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Kate Adie presents stories from the US, Indonesia, Georgia, Thailand and Colombia.Donald Trump's only Republican rival for the US presidency, Nikki Haley, says she'll fight on, despite roundly losing to him in her home state of South Carolina, where she was governor twice. Our Correspondent, Will Vernon, joined Republican campaigners in South Carolina, as they went door-to-door.In Indonesia, Prabowo Subianto, a former army general with a questionable past humans rights record, is set to become the country's next president. Our South East Asia Correspondent, Jonathan Head, remembers first meeting Mr Subianto, when he served under the dictator General Suharto.Thousands of babies in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia were stolen from their parents at birth and sold. Our Correspondent, Fay Nurse, meets some mothers who were told their new-borns had died suddenly, but who now wonder if they may still be alive.Thailand is moving a step closer to legalising same-sex marriage. In Bangkok, Rebecca Root meets couples who are keen to tie the knot.And we're in Colombia, where a literary festival encourages people to debate divisive issues without turning to violence. Kirsty Lang finds out more.Producer: Sally Abrahams Production Co-ordinator: Sophie Hill Editor: Matt Willis
Michael Vann joins Long Reads for a special, two-part conversation about Indonesia's turbulent past and present. Michael is a professor of history at Sacramento State University who specializes in the history of Southeast Asia. Today's episode covers the events leading up to the coup in the 1960s, when General Suharto seized power and slaughtered the Indonesian left.Long Reads is a Jacobin podcast looking in-depth at political topics and thinkers, both contemporary and historical, with the magazine's longform writers. Hosted by Features Editor Daniel Finn.You can find Michael's essays about Indonesian history on the Jacobin website:"The True Story of Indonesia's US-Backed Anti-Communist Bloodbath" https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/01/indonesia-anti-communist-mass-murder-genocide"Indonesia Still Hasn't Escaped Suharto's Genocidal Legacy" https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/09/indonesia-sukarno-suharto-communists-genocide-dictatorship-corruptionProduced by Conor Gillies, music by Knxwledge. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On September 30th, 1965, people in Indonesia went to bed thinking that the following day would be like any other. However, that assumption was sadly wrong. In the early hours of October 1st — before the sun had even risen — members of the Gerakan 20 September (G30S) initiated a failed putsch for power that triggered a genocide. In a campaign of bloodletting that would shake Indonesia to its core, General Suharto attacked communists, feminists, and all believed to associate with them. Over a period of several months, his forces killed over one million people, displaced one million more, and tortured countless others. Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/DasCriminal Sources: https://bit.ly/3bhoMVw
Our third discussion on The Jakarta Method details the methodological differences between the two wings of the CIA: the measured, "conciliatory" cosmopolitanism of Howard "Smiling" Jones vs. the loose cannon interventionism of Frank Wisner ("The Wiz"). However tactically distinct in their approaches to regime change in Indonesia during the rise of Sukarno and the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), both proved to have similar aims, leading ultimately to the extermination of the PKI preceding the coup d'etat of General Suharto. The music on After the ‘End of History' appears courtesy of Jason King, whose work you can find on SoundCloud.
