Johanis Manuhutu


Johanis Hermanus Manuhutu was a South Moluccan civil servant in the Dutch East Indies and the first president of the Republic of South Maluku in 1950.

Biography

Manuhutu completed his initial education at Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs in Ambon Island and then studied at the Education School for Native Civil Servants in Makassar. Starting 1929 he worked at the Inland Government Service in Ambon. Later he was transferred to Java where he suffered Japanese occupation during the World War II.
After that war he was, among other things, head of the South Moluccas Daïra of the State of East Indonesia during the time of the United States of Indonesia. In response to the attempts of centralization by the government in Jakarta, the initiative was taken to withdraw the Daïra of South Moluccas from the federation. On April 25, 1950, at the initiative of Chris Soumokil and Johan Manusama, the independent Republic of South Moluccas was proclaimed by a declaration signed by Johanis Manuhutu and Albert Wairisal. Manuhutu was appointed as president and Waisiral became prime minister. On May 3, 1950, Chris Soumokil succeeded him as president.
In early 1952, Manuhutu was captured by the Indonesian army in an operation on Seram Island, and was sentenced to five years in prison. He stated that he had issued the proclamation under heavy pressure from the military at the time. In August 1955, he was pardoned and thus effectively released after three and a half years of imprisonment. Later he went to live near Jakarta with his wife and brother, where he worked for a shipping company. He reconciled with the Indonesian authorities and in 1970 he may have been involved in discussions about the possible return of Ambonese people from the Netherlands.
Manuhutu was married and had seven children.