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""An even more strident demand came from the Australian Financial Review,
the country's main business newspaper. Its commentator Brian Toohey declared
the US-NATO bombing of Serbia to be a precedent for an Australian-led UN
mobilisation against Indonesia. ""

""As in Kosovo, the purpose of such an armed intervention will not be to
protect the rights and aspirations of poor villagers, but to secure the
investments and strategic interests of Western big business. ""

Western calls for intervention mount after Timor killings
By Mike Head
20 April 1999

Western governments and media columnists have stepped up calls for military
intervention in East Timor after pro-Indonesian militias killed at least 20
people and abducted dozens more in two days of violence throughout the
provincial capital of Dili last weekend.

Portugal, the former colonial ruler of the territory, was joined by the
Foreign Minister of Ireland, another European Union member, in demanding UN
action, while the United States and Australia expressed alarm about the
developments and indicated support for early UN involvement.

Between 2,000 and 7,000 members of various militia groups rampaged through
Dili, shooting known independence supporters, assaulting refugees from other
towns and burning homes, and businesses of secessionists. According to
eye-witness accounts from refugee agencies, the show of force began with a
rally on Saturday in front of the governor's office. There Eurico Guterres,
the commander of the Aitarak militia urged his followers to "conduct a
cleansing of all those who have betrayed integration. Capture and kill them,
if you need it. I, Eurico Guterres, will be responsible."

Paramilitary groups with assorted names from throughout East Timor attended
the rally, coming from towns and villages such as Atabae, Maliana, Aileu,
Same, Ainaro, Suali, Maubara, Viqueque, Bacau and Lospalos. Also present
were the Governor, Abilio Soares, the military commander, and the police
chief. Aid agencies said some Dili residents were rounded up and forced to
participate.

Gangs armed with rifles, home-made guns and machetes then circled the city,
shooting weapons and seizing vehicles. Among the homes targetted was that of
a prominent businessman and independence supporter, Manuel Carrascalao,
leader of the East Timorese People's Reconciliation and Unity Movement. Some
170 refugees from outlying areas had been sheltering in the house.
Carrascalao's adopted son and others were either shot or hacked, leaving a
likely death toll of 10-15. Many more are missing.

Gangs also ransacked the houses of two other leaders of the umbrella
secessionist movement, the National Resistance Council of Timor
(CNRT)--Leandro Isaac and David Diaz. Likewise, the home of the late Herman
das Dores Soares, the victim of a military shooting last year, was raided.
Militiamen burned the warehouse, kitchen and two cars owned by his family.
Other homes were raided or burned down.

Four truck and van loads of militia members attacked and destroyed the
offices of the local daily Suara Timor Timur (Voice of East Timor). They
smashed up computers, printing machines, archival cabinets, windows and
doors, accusing the paper of being a voice for anti-integration forces.

A number of witnesses, including aid agencies, Western reporters and the
Irish Foreign Minister David Andrews, stated that Indonesian military
commanders and soldiers watched benignly or gave signs of encouragement as
the attacks continued. At times, soldiers waved on the attackers and
provided them with food and water.

Refugee agencies reported similar rallies and violence in other towns and
villages in preceding days, including in Suai, Emera, Maubara, Viqueque and
Maliana. These events followed the previous weekend's massacre of up to 52
people in a churchyard at Liquicia and reports of military shootings
elsewhere.

In the leadup to last weekend's violence, the Indonesian regime currently
headed by B.J. Habibie gave indications of hardening its attitude toward the
prospect of East Timorese independence or autonomy. A spokeswoman for
Habibie said the government took responsibility for the events, but
emphatically ruled out any foreign involvement in East Timor in preparation
for a UN-supervised "act of free choice" on autonomy, due to be held in
July.

According to one report from New York, Jakarta is planning to demand
significant changes to the autonomy package due to be finalised with
Portugal at the UN this week. The changes include a continued Indonesian
armed forces (ABRI) presence, supervision of an East Timor police force by
the Indonesian police, Indonesian control over the territory's natural
resources (notably oil and coffee) and no East Timorese flag, emblems,
colours or sporting teams.

In addition, no details of the proposed voting method on the autonomy plan
have been released, or indeed whether any ballot is to be permitted.

Under pressure from Portugal, the US and Australia to resolve the ongoing
Timor conflict and relax the Indonesian regime's grip on the economy,
President Habibie in January this year indicated that an autonomy plan would
be drafted but if it were rejected, Indonesia would simply abandon the
province. Its legal status would then revert to a Portuguese colony. Because
of lobbying by Portugal and the European Union, the UN has never recognised
the Indonesian annexation of East Timor after its 1975 invasion.

