Janatin

Usman bin Haji Muhammad Ali
Nickname(s) Janatin
Born (1943-03-18)18 March 1943
Banyumas, Dutch East Indies
Died 17 October 1968(1968-10-17) (aged 25)
Singapore
Buried at Kalibata Heroes Cemetery
Allegiance Indonesia
Service/branch Indonesian Navy
Years of service 1962–1965
Rank Second Sergeant
Awards National Hero of Indonesia

Second Sergeant Usman bin Haji Muhammad Ali (18 March 1943 – 17 October 1968), better known as Janatin and Usman Janatin, was an Indonesian marine and National Hero of Indonesia.

Biography

Janatin was born in Jatisobo, Banyumas, on 18 March 1943.[1][2] He graduated from his middle school in 1962.[1]

On 1 June 1962, he entered the Indonesian Marine Corps.[1] During the Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation, he was appointed as one of three volunteers to serve in a military operation called Komando Siaga (later renamed Komando Mandala Siaga), led by Vice Admiral Omar Dhani.[2][3] Then he was stationed at Sambu Island, Riau. On 8 March 1965, he, Harun Thohir, and Gani bin Arup were assigned to conduct sabotage in Singapore. Equipped with a rubber boat and 12.5 kilograms (28 lb) of explosives, they were told to bomb an electric power house, but instead, on 10 March 1965, they targeted a civilian building, the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank building, now known as the MacDonald House, killing three and wounding at least 33 others, all of which were innocent civilians. When escaping, Janatin and Thahir went to a beach, while Gani chose a different route. Janatin and Thahir seized a motorboat, but on the sea the motorboat broke down. They were arrested by Singapore patrol squads on 13 March 1965 and convicted of murder, as they had been wearing civilian clothes at the time and had targeted a civilian building, and were sentenced to death by a Singapore court.[4]

They were sentenced to hang in Changi Prison, Singapore, on 17 October 1968. Janatin's remains was taken back to Indonesia and buried in Kalibata Heroes Cemetery, Jakarta.[5]

In 2014, one of the ships of the Bung Tomo-class corvette by the Indonesian Navy was named after him and Harun, the KRI Usman-Harun. The name however, causes controversy between Indonesia and Singapore, and Singaporean government banned the ship from berthing at their port.[6]

References

Bibliography

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