of Indonesia |
17 August 1950 |
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Currency |
Rupiah (IDR) |
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The United States of Indonesia
(Dutch:Verenigde Staten van Indonesiƫ, Indonesian: Republik Indonesia Serikat, RIS), abbreviated as RUSI, was a federal state
to which the Netherlands formally transferred sovereignty of the Dutch East Indies
(minus Netherlands New Guinea) on 27 December 1949 following the Dutch-Indonesian
Round Table Conference. This
transfer ended the four-year
conflict between Indonesian nationalists
and the Netherlands that was fought over for control of Indonesia. It lasted
less than a year, before being replaced by the unitary Republic of Indonesia.
Background[edit]
In January 1942, the Japanese invaded
the Dutch East Indies, displacing the Dutch colonial
government.[1]
On 17 August 1945, two days after the Japanese surrender,
Indonesian nationalist leader Sukarno declared Indonesian
independence.[2]
The Dutch, viewing Sukarno and the Indonesian leadership as having collaborated
with the Japanese, decided to restore their authority.[3]
However, British South East Asia Command, under Lord Louis Mountbatten,
who had responsibility for the Dutch East Indies, refused to allow Dutch troops
to land in Java and Sumatra and recognized de facto Republican authority
there. However, the Dutch were able to reassert control over most of the area
previously occupied by the Japanese Navy, including Borneo and the Great East.
Discussions between the British and the Dutch resulted in Acting
Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies
Hubertus van Mook proposing eventual self-determination for an Indonesian
commonwealth.[4][5]
In July 1946, the Dutch organised the Malino Conference
in Sulawesi at which representatives from Borneo and eastern Indonesia backed
the proposal for a federal United States of Indonesia with links to the
Netherlands. It would comprise three elements, the Republic of Indonesia, a state
in Borneo and
another for East Indonesia.[6][7]
This was followed on 15 November by the Linggadjati Agreement, in which the unilaterally declared Republic of Indonesia agreed to the principle of a federal Indonesia.[8][9]
The Dutch then organised the December 1946 Denpasar Conference, which led to the establishment of the State of East Indonesia, followed by a state in West Borneo in 1947.[10]
A military action by the Dutch
launched on 20 July 1947 against those areas controlled by the Indonesian
republicans, Operation Product, resulted in the Dutch regaining control of West and East
Java, the areas around Medan, Palembang and Padang in Sumatra. The United Nations
called for a ceasefire, and negotiations between the two sides led to the Renville Agreement of January 1948, with a cease-fire along the "Van Mook Line",
which connected the most advanced Dutch positions. The Dutch then established
states in the areas they had reoccupied, including East Sumatra (December
1947), Madura and West Java (February 1948), South Sumatra (September 1948) and
East Java (November 1948). The leaders of these regions then established the Federal
Consultative Assembly.[11]
A second Dutch military action, Operation Kraai,
aimed at destroying the republic, was launched on 18 December 1948. Despite
recapturing the major cities of Java, including the republican capital of Yogyakarta,
and all of Sumatra except Aceh in the far north, it triggered the protest resignation of
the cabinets of the State of East Indonesia and Pasundan (West Java) and of the
Sultan of Yogyakarta from his position as regional head. There was also pressure
from the United States and the United Nations,
in particular in the form of a Security Council resolution.[12][13]
The Dutch agreed to negotiations with Indonesia to arrange a transfer of
sovereignty. The Dutch–Indonesian
Round Table Conference took
place in The Hague from August to November 1949, and resulted in the Dutch
agreeing to hand over sovereignty to the Dutch East Indies, except for Western New Guinea. However, many Indonesian nationalists believed that the
Dutch had insisted on a federal state in an attempt to weaken or even break up
the new nation, a manifestation of a "divide and conquer" strategy.
Nevertheless, on 17 December 1949, sovereignty was transferred to the United
States of Indonesia.[14][15][16][17]
Governance[edit]
The RUSI had a bicameral
legislature. The People's Representative Council consisted of 50 representatives from the Republic of
Indonesia and 100 from the various states according to their populations. The Senate had two members from each constituent part of the RUSI
regardless of population, making 32 members in total. The state was governed
according to the Federal
Constitution of 1949, which had been drawn up on the
sidelines of the Round Table Conference. It had a cabinet of 16 members,
led by Prime Minister Hatta.[18][19][20]
Dissolution[edit]
In March and April 1950, all the
constituents of the RUSI except East Sumatra and East Indonesia dissolved
themselves into the Republic.[21]
From 3–5 May, a three-way conference between the State of East Indonesia, the
State of East Sumatra and the Republic of Indonesia ended with a decision to
merge the three entities into a single unitary state.[22]
On 19 May, an announcement was issued by the governments of the United States
of Indonesia (representing the two remaining constituent states) and the
Republic of Indonesia, which stated that all parties, "...have reached an
agreement to jointly create a unitary state as the transformation of the
Republic of Indonesia proclaimed on 17 August 1945".[23]
The United States of Indonesia was officially dissolved by President Sukarno on 17
August 1950 – the fifth anniversary of his proclamation of
independence – and replaced by a unitary Republic of Indonesia.[24]
Constituent
entities[edit]
The United States of Indonesia. The
constituent state of the Republic of Indonesia is shown in red. The State of
East Indonesia is shown in gold as Negara Indonesia Timur. Other
constituent states are shown in blue. Autonomous constituent entities are shown
in white.
