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[sent 'for the record']

The Los Angeles Times
Monday, August 30, 1999

E. Timorese Flood Polls During Lull in Violence

-   World Threatens to Withhold Aid
-   Police Vow to Enforce Peace

 Southeast Asia: Militias vow to end bloodshed and allow vote that could
bring birth of a new nation. Those in line seem to lean toward independence
from Indonesia.

By DAVID LAMB, Times Staff Writer

    DILI, Indonesia--As dawn broke today, tens of thousands of voters here in
East Timor were taking advantage of a lull in violence and heading toward
United Nations polling places to decide whether their former Portuguese
colony should become independent or remain an Indonesian province.

     Warring militias yielded to international pressure and pledged at the
eleventh hour Sunday to end an orgy of bloodshed, paving the way for the
historic election that could lead to the birth of a new nation.

    "A long chapter in the history of our people's struggle for affirmation
of its culture and firm determination to choose its own future is reaching a
conclusion," said East Timor's independence leader, Jose Alexandre "Xanana"
Gusmao, who is under house arrest but was allowed to cast his vote for
independence in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital, at a polling station set up
to accommodate East Timorese living outside the territory.

    Gusmao, once Indonesia's most wanted man and now a voice for forgiveness
and tolerance, is widely tipped to lead East Timor if, as expected, voters
opt for independence. A former guerrilla fighter, he was captured in 1992 and
sentenced to 20 years in prison, but the government says he might be freed
soon if the election goes smoothly.

     Fearful of continued bloodshed, many of the voters who flocked to cast
their ballots this morning had spent the night in the forests and hills
surrounding this provincial capital.

     The polls opened at 6:30 a.m., and by 8, 1,500 people, each holding a
registration form, were waiting peacefully in line in the yard of a secondary
school in the Becora district on the eastern outskirts of Dili.

    Like seemingly everyone around him, Sebastiao da Costa, 58, a retired
civil servant, said he was rejecting continued ties with Indonesia.

     "Today is very important for East Timor because we're finally getting
our chance to vote for independence," he said. "People are 100% for
independence. Yes, I've been afraid by the violence, but nothing would have
stopped me from voting today."

    Nearby stood Teresa da Carvalho, 25, a university employee who described
herself as an activist and said she will not marry her fiance until this half
of Timor island is independent from Jakarta, whose forces took control of the
territory in 1975.

     "If the vote was for autonomy," she said, "it would be better to
continue our guerrilla struggle. After 24 years, our time has come for
independence."

     U.N. officials and Western diplomats said the surprise agreement signed
by the pro- and anti-independence militias Sunday was in large part a result
of international pressure exerted on Indonesia, which in turn pushed the
militias and its own security forces to end the violence that has racked the
province.

     World Threatens to Withhold Aid

     The tacit message delivered by the international community was: If the
election is derailed by violence, donors may cut their much-needed financial
assistance to Indonesia and turn their backs on East Timor, an impoverished
backwater of little political, economic or strategic significance.

     There was an unconfirmed report today from an anti-independence militia
that a separatist mob stabbed two of its members to death.

     Although Sunday's agreement basically only reiterated conditions the
militias have signed on to--and ignored--before, it was noteworthy that the
young thugs who have roamed Dili in recent weeks with spears, swords,
machetes, bows and arrows, and homemade firearms mostly faded from the
streets as an eerie calm fell over the tense capital.

     The rest of the province was markedly quieter, too, after the accord was
announced Sunday morning at a news conference chaired by Ian Martin, chief of
the U.N. mission that has 1,000 members representing 70 nations here.

     "It may have been said before, but the agreement gives shape and meat to
the whole ballot process," said Tamrat Samuel, a senior U.N. political
affairs officer. "We're taking it seriously."

     Under terms of the deal brokered by the U.N. during two days of talks,
the opposing militias agreed not to carry weapons outside their designated
cantonment areas, to support efforts by the police to arrest violators, to
make joint inspections of each other's cantonments and to work toward a free
and fair election allowing the 430,000 registered voters to determine their
own future.

     Eurico Guterres, the deputy commander of an anti-independence militia
who only last week had promised to turn East Timor into a "sea of fire" if
voters choose independence, said it was time for reconciliation in order to
support the 800,000 people of the province.

     "We have entrusted the army to do all it can to support this
reconciliation," he said.

     For his part, Falur Rate Laek, deputy commander of the independence
militia, said there can be no winners or losers in the 24-year struggle for
independence that has claimed 200,000 lives, and "we should take full
responsibility to settle the conflict." He and Guterres hugged and joined
arms for photographers, who are among the more than 600 Indonesian and
foreign journalists on hand for the election.

     Police Vow to Enforce Peace

     Police Chief Col. Timbul Silaen, whose 8,000-man force has been timid
and incompetent in its appointed mission of providing pre- and post-election
security, said his men would become aggressive in arresting agitators. And
military commander Noer Muir, whose 18,000 soldiers have actively sided with
the forces wanting continued association with Indonesia, said, "We hope God
almighty will place his blessing on this agreement."

     It was a tall order that left much room for skepticism. But many dared
to hope. Said Australian businessman Gino Favaro, who owns the 25-room Hotel
Dili, which was occupied by the Japanese during World War II: "I'm an
optimist. If we have peace, hundreds of millions of dollars in aid are going
to pour in from nations around the world. East Timor will boom."

    Voters are being asked two questions. First: "Do you accept the proposal
for autonomy for East Timor within the Unitary State of the Republic of
Indonesia?" Second: "Do you reject the special autonomy for East Timor,
leading to East Timor's separation from Indonesia?"

    Indonesia, which invaded in 1975--after Portugal walked away from its
colony--and then annexed the territory the next year despite international
condemnation, had long insisted that it would never relinquish the province.
But the U.N. and most of the world never recognized Indonesia's sovereignty
over the area.

     Then, in January, President B. J. Habibie stunned everyone by offering
the East Timorese the choice of independence or wide-ranging autonomy within
the republic. The offer set off a wave of violence as unruly militias,
particularly those supporting independence, set out to intimidate the
opposition.

     "A lot of people at this time are very afraid," the Roman Catholic
bishop of Dili, Carlos Ximenes Belo, co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Prize for
Peace, said in a message to the East Timorese on Sunday.

     But, he went on: "Don't be afraid. Be brave and choose the future of
East Timor. This generation will create history, and people all over the
world will talk about us.

     "They will talk about the warrior people and the brave-hearted. Be
responsible. Please be cautious. Do not provoke others. Just go quietly, cast
your vote and quietly return to your homes and pray."

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Didistribusikan tgl. 31 Aug 1999 jam 13:14:09 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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