http://www.smh.com.au/world/east-timorese-plead-for-justice-20120311-1usg3.html
East Timorese plead for justice 
Michael Bachelard, Dili
March 12, 2012 
  a.. 
 
Domingas da Silva was raped repeatedly by Indonesian soldiers. Photo: Michael 
Bachelard

WHEN East Timorese voters go to the polls on Saturday to choose a new 
president, every candidate with a chance will be a veteran of the struggle 
against Indonesia.

The thousands of fighters in that long war, including the oldest and 
best-known, the ''generation of 1975'', were recently awarded a generous 
compensation scheme by the government in recognition of service.

But barely mentioned by this country's tight-knit political elite are other 
victims of the invasion, many of them women, who were raped or brutalised or 
lost parents, husbands or children in the long occupation.

Domingas da Silva was 17 when the Indonesians invaded, and 21 when they 
captured her in the southern town of Viqueque, in 1979. In the following years, 
she was raped many times, and bore six children to different Indonesian 
soldiers.

At 54, the pain of those events still fills her eyes with tears. ''I felt like 
I lost my dignity and it was painful in my heart,'' Ms da Silva told The Age.

Family and neighbours rejected her, and only the local Catholic priest would 
help.

Even so, there are many years she can barely remember, her mind made blank by a 
mental illness she cannot name.

This mental state continued for 20 years, until after independence in 1999, 
when a women's group brought Ms da Silva to Dili, and sought help from a group 
called Pradet, dedicated to trauma recovery. She is stronger now, and well 
enough to speak out. She wants some recognition of her pain, and some measure 
of justice, though not money, because the children and grandchildren born of 
the rapes support her.

The Association for the Victims of the Conflict 1974-'99 lobbies on behalf of 
people such as Ms da Silva. Spokesman Jose Luis Oliveira says his pleas for 
recognition have been ignored by veterans and politicians.

A bill seeking reparation for victims has languished in East Timor's parliament 
since 2009.

''So the victims become victims again because the state is violating them by 
omission,'' he says. ''This is very painful because in the past it was the 
victims who gave the soldiers food and helped the veterans in the jungle.''

Ms da Silva's needs are secondary, in the mind of East Timor's leaders, to two 
more pressing matters. The first is the veterans, who form a powerful lobby and 
pose a threat of unrest in this tiny country.

The second is East Timor's desire for a strong relationship with its giant and 
powerful neighbour, Indonesia.

Despite the mutual scars, East Timor's youth has embraced Indonesian brands and 
pop culture, and many traders here are Indonesian, or from Indonesian stock.

Leaders across the political spectrum have gone out of their way to forgive 
past wrongs and enter discussions with East Timor's powerful neighbour.

Political party Fretilin's presidential candidate, Francisco ''Lu Olo'' 
Guterres, told The Age: ''As president of the republic my number one role would 
be to nurture and maintain the relationship with Indonesia.''

Mr Guterres, a veteran of the war whose wife and many relatives were killed by 
Indonesian troops, says now it is the responsibility of Indonesia and the 
United Nations to recognise victims and seek or provide justice.

''It is the character of the people of Timor Leste that they know how to 
forgive,'' he says.

Former Australian envoy James Dunn said: ''I think reconciliation is important 
for a lot of East Timorese people, but people still care a lot about it and 
feel really badly hurt.''

Mr Oliveira says the suffering of victims has ''been traded for peaceful 
international relations''.

As for Ms da Silva, her plea is simple. ''I ask the government: Please, pay 
attention to us.''

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