Black Armada

The Black Armada (Armada Hitam) was a name applied to Dutch merchant and military vessels which were prevented from sailing to the newly proclaimed independent Indonesia from Australian ports due to waterfront strikes or 'black bans' by maritime trade unions from 1945 to 1949.

End of World War II
On 15 August 1945, the Empire of Japan announced its surrender, bringing to an end both World War II and the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies. Two days later, on 17 August, Indonesia proclaimed its independence, however the Netherlands refused to recognise the claim and sought to re-assert Dutch control over its former colony.

"Black ban" on Dutch shipping
The ban began on 23 September when Indonesian crew members of four Dutch ships berthed in Sydney held a sit-down strike, refusing to work on Dutch-flagged or chartered vessels, over a pay dispute and claiming that the materiel on the ships was intended to be used to suppress the independence movement. The Indonesian sailors made a request to the Waterside Workers' Federation of Australia to join the boycott, and WWF federal secretary Jim Healy said that the union would not be a party to aiding in the suppression of an elected independent Indonesian government.

The next day, three ships in Brisbane were held up by the bans, as well as the SS Karsik (1938) in Melbourne. The disputes committee of the Trades and Labour Council endorsed the unions' ban, declaring six vessels in Brisbane to be "black". On 25 September 1945, a meeting of some 1400 waterside workers in Brisbane endorsed the black ban on Dutch ships (with no dissenting voice) and declared "that the Dutch Government in Australia shall not interfere with the Government as at present established by the Indonesian people themselves". This boycott by the Waterside Workers Federation speedily extended to bans by other unions: boilermakers, engineers, ironworkers, ship painter and dockers, carpenters, storemen and packers, tally clerks, and tug crews.

The Netherlands East Indies government-in-exile responded to this with the use of Dutch troops to load the Van Heutz with the Australian government's permission. In his 1975 book Black Armada, journalist Rupert Lockwood emphasised the unprecedented nature of this intervention: ""The presence in Australia of a foreign emigre regime was providing another paragraph in the chronicle of unique historical experience: the wildest Australian imagination had never conceived a Labor Government aiding the soldiers of a foreign army to break a strike of Australian trade unionists who contributed generously in funds and votes to put that Labor Government in office.""

- Rupert Lockwood

The Dutch government responded to the boycotts, insisting that any military materiel and personnel on the ships was for the purpose of fighting pro-Japanese militia in Indonesia. Commander Huibert Quispel of the Netherlands Indies Government Information Service stated that the vessels were "mercy ships" carrying food, clothing and medical supplies for the Indonesian people, and that by boycotting them, Australia's militant trade unions were only aiding the Japanese, and the "Quisling Jap-sponsored government" of Indonesia.

In December 1949, after Dutch recognition of Indonesian independence, a conference of 17 trade unions passed a motion raised by Healy to lift the black ban on Dutch shipping, ending the dispute which had run for over four years.

What the boycotts meant
"Indonesian seamen walked off ships,..., refusing to carry troops, munitions, archives, currency and other paraphernalia of colonial rule... Waterside workers ... refused to load Dutch cargoes, tug-crews would not provide tow-ropes, shipyard unions denied repairs to Dutch ships, Royal Netherlands Airforce aircraft and Navy craft.... The boycott extended to Dutch transport, stores and depots ashore." The number of ships subject to the bans included in total 559 craft: corvettes, submarines, troopships, passenger liners, merchant ships, tankers, barges, lighters and surf landing craft, all necessary for the Dutch re-occupation of Indonesia after its declaration of independence on 17 August 1945.

Effect of the boycotts
Lockwood believes that the "schedule-wrecking" delays to Dutch war plans for the newly declared Indonesian Republic gave the fledgling government sufficient time to create the administrative capacity which allowed it to weather the "foreign-promoted carnage and disorder of the 1950s", thus preventing the Indonesian archipelago from becoming another Indochina.

1. Amalgamated Engineering Union

2. Australasian Society of Engineers

3. Australian Federation of Locomotive Enginemen

4. Australian Meat Industry Employees' Union

5. Australian Railways Union

6. Blacksmiths' Society, now part of the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union

7. Boilermakers' Society

8. Breadcarters' Union

9. Building Workers' Industrial Union

10. Electrical Trades Union

11. Federated Clerks Union

12. Federated Engine Drivers and Firemen's Association

13. Federated Ship Painters and Dockers Union

14. Firemen and Deckhands' Association

15. Hotel, Club and Restaurant Employees' Union

1. Marine Stewards and Pantrymens' Union

2. Merchant Service Guild

3. Miners' Federation

4. Moulders' Union

5. Operative Painters' Union

6. Plumbers Union

7. Seamen's Union

8. Sheet Metal Workers' Union

9. Shipwrights' Union

10. Storemen and Packers' Union

11. Transport Workers' Union

12. Vehicle Builders' Union

13. Waterside Workers' Federation

14. West Australian Docks Union

15. West Australian Carpenters and Joiners' Union

1. Chinese Seamen's Union in Australia

2. Indonesian Seamen's Union in Australia

3. Indian Seamens' Union in Australia

4. Malayan Merchant Navy Association

1. Burma

2. Canada

3. Ceylon

4. China

5. Egypt

6. Holland

1. India

2. New Zealand

3. Pakistan

4. Singapore

5. Thailand

6. United States of America (West Coast)