1951 mass arrests in Indonesia
Date | August 6 – September 28, 1951 |
---|---|
Location | throughout Java and Sumatra |
Also known as | August Raid |
Type | Mass arrest, Preventive detention |
Motive | political repression |
Target | Communist Party of Indonesia leaders and members, trade unionists, leftists, other politicians |
Perpetrator | Government of Indonesia, Soekiman Cabinet, Indonesian National Armed Forces |
Arrests | approximately 15,000 |
Mass arrests, primarily of communists and leftists, were carried out in Java and Sumatra in August and September 1951. Sometimes called the August Raid, this was a move by the Indonesian government, led by the Soekiman Cabinet, to prevent a rumoured coup by the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) and its allies. The total number of detainees started with several hundred in early August and ended up as roughly 15,000 across Indonesia by October. Many were released without charge within days or months, but some remained in detention until the Wilopo Cabinet took power in 1952.
Background
[edit]The coalition in power at the time of the mass arrests was the short-lived Soekiman Cabinet, which was mainly supported mainly by factions of the Indonesian National Party and the Masyumi Party.[1] It was faced by strikes and instability in the summer of 1951, violent rural banditry, internal political divisions, and tensions over the negotiations of the Treaty of San Francisco which would mean peace between Indonesia and Japan.[2][1] In June the Justice Minister Mohammad Yamin also unexpectedly pardoned 950 political prisoners, including Chairul Saleh and a variety of suspected rebels, without consulting the army and based on his arbitrary assessment of each person and not legal principles.[1] The outrage over this forced Yamin to resign from cabinet.[1]
Although the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) was legal in Indonesia, it was not on good terms with the government. Strikes in the summer led to tensions between the PKI and affiliated unions, and the government. In one incident at the port of Tanjung Priok in Jakarta on 5 August, 150 armed men with communist insignias raided a police station and exchanged gunfire with Indonesian security services for twelve hours.[3][1] Six people died, including three police officers, and a number of others were wounded.[4][5] The PKI denied involvement.[1] There were also rumours of secret planning for a coup between members of the Communist Party and representatives from the People's Republic of China.[3][6] The incident in Tanjung Priok, and its possible connection to incidents in other cities such as a bombing in Bogor, led the government to widen its investigations.[7][5][8] The 1948 Madiun Affair, a conflict between the government and the Communist Party was also still in recent memory and was invoked as a reason for the aggressive crackdown.[9][10] The pro-American, anti-PRC attitudes of the Soekiman cabinet and their desire to undermine their political opponents were also major factors.[6]
Arrests
[edit]The plan for mass arrests was agreed upon between Premier Soekiman Wirjosandjojo, one or two ministers, and the Public Prosecutor Suprapto following the Tanjung Priok events.[1] President Sukarno seems to have agreed to it as well.[1][10] The first round of arrests was of people accused of participating in the Tanjung Priok shootout; the district was closed off to the public and roughly fifty were arrested in the days following the incident.[5][4] By 10 August, rumours were circulating of much wider arrests of communists, although it wasn't expected that the PKI would be banned.[11]
Sumatra
[edit]On 11 August, the government enacted a curfew in Medan, North Sumatra under the pretext of military exercises, and started arresting hundreds of Communists and "troublemakers" in and around the city.[4][12] The final tally was roughly 500 detainees, including leading Sumatran communists Abdoe'lxarim MS and Jusuf Ajitorop.[13] S.M. Tari, editor of the paper Rakjat was also arrested.[14] The detainees were all kept in a camp near Medan.[14] The majority of names of detainees were kept secret, however, and targeted arrests continued to take place in the Medan area and throughout Sumatra throughout August; the practice of closing towns while mass arrests took place was repeated elsewhere.[15][16][17][18]
Jakarta
