Hi Martinho, Here's another perspective on what's happening in another former 
Portuguese colony. Without intending to bait our Lusostalgic friends, could one 
ask whether there was something specific about Portuguese colonialism that left 
behind strongly polarised, violent, almost-futureless societies when compared 
to others (apart from French colonialism too, to a degree ... where we also saw 
violent implosions like the Portuguese case?). FN

http://www.forbes.com/work/feeds/ap/2006/05/26/ap2776496.html

> From: "Anthony and Nolette de Souza" 
> Subject: TIMOR LESTE
> 
>       It's no big deal that Australia has sent troops to reestablish order in 
> Timor Leste
> for, during the Second World War, the Timorese saved hundreds or Aussies 
> fighting the
> Japanese.  Australia is merely returning the favour.
> 
>       Martinho

        
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Associated Press
Update 10: Troops Try to Prevent War in East Timor
By ANTHONY DEUTSCH , 05.26.2006, 02:54 PM

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Hundreds of Australian troops supported by helicopters roaring overhead fanned 
out across East Timor's capital Friday, aiming to keep violence between the 
army and former soldiers from exploding into civil war.

A small contingent of camouflage-clad U.S. Marines landed in Dili to protect 
the American Embassy, and Indonesia closed its land border with East Timor as 
the spiraling conflict drew in police, machete-wielding youths and residents 
frustrated by poverty and unemployment.

In a sign of the depth of hatred dividing the Indian Ocean nation, a mob 
torched the house of a government minister, killing five children and an adult 
whose charred bodies were found Friday.

The bloodshed that started after the March firing of 600 disgruntled soldiers - 
nearly half the 1,400-member army - is the most serious crisis East Timor has 
faced since it broke from Indonesian rule in 1999. The impoverished nation 
received millions of dollars in international aid over the last seven years, 
much of it focused on building up the military.

After staging deadly riots last month, the sacked troops fled the seaside 
capital, set up positions in the surrounding hills and threatened guerrilla war 
if they were not reinstated.

Sporadic gunfire and explosions, some near the presidential compound, were 
heard throughout the day Friday in Dili and from rebel positions on city 
outskirts. The clashes killed a civilian and a soldier, said Antonio Caleres, 
director of Dili's main hospital, bringing the death toll to 23 in the past 
four days.

Machete-wielding youths were seen stopping a bus outside the capital Friday, 
asking passengers where they were from before letting them go.

On Thursday, a crowd stormed a Dili neighborhood, where they smashed windows 
and used gasoline to burn houses, including the residence of Home Affairs 
Minister Rogerio Lobato.

Lobato was not inside but six of his relatives were killed, including two young 
children and three teenagers, Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri said.

"I ran away when I saw them coming," neighbor Victor Do Dantos, 20, said of the 
attackers, declining to speculate on who they were. It was unclear whether the 
minister's home was deliberately targeted.

Hundreds of heavily armed Australian troops patrolled the streets on foot or in 
armored personnel carriers Friday, backed up by Black Hawk helicopters. More 
Australians are expected to arrive in the coming days for a total 1,300. New 
Zealand, Malaysia and Portugal - East Timor's former colonial power - have 
pledged or sent smaller numbers of troops.

Thousands of people have abandoned their homes, many seeking refuge inside the 
United Nations compound in Dili.

"I'm afraid and saddened. Australian troops are arriving here because we cannot 
solve own problems," said Julio Dos Reis, a 34-year-old prison guard standing 
by a roadside with his 2-year-old daughter. "Our leaders don't have the ability 
to resolve this."

East Timor's government asked for international help this week, but tensions 
grew Thursday when army soldiers attacked the national police headquarters, 
accusing officers of allying themselves with the renegade former troops.

U.N. police and military advisers negotiated a cease-fire under which police 
were to surrender weapons and leave the building. As unarmed police were 
escorted out, soldiers opened fire.

An injured policewoman screamed for help as U.N. officers and ambulances 
arrived at a street strewn with bodies and wounded in blood-soaked uniforms. At 
least 10 people were killed and 26 wounded, including two U.N. advisers, said 
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric and a hospital director.

The renegade soldiers were fired after a monthlong strike to protest what they 
said were poor working conditions. Many fought in the resistance against brutal 
Indonesian rule and felt they were denied recognition, from promotions to 
coveted assignments, because of discrimination. The fired soldiers come largely 
from East Timor's west while the military leadership is from the east.

The foreign minister said Friday he believed the issues that triggered the 
violence were "still capable of resolution."

"Despite our situation, I have continued to talk to all aggrieved parties in 
the hope we all can find a lasting, peaceful solution," said Jose Ramos Horta, 
a Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

Yet one analyst said the anger fueling the violence was rooted in East Timor's 
colonial past.

"Unmet expectations: You see this in a lot of postcolonial countries," Damien 
Kingsbury, an Australian academic and expert on Indonesia and East Timor. "Lots 
of people believe once their colonial masters are gone everything will get 
better. Well, often that isn't the case." 

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frederick Noronha         784 Near Convent, Sonarbhat SALIGAO GOA India
Freelance Journalist      TEL: +91-832-2409490 MOBILE: 9822122436
Skype/Yahoomessenger: fredericknoronha www.bytesforall.net


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