Thursday, December 11, 2025

1) Blood, silence and history: questioning Indonesia’s 1965 narrative



2) Security in Intan Jaya has improved, TNI says  

3) Activists urge Vanuatu government to take 'decisive stance' on West Papua

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Duncan Graham
 
1) Blood, silence and history: questioning Indonesia’s 1965 narrative
 December 11, 2025 

As Indonesia prepares to release a new official national history, an Australian historian’s account of the 1965–66 mass killings threatens to reopen a long-suppressed debate about power, violence, and memory.

Indonesia’s reputation for tolerance is about to be tested by an Australian academic. Queensland historian Greg Poulgrain says he isn’t seeking fame or notoriety, just “telling the truth”, but fears his name will be trashed and research shredded. That’s if the Indonesian government responds furiously to a foreigner challenging the official account of frenzied killings as “one of the darkest turning points in Indonesia’s modern history.”

The Indonesian government-approved version of the past six decades has a surprise Moscow-engineered Communist plot to take over the Republic. This was thwarted by the military and courageous General Soeharto, who was then rewarded with the presidency, a position he held for 32 years.

The US Central Intelligence Agency claimed: “The (1965-66 anti-Communist) massacres in Indonesia rank as one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century.”

In 1966, Australian PM Harold Holt callously quipped: “With 500,000 to one million Communist sympathisers knocked off, I think it’s safe to say a reorientation has taken place.”

This month Jakarta plans to launch a new official history of the world’s fourth largest nation by population (285 million) with 88 per cent Sunni Muslims.

US and UK-educated former journalist Fadli Zon is Indonesia’s Minister for Culture. He’s ordered the writing of his nation’s history in ten volumes by more than a hundred academics pounding laptops. The section dealing with the 1965 crisis should be on the streets before 2025 departs.

Also to be released this month by Kompas, the nation’s premier publisher, is Poulgrain’s Blood and Silence – the Hidden Tragedy 1965.

His account has the plot known ahead of time by Soeharto, who launched the genocide backed by Washington. He’s just been awarded National Hero status by his former son-in-law, current President Prabowo Subianto.

Nations tack together myths about themselves that become so embedded they morph into truths and resist scrutiny.

Ours is that we’re tough Ozzies, big on mateship and giving all a go, sturdy upholders of the Anzac spirit, larrikins who value independence.

Indonesia’s pride is a nation of friendly folk, humble and helpful, accepting those who follow different gods, values and opinions.

That’s the opposite of the ghastly reality that still stains memories and stirs fears of a repeat in the land next door, once red with the blood of executions. This writer has been shown bunkers on riverbanks, allegedly mass graves from the 60s, undisturbed lest they release vengeful ghosts.

The excuse for the slaughter is that the wee folk were impetuously aroused to slitting neighbours’ and relatives’ throats because the godless Communists were about to overthrow the government and ban Islam. They didn’t need encouragement.

Poulgrain’s account doesn’t follow that script. He has US capitalists and right-wing politicians in cahoots with Muslim big business, determined to rip out the land rights movement rooted in Marxism, not through legislation and debate but violence.

During his 20-year reign, founding President Soekarno had grown close to the Partai Komunis Indonesia and away from the West and foreign corporations. His home-grown ideology was Nasakom, a contrived blend of nationalism, Islam and Communism. No reference to the military.

Nasakom remained illusory,” writes Poulgrain. “Soekarno’s political opponents took every opportunity to label him as a Communist, though (President) John Kennedy knew this was untrue.

“This worried the PKI’s fierce rivals, the Indonesian Army, whose power waned as the PKI grew.”

The story of Asia’s largest genocide is one that few Australians know and many Indonesians don’t want told. On the last day of September 1965, Indonesians woke to news that six generals had been seized from their homes by soldiers, shot, and their bodies dumped in a well at an air force base after being castrated and their eyes gouged by naked dancing women.

This was an embellishment to pique outrage – autopsies found no traces of torture and mutilation. Nor were there any nudies.

The killers were alleged to be Communists, and the mastermind was supposed to be Moscow. Russia and China were rivals seeking the support of the Partai Komunis Indonesia, then the world’s largest Communist party outside the Sino-Soviet Bloc.

That afternoon, the public was reassured by radio that the government of the first President Soekarno was intact, though the military was in charge through a ‘Revolutionary Council’.