[edit]The most high-profile arrests began in Jakarta on 16 August, the day before Indonesian Independence Day, which the PKI had threatened to boycott.[1][19] Military police carried out preventive detention of roughly 100 communists and leftists, including sixteen members of the Provisional House of Representatives who were arrested at their homes early in the morning.[1][3] Soekiman gave a brief statement in the House on the 16th, promising more arrests but refusing to go into detail for operational reasons.[3] Information Minister Arnold Mononutu also kept the charges secret and alleged the a foreign power was preparing a coup in cooperation with local Communists.[3]
Among the arrested parliamentarians were Mudigdo, Tjudito, and Djokosoedjono of the PKI, Mustafa of the worker's bloc, Pandu, Syono and Maruto of the Murba Party, Sarwono S. Sutardjo of the Partai Kedaulatan Rakjat, Sidik Kertopari of the Peasants Front of Indonesia (BTI), and independent member Siauw Giok Tjhan.[20][19][9] PKI leaders Alimin, Lukman, Njoto and D. N. Aidit managed to escape arrest, but further raids detained Aidit's non-PKI father, Abdullah Aidit, as well as PKI leaders Peris Pardede, Tan Ling Djie, Karsono Werdojo, and Sakirman.[9][21] Alimin escaped to the PRC's embassy and was given asylum, whereas Lukman, Njoto and Aidit stayed in hiding for months.[6][22] Rustam Effendi, an Indonesian-born Dutch communist who had represented the Communist Party of the Netherlands in the House of Representatives of the Netherlands from 1933 to 1946, was also in Jakarta and was arrested.[3] Senior officials Hadiomo Kusumoutojo and Abdul Rachman from the Ministry of Labour were also detained.[19][9] Many of the Jakarta-area detainees were kept in the Cipinang Penitentiary Institution.[23]
Journalists were also arrested. Five editors from Sin Po were brought in: A. Karim, Tjia Tjo Soen, Lieng Jing Chen, Lee Swie Kee and Oen Tek Hian, as well as the director Ang Jan Goan.[9] The arrested parliamentarian Siauw Giok Tjhan was also editor of Harian Rakjat; the editor Kasan of Indonesia Raya and Lie Kit of the Chinese magazine Cheng Lim were also rounded up.[9] Also arrested was the freelance journalist and former chairman of the Persatuan Tionghoa Indonesia Liem Koen Hian, as was the chairman of the Journalist's union (Indonesian: Serikat Buruh Pertjetakan Indonesia) Suhardjo.[9][19] Military police also raided the offices of the Central All-Indonesian Workers Organization (SOBSI, a communist-affiliated union) and of the PKI, a well as the private homes of some PKI members.[3][19] Chinese community leaders were also arrested.[1]
East Java
[edit]Another several hundred were arrested in East Java on 18 and 19 August; initial accounts counted 35 in Surabaya, 40 in Bojonegoro, 50 in Madiun, 20 in Kediri and 15 in Malang.[24][25][26] News reports debated whether Dutch and Chinese citizens had also been arrested, as well as a smaller number of non-leftist Indonesians.[25][26] Many journalists were rounded up in the East Java raids, including Go Tjing Hok, editor of the Java Post, Goe Po An, editor of Trompet Masjarakat, and others.[27] Among the political figures who were rounded up in Surabaya were Oloan Hutapea, chairman of the regional PKI and editor of Bintang Merah, Roeslan Kamaloedin, general secretary of the Surabaya PKI, and many other local members; Soebardi, Soetomi, and a number of SOBSI leaders; and Soepardi and Cholil of the Rukun Kampung Kota Surabaya (RKKS, Surabaya City district association, a communist-affiliated neighborhood association).[25] Heads of local Chinese organizations were also arrested, including Djie Tjhiang Than of the Red China-Indonesia Friendship Association and a number of headmasters of Chinese schools.[25] In subsequent days other communist and left-wing leaders of youth (pemuda) organizations were located and arrested in Surabaya.[28]
West Java
[edit]100 or so people were arrested in Cirebon, West Java on 17 August, though none of the figures were high-profile political ones.[29] The military police portrayed the detainees as a mix of criminal gangs, Darul Islam rebellion supporters, members of the paramilitary Barisan Sakit Hati and communists.[29] Another 50 were arrested in Bandung, West Java.[26]
Another 100 were arrested in West Java on 28 August, bringing the total to around 2000.[30] This time non-leftists were also arrested, including Muhammad Isa Anshary and members of the Masyumi Party.[30][23] Three Dutch citizens were also a arrested: Koops, F. Alewijn and W.F. van de Woestijne, leading to a diplomatic inquiry from the Netherlands.[23]
Central Java
