United Nations Commission for Indonesia

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AbbreviationUNCI
Formation25 August 1947 (Committee of Good Offices)
28 January 1949 (UNCI)
TypePeacekeeping Mission
Legal statusEnded 1950
United Nations Commission for Indonesia [1]
AbbreviationUNCI
Formation25 August 1947 (Committee of Good Offices)
28 January 1949 (UNCI)
TypePeacekeeping Mission
Legal statusEnded 1950
Parent organization
United Nations Security Council
WebsiteUNCI

The United Nations Commission for Indonesia (Indonesian: Komisi Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa untuk Indonesia, UNCI) was a United Nations commission formed to replace the Committee of Good Offices known in Indonesian as Komisi Tiga Negara (lit.'Trilateral Commission', not to be confused with the modern Trilateral Commission). The purpose of UNCI was to continue the duties of the previous commission, while at the same time overseeing the handover of the Indonesian territory to the republican government and reporting regularly to the United Nations Security Council. UNCI was formed after the Good Offices Commission was deemed to have failed to reconcile the conflict. UNCI played an important role in the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference.[2]

Meeting on a country road between officers of the Indonesian and Dutch army. Representatives of the United Nations are also present.(October 1949)

On 17 August 1945, Indonesian nationalist leader Sukarno proclaimed Indonesian independence from Japan who occupied the Dutch East Indies since 1942. The Dutch viewed the Indonesian Republican leadership on Java as Japanese collaborators, and wanted to regain control of their colony. The conflict between the Dutch and Indonesian nationalists and other involving parties developed into a full-scale national revolution.[3]

By mid-1946, both sides were under international pressure to negotiate.[4] The Dutch favoured a federal Indonesian state, and organised the Malino Conference in July 1946, which led to the establishment of the State of East Indonesia. In November, the Dutch and Indonesian sides reached an agreement at Linggadjati, in which the Netherlands agreed to recognize de facto republican rule over parts of Java, Sumatra and Madura, and that republic would become a constituent state of a federal United States of Indonesia.[5]

Council's Committee of Good Offices

Aftermath

References

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