
AMBON Map of Ambon Island No. 1 Map of Ambon City Map of Ambon Island No. 2

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One of Indonesia's Spice Islands, Ambon attracted European
adventurers and colonists for its clove trade as early as 1521. It
was fought over by the Portuguese, British and Dutch until finally
coming under Dutch rule in 1814. The Dutch presence created a
relatively large Christian population in Ambon. |
Following World War II, during which the island was occupied by the Japanese,
many Ambonese resisted becoming part of Indonesia and attempted to establish
an independent South Moluccan Republic (RMS = Republik Maluku Selatan), but
Indonesian troops suppressed the movement.
Ambon is home to the capital of Maluku province that consists of about 1,000
islands formerly known as the Moluccas, or Spice Islands. Ambon island
embraces 294 square miles (764 square kilometers) of generally hilly, agricultural
terrain that produces coffee, corn, copra, cloves and sugar, among others.
Muslims have steadily immigrated to Ambon since the establishment of the
Indonesian Republic in 1949. Christians and Muslims co-existed in relative peace
for decades, although the new settlers steadily chipped away at the traditional
Christian predominance. The population in 1980 stood at more than 650,000.
An Ambonese Muslim became the governor of the island in the early 1990s, and
the change in the power structure of the island increased tensions. A series of
church burnings and attacks on mosques in Jakarta and West Timor brought the
situation to critical mass.
Government attempts to suppress the unrest were unsuccessful, and in January
1999 what began as a street fight between a Christian bus driver and a Muslim
passenger escalated into the worst religious fighting in Indonesia's history. More
than 1,000 people were killed and thousands more fled.
By late June 2000, when Indonesian President
Abudurrahman Wahid proclaimed a state of civil
emergency, about 3,000 people had been killed since
the outbreak of violence, and Wahid's declaration did
little to quiet the uproar. |

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Text Source: http://www.cnn.com/ASIANOW/southeast
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