[edit]Raids in Central Java province started on 19 August.[31] The PKI office in Bojong in Semarang was raided and the police spent a full day going through its archive; most of the local trade unions were raided the next day.[31] The raids, prominent union leaders were arrested, including not only SOBSI, but the Oil workers and Cigarette factory worker unions, local PKI leaders, left-wing city councilors, and leaders of the Murba Party, Partai Rakjat Indonesia and others were detained.[31] Chinese organizations and schools were also raided, but arrests were not made, but ten members of the Lembaga Indonesia Tionghoa, a Chinese-Indonesian friendship association, were arrested.[31][32] On 20 August raids were conducted in nearby Salatiga as well, where 9 SOBSI, BTI and Chinese organization leaders were arrested.[33] In Surakarta 22 were arrested on 22 August, including more PKI members, leaders of the Sugar Worker Unions and youth organizations.[34]
The most high-profile raids in Java and Sumatra took place in August, but they didn't end then. Mass arrests continued into the fall, and by early November the government estimated the total number of arrests as being around 15,000.[35]
Reaction and release
[edit]Parliamentarians were very unhappy about the detention of their members and protested as early as 16 August, when Deputy Speaker Albert Mangaratua Tambunan sent a delegation to the Premier to demand an explanation.[19] Even right-wing members who otherwise supported the crackdown objected to the House being cordoned off and members dragged out in the middle of a session, and many members of Soekiman's own cabinet had been blindsided by the mass arrests.[1][36] [23] The indefinite detention of 16 or more members also meant that the House might not be able to achieve quorum (110 members) and carry on its business.[37] The PKI and SOBSI also complained that their offices had been searched and called the mass arrest of their parliamentarians an open violation of democratic and human rights.[23][19] Later in the month, the PKI accused the Soekiman coalition of falling prey to a "rising fascist ideology" akin to that which Indonesians lived under during the Japanese occupation.[38] Other parties supported the repression or were ambivalent. Masyumi, some of whose members had been arrested, still supported the campaign overall, whereas Sutan Sjahrir of the Socialist Party of Indonesia said communist or Darul Islam rebels were just symptoms of deeper economic causes.[39][40]
The Indonesian Army was unhappy about the arrests when they began in August, because they had not been consulted about them and were expected to carry them out under a legally shaky state of emergency.[1] The Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Casey met with his Indonesian counterpart Achmad Soebardjo in September and said he was pleasantly surprised by the anti-communist attitude of the Indonesian government.[41] The United States ambassador to Indonesia, H. Merle Cochran, was a close ally of Soekiman and also reacted positively to the arrests.[1][42] On the other hand, the PRC reacted badly to the accusations against them and China-Indonesian relations deteriorated significantly.[6][43]
The arrests were widely covered in the local and international press, not only via wire services and in the New York Times, but in the communist press, including the Daily Worker and De Waarheid.[44] The reaction generally fell along ideological lines, with leftist papers being outraged and right-wing papers supporting the measures.[25][24][45]
The mass arrests in August surprised the Communist Party and its affiliated organizations and seemingly neutered their ability to react.[26][7] Aidit and the other leaders who were in hiding did spend the time studying Indonesian politics and revised the party's strategies.[22] The repression also led to some trade unions to distance themselves from the Communist Party, although the majority remained affiliated; the PKI also remained politically isolated from the other left-wing parties in the House.[46][1] By late August, many of the affiliated unions were holding protests against the continuing detention of PKI and union leaders.[47] SOBSI later claimed that 3000 of its leaders and members were arrested in the sweeps.[48] The PKI also moderated its agrarian policy and stopped supporting armed activity within Indonesia as a result of the arrests, but the detentions did not slow the rapid growth of the party in the early 1950s.[49][10]
