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Inter Press Service
August  4, 1999

RIGHTS-EAST  TIMOR:  U.S. TIMORESE REGISTER FOR FIRST VOTE

By Farhan Haq

NEW YORK,

   Without any fanfare but with high hopes, East Timorese across North America
and further afield in Latin America are trickling into a small office in New
York City to fulfill a lifelong dream: to vote on East  Timor's  status.

   This morning, fewer than a dozen people entered the offices of the
International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Manhattan to prove their
credentials as East Timorese and register to vote on Aug. 30 on whether they
wish autonomy under Indonesian rule, or independence.

   Once registered, they face another trip here to cast their ballots as
the IOM office is the only site for the  Timor  ballot in the entire Western
hemisphere.

   Because of the expense involved in travelling from Canada and even Latin
America, few voters were expected to register in New York; but what those
arriving at the IOM offices lacked in numbers, they made up for in enthusiasm.

   "As a Timorese, I've been waiting for this moment all these years," said
Isabel Galhos, who defected to Canada in 1994 while representing Indonesia
at a youth program. "I hope this is the first sign of me going home within the
year."

   "This is the first time I am able to exercise the right to vote in my
life," said Constancio Pinto, currently U.N. representative of the
pro-independence
National Council of Timorese Resistance, as he registered.

   Pinto fled his homeland after the 1991 massacre of more than 270 people
at a cemetery in Dili, the capital of East  Timor.  "I have been struggling
for
this right to self-determination for more than 24 years -- since I was 10
years
old," he said.

   The United Nations has faced an uphill battle in organizing the Aug. 30
ballot, particularly because pro-Indonesia militias have waged a campaign of
violence and intimidation in the run-up to the vote.

   At the same time, however, hundreds of thousands of people in East  Timor
have showed up at registration sites since voter registration began on July
16.

   "People walked for hours...from the mountains, from the jungles, into
registration centers," said Jose Ramos Horta, co-winner of the 1996 Nobel
Peace Prize and a leader of the pro-independence movement in East  Timor.
Despite the intimidation they faced, he argued, the East Timorese had made
voter
registration a success.

   By Monday, the United Nations estimated that more than 410,000 Timorese had
registered, with 400,000 of the registrations occurring in East  Timor  itself
and the rest in centers in Indonesia, Macau, Mozambique, Australia and
Portugal, as well as  New York.

   With registration extended until Aug. 6 within East  Timor,  and Aug. 8 in
outside centers, Timorese leaders were confident that all those who wanted to
vote would be able to do so.

   Ramos Horta said he was "optimistic" about the vote, although he warned
that it could be difficult to register thousands of Timorese displaced from
their
homes in recent fighting.

   "I am still worried about the potential for fake registrations for
Indonesians from West  Timor, " the western half of the island, Ramos Horta
said.

   West  Timor  has been part of Indonesia for centuries, unlike East  Timor,
which was a colony of Portugal until it was invaded by Indonesia in 1975.

   Ian Martin, head of the U.N. Assistance Mission in East  Timor  (UNAMET),
said on Wednesday that "the indications are that very good proportions of the
internally displaced have presented themselves, either by going back to their
home areas" or registering in Dili or other locations.

   He added that UNAMET had reinforced its registration centers near the
border  with West  Timor,  but conceded that "not very large numbers have
(registered
there) yet."

   Martin said that the U.N. mission had installed several safeguards to
prevent voting from non-Timorese or double registrations. "So far, we are
pretty
confident of the integrity of the register that is being produced," he said.

   The Timorese who registered in New York all had to submit detailed
information on their bona fides to be able to vote on Aug. 30. They had to be
born in East  Timor  or have Timorese-born parents, or be a spouse of someone
who fitted in one of those two categories.

   One of the New York registrants, Eduardo de Assis, a Californian
resident who left East  Timor  in 1946, registered along with his daughter
Carol, a
computer software teacher. He described his trip to New York as "just a little
struggle" for East Timor.

   Despite the costs and logistics of travel, the Timorese registering in New
York had the advantage over other would-be voters in their homeland -- they
did not have to face the threats and violence that racked the island state in
recent weeks.

   Amnesty International recorded more than 30 executions in the immediate
aftermath of the May 5 agreement, signed in New York between Indonesia and
Portugal, that paved the way for the August ballot.

   The International Federation for East  Timor,  which
supports self-determination and will help to monitor the vote, said in a
report this week that it had evidence that pro-Indonesia militias were
continuing to
threaten the lives of any Timorese who might vote for independence.

   "The conditions are not yet ripe for the vote itself," Ramos Horta said.
But he remained confident that Indonesia would ensure security for the vote to
proceed peacefully, or else it would suffer the consequences
internationally for failing to do so.

   "I think after the vote, the situation will be peaceful as long as the
United Nations remains there," Pinto said. He dismissed the possibility of
violence if, as expected, the East Timorese voted for independence. "We will
try our
best to create an environment of peace in East  Timor, " he said.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 7 Aug 1999 jam 16:01:59 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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