This was led by General Soeharto, who later became the second president and held his job for 32 years. During this time, he and his family allegedly amassed US $35 billion of public money through widespread corruption.

In 1965, he ordered the nation cleansed of the ungodly PKI, so the military broke out its armouries for the killing squads. Modern weapons weren’t always necessary, as scythes and other farm tools were used to murder villagers the Army had labelled Reds. They helpfully distributed lists of those doomed to die.

Poulgrain quotes a distressed Soekarno saying: “Those people instigating the anti-PKI massacres, namely, the Army and the CIA, ought to be brought to trial.” That didn’t happen. Soekarno’s power was waning, and Soeharto’s narrative of a spontaneous and unstoppable grass-roots uprising prevailed.

Poulgrain’s research has Soeharto well prepared ahead of the coup. “At no time during his two decades in the military (prior to 1965) did Soeharto acquire a reputation of being anti-PKI … (he was) more concerned with business than politics.”

Poulgrain claims the unarmed Communists allegedly threatening the State were in reality “landless rice-farmers (petani) whose very existence depended on getting some land to grow rice. They comprised the bulk of PKI membership … supporting legal land reform in the hope of securing a small patch to grow their own food.

“On the other side were Muslim landlords for whom land reform was seen as a threat to their livelihood, wealth and status, their very existence.

“Most petani had no land at all … 60 to 70 per cent were pursuing subsistence-based agriculture.”

Sixty years on, land reform and inequality remain weeping wounds. In the 2024 presidential election campaign, The Jakarta Post commented: “Economic inequality, notably in income and wealth ownership, should have been discussed vigorously because of its connection to economic instability and political unrest.

“(There’s a) correlation between economic inequality and slow economic income disparity; last year was the worst in the last five years … remaining among the highest in Asia.”

If this gulf isn’t bridged, sociologists fear another volcano of violence could erupt.

G30S remains a compulsory annual national holiday with all flags at half-mast, including those on residents’ gates.

There are sickening dioramas in a special Jakarta museum celebrating the horrors, influencing school kids on compulsory visits. There’s a huge statue of the six murdered generals looking formidable. Doubts voiced by outsiders get ridiculed with the easy slur that critics are Fellow Travellers.

Poulgrain’s 122-page book is based on years of research and interviews held with key participants in Indonesia and overseas for his PhD in the last century, when many witnesses were alive. He writes:

“Australia’s biggest contribution to the Army’s anti-communist campaign was broadcasting and supporting Indonesian Army propaganda.

“The Army seized control of virtually all of Indonesia’s media after the attempted coup. It began an aggressive and pervasive anti-PKI campaign, spreading dangerous disinformation to discredit and dehumanise the Communists.  The party and its principles are still banned.

“Radio Australia fed the Indonesian population an Indonesian Army-approved political narrative that Ambassador Mick Shann said ‘should [be thumped] into Indonesians’ as much as possible.”

Those words are the advice of Australia’s then leading diplomat in Jakarta.

The first edition of Blood and Silence will be in English. Whether Kompas will be forced to abandon its promise to publish in Indonesian will be a test of the nation’s tolerance for dissenting views, a pillar of democracy.

The views expressed in this article may or may not reflect those of Pearls and Irritations.

Duncan Graham

Duncan Graham has been a journalist for more than 40 years in print, radio and TV. He is the author of People 

Next Door (UWA Press). He is now writing for the English language media in Indonesia from within Indonesia.

 Duncan Graham has an MPhil degree, a Walkley Award, two Human Rights Commission awards and other prizes

 for his radio, TV and print journalism in Australia. He lives in East Java.


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2) Security in Intan Jaya has improved, TNI says  

TNI’s role in Papua is not limited to security but also covers social communication, support fo
r public service and contribution to regional development acceleration, a flag officer said.

News Desk (The Jakarta Post) Jakarta Thu, December 11, 2025 



Security in Intan Jaya regency, Central Papua, has improved significantly in the past few
 months following a series of security operations against the Free Papua Organization (OPM) I
nsurgent movement, the Indonesian Military (TNI) claimed recently.

“We will continue to limit the armed group’s moving space and ensure Papua is still safe and
y, Central Papua. “The people’s safety is our highest priority in every duty implementation.” 
Lucky said that the TNI’s purview in Papua was in line with Presidential Instruction 
No. 9/2020 on Accelerating Welfare Development in Papua and West Papua. He said 
that the TNI’s role is not limited only to security but also covers social communication, 
support for public services and contribution to regional development acceleration.

