Ministry of Home Affairs (Pasundan)

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Ministry of Home Affairs
Kementerian Dalam Negeri
Emblem of the Pasundan Police Department (de jure under the Ministry)
Agency overview
FormedMay 8, 1948 (1948-05-08)
Dissolved23 January 1950
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Gaos Hardjasoemantri, Secretary General
  • Raden Yusuf, Chief of the Pasundan Police Department

The Ministry of Home Affairs was a government ministry of the State of Pasundan. The ministry was responsible for the control of the state apparatus, civil service, and the Pasundan Police Department.

Transfer of power[edit]

After the establishment of the Adil Cabinet on 8 May 1948, prime minister Adil Puradiredja appointed himself as the Minister of Home Affairs. The formation of the ministry was done a month later, on 11 June 1948, after the handover of the authority from the Recomba (government commissioner for administrative affairs) to the Minister of Home Affairs. The instrument of transfer for this purpose was the Staatsblaad (State Gazette) 1948 No. 116.[1]

According to George McTurnan Kahin, the transfer of power was pitifully meager. For example, according to the second article of the instrument of transfer, "provisions concerning the rehabilitation of residencies and regencies" would continue to be taken care of by the Dutch government in Batavia until such time as the latter made other arrangements. This caused territorial heads of Pasundan (residents and regents) being appointed by the Dutch government in Batavia, resulting in three out of four Pasundan residents being Dutch.[2]

Other powers that were severely limited by the Dutch government in Batavia was the Pasundan Police Department. The instrument of transfer limited the power transfer so that the exercise of the authority did not apply where federal interests were concerned. The "federal interest" was interpreted by the Attorney General of the Netherlands Indies to include the authority over the Pasundan Police Department. Thus, the Pasundan Police Department was under the direct control of the Attorney General.[3]

The subordination of the police to the Attorney General of the Dutch East Indies was questioned by Ating, one of the police commissioners in Pasundan. He was subsequently arrested on 14 January 1949 by the Dutch army commander in Pasundan, Major General Engels.[3]

National Civil Service and Police Meeting[edit]

Shortly after the formation of the ministry, the ministry held the first National Civil Service and Police Meeting in Bandung. The meeting resulted in several decisions about the guidelines for the national development.[4]

Ministers[edit]

No Portrait Name Took office Left office Cabinet R
1 Adil Puradiredja 8 May 1948 10 January 1949 Adil [5]
2 Djumhana Wiriaatmadja 10 January 1949 31 January 1949 Djumhana I [6]
3 Ma'moen Soemadipradja 31 January 1949 18 July 1949 Djumhana II [6]
18 July 1949 11 January 1950 Djumhana III [7]
4 Anwar Tjokroaminoto 11 January 1950 23 January 1950 Anwar [8]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Bastiaans, W. Ch. J. (1950), Personalia Van Staatkundige Eenheden (Regering en Volksvertegenwoordiging) in Indonesie (per 1 Sept. 1949) (PDF), Jakarta{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Toer, Pramoedya Ananta; Toer, Koesalah Soebagyo; Kamil, Ediati (1999), Kronik revolusi Indonesia: 1948, Jakarta: Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia
  • Government of Pasundan (1949), Satu Tahun Berdirinja Negara Pasundan, Bandung{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Kahin, George McTurnan (1952), Nationalism and Revolution in Indonesia, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press

References[edit]

  1. ^ Government of Pasundan 1949, p. 13
  2. ^ Kahin 1952, p. 370
  3. ^ a b Kahin 1952, pp. 370–371
  4. ^ Government of Pasundan 1949, p. 14
  5. ^ Toer, Toer & Kamil 1999, p. 137
  6. ^ a b Bastiaans 1950, p. 33
  7. ^ "HET NIEUWE KABINET VAN PASOENDAN". De locomotief : Samarangsch handels- en advertentie-blad. Bandung. 22 July 1949.
  8. ^ "Nieuw kabinet van Pasoendan". De vrije pers : ochtendbulletin. Bandung. 10 January 1950.