Senin, 14 Februari 2011
History of Indonesia
The Dutch began to colonize
Indonesia in the early 17th
century; Japan occupied the
islands from 1942 to 1945.
Indonesia declared its
independence after Japan's
surrender, but it required four
years of intermittent
negotiations, recurring hostilities,
and UN mediation before the
Netherlands agreed to transfer
sovereignty in 1949. Indonesia's
first free parliamentary election
after decades of repressive rule
took place in 1999. Indonesia is
now the world's third-largest
democracy, the world's largest
archipelagic state, and home to
the world's largest Muslim
population. Current issues
include: alleviating poverty,
improving education, preventing
terrorism, consolidating
democracy after four decades of
authoritarianism, implementing
economic and financial reforms,
stemming corruption, holding the
military and police accountable
for past human rights violations,
addressing climate change, and
controlling avian influenza. In
2005, Indonesia reached a
historic peace agreement with
armed separatists in Aceh, which
led to democratic elections in
Aceh in December 2006. Indonesia
continues to face a low intensity
separatist movement in Papua.