Another shocking gangland-style murder took place in Bali this week when a tourist from the Netherlands was attacked by two knife-wielding assassins on a motorbike and hacked to death in front of his girlfriend on the street.

The shocking incident that has left residents stunned follows a spate of similar events on the island.

Last month, a Ukrainian man was kidnapped, tortured, and beheaded by alleged members of the Chechen mafia.

Earlier this month, three Australians were found guilty of the premeditated murder of another Australian man in a gangland-style debt vendetta that turned out to be a case of mistaken identity, with the coroner in Bali telling news.com.au the murder rate on the island has increased exponentially over the past year.

Anger as tourist breaks Bali's biggest rule

At 10pm on Monday evening (March 23), 49-year-old Dutch national Rene Pouw was viciously attacked by two men in front of his villa in the inner-city suburb of Kerobokan, home to Bali’s infamous Kerobokan Prison, aka the Bali Hilton.

The crime was witnessed by the victim’s girlfriend, a 30-year-old Indonesian woman identified only by the initials PI.

She told police Pouw suffered knife wounds to his head, neck, shoulder and lower thighs, in addition to cuts to his hands and arms as he attempted in vain to defend himself against the vicious attack.

PI also told police that the assassins, one who wore a black and green jacket commonly used by delivery drivers in Indonesia, then pursued her down the street with a bloody knife.

“The victim’s girlfriend hid in a dark area in front of villa number four because she had been targeted by the perpetrator wearing the ojol jacket,” Chief of police for North Kuta Commissioner I Ketut Agus Pasek Sudina said. “[Only] after feeling safe and seeing the perpetrators fleeing towards the main road, [did] she dared to come out.”

Another witness, identified by the initials KPTAP, told police he heard screams and spotted the assassins fleeing the scene of the crime on a black Honda Vario, noting the pillion passenger was still brandishing a long knife described as a samurai sword by some news outlets in Indonesia.

Pouw was rushed by ambulance to Bali’s BIMC private hospital but lost consciousness before he arrived. he was declared dead as a result of blood loss at 11:30pm. The body was transferred to Ngoerah Central General Hospital on Tuesday morning, where it is being prepared for a forensic autopsy.

“So far I have only performed an external examination,” Dr Nola Margaret Gunawan, a forensic medicine specialist who will perform the autopsy, told news.com.au.

“Most of the wounds are large in size and are mostly in the upper body and head.”

Dr Gunawan, who has worked as a coroner in Bali since 2019, said there had been a dramatic increase in violent murders in Bali over the past year.

“From the first day I started working in Bali until the end of 2024, I performed an autopsy on one murder victim. But in the first six months of 2025, I received one murder victim every month, and that was only when I was on duty,” she said, adding, “This is the second murder victim I have received this year, and we’re still in March.”

Commissioner Sudina said police were still working to identify the motive for the attack, adding that theft was being considered a likely motive because “none of the victim’s belongings were missing.”

But according to Algemeen Dagblad (AD), a Dutch daily newspaper, Pouw was a convicted drug criminal on the run from the law and was probably murdered in a “targeted” hit to “settle” a bad debt.

“Everything points to him being the man of the same name who was on the run from the Dutch investigative services for years,” AD reported. “His name and age from previous publications on this website … correspond exactly with data from the Indonesian police. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in The Hague reports being aware of the death of a Dutch man, but for privacy reasons does not want to say whether it is actually the [same person] known in the underworld.”

Pouw was sentenced to five years in 2005 for drug trafficking, but only served one year before absconding from the Netherlands while on weekend leave. In 2010, he was placed on the European nation’s National Wanted List. In 2011, Pouw was rearrested in Spain and served the remainder of his sentence there before moving to Southeast Asia.

“The authorities had a great interest in him at the time,” AD added. “He was on their radar because he possibly wanted to testify in the Passage mega-trial, concerning a failed assassination attempt.”

Back in Bali, chief of Badung Police Joseph Edward Purba, whose precinct is jointly investigating the murder with North Kuta Police, announced an island-wide manhunt is underway to apprehend the suspects. “The team is fully engaged in the investigation to determine the identity and whereabouts of the perpetrators,” he said. “This case is a priority for us.”

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