With elections due to be held across Indonesia on June 7, key political and
military leaders have denounced Habibie for even canvassing the notion of
autonomy. The Far Eastern Economic Review last month reported that Wiranto
is working with retired General Benny Murdani, an architect of the Timor
occupation. Murdani told a visiting academic in January that he disapproved
of Habibie's autonomy offer. In "four to five months" ABRI would be ready to
crack heads once and for all in East Timor, he boasted.

Opposition politicians such as Megawati Sukarnoputri and Abdurrahman Wahid
have condemned Habibie's plan. Elements within Indonesian ruling circles are
determined to cling to East Timor for fear of setting off breakaway
movements in other resource-rich regions such as West Papua and Aceh. Their
interests coincide with local business interests in East Timor, forged on
the basis of the military's domination of the coffee trade, logging and
other concerns.


Demands for UN troops

On Sunday Portugal accused Indonesia of being directly responsible for the
latest militia violence and called for stronger international action to halt
the attacks. "It was Indonesia that armed the militias," Portuguese Prime
Minister Antonio Guterres declared. But he said the incidents would not
prompt Portugal to suspend the talks with Indonesia at the UN. Portugal
hopes to use the UN negotiations to force Jakarta to accept UN monitoring of
a ballot.

The Irish government, which has in recent years expressed interest in
playing a larger role in East Timor, is backing Portugal. Speaking from
Jakarta on Sunday, its minister David Andrews said he was "deeply shocked
and horrified" by what he had seen in Dili the day before. He called for an
immediate UN presence and declared his intention to brief European Union
ambassadors in Jakarta before raising the subject at an EU foreign ministers
meeting in Brussels next week.

A US State Department spokesman adopted a more cautious line. James Rubin
said the United States was "deeply concerned" by the weekend reports and
wanted ABRI to "bring the pro-integrationist militia groups under control".
This was in line with the stance adopted last week by US Assistant Secretary
of State for Asian and Pacific Affairs Stanley Roth, after visiting Habibie
and Wiranto in Jakarta. "I emphasised in my discussions that Indonesia has
responsibility to provide security," Roth said.

Roth claimed to see several "positive notes" in Jakarta, including the
establishment of a human rights commission for East Timor, which would
include the jailed resistance leader Xanana Gusmao. Roth, a frequent visitor
to Gusmao's cell in recent years, held what he called "a very good
discussion" with Gusmao on steps to "promote a peaceful outcome in East
Timor".

In Australia, the Howard government has, on the one hand, pointed to the
evidence of military backing for the militias but, on the other, called on
the Indonesian government and ABRI to protect East Timorese people from the
gangs. Meanwhile, the Liberal-National Party government is preparing troops
and other personnel to participate in a UN force and is forming a new
3,000-strong Rapid Deployment Force in Darwin, just 600 kilometres from
Dili.

Prime Minister John Howard and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer have come
under intense fire from the Labor Party opposition and key sections of the
corporate-controlled media for not demanding the immediate acceptance of a
UN force, which would include a substantial contingent of Australian troops.

Labor's foreign affairs spokesman Laurie Brereton repeated earlier calls for
the Howard government to commit itself to joining a UN force in East Timor.
"The horrific events in Dili confirm the absolute necessity for immediate
and strong international pressure on the Indonesian government to disband
and disarm the pro-integrationist militias and accept an effective United
Nations peacekeeping mission," he said.

An even more strident demand came from the Australian Financial Review, the
country's main business newspaper. Its commentator Brian Toohey declared the
US-NATO bombing of Serbia to be a precedent for an Australian-led UN
mobilisation against Indonesia. "No-one is suggesting that Indonesia's basic
infrastructure should be collapsed by 1,000 advanced warplanes as in
Serbia," he wrote last weekend. "But there may be isolated incidents in
which paramilitary groups have to be confronted on the ground by an
international force of about 5,000 troops, including a significant number
from Australia." Toohey urged the Australian military to "start treating it
[ABRI] as little different to the Serbian forces".

Plans are well underway for a large UN military operation. Australia's
Northern Territory government revealed the plans in a newspaper
advertisement seeking expressions of interest from local businesses in
supplying the UN's "initial requirements for goods and services". It listed
fixed-wing aircraft and medium-sized helicopters, military-style food
rations, temporary housing, power generators, water purification equipment,
a field hospital, medical evacuation facilities, freight shipping services
and 70 four-wheel drive vehicles with UN insignia.

The Northern Territory government wants to make its capital, Darwin, the
"staging post" for the UN operation.

As in Kosovo, the purpose of such an armed intervention will not be to
protect the rights and aspirations of poor villagers, but to secure the
investments and strategic interests of Western big business. Having worked
hand-in-glove with the Suharto dictatorship for decades to oppress the
Timorese, and the Indonesian masses as a whole, the corporate chiefs,
politicians, military commanders and their media mouthpieces have not
suddenly acquired pangs of conscience.

Rather, they are seeking new means of preventing the unrest unleashed by the
collapse of the Indonesian economy from threatening their oil and coffee
interests and other profit-making opportunities currently in the hands of
the Indonesian military and its cronies.



