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Sent: Saturday, September 16, 2000 11:15 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] International pressure for intervention into West Timor
after UN staff ki...


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

One should certainly be careful about supporting these kinds of military
interventions, which usually lead to the occupation of a nation, as happened
in Yugoslavia.  However, many gullible people on the "Left" will fall for
this, thinking they are supporting "humanitarian" intervention in East and
West Timor.

Peacefully yours,
Nancy Hey

 This article is from the World Socialist Web Site at http://www.wsws.org

 International pressure for intervention into West Timor after UN staff
 killed

                     By Mike Head
                     11 September 2000

                     Australia and other Western governments have seized upon
 last week's militia killing of UN staff in West Timor to raise the prospect
 of lengthening the Australian-led UN military intervention into East Timor,
 and extending it into the Indonesian-controlled western half of the island.

                     Three international UN employees, Samson Aregahegn,
 Carlos Caceres-Collazo and Pero Simundza, were hacked to death and three
 unnamed local staff are thought to have been murdered last Wednesday
 September 6 by Indonesian military-backed militias at Atambua, a refugee
 centre near the East Timor border.

                     Between 50 and 100 militia members stormed the UN High
 Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in the town, after hearing that
 former militia leader Olivio Moruk had been decapitated the night before.
 The Indonesian police and military took no action to protect the UN staff.

                     The murders have sparked the withdrawal of UN and
 international aid agency staff from West Timor, leaving some 90,000 to
 120,000 East Timorese refugees without access to assistance and food aid.

                     The attack came on the first anniversary of the
 announcement of the results of the UN ballot on the secession of East Timor
 from Indonesia. The overwhelming vote for separation sparked an Indonesian
 military and militia onslaught of burning, looting and killing against the
 East Timorese people, forcing an estimated 300,000 refugees to cross the
 border into West Timor.

                     A year ago, Australia, together with other capitalist
 powers, utilised the violent response to the UN ballot to send in thousands
 of troops to occupy East Timor and set up a UN protectorate, ending nearly
 25 years of Indonesian rule. The militias and their supporters withdrew to
 West Timor, where they have established control over many of the refugee
 camps.

                     Australian media proprietors have called for the
 widening of the military intervention, using the same pretext as that
 employed a year ago-that of defending the humanitarian interests of the
 Timorese people.

                     "Military commitment by Australia and other concerned
 nations to East Timor is not only looking much longer term than first
 envisaged, events may be pushing the international community into a wider
 theatre in eastern Indonesia," wrote Hamish McDonald, the Sydney Morning
 Herald's foreign editor , on September 8.

                     "Assume that Indonesia continues unable (on the part of
 its civilian government) and unwilling (on the part of its military) to
 crack down on pro-Jakarta militias holding some 90,000 deportees from East
 Timor in grim camps across the border.

                     "Consideration will have to be given to international
 intervention in West Timor itself, with the finite aim of evacuating those
 deportees who wish to return home, and then getting out."

                     While McDonald spoke of a limited operation, military
 intervention has a logic of its own. It can easily spark a wider and more
 permanent involvement, as is already the case with the original East Timor
 operation.  At the recent first national congress of the Timorese National
 Resistance Council (CNRT), the leadership of Xanana Gusmao and Jose Ramos
 Horta called for Australia and other powers to keep troops in East Timor
 indefinitely after the UN formally withdraws from the territory.

                     Any intervention into West Timor will mean further
 intensifying the Western pressure on the Indonesian government of President
 Abdurrahman Wahid and the military. The September 8 editorial in the
 Australian Financial Review spoke of cutting off aid to Indonesia: "If
 multilateral organisation staff can't be protected by Indonesian security
 forces on Indonesian soil, the country is going to seriously undermine the
 aid flows which support its economy."

                     The editorial staked Australia's claim to lead a
 military mobilisation into West Timor, as it did in East Timor. "If
 Indonesia is prepared to accept UN troops in West Timor, Australia will
 undoubtedly have a key role," it stated.

                     Rupert Murdoch's the Australian immediately agitated for
 intervention.  Its banner front-page headline on September 8 was "Why Carlos
 was left to die", referring to one of the murdered UN staff, Carlos
 Caceres-Collazo, an American citizen. The article asserted that the UN
 workers died because Australian and New Zealand military helicopters, only
 minutes away in East Timor, were not sent to rescue them. The article and an
 accompanying editorial criticised the need to obtain permission from the
 Australian and Indonesian governments for such operations.

                     The Australian government demanded that the Jakarta
 regime apprehend the killers of the UN staff, protect foreigners and close
 down the militia-dominated refugee camps. Foreign Minister Alexander Downer
 called for the immediate detention of militia leader Enrico Guterres, who
 was among 19 figures named by an Indonesian report last week as being
 implicated in the bloodshed in East Timor. Downer advised all Australians to
 leave West Timor.