On the night of September 30/October 1, 1965, a bungled coup d’état resulted in the deaths of a handful of Indonesian generals and a young girl. Within days the Indonesian army claimed that the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China, was responsible. This set in motion the confusing, mysterious, and often perplexing events in 1965 that led to the downfall of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno – an anti-imperialist who sought to combine the forces of nationalism, religion, and communism – and the rise of the authoritarian General Suharto who ruled Indonesia for 32 years – a period of far-right military dictatorship known as the New Order. As part of Suharto’s overthrow of Sukarno, the circle of officers around him incited regional officers to start a campaign of arrest, detention, torture, and mass murder of millions of Indonesians. We don’t have exact numbers, but somewhere between 500,000 and a million were killed and an equal number sent to brutal prisons throughout the nation’s sprawling archipelago, Buru Island being the most infamous. Prisoners worked as slave labor for years. After their release, they were subject to official repression and were treated as social pariahs. Even the children of former prisoners faced discrimination. Allegedly this wave of violence was directed at the massive Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, but in reality, scores of other leftists including feminists, labor organizers, and artists fell victim to the bloody purge. Because the killers ran the state for decades, a generation of Indonesians were fed a steady stream of lurid propaganda that falsely claimed the PKI was planning its own campaign of mass murder. John Roosa’s Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Massacres of 1965-1966 in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2020 is a carefully crafted study of these events that sheds light on the mechanics of mass murder and dispels a number of myths about this dark moment in Indonesian history. Based on decades of interviews and archival research the book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarly work on what some have termed a political genocide and what a 1968 CIA report called “one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century”. John Roosa is an Associate Professor of history at the University of British Columbia. Buried Histories is a sequel to his previous book, Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup D'État in Indonesia, the definitive political history of the event that set the Indonesian genocide in motion. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford, 2018). When he’s not quietly reading or happily talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the night of September 30/October 1, 1965, a bungled coup d’état resulted in the deaths of a handful of Indonesian generals and a young girl. Within days the Indonesian army claimed that the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China, was responsible. This set in motion the confusing, mysterious, and often perplexing events in 1965 that led to the downfall of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno – an anti-imperialist who sought to combine the forces of nationalism, religion, and communism – and the rise of the authoritarian General Suharto who ruled Indonesia for 32 years – a period of far-right military dictatorship known as the New Order. As part of Suharto’s overthrow of Sukarno, the circle of officers around him incited regional officers to start a campaign of arrest, detention, torture, and mass murder of millions of Indonesians. We don’t have exact numbers, but somewhere between 500,000 and a million were killed and an equal number sent to brutal prisons throughout the nation’s sprawling archipelago, Buru Island being the most infamous. Prisoners worked as slave labor for years. After their release, they were subject to official repression and were treated as social pariahs. Even the children of former prisoners faced discrimination. Allegedly this wave of violence was directed at the massive Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, but in reality, scores of other leftists including feminists, labor organizers, and artists fell victim to the bloody purge. Because the killers ran the state for decades, a generation of Indonesians were fed a steady stream of lurid propaganda that falsely claimed the PKI was planning its own campaign of mass murder. John Roosa’s Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Massacres of 1965-1966 in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2020 is a carefully crafted study of these events that sheds light on the mechanics of mass murder and dispels a number of myths about this dark moment in Indonesian history. Based on decades of interviews and archival research the book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarly work on what some have termed a political genocide and what a 1968 CIA report called “one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century”. John Roosa is an Associate Professor of history at the University of British Columbia. Buried Histories is a sequel to his previous book, Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup D'État in Indonesia, the definitive political history of the event that set the Indonesian genocide in motion. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford, 2018). When he’s not quietly reading or happily talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the night of September 30/October 1, 1965, a bungled coup d’état resulted in the deaths of a handful of Indonesian generals and a young girl. Within days the Indonesian army claimed that the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China, was responsible. This set in motion the confusing, mysterious, and often perplexing events in 1965 that led to the downfall of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno – an anti-imperialist who sought to combine the forces of nationalism, religion, and communism – and the rise of the authoritarian General Suharto who ruled Indonesia for 32 years – a period of far-right military dictatorship known as the New Order. As part of Suharto’s overthrow of Sukarno, the circle of officers around him incited regional officers to start a campaign of arrest, detention, torture, and mass murder of millions of Indonesians. We don’t have exact numbers, but somewhere between 500,000 and a million were killed and an equal number sent to brutal prisons throughout the nation’s sprawling archipelago, Buru Island being the most infamous. Prisoners worked as slave labor for years. After their release, they were subject to official repression and were treated as social pariahs. Even the children of former prisoners faced discrimination. Allegedly this wave of violence was directed at the massive Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, but in reality, scores of other leftists including feminists, labor organizers, and artists fell victim to the bloody purge. Because the killers ran the state for decades, a generation of Indonesians were fed a steady stream of lurid propaganda that falsely claimed the PKI was planning its own campaign of mass murder. John Roosa’s Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Massacres of 1965-1966 in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2020 is a carefully crafted study of these events that sheds light on the mechanics of mass murder and dispels a number of myths about this dark moment in Indonesian history. Based on decades of interviews and archival research the book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarly work on what some have termed a political genocide and what a 1968 CIA report called “one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century”. John Roosa is an Associate Professor of history at the University of British Columbia. Buried Histories is a sequel to his previous book, Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup D'État in Indonesia, the definitive political history of the event that set the Indonesian genocide in motion. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford, 2018). When he’s not quietly reading or happily talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the night of September 30/October 1, 1965, a bungled coup d’état resulted in the deaths of a handful of Indonesian generals and a young girl. Within days the Indonesian army claimed that the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China, was responsible. This set in motion the confusing, mysterious, and often perplexing events in 1965 that led to the downfall of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno – an anti-imperialist who sought to combine the forces of nationalism, religion, and communism – and the rise of the authoritarian General Suharto who ruled Indonesia for 32 years – a period of far-right military dictatorship known as the New Order. As part of Suharto’s overthrow of Sukarno, the circle of officers around him incited regional officers to start a campaign of arrest, detention, torture, and mass murder of millions of Indonesians. We don’t have exact numbers, but somewhere between 500,000 and a million were killed and an equal number sent to brutal prisons throughout the nation’s sprawling archipelago, Buru Island being the most infamous. Prisoners worked as slave labor for years. After their release, they were subject to official repression and were treated as social pariahs. Even the children of former prisoners faced discrimination. Allegedly this wave of violence was directed at the massive Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, but in reality, scores of other leftists including feminists, labor organizers, and artists fell victim to the bloody purge. Because the killers ran the state for decades, a generation of Indonesians were fed a steady stream of lurid propaganda that falsely claimed the PKI was planning its own campaign of mass murder. John Roosa’s Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Massacres of 1965-1966 in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2020 is a carefully crafted study of these events that sheds light on the mechanics of mass murder and dispels a number of myths about this dark moment in Indonesian history. Based on decades of interviews and archival research the book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarly work on what some have termed a political genocide and what a 1968 CIA report called “one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century”. John Roosa is an Associate Professor of history at the University of British Columbia. Buried Histories is a sequel to his previous book, Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup D'État in Indonesia, the definitive political history of the event that set the Indonesian genocide in motion. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford, 2018). When he’s not quietly reading or happily talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On the night of September 30/October 1, 1965, a bungled coup d’état resulted in the deaths of a handful of Indonesian generals and a young girl. Within days the Indonesian army claimed that the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), the largest communist party outside of the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China, was responsible. This set in motion the confusing, mysterious, and often perplexing events in 1965 that led to the downfall of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno – an anti-imperialist who sought to combine the forces of nationalism, religion, and communism – and the rise of the authoritarian General Suharto who ruled Indonesia for 32 years – a period of far-right military dictatorship known as the New Order. As part of Suharto’s overthrow of Sukarno, the circle of officers around him incited regional officers to start a campaign of