Indonesia may
offer 'regret' for 1965 communist purges - From 1965-1966, around 500,000
so-called communists, other sympathisers believed killed
Speaking on the opening day of the national symposium on the
1965-1966 mass killings at a Jakarta hotel Monday Luhut Binsar Panjaitan said
that President Jokowi Widodo's government had ruled out a criminal
investigation into the period, but would consider an “expression of regret” to
those who died and their families.
“Perhaps its wording would
be ‘remorse for past events, which were a dark history for this nation, and
which we hope will not ever happen again,’" antaranews.co. quoted the
coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs saying of any
response.
“We’re still looking for
the exact wording.”
The symposium was attended
by some of the thousands of survivors of one of the darkest chapters in
Indonesia's history.
Between 1965 and 1966, at
least 500,000 so-called communists and their sympathisers are believed to have
been killed in a state-sanctioned purge.
The bloodshed remains one
of the largest mass killings the world has ever known.
In 2015, an international
people's tribunal in The Hague concluded that the Indonesian government was
responsible for the massacres and oppression of 1965.
On Monday, however,
Panjaitan underlined that it did not plan to apologize.
"[It] never crossed
the government's mind that we will ask for forgiveness," he told
reporters.
The two-day symposium --
April 18-19 -- is being attended by around 200 people, including victims and
perpetrators of the violence, activists, community organizations and government
officials.
No comments:
Post a Comment