Several phases are distinguished during the
Bersiap period, each with different levels of violence and chaos. The
Bersiap was mostly situated on the island of
Java. British troops landed on
Sumatra in October 1945. Former civilian internees on Sumatra were put into large camps in the sparsely populated interior. They were taken to the coast to the cities of Padang, Medan, and Palembang. By the end of November, all Japanese internment camps on Sumatra had been cleared. On Sumatra, the Japanese cooperated with the British and the Indonesian republicans were less militant than on Java, because the British never went inland and preferred to bypass areas with difficult terrain like Aceh and Batakland. The situation there, despite rioting in Medan and Padang, was relatively peaceful by the end of 1945. The chaotic
Bersiap violence did not occur on any other island in Indonesia. '' spears
Bersiap started immediately after the
proclamation of Indonesian independence and before the arrival of the first British and Dutch armed forces. Chinese houses and shops were looted and their families killed. Militias were formed all over the Indonesian island, in
North Sulawesi, youth formed BPMI militia. By October, Republican leaders tried to organize these militias into a formal para-military called the
TKR, however, this effort was slowed by the allies. On 18 September 1945 a group of ex-internees led by Mr. W.V.Ch. Ploegman raised a Dutch flag at the Yamato Hotel where they were staying. This action angered unarmed Surabaya youth. Several people died. On 23 September 1945, Dutch Captain P.J.G. Huijer who went into Surabaya with permission from Admiral Helfrich (Commander of Dutch forces in the Indies), and General Van Oyen (KNIL Commander), claimed they were ordered by Mountbatten to request that General Nagano (IJA 16th Army) surrender. They actually did not have permission from the British. The Japanese troops paraded on the airfield and laid down their weapons, including tanks, anti-aircraft weapons, artillery, transports and ammunition, then withdraw to Semarang. The newly formed Indonesian TKR militia descend on the airfield and seized the arms. Huijer was captured by the TKR on 9 October and delivered to the British consulate. This incident was the beginning of many conflicts in the Surabaya area. during one of his speeches, circa 1947 In the second phase of the
Bersiap (15 Sept – 14 Oct 1945), de-centralised local
Pemuda groups started to organise and obtain weapons. The first Japanese soldiers were molested and the attitude against Dutch and Eurasian civilians became hostile. Indonesian propaganda also became aggressive. Atrocities committed by revolutionary forces against Indo-Europeans began. Fights between Pemuda and young Eurasians broke out, resulting in a food boycott of Indos (5 October), which in turn resulted in more violent fights. In October,
razzias (raids) commenced and Eurasian males were arrested and killed. On 12 October, the Revolutionary government ordered the arrest of all Eurasian men and boys. In Surabaya, 42 Eurasians were killed in the basement of the Simpang Club and several hundred were tortured in the Kalisosok Prison in the Werfstraat. After an Ambonese prison guard informed the British about plans to poison the prisoners (9 November), they were rescued (10 November) by a Eurasian commander and a
Gurkha unit. By the end of September, the first British (Indian) troops started to arrive. The British tried to remain neutral and seek cooperation with the Republican leadership. Also, the Japanese military tried not to get involved and only reacted when provoked. The
49th Indian Infantry Brigade arrived in Surabaya by 25 October 1945 under
Brigadier Mallaby. At first, the British were received well by TKR commander Mustopo and Surabaya Governor Dr Surio, and deployed in small units all over the city. TKR was instructed to support the British in securing Japanese prisoners and to save allied internees. On the morning of the 27th, an Allied airplane spread leaflets demanding that Indonesians surrender their weapons or be shot. This ultimatum from General Hawthorne, caused an uprising in Surabaya by dozens of youth militias that led to a battle on 10 November and a
fatwa jihad (holy war) against westerners. By October 1945, a
fatwa jihad supporting war in Surabaya was echoed in Aceh by popular cleric Daud Beurueh. Some militia contingents from Sulawesi and other Indonesian areas became involved in the Surabaya war. A small Dutch forces would land in
Kutaraja, from October to early November, but would withdraw to Medan as the atmosphere grew more hostile. The pro-Dutch
uleëbalang expected the Dutch to return, and were left exposed when they did not. The Dutch would leave Aceh untouched for the rest of the Revolution, this situation would turn the civil war in Aceh decisively in the pro-Republican
ulama. Travel for the perceived anti-revolutionary population—Christian Indonesian, Chinese Indonesian, European and Indo-European people—became impossible. The British armed forces tried to obtain control, but encountered heavy resistance, particularly in the middle of Java. Surabaya was the scene of bitter fighting.(see
Battle of Surabaya) wearing U.S. Marine Corps fatigues The Republic managed to reform the TKR para-military into a formal armed force: Tentara Republik Indonesia (Army of the Republic of Indonesia) or TRI, organised by Maj.Gen.
Urip Sumohardjo, an ex-KNIL major. This new organisation managed to disband most militias. However, many major militia still remained outside the TRI until a major reorganization 1947 made possible by a United Nations sponsored cease-fire before the Renville negotiations. The fourth phase (December 1945 to December 1946) is considered the aftermath of the heaviest
Bersiap fighting. In Jakarta, where hundreds of autonomous
Pemuda groups existed, the last months of 1945 were, according to Cribb, a "terrifying time of regular looting, robbery, kidnapping and random murders were Europeans and Indo-Europeans disappeared even from the heart of the city, to be found floating in the
kali (canals) days later". In Bandung, Republican attacks against alleged pro-Dutch civilians reached a peak in November and December, with 1,200 killed there. The alleged pro-Dutch civilians mostly included native-born Indo-European, Indo-Chinese, Christian indigenous people (e.g. Menadonese and Ambonese) and indigenous aristocracy, which made the
Bersiap period a chaotic mix of civil war, religious conflict and social revolution. Other killings among supposed revolutionary groups also happened, with prominent Indonesian nationalist and minister,
Oto Iskandar di Nata kidnapped and killed on 19–20 December 1945 by Laskar Hitam. Meanwhile, in Aceh, between December 1945 to March 1946, the leading
uleëbalang of Aceh and their families would be imprisoned or killed, leading to dominance of pro-Republican
ulama displacing the
uleëbalang elites. Throughout Java regular violence continued through to March 1946. In March 1946, departing Republican forces responded to a British ultimatum for them to leave Bandung by deliberately burning down much of the southern half of the city, in what is known as the "Bandung Sea of Fire. Indonesian commanders put much effort into organising irregular fighting units and consolidating their forces on Java.
Nasution in West-Java, and Sudirman in Central Java had a hard time controlling the many different armed forces and excluding criminal forces from their ranks, but in the end they succeed. Pressure from the British compelled Dutch politicians to commence negotiations with the Republican leadership, leading to the
Linggadjati Agreement, which eventually failed. Indonesian forces began evacuating Japanese military forces and European and Eurasian civilian prisoners. In March 1946, the
Royal Netherlands Army started to enter the country to restore order and peace. In July 1946, the last of the Japanese army was evacuated and all British troops were withdrawn by the end of the year, leaving the Dutch military in charge and de facto ending the
Bersiap period. Java and Sumatra was now divided into Republican and Dutch controlled areas. The violence and warfare continued. ==Post-
Bersiap period==