Some of the detainees were released within days due to a lack of evidence against them, but others were held without charge for several months or even a year.[7] By late September, parliamentarians were tiring of the indefinite internment of so many citizens and an Interpellation was put to the government about it.[50][1] Tan Po Goan, a lawyer and parliamentarian representing Baperki who put forward the interpellation, noted that people who had been foot soldiers in the APRA rebellion in 1949 who had been held without charge for a year and a half and received an apology upon their release.[50] He worried that hundreds of people had been held in Jakarta arrests since August and none had been convicted yet, due to the weak legal basis for their arrest.[51] Soekiman formally answered in mid-October, replying that the government had to take those preventive measures to stop a fifth column from infiltrating and destabilizing the country.[52] Tan Po Goan found the answer incomplete and asked for a more detailed response from the government about which cases it felt entitled to act outside the law.[53] He called their detention policies "Made in Holland".[53]
Soekiman replied once again that the government had to continue to act to stop destructive elements which were present in society.[54] He said that circumstances were not normal, so governments could not rely completely on the law, but should instead use it as a guide.[54] He claimed that anyone who was innocent would be released immediately and that the Attorney General had access to proof that had not yet been made public.[54] He also noted that the detainees had been prevented from being committing any crimes during those months and asked the critical parliamentarians if they should just sit and wait for a coup d'état to take place.[54]
Facing further criticism, at the end of October Soekiman and his government began to claim that they had evidence of a plot to assassinate President Sukarno, Vice President Mohammed Hatta and several ministers.[1] However, the lack of any trials for those suspected of the plots calls into question its connection to the mass arrests.[10][1] Soekiman also asserted that detainees had confessed to planning a coup against the Indonesian Republic.[55][35][56] He denied that the government had committed any legal excesses, and offered to send the Attorney General to personally visit every single arrest site and punish any local officials who had gone beyond their mandate.[56] He said that he regretted having had to arrest sitting parliamentarians within the House back in August, but that Indonesian government apparatuses were still emerging from a revolutionary period and had not yet reached a state of perfection.[56] Following the speech, Tan Po Goan expressed skepticism and some of the left-wing parties tried to pass a censure motion against Soekiman, but were voted down.[35][57][58]
Upon the fall of the Soekiman Cabinet in early 1952, the release of August detainees was one of the demands of left-wing parties being asked to support an incoming new government.[22] When the Wilopo Cabinet took power, it began to release the remaining detainees, and seems to have freed all of them during their time in power.[59]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Feith, Herbert (1962). "Chapter V The Sukiman Cabinet". The Decline of Constitutional Democracy in Indonesia. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 177–224.
- ^ "REGIME IN INDONESIA FACING DIFFICULTIES". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 13 June 1951. p. 7.
- ^ a b c d e f g "INDONESIA ARRESTS 100 RED SUSPECTS: RED REPRESENTATIVES WHO WILL DISCUSS BUFFER ZONE". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 17 Aug 1951. p. 1.
- ^ a b c "500 SEIZED IN INDONESIA: Soldiers and Policemen Arrest Troublemakers in Sumatra". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 15 August 1951. p. 4.
- ^ a b c "Tandjong Priok geïsoleerd Leger en politie voeren zuiverings-actie uit". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 7 August 1951.
- ^ a b c d Mozingo, David P. (1976). Chinese policy toward Indonesia, 1949-1967. Ithaca, N.Y: Cornell University Press. pp. 101–2. ISBN 9780801409219.
- ^ a b c "REDS IN INDONESIA QUIET ON ARRESTS: Expected Reactions to Roundup Fail to Develop Left, Groups Shift to Right Hundreds Released Fail to Understand Tactics". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 15 Oct 1951. p. 3.
- ^ "Aanval op Priok met rode vlag ONDERLING VERBAND ?". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 7 August 1951.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Herhaling van Madiun-opstand door arrestaties voorkomen? Regering spreekt van complot om ministers te ontvoeren Cordon om het parlement". De vrije pers: ochtendbulletin (in Dutch). Surabaya. 18 August 1951.