The RUSI comprised sixteen main
entities: seven states (negara), including the "Republic of
Indonesia" consisting of parts of Java and Sumatra (a combined population of over 31 million); and the nine
formerly directly-ruled territories (neo-lands, Dutch: neo-landschappen). Apart from the Republic of Indonesia, all these constituent
entities, which had populations between 100,000 and 11 million, were
established by the Dutch. Also included were a number of smaller entities not
seen as viable as distinct political entities.[18][25][26]
Name |
Established |
Capital |
Dissolved |
Notes[27]
|
17 August 1945[28] |
Yogyakarta |
- |
- |
|
States |
||||
24 December 1946[29] |
Makassar |
17 August 1950[30] |
Longest-lasting state |
|
Medan |
17 August 1950[30] |
Along with East Indonesia, the
last state to be dissolved |
||
20 February 1948[33] |
Pamekasan |
9 March 1950[21] |
State |
|
25 February 1948[33] |
Bandung |
11 March 1950[21] |
State |
|
2 September 1948[33] |
Palembang |
24 March 1950[21]
|
State |
|
27 November 1948[33] |
Surabaya |
9 March 1950 [21] |
State |
|
Autonomous entities |
||||
Pontianak |
22 April 1950 [35] |
|||
12 May 1947[36] |
Samarinda |
24 March 1950[21] |
Federation |
|
3 June 1947[36] |
Banjarmasin |
4 April 1950[21] |
Neo-land |
|
14 January 1948[37] |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
||
March 1947[38] |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
Federation |
|
July 1947[39] |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
Neo-land |
|
July 1947[39] |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
Neo-land |
|
July 1947[39] |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
Neo-land |
|
Semarang |
9 March 1950[21]
|
Undefined political entity |
||
Other regions |
||||
- |
- |
4 April 1950[21] |
Autonomous community |
|
- |
- |
9 March 1950[21]
|
Autonomous community |
|
- |
- |
9 March 1950[21]
|
Autonomous community |
|
June 1948 [41] |
- |
11 March 1950[21] |
- |
- ^ Recognition by the Dutch authorities of the temporary
representative bodySchiller 1955,
p. 121
See
also[edit]
- History
of Indonesia
- Indonesian
National Revolution
- Indonesian regions
- List of members of the Senate of the United States of
Indonesia
- Netherlands-Indonesian
Union
- State
of East Indonesia
Notes[edit]
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
p. 322.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 341-342.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
p. 344.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
p. 349.
- ^ Reid 1974,
pp. 104-105.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 358-360.
- ^ Anak Agung 1995,
p. 107.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
Reid 1974,
p. 100.
- ^ Anak Agung 1995,
p. 112.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 361-362.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 362-364.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 370.
- ^ Reid 1974,
pp. 152-158.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 373.
- ^ Legge 1964,
p. 160.
- ^ Indrayana 2008,
p. 8.
- ^ Kahin 1961,
pp. 443–445.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
Kahin 1970,
p. 447.
- ^ Indrayana 2008,
p. 7.
- ^ Feith 2007,
p. 47.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
Simanjuntak 2003,
pp. 99-100.
- ^ Anak Agung 1995,
p. 773.
- ^ Anak Agung 1995,
p. 786.
- ^ Ricklefs 2008,
pp. 373-374.
- ^ Cribb & Kahin 2004, p. 372.
- ^ Cribb 2000,
p. 170.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 193.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 182.
- ^ Kahin 1952,
p. 355.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
Reid 1974,
p. 165.
- ^ Kahin 1952,
p. 225.
- ^ Reid 1974,
p. 117.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
c
d
Cribb 2000,
p. 160.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 183.
- ^ Kahin 1952,
p. 456.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
Wehl 1948,
p. 165.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 103.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 121.
- ^ Jump up to: a b
c
Schiller 1955,
p. 111.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 192.
- ^ Schiller 1955,
p. 194.
References[edit]
- Cribb, Robert (2000). Historical Atlas of Indonesia.
Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-0985-1.
- Cribb, R.B; Kahin, Audrey (2004). Historical Dictionary
of Indonesia. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810849358.
- Feith, Herbert
(2008) [1962]. The Decline of Constitutional Democracy in Indonesia.
Singapore: Equininox Publishing (Asia) Pte Ltd. ISBN 978-979-3780-45-0.
- Friend, Theodore (2003), Indonesian Destinies, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-01834-6.
- Ide Anak Agung Gde Agung (1996) [1995]. From the
Formation of the State of East Indonesia Towards the Establishment of the
United States of Indonesia. Translated by Owens, Linda. Yayasan Obor. ISBN 979-461-216-2.
- Kahin, George McTurnan (1970), Nationalism and Revolution in Indonesia, Cornell University Press, ISBN 0-8014-9108-8.
- Indrayana, Denny (2008), Indonesian Constitutional
Reform 1999-2002, PT Gramedia, ISBN 978-979-709-394-5
- Legge, J.D. (1964), Indonesia, Englewood Cliffs, New
Jersey: Prentice-Hall Inc
- Reid, Anthony (1981). "Indonesia: revolution
without socialism". In Jeffrey, Robin (ed.). Asia: the Winning of
Independence. Macmillan. pp. 113–162. ISBN 9780333278574.
- Reid,
Anthony J.S
(1974), The Indonesian National Revolution, 1945-1950, Hawthorn, Victoria,
Australia: Longman, ISBN 0-582-71047-2
- Ricklefs, M.C.
(2008) [1981], A History of Modern Indonesia Since c. 1200 (4th ed.),
Palgrave MacMillan, ISBN 978-0-230-54686-8
- Schiller, A. Arthur (1955), The Formation of Federal
Indonesia 1945-1949, The Hague: W. van Hoeve Ltd
- Simanjuntak, P. N. H. (2003). Kabinet-Kabinet Republik
Indonesia: Dari Awal Kemerdekaan Sampai Reformasi (in Indonesian).
Jakarta: Djambatan. ISBN 979-428-499-8.