Bonnie Triyana, a historian and a member of the Indonesian
repatriation team, said the pieces include statues from Java's
Singosari, or the Islamic holy book Koran owned by an Indonesian
national hero, and bones excavated in Java in the 19th century
by Dutch paleoanthropologist Eugène Dubois, which became known
as Java Man.
"The main purpose is to return the items and produce knowledge,"
he told Reuters on Friday.
"These artefacts are a sign of a much bigger event."
From 1800 to 1949, Indonesia was a colony of the Netherlands
known as the Dutch East Indies, and an important source of
wealth, thanks to the trade in spices, precious metals and
minerals.
Bonnie said the team's main focus was state-owned collection in
national museums, including Naturalis Biodiversity Center, which
houses the Java Man femur and skull. The request was filed in
July, Bonnie said.
The education and science ministry in the Netherlands, which
coordinates the repatriation process, did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
The Netherlands has previously returned museum pieces to
Indonesia, including a dagger owned by the Javanese prince
Diponegoro, which it gave back in 2020.
(Reporting by Stanley Widianto; Editing by Martin Petty)
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