arrest, detention, torture, and mass murder of millions of Indonesians. We don’t have exact numbers, but somewhere between 500,000 and a million were killed and an equal number sent to brutal prisons throughout the nation’s sprawling archipelago, Buru Island being the most infamous. Prisoners worked as slave labor for years. After their release, they were subject to official repression and were treated as social pariahs. Even the children of former prisoners faced discrimination. Allegedly this wave of violence was directed at the massive Indonesian Communist Party, the PKI, but in reality, scores of other leftists including feminists, labor organizers, and artists fell victim to the bloody purge. Because the killers ran the state for decades, a generation of Indonesians were fed a steady stream of lurid propaganda that falsely claimed the PKI was planning its own campaign of mass murder. John Roosa’s Buried Histories: The Anticommunist Massacres of 1965-1966 in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2020 is a carefully crafted study of these events that sheds light on the mechanics of mass murder and dispels a number of myths about this dark moment in Indonesian history. Based on decades of interviews and archival research the book is a welcome addition to the growing scholarly work on what some have termed a political genocide and what a 1968 CIA report called “one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century”. John Roosa is an Associate Professor of history at the University of British Columbia. Buried Histories is a sequel to his previous book, Pretext for Mass Murder: The September 30th Movement and Suharto's Coup D'État in Indonesia, the definitive political history of the event that set the Indonesian genocide in motion. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford, 2018). When he’s not quietly reading or happily talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Trump ballon az égen, aranyvécén tweetelő robot, de ez sehol nincs a többi rettenetes királynői látogatóhoz képest. Miután A TELJESSÉG IGÉNYE NÉLKÜL átmentünk néhány itt járt diktátorlátogatáson, beleugrottunk 3 fontos dokumentumfilm felemelő tanúságfelhőjébe, hogy aztán az NSYNC-n és AOC-n keresztül megérkezzünk Hajdú Eszter 2018-as filmjéhez ahol Bayer jobban égeti magát mint valaha. Talán választ adhattam az istenhívők legnagyobb melegek ellen felhozott kérdésére, ahogyan Eddie Izzard is megérdemelte az említést. Szerintem fontos epizód. Linkek: Lefty vlog: KATT IDE (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCY07DDqCSVD4yYf6t5wU12Q) HUNGARY 2018 - Behind the Scenes of Democracy dokumentumfilmhez KATT IDE (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDd296vblBU&t=1664s) Knock down the house-ról többet ITT TALÁLSZ (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9358052/) The Boy Band Con -hoz a Youtube Trailer itt (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHavSOAP4BI) Ha már összeírtam, akkor ide is rakom: President Mobuto Sese Seko of Zaire A középafrikai ország veztője Mobuto Sese Seko 1978-ban vacsizott együtt a királynővel, az az az ember aki 12billió font körüli összeget rabolt el országa népéptől, és tobb mint 200ezer ember haláláért felelős…. President Nicolae Ceausescu of Romania Szintén 1978-ban fogadta a királynő a roman diktátort Nicolae Ceausescu-t akit állítólag annyira nem szívesen látott, hogy egy alkalommal konkrétan elbújt a bokorban, csak ne kelljen udvarias beszélgetésbe elegyednie. President General Suharto on Indonesia Öt évvel a látogatás előtt Suharto kormánya közel egymillió embert gyilkolt le mikor lerohanták a Kelet Timor nevű térséget, de ennek ellenére is az öreglány megtartotta a tisztelgő ünnepséget a kedves Indonéz uralkodó fogadására 1979-ben. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe Még jóval a látogatása előtt (ami 1994-ben volt) a Zimbabwe-i uralkodó több mint 10ezer ember halálával volt gyanusítva -mikor a l980-as lázadásokat brutális ezközökkel verte le. Mindezzel mit sem törődve nemes kitüntetést kapott “Honorary Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Bath”- címen. Később a kitüntetést visszavonták a kormány általánosan használt kegyetlenkedései miatt. President Bashar Al-Assad of Syria 2002-ben Toni Blair (az akkori miniszterelnök) hívta meg Assad-ot a szíriai vezetőt és az angol származású feleségét Asma to Britain, akik a látogatás során a Királynővel vacsorázhattak a Buckingham palotában. Mindezt akkoriban amikor egyre többen hangoztatták hogy a Szír vezér pénzeli a Palesztin és Iszlamista terror csoportokat. Később a kép tovább durvult mikor Assad vélhetőleg vegyi fegyverekkel ölte halomra saját népét. President Vladimir Putin of Russia A KGB ügynökből let Orosz elnök 2003-ban járt itt állami látogatáson, amire reagálva rengetegen vonultak az utcákra jelezve felháborodásukat a Csecsen szeparistákkal való brutális bánásmódra. 3 évvel később minden bizonyíték szerint az Orosz vezetés elrendelésére Londonban megölték Alexander Litvinenko, illetve 2018-ban Salisburi-ben kiséreltek meg egy szintén állami megbízású titkos merényletet. Azóta a feszültség egyre csak nő Oroszország és UK között…. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) 2018 márciusában minden előzetes tiltakozás ellenére MBS látogatta meg a királynőt. Ki más mint a világbohóc elvtelen paprikajancsi Boris Johnson fogadta, hogy aztán a szaudi kisherceg a királynővel ebédelhessen. Hogy mennire igaza volt a látogatás áellen tüntetőknek, azt gyorsan megtudta a világ. Hét hónappal később October másodikán Jamal Khashoggi-t a The Washington Post nevű amerikai lap újságíróját gyalázatos módon megölték , mindezt pofátlanul nyilvánvalóan a Saudi vezér utasítására Törökországban, a Saudi nagykövetség egyik hátsó szobájában. persze nagy nemzetközi hőbörgés volt, de semi más. Furcsa podcast... egyensulyozni probal a beteg faszsagok es ertelmes gondolatok terhe alatt -neha sikerul, neha nem. Szinte minden episode mas. Talan pont ez kell neked most.