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>From IPS News
http://www.oneworld.org/news/by_country/index.html

EAST TIMOR: Tension Rises as Indonesian Crisis Deepens
By Sonny Inbaraj
DARWIN, Australia, Mar 30 (IPS) - Indonesia's economic crisis has diverted
world attention from the war in East Timor, but the few reports filtering
out of the territory indicate an escalation of tensions there in recent
months.
The Indonesian Armed Forces (Abri) presence in East Timor, a tiny island
2,500 km east of Jakarta, intensified early this year with new forces from
eight battalions, totalling 5,600 men, moving into the island.

In a message received by human rights organisations in Darwin, recently, the
East Timorese resistance, known as Falintil, said government forces had
launched a new campaign against villagers suspected of supporting its
guerrillas.

''This is a concerted attempt to terrorise the population so that they stop
supporting us,'' said the statement.

Reports of heightened tensions in East Timor, which was invaded by
Indonesian troops in 1975, come on the eve of the Asia-Europe summit in
London on Apr. 2-3.

The human rights situation in East Timor has often been raised in
international fora by Portugal, which the United Nations still considers the
ruling authority on the island.

But on Sunday, Indonesian Foreign Minister Ali Alatas said he did not see
East Timor coming up in the talks. ''I think that will impossible during the
summit. We should know that it will be an irrelevant topic. All people,
including the host country (Britain) know this,'' he told Kompas news agency
firmly.

Diplomatic efforts aimed at finding a solution to the East Timor problem
seem to be making little headway of late.

No date has yet been fixed for a visit to East Timor's capital, Dili, by the
European 'troika' of past, present and upcoming European Union presidents,
announced by British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook recently in Jakarta.

Exiled East Timorese leader and Nobel Peace Prize co-winner Jose Ramos Horta
says European governments should not use the Asian financial crisis as an
excuse to not take a stand on East Timor or press Indonesia on it.

''Several countries claim the West should not put extra pressure on
Indonesia right now. This kind of argument is hypocritical and unethical and
displays a lack of courage on the part of Europeans,'' said Ramos Horta.

Meantime, Falintil said two villagers had been tortured and one beheaded by
Abri's Rajawali forces in Ermera district in East Timor. Also in Ermera, it
said, seven people suspected of helping the guerrillas were arrested
recently after all their possessions were destroyed by Abri.

The Falintil message also had details of a Jan. 4 night strike by Abri in
Bobonaro district, which led to the arrest of two guerrillas and eight
villagers. According to Falintil, one villager was killed and his body found
floating on the Bebuik River.

While they could not independently verify these reports, Australian aid
workers returning from East Timor last week confirmed the increase in
Indonesian troop presence. ''It's worst in the villages than the last time I
was there,'' said a relief worker who did not want to be named.

''There are more checks; there are soldiers in more places and all of them
are heavily armed. It seems they're ready for combat,'' added the relief
worker.

Indonesia annexed East Timor as its province in 1976, a year after its
invasion. More than 200,000 East Timorese, mostly civilians, women and
children died in the bombardments and ''cleaning'' manoeuvres of Abri in the
months following the invasion of Dec. 7, 1975.

Defence analysts estimate that the Indonesian government is spending at
least 200 million U.S. dollars a year in maintaining an estimated 15,000
troops in East Timor.

''Given an official defence budget of 3 billion dollars, a defence force of
500,000, including police, and an assumed strength of 15,000 actually in
East Timor, then expenditure would be around 90 million dollars per annum,''
said Robert Lowry, formerly of the Australian Defence Academy, and author of
'The Armed Forces of Indonesia'.

''That figure could be, at least, doubled because of the cost of troop
rotation and salary supplements, the greater intensity of operations, and
cross subsidies from other government departments and agencies. An annual
cost of 200 million dollars per annum would be a conservative figure,'' he
added.

This amount spent on the troops in East Timor, in the midst of the economic
crisis tearing the seams of Indonesia's social fabric, has yet to be
questioned by the international community involved in the financial bail-out
of the country.

Meantime, East Timorese also have to put up with a prolonged drought that
has hit the region. Indonesia is suffering from its worst drought in 50
years.

The Australian relief agency AusAid says the most severely affected area is
Atauro Island off the northern coast.

''The problem in Atauro is further compounded by the fact that prices have
risen sharply, due to the currency crisis, and the majority of East Timorese
can no longer afford to buy food at current prices,'' the aid agency said.
''There have been reports that because of this, people are scavenging for
food and eating leaves and tubers.''

The loss of livestock due to drought also plagues residents. ''Previously,
in East Timor, if the crops failed cattle and pigs could be sold to
supplement family income. Now that seems impossible, further exacerbating
the impact of the drought,'' AusAid said. (END/IPS/AP-HD-IP/SI-AA/JS/98)


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