
THE HAGUE, June 21, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten Sunday
issued a formal state apology to members of the Moluccan community for their
decades-long mistreatment by the Netherlands after Indonesia won independence
from colonisation.
Many Moluccans, from the so-called "spice islands" in eastern Indonesia,
fought for the Dutch colonial army during the post-World War II struggle for
independence.
After Indonesia gained independence in 1949, around 12,500 Moluccans were
brought to the Netherlands in a state-organised transfer to escape reprisals.
They were supposed to stay only briefly before returning to an independent
country, as part of negotiations at the time between the Dutch government and
Indonesia.
However, the Dutch reneged on their promise to repatriate them and they were
housed in dire conditions, with little attempt to find them jobs or integrate
them into broader Dutch society.
Unveiling a monument to commemorate that dark period of Dutch history, a
visibly moved Jetten told hundreds of Moluccans gathered in Rotterdam that it
was "high time" to apologise.
"For the inadequate reception and housing. For being unseen and abandoned.
For the unfulfilled longing for home. And for the grief and pain in so many
families. For this, I offer my apologies today on behalf of the Dutch
government," said Jetten.
The Ulu Kora monument was unveiled on the Lloydkade in Rotterdam, where the
first ships transporting Moluccans arrived in the Dutch port.
Those who were in the army were immediately discharged and many were sent to
former concentration camps used to gather Jews in the Nazi-occupied
Netherlands.
The 1970s saw a number of violent actions by second-generation Moluccans, who
felt betrayed by the Dutch for failing to secure their independent homeland.
"I realise the injustice cannot be suddenly removed with apologies. We cannot
change the course of history and the reality of today with a few sentences,"
said Jetten.
"But I do hope that the words I just spoke are perceived as a form of
recognition and an act of historical justice for you," he told members of the
community, many of them clutching family photos of first-generation Moluccans
now dead.