The
Netherlands and Indonesia are to set up a joint team to protect Second World
War shipwrecks being plundered on the sea bed.
Foreign affairs minister Stef
Blok said he had agreed with his Indonesian counterpart to set up a team to
locate and protect vulnerable wrecks by the end of the year.
It follows the
discovery last year that three Dutch wrecks had disappeared from the bottom of
the Java Sea, having apparently been taken by scrap dealers.
At least 110 Dutch
ships that were sunk during the Pacific Ocean campaign are currently lying in
Indonesian waters. On a visit to Jakarta, Blok said the Indonesian government
was aware of the cultural significance of the shipwreck sites to the
Netherlands.
The locations of the three missing vessels – the SNLMS De Ruyter,
Java and Kortenaer – will be marked as commemorative sites. The ships were sunk
by the Japanese fleet in 1942, with the loss of around 1,100 sailors.

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