- ^ a b c d ven der Kroef, Justus M. (1965). The Communist Party of Indonesia. Vancouver: University of British Columbia. p. 49.
- ^ "De Regering en de communisten „Merdeka": Vreemde invloed achter beweging tot stichten van wanorde Binnenkort arrestaties op grote schaal verwacht". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 10 August 1951.
- ^ "Alle verbindingen tijdens actie stilgelegd". Java-bode: nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 13 August 1951.
- ^ "Grote razzia's ter Oostkust Honderden arrestaties alleen in Medan". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 13 August 1951.
- ^ a b "500 Arrestaties in O.-Sumatra". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 14 August 1951.
- ^ "De arrestaties in Oost-Sumatra". Java-bode: nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 16 August 1951. p. 1.
- ^ "Nog dagelijks nieuwe arrestaties en huiszoekingen in Medan". De nieuwsgier (in Dutch). Jakarta. 16 August 1951.
- ^ "Razzia ter Oostkust". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 24 August 1951.
- ^ "Veiligheidsactie in het Lampongse". Java-bode: nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 25-08-1951. p. 2.
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(help) - ^ a b c d e f g "Regering grijpt in Belangrijke arrestaties in de hoofdstad". De vrije pers: ochtendbulletin (in Dutch). Surabaya. 16 August 1951. p. 1.
- ^ "Arrestaties te Djakarta". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 16 August 1951.
- ^ Durdin, Tillman (18 August 1951). "INDONESIAN LEADER SEES REDS SET BACK: Sukiman Says Arrests Have Crippled Leftists--Is Sure Japan Pact Will Be Backed Communism Not Popular". New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. 5.
- ^ a b c Hindley, Donald (1964). Communist Party of Indonesia, 1951-63. Los Angeles: University of California Press. pp. 69–75. Cite error: The named reference "Hindley1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b c d e "ARRESTATIES IN WEST-JAVA". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 27 August 1951. p. 1. Cite error: The named reference "NVS1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b "De arrestaties in Oost-Java Politie vond bij een arrestant 35 kilogram goud Aangehoudenen reeds naar elders overgebracht". De vrije pers: ochtendbulletin (in Dutch). Surabaya. 20 August 1951.
- ^ a b c d e "De arrestaties in Oost-Java". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 20 August 1951.
- ^ a b c d "INDONESIA ROUND-UP NETS 200 SUSPECTS". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 20 August 1951. p. 3.
- ^ "Arrestaties in Oost-Java uitgevoerd Verschillende journalisten door politie aangehouden". De vrije pers : ochtendbulletin (in Dutch). 18 August 1951. p. 2.
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and|page=
specified (help) - ^ "Arrestaties in Soerabaja". Algemeen Indisch dagblad: de Preangerbode (in Dutch). Bandung. 22 August 1951. p. 2.
- ^ a b "Onveiligheid in het Cheribonse Evacuatie van politieke figuren uit Indramajoe". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 22 August 1951.
- ^ a b "INDONESIA ARRESTS RISE: 100 More Seized in West Java-- Total Is Near 2,000". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 27 August 1951. p. 4.
- ^ a b c d "Massa-arrestaties in Semarang". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 22 August 1951.
- ^ "Wie in Semarang gearresteerd zijn". Algemeen Indisch dagblad: de Preangerbode (in Dutch). 27 August 1951. p. 2.
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and|page=
specified (help) - ^ "ARRESTS IN SALATIGA". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 23 August 1951.
- ^ "Arrestaties in Solo". De locomotief: Samarangsch handels- en advertentie-blad (in Dutch). Semarang. 24 August 1951.
- ^ a b c "INDONESIA RELEASES 35 HELD IN RED PLOT". New York Times. New York, N.Y. 5 November 1951. p. 2.
- ^ Durdan, Tillman (14 October 1951). "INDONESIA FACING COMPLEX PROBLEMS: INDONESIAN LEADERS". New York, N.Y.