                     The Clinton administration has also been prominent in
 escalating the pressure on the Indonesian government. President Clinton used
 an address to the UN Security Council during last week's Millenium Summit to
 condemn the killings of the UN staff and to demand that Indonesia "put a
 stop to these abuses".

                     The UN Security Council adopted a resolution expressing
 outrage at the attack on the UNHCR office and further reports the next day
 of the killing of 20 civilians in a refugee camp at Betun. It called on
 Indonesia to immediately disarm and disband the militias. The council
 announced that it would send a mission to Indonesia and East Timor to
 investigate the resurgence of militia activity against UN workers and
 civilians in both East and West Timor.

                     "We must face the facts," declared Richard Holbrooke,
 the US ambassador to the UN, before the vote. "The Indonesian military, or
 to be more precise, elements within the Indonesian military, are directly or
 indirectly responsible for these outrages."

                     There is clear evidence of Indonesian military and
 government support for the militia operations. The unstable administration
 of Wahid and Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri rests increasingly on the
 military and associated nationalist tendencies. Megawati recently appointed
 Guterres, the most prominent Timorese militia leader, as head of Banten
 Pemuda, the youth wing of her party, the Indonesian Democratic Party
 (PDI-P).

                     But the underlying responsibility for the mayhem in
 Timor rests with the same Western authorities now professing concern for the
 plight of the Timorese people. For 25 years, Australia, the US and the UN
 supported-either explicitly or tacitly-the Indonesian annexation of East
 Timor, turning a blind eye to the killing of an estimated 200,000 Timorese
 people.

                     Both Washington and Canberra regarded the Suharto
 dictatorship as a vital strategic ally and actively encouraged its 1975
 invasion of the former Portuguese colony. Australia became one of the few
 countries in the world to formally recognise Indonesian sovereignty over
 East Timor, in return for the signing of the 1989 Timor Gap Treaty that gave
 Australia the lion's share of the considerable oil and gas reserves beneath
 the Timor Sea reserves.

                     The US and Australia shifted their ground in the late
 1990s because with the end of the Cold War, Suharto's regime was no longer
 essential as an anti-communist bulwark. Suharto's style of crony capitalism,
 under which the military and its associates monopolised areas of the
 economy, had become a barrier to the exploitation of Indonesia's natural
 riches by global banks and corporations. The 1997-98 Asian financial crisis
 was used to demand the dismantling of Suharto's economic order.

                     The same processes saw the revival of claims by
 Portugal, backed by the European Union, for its return to the enclave that
 it had ruled for four centuries. Seeking to head off Portugal's claims, the
 US and Australia pressured Suharto's successor Habibie into holding a
 UN-supervised referendum on autonomy for East Timor. The CNRT leaders,
 seeing UN intervention as a means of being installed into power, also
 switched their position, from calling for a 10- or 15-year delay in an
 autonomy ballot to backing last year's sudden vote.

                     Each of the key participants in the UN ballot-Portugal,
 Australia, the US and the CNRT-knew that if Habibie's autonomy plan were
 defeated, the Indonesian generals and their militia thugs would reply with a
 "scorched earth" policy of destruction and murder. The Australian government
 had detailed intelligence reports, obtained from its extensive electronic
 surveillance of Indonesia as well as a network of Australian Secret
 Intelligence Service agents, that Indonesian commanders had prepared an
 onslaught on the East Timorese people.

                     The Western powers calculated that heavy casualties
 would provide the catalyst for armed military intervention. Their purpose
 was not to save the lives of the East Timorese people, but to secure order
 and establish a neo-colonial administration. By the time that the
 Australian-led and UN-sanctioned INTERFET force entered East Timor on
 September 20 last year, the militia devastation of the territory had already
 been completed.

                     Now, 12 months on, having helped create the disaster
 that has engulfed the Timorese people, the capitalist powers are seeking to
 exploit it to extend their military intervention. Once again, the banner of
 "humanitarianism" is being utilised. In his article, the Sydney Morning
 Herald's Hamish McDonald asked rhetorically: "How could such intervention be
 engineered?" His answer was: "UN Secretary-General Kofi Anan advocated last
 September that 'humanitarian intervention' could override sovereignty
 concerns."

                     The emerging UN doctrine of "humanitarian intervention"
 signals a new volatile stage in wider conflicts over the control of
 Indonesia. Throughout all the twists and turns of their policies toward East
 Timor over the past quarter century, the essential thread running through
 the stance taken by the capitalist powers has been the pursuit of their
 commercial and strategic interests in the region.

                     Apart from the multi-billion dollar oil and gas fields
 off Timor's coast, the entire Indonesian archipelago remains one of the most
 lucrative sites of mining and cheap labour exploitation in the world, and
 huge investments are at stake. Located astride the shipping channels between
 Asia and Europe, and the Pacific and Indian oceans, Indonesia is also a
 vital strategic and military prize. As they were in 1975, Timor's people
 have been reduced to pawns in the considerations of the major powers.

                     See Also:
                     East Timor and Australia's oily politics
                     [8 March 2000] >>


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