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The Jakarta Post, September 13, 2000

UN mission 'inappropriate'

JAKARTA (JP): The government on Tuesday said the UN Security
Council's decision to dispatch a mission to Indonesia next week
following the killing of three UN relief workers in Atambua, East
Nusa Tenggara, was at this time "inappropriate".

"We are of the opinion that the presence of the UN mission here
would be inappropriate because Indonesia is still trying to
earnestly resolve the problem," Coordinating Minister for
Political, Social and Security Affairs Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
told journalists after a special Cabinet meeting to discuss the
militia and refugee problems in west Timor.

It was the third such Cabinet meeting in five days.

"We think that the Indonesian government is currently trying to
respond to the UN Security Council resolution ... we believe that
we should be given trust, sovereignty and a chance to do what we
have to do," Susilo said.

He added that the government would like to see "fair" treatment and
that the sovereignty of the nation "should be respected".

"We are going to take diplomatic steps ... through our permanent
representative to the UN, through our President, so that there will
be good communication between the government and the UN," Susilo
said.

A mob attacked the United Nations High Commission for Refugees
(UNHCR) office in Atambua last week allegedly following news that
ex-militia leader Olivio Moruk had been murdered the previous night
by unknown assailants.

Appalled by the brutal murder of three UN workers, the UN Security
Council adopted on Friday a resolution that unanimously called on
Jakarta to immediately disarm and disband the militias in West
Timor.

Following the adoption of the resolution, the Council decided to
dispatch a mission to Indonesia, and possibly East Timor, to
discuss the implementation of the resolution.

Diplomats in New York were reportedly saying that the UN mission
would convey a strong message to Jakarta to disarm and disband
militias in the West Timor refugee camps and bring those
responsible for the attacks to justice.

The news that Jakarta was unwilling to accept the UN mission was
first expressed earlier in the day by Defense Minister Mahfud M.D.

He told reporters that the government will refuse to meet the UN
mission when it arrives here next week.

"Today's Cabinet meeting has decided that the Indonesian government
will not meet that mission because we already have our own
programs," Mahfud replied when questioned about the matter by
reporters immediately after the conclusion of the Cabinet meeting
chaired by Vice President Megawati Soekarnoputri.

President Abdurrahman Wahid did not attend the meeting.

"We will reject the presence of that mission. We will negotiate
(with the UN) on our own, we will settle this on our own (because)
we are a sovereign nation," he added.

But Mahfud said the government would meet with United States
Defense Secretary William Cohen, who is scheduled to visit
Indonesia by the end of the week, as his visit had been scheduled
long before the violence in Atambua.

Nevertheless, Attorney General Marzuki Darusman later said the
arrival of the UN mission was inevitable as the UN Security Council
resolution had requested UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to report
to the Council on the situation on the ground within a week of the
resolution's adoption.

"Besides, I think the visit would be able to speed up efforts to
resolve the problems that have so far been a bit neglected,"
Marzuki told The Jakarta Post.

He added that Jakarta could also use the visit to reiterate its
demand that the international community be fully committed to
finding a solution to the militia and refugee problems in West
Timor.

Marzuki earlier said that a team of cabinet members would be
dispatched to West Timor in the next few days to boost "the
coordination" among government agencies on the ground and to
monitor the latest situation in the area.

"The makeup of the team will be decided by President Abdurrahman
Wahid during the next Cabinet meeting on Sept. 14," Marzuki said.

Separately, the head of the National Police information department
Sr. Supt. Saleh Saaf on Tuesday said police had arrested six of the
10 suspects believed to be connected with the murder of ex-militia
leader Olivio Moruk. "Only one of the suspects is still at large,
three others died in a brawl during the abduction of Olivio," Saleh
said.

But Saleh reacted strongly when asked whether the suspects were ex-
militia members or ordinary refugees in Atambua.

"There is no such thing as militia, they are all just refugees from
East Timor," Saleh insisted.

Olivio is also one of the 19 suspects named by the Attorney
General's Office for being involved in the violence in East Timor
last year.

Saleh added that police were still looking for five people who had
been named suspects in the killing of the three UN humanitarian
workers. (jaw/byg)

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Didistribusikan tgl. 18 Sep 2000 jam 05:41:14 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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