- ^ "Arrestaties brengen quorum in gevaar". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 20 August 1951.
- ^ "P. K. I. CONTRA „FASCISME"". De vrije pers: ochtendbulletin (in Dutch). Surabaya. 27 August 1951. p. 2.
- ^ "Masjumi betreurt arrestaties va Islamietisthe leiders". Algemeen Indisch dagblad: de Preangerbode (in Dutch). Bandung. 27 August 1951. p. 2.
- ^ "Wat Sjahrir ervan zegt Rangorde uit het oog verloren". Algemeen Indisch dagblad : de Preangerbode (in Dutch). Bandung. 29 August 1951.
- ^ "Minister Soebardjo naar Australië Casey aangenaam getroffen door anti-communistische houding". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 15 September 1951.
- ^ Anak Agung Gde Agung, Ide (2018). Twenty years Indonesian foreign policy 1945–1965. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. p. 183. ISBN 9783111558226.
- ^ Ang, Cheng Guan (2018). Southeast Asia’s Cold War: an interpretive history. Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press. p. 63. ISBN 9780824873462.
- ^ "Amerikaanse pers over de razzia's in Indonesië". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 24 August 1951.
- ^ "Kabinet-Sukiman heeft aan prestige gewonnen BRITSE VISIE OP ARRESTATIES". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 17 September 1951.
- ^ Durban, Tillman (20 October 1951). "INDONESIAN LABOR LOOSENS RED GRIP: Communists Still Dominating Unions but New Defections Reduce Party's Margin Non-Reds Control Others Causing Stoppages". New York Times. New York, N.Y. p. 2.
- ^ "Protesten tegen arrestaties". De vrije pers: ochtendbulletin. (in Dutch). Surabaya. 27 August 1951. p. 2.
- ^ Hindley, Donald (1964). Communist Party of Indonesia, 1951-63. Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 108.
- ^ Feith, Herbert (2009). The Wilopo Cabinet, 1952-1953 A Turning Point in Post-Revolutionary Indonesia. Equinox. p. 103. ISBN 9786028397155.
- ^ a b "VRAGEN OVER ARRESTATIES: Interpellatie-voorstel bij parlement ingediend". Java-bode: nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 22-09-1951.
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(help) - ^ "„Onrust onder de hevolhtng" Interpellatie-voorstel in Parlement aanvaard „Honderden beroofd van hun vrijhei zonder krachtige rechtsgronden"". Algemeen Indisch dagblad : de Preangerbode (in Dutch). Bandung. 27 September 1951. p. 2.
- ^ "De interpellatie over de arrestaties Premier Sukiman: Wij moeten paraaf zijn voor vijfde colonne". De nieuwsgier (in Dutch). Jakarta. 17 October 1951.
- ^ a b "INTERPELLATIE OVER ARRESTATIES: Regeringsantwoord niet bevredigend geacht". Java-bode : nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 20 October 1951. p. 2.
- ^ a b c d "Premier Soekiman verdedigt de stelling: Regering dient niet steeds te handelen onder sanctie van wetsartikelen". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 22 October 1951.
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(help) - ^ "PREMIER SUKIMAN: „Aanslag beraamd op Pres. Soekarno"". Het nieuwsblad voor Sumatra (in Dutch). Medan. 30 October 1951. p. 1.
- ^ a b c "Premier Soekiman onthult samenzwering Moordaanslag beraamd op President Soekarno en Vice-president Hatta Acties tegen diverse toonaangevende figuren". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 30 October 1951.
- ^ "Mr. Tan Po Goan: Nog geen 5% van gearresteerden zullen voor gerecht kunnen worden gedaagd". Nieuwe courant (in Dutch). Surabaya. 2 November 1951.
- ^ "Regeringsantwoord over arrestaties goedgekeurd". Java-bode : nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indie (in Dutch). Jakarta. 2 November 1951. p. 2.
- ^ Hindley, Donald (1964). Communist Party of Indonesia, 1951-63. Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 245.