The TNI, through Koops Habema, said that security operations in Hitadipa district and 
other districts in Intan Jaya were triggered by the fatal shooting of Anselmus Arfin, a man 
who was working on the Trans Intan Jaya highway in the Mamba-Hitadipa section on
 Oct. 8 in Ndugusiga village, attributed to the OPM.

It was suspected that the shooting was carried out by an OPM group led by Undius Kogoya.

 Responding to the shooting, Koops Habema entered Soanggama village on Oct. 15, which 
has been known as one of the insurgents' main bases. During the operation, Koops Habema 
operatives managed to kill 14 OPM insurgents while Undius managed to escape. In the next 
operation, military applied a blockade strategy by closing escape routes and deploying
 soldiers in various strategic villages, such as Zanepa, Engganengga, Maya, Bilai and Agapa.

The strategy was aimed at curtailing the insurgents’ movement and cut their logistics 
access and support network. The blockade caused Undius to be isolated and, was later 
reported to have died of his illnesses under blockade. Another insurgent leader, 
Yulius Wonda, was also reported to have died.

 The operations complemented other enforcements against other OPM leaders, such 
as Lamek Taplo and Jack Milian Kemong, who were included in the operation’s target list. 
With the targeted killing of some of their leaders, the armed insurgents’ command structure 
in Intan Jaya regency is reportedly to have weakened significantly. With diminishing activities 
of armed insurgent groups, the people’s social and economic activities have slowly recovered.
 In several areas, electricity supplies from state-owned electricity firm PT PLN are available 
for up to 12 hours per day. The strategic Mamba-Hitadipa road has now been paved with 
asphalt for about 6 kilometers. 

Previously, progress was hindered by security disturbances. Increased security is also 
reflected in public’s support for the presence of security apparatus. Residents in
 Soanggama village, Hitadipa district, officially handed over land to the TNI for building 
a security post. Soanggama village chief Marinus Lawiya and Hitadipa district chief Soleman
 Bilambani represented the residents in handing over the land through a customary 
procession, which served as a symbol of the people’s acceptance of TNI presence 
in the area. (nvn)


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3) Activists urge Vanuatu government to take 'decisive stance' on West Papua
10:33 am on 11 December 2025 

West Papuan activists in Vanuatu are demanding that the Vanuatu government "take a stronger and more 
decisive stance" in support of the region's independence from Indonesia, the Vanuatu Daily Postreports.
The newspaper reported West Papuan "freedom fighters and advocates" have formally submitted a petition
 to the government, expressing concern Vanuatu is lacking in its support to the long-standing struggle of 
the indigenous Melanesian people of West Papua.
Read more:
  • Indonesia urges respect for its sovereignty after Australia-PNG defence treaty
  • West Papua holds an important place on Pacific countries' agenda says Mapou
  • Pro-independence advocates urge Melanesian Spearhead Group to elevate ULMWP membership
  • "The petition raises concern among chiefs, described as custodians of the land and traditional governance systems, 
    who fear that Vanuatu's support for West Papua is declining while diplomatic relations with Indonesia continue 
    to strengthen," the report stated.
    According to the newspaper, the petition outlines several actions the Vanuatu government should undertake,
     including accrediting the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) as part of Vanuatu's 
    delegation to international forums.
    The petitioners also want the Vanuatu government to revisit the 2010 motion declaring Vanuatu's foreign 
    policy support for West Papua's independence, to issue recognition of the West Papua provisional government,
     to advocate for West Papua's elevated Melanesian Spearhead Group membership status, to seek international 
    support for United Nations access to West Papua, to cancel bilateral agreements with Indonesia, and to
     sponsor the West Papua case before the International Court of Justice.
    They want a written response to their demands, stating "if no response is received before the Melanesian 
    Arts Festival in Fiji in 2026, the petitioners will boycott Vanuatu's participation".
    West Papua, located in the western part of the island of New Guinea, has been under Indonesia's 
    administration since 1963.
    Earlier this year, ULMWP leader Benny Wenda claimed Indonesian "military escalation" in the region 
    was forcing the indigineous Papuans to flee their ancestral lands.
    While the Indonesian military said its presence is "not to intimidate the people" but to protect them from 
    violence, human rights groups, such as Human Rights Watch, say Indonesian forces are causing mass
     displacement and violence against indigenous Papuans.
    -Vanuatu Daily Post/RNZ Pacific
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