Trump ballon az égen, aranyvécén tweetelő robot, de ez sehol nincs a többi rettenetes királynői látogatóhoz képest. Miután A TELJESSÉG IGÉNYE NÉLKÜL átmentünk néhány itt járt diktátorlátogatáson, beleugrottunk 3 fontos dokumentumfilm felemelő tanúságfelhőjébe, hogy aztán az NSYNC-n és AOC-n keresztül megérkezzünk Hajdú Eszter 2018-as filmjéhez ahol Bayer jobban égeti magát mint valaha. Talán választ adhattam az istenhívők legnagyobb melegek ellen felhozott kérdésére, ahogyan Eddie Izzard is megérdemelte az említést. Szerintem fontos epizód. Linkek: Lefty vlog: KATT IDE (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCY07DDqCSVD4yYf6t5wU12Q) HUNGARY 2018 - Behind the Scenes of Democracy dokumentumfilmhez KATT IDE (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDd296vblBU&t=1664s) Knock down the house-ról többet ITT TALÁLSZ (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9358052/) The Boy Band Con -hoz a Youtube Trailer itt (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHavSOAP4BI) Ha már összeírtam, akkor ide is rakom: President Mobuto Sese Seko of Zaire A középafrikai ország veztője Mobuto Sese Seko 1978-ban vacsizott együtt a királynővel, az az az ember aki 12billió font körüli összeget rabolt el országa népéptől, és tobb mint 200ezer ember haláláért felelős…. President Nicolae Ceausescu of Romania Szintén 1978-ban fogadta a királynő a roman diktátort Nicolae Ceausescu-t akit állítólag annyira nem szívesen látott, hogy egy alkalommal konkrétan elbújt a bokorban, csak ne kelljen udvarias beszélgetésbe elegyednie. President General Suharto on Indonesia Öt évvel a látogatás előtt Suharto kormánya közel egymillió embert gyilkolt le mikor lerohanták a Kelet Timor nevű térséget, de ennek ellenére is az öreglány megtartotta a tisztelgő ünnepséget a kedves Indonéz uralkodó fogadására 1979-ben. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe Még jóval a látogatása előtt (ami 1994-ben volt) a Zimbabwe-i uralkodó több mint 10ezer ember halálával volt gyanusítva -mikor a l980-as lázadásokat brutális ezközökkel verte le. Mindezzel mit sem törődve nemes kitüntetést kapott “Honorary Knight Grand Cross in the Order of the Bath”- címen. Később a kitüntetést visszavonták a kormány általánosan használt kegyetlenkedései miatt. President Bashar Al-Assad of Syria 2002-ben Toni Blair (az akkori miniszterelnök) hívta meg Assad-ot a szíriai vezetőt és az angol származású feleségét Asma to Britain, akik a látogatás során a Királynővel vacsorázhattak a Buckingham palotában. Mindezt akkoriban amikor egyre többen hangoztatták hogy a Szír vezér pénzeli a Palesztin és Iszlamista terror csoportokat. Később a kép tovább durvult mikor Assad vélhetőleg vegyi fegyverekkel ölte halomra saját népét. President Vladimir Putin of Russia A KGB ügynökből let Orosz elnök 2003-ban járt itt állami látogatáson, amire reagálva rengetegen vonultak az utcákra jelezve felháborodásukat a Csecsen szeparistákkal való brutális bánásmódra. 3 évvel később minden bizonyíték szerint az Orosz vezetés elrendelésére Londonban megölték Alexander Litvinenko, illetve 2018-ban Salisburi-ben kiséreltek meg egy szintén állami megbízású titkos merényletet. Azóta a feszültség egyre csak nő Oroszország és UK között…. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) 2018 márciusában minden előzetes tiltakozás ellenére MBS látogatta meg a királynőt. Ki más mint a világbohóc elvtelen paprikajancsi Boris Johnson fogadta, hogy aztán a szaudi kisherceg a királynővel ebédelhessen. Hogy mennire igaza volt a látogatás áellen tüntetőknek, azt gyorsan megtudta a világ. Hét hónappal később October másodikán Jamal Khashoggi-t a The Washington Post nevű amerikai lap újságíróját gyalázatos módon megölték , mindezt pofátlanul nyilvánvalóan a Saudi vezér utasítására Törökországban, a Saudi nagykövetség egyik hátsó szobájában. persze nagy nemzetközi hőbörgés volt, de semi más. Furcsa podcast... egyensulyozni probal a beteg faszsagok es ertelmes gondolatok terhe alatt -neha sikerul, neha nem. Szinte minden episode mas. Talan pont ez kell neked most.
There is growing distrust between Indonesian President Sukarno and the Communist towards the Army Generals. After a failed left wing coup in October 1965, the Generals turn on the Communists killing at least half a million of them. In 1966 the General began to oust President Sukarno from power. A biography of General Suharto who would rule Indonesian for over thirty years and would ally himself with the west.