The Dutch Honorary Debts Committee Foundation, represented on a
pro bono basis by human rights lawyer
Liesbeth Zegveld, fought its first successful legal battle on behalf of seven widows of men summarily executed by the
Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) under Major
Alphons Wijnen during the
Rawagede massacre of 9 December 1947. On 14 September 2011, the court in
The Hague ruled that the Dutch government was to offer a public apology and
reparations to the still living relatives of the 431 victims of the massacre. Further recognition and compensation for Indonesian war victims followed as the KUKB continues to advocate for the surviving relatives of up to 3,500 Indonesians summarily executed during the
South Sulawesi campaign of 1946–1947 under KNIL Captain
Raymond Westerling. On 15 August 2021, the Dutch Honorary Debts Committee Foundation announced that Liesbeth Zegveld had stopped taking on new cases for the foundation since earlier that year, citing time constraints and increased criticism from chairman Pondaag. Upon inquiry by radio show
De Nieuws BV, Zegveld confirmed having ended her cooperation with the foundation over difficulties working with Pondaag. In the Dutch historiography of the Indonesian Revolution,
Bersiap ('get ready' or 'be prepared' in
Malay) refers to a period of Indonesian revolutionary and ethnic violence lasting from August 1945 until at least November 1947, but Triyana claimed that the curation team had agreed to omit the word as it would "simplify" the narrative and reinforce stereotypes of "primitive, uncivilized Indonesians". In response, the
Federation of Dutch Indos (FIN, ) accused Triyana of "runaway
wokeism" At the request of the FIN, representatives of the political parties
JA21,
Party for Freedom,
Farmer–Citizen Movement, and
Christian Democratic Appeal also spoke out against "historical falsification" and "genocide denial" over the following days On 21 January 2022, the Dutch Honorary Debts Committee Foundation became involved when it filed a police report against the
Rijksmuseum, its director, and the lead curator of the exhibition for their intention to continue using the term
Bersiap, which the KUKB too considers to have racist connotations. On 9 February, the
Public Prosecution Service (OM, ) dismissed the police reports of both the FIN and the KUKB, clarifying that Bonnie Triyana had exercised his right to
free speech to contribute to the public debate, and that prosecutors concluded
Bersiap to be a valid descriptor of historical events and that its use, too, is covered by the right to freedom of expression. The Dutch Honorary Debts Committee Foundation announced on 4 July it had filed a complaint with the
Amsterdam Court of Appeal and chairman
Jeffry M. Pondaag, secretary Dida Pattipilohy, and historian
Marjolein van Pagee presented their arguments in a hearing on 13 October. On 5 January 2023, the court rejected the complaint of KUKB and reaffirmed the verdict of the OM. == See also ==