EAST TIMOR BETRAYED

The following INTERVIEW was published in "The Guardian", newspaper
of the Communist Party of Australia in its issue of Wednesday,
September 15th, 1999. Contact address: 65 Campbell Street, Surry Hills.
Sydney. 2010 Australia. Phone: (612) 9212 6855 Fax: (612) 9281 5795.
Email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Webpage: http://www.peg.apc.org/~guardian
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"The Guardian" spoke to Gareth Smith on his return from East
Timor early last week where he had been a volunteer district
electoral officer with the United Nations election monitoring
agency UNAMET, working on the registration of voters for the
August 30 referendum.

I am feeling very shattered -- heartbroken and angry. We made
promises to the people of East Timor that UNAMET would not leave
East Timor, that we would be there after August 30 whatever the
result.

We put up posters saying this, to reassure them. Even though we
didn't spell out that there would be armed protection,
nevertheless the implication was made.

The Timorese response was always the same: "we do not want to die
again, we do not want 1975 to come back again."

On July 16 I was in Viqueque Province in the southeast, at a
place called Makadiki. At 10.30am two British-made Hawk jet
aircraft screamed overhead, absolutely terrorising the people,
sending them scattering.

A priest said this is typical of what the Indonesians do. "This
is to let us know that they are going to take us back to 1975 if
we choose independence."

So thankyou British Aerospace, and the assurances that the
British Government received from Indonesia that those aircraft
would only be used for "external defence".

The other thing that sticks in my craw is the emphasis placed on
the May 5 agreement between Portugal, the UN and Indonesia.
Whenever people expressed concern they were told: look, here's
the agreement.

It says nothing here about violence at the end of the poll, and
it's signed by the UN. Indonesia signed it, and Indonesia is
going to honour its commitments. It is a legal document.

The document contained an obligation for Indonesia to withdraw
all its military from East Timor in the lead-up to the popular
consultation.

And in a blaze of publicity they embarked their troops at Dili
and off they sailed.

But they just went to the horizon, turned to the right and then
sailed up to Los Palos where they landed the troops on the
beaches at night.

Just simply reinserted them.

Obviously Australian intelligence and the UN knew about this
trickery and yet they still insist on giving the Indonesian
Government the benefit of the doubt. Their martial law [declared
Tuesday, September 14] is treated as a sort of magic mantra.
There is no excuse for this.

It's like asking neo-Nazis to run a Jewish orphanage...

I think it is either naivety of a very high order or there is
criminal negligence involved in this.

Vacuum

In a sense the United Nations played into the hands of the
militias by publishing 20,000 copies of a booklet in bahasa,
Portuguese and tetun languages which laid out in detail what
would happen if the autonomy package were chosen.

So the militias were able to hold this official document
emblazoned with the logo of the UN and UNAMET all over it, and
say, now this spells out what will happen here if you elect for
special autonomy.

But there was nothing to hold in the other hand to say that if
you reject autonomy, then this is the kind of future you can look
forward to.

There was nothing published, even though the public information
unit said that there would be a similar publication.

So there was something very concrete and tangible with the
imprimatur of the United Nations and there was a vacuum on the
other side, and that vacuum was filled by the militias and the
military.

They said, see, we are going to go back to 1975 -- widespread
killing, mayhem and chaos.

In Luca, in the mountains, the military commander of Battalion
406 used to go from house to house where internally displaced
persons now live, telling people: if you choose independence you
are going to choose murder, you are going to choose for your
villages to be burnt to the ground; we will make sure that that
happens.

Q: So the Australian Government, or the United Nations, was not
exactly ignorant of what was going to happen?

Of course not, if for no other reason than that district
electoral officers like myself received many reports from people
about intimidation and threats, and that the Catholic priests
told us about a massive build-up of arms.

In Kupang I saw the young boy militia arrive. They had an M-16
carbine in the passenger seat of the lead vehicle. There were
five vehicles.

They went up to our registration centre and showed the gun, but
didn't get out of the vehicle. Then they photographed East
Timorese in the civic education program being conducted at the
centre.

Then they went to volley ball courts, where every day in the
afternoon people play volley ball. They levelled their guns at
the players, photographed them, and said we will identify you
from the photographs, and if any of you are known independence
supporters you are going to be executed if you choose
independence.

The volleyball courts are 15 metres away from the police station.

In fact the police had a weight lifting centre virtually on the
volley ball pitch itself. So they were right there watching all
of this.

Collusion

And where did the militia hole up? They went to the TNI
(military) base on the hill, their vehicles went into the army
compound and they lived there hosted by the Indonesian military.

Information on this open, brazen collusion was fed back to the
United Nations.

Two utterly traumatised East Timorese who had infiltrated the
militia group, had carefully documented all the negotiations of
this group with the TNI including details of Indonesian military
rank, name, number, the kinds of weapons involved, etc.

That document was taken to UNAMET headquarters and given to the
military liaison officers. Similar data must have been coming in
from every district electoral officer in East Timor.

Details of intimidations and threats were typed up by the
Australian police in my case, and in most cases people said don't
let our names go to the Indonesian police.

There is already a huge body of human rights data recording
violations and abuse.

We had reports of mass graves from the 1970s and the 1980s in
Uato Lari and of a huge mass grave in the Mattebian mountains.
That's where Indonesia's airforce had been bombing and napalming
the people in the 1970s and the beginning of the 1980s.

People let down

Why wasn't there international condemnation when Indonesia failed
to honour its agreement of May 5? Why didn't the Australian
Government start beating a drum about that?

They just let Indonesia get away with it. They appeased Indonesia
and they did it in many ways.

To give an example: when the militia showed their guns in Uato
Carbau, I wrote a report to the Viqueque regional electoral
committee, which is the body to receive all complaints of
electoral malpractice. But I was told by the regional co-
ordinator, "I'm sorry, but the committee doesn't exist."

Why? Because of the terror campaign, the CNRT  [Council of
National Timorese Resistance] representative had fled for his
life into the mountains. Because he wasn't on the committee, the
committee couldn't be formed.

It seems to me that UNAMET's view was, we have an opportunity to
have an election, let's go for it, even though there are all of
these infringements of the agreement; let's not antagonise
Indonesia, let's do it.

I can understand that as a strategy. They had already delayed the
vote by a fortnight as it was, but in the process of doing that
the Indonesian military had got the notion that they could run
roughshod and do what they liked.

Links with military

Q: Some reports say that some of the militias are actually
Indonesian military or police ...

Oh yes, people said that they recognised Kopassus special forces
[elite military] individuals. They remember them very, very well,
because they'd seen their loved-ones butchered and the faces of
their killers were seared on their memories.

They've seen the same people now dressed in Polri (police)
uniforms and here we had the United Nations saying that the
Indonesian police are responsible for security. No wonder the
people had difficulty believing us.

We've all got certificates of congratulations, individually
signed by Ian Martin the head of the UNAMET Commission on behalf
of Kofi Annan, saying what a wonderful, fantastic job we've all
done.

Overwhelming support for independence

And yes, that's absolutely true. It only took two months
basically to run the whole thing from registration to the conduct
of the poll under really bad conditions. Quite a few people went
down with malaria, living conditions were really bad and yet it
was done.

And the popular turnout was 98 point something percent. Some of
them had to walk for six hours to get to the voting centre. Some
of them camped overnight to make sure that they could vote, in
spite of being told that their villages would be burnt while they
were away voting.

They came and they demonstrated a massive vote for independence.
But on the other hand, the result was announced without any
security in place to protect the people, even though it was 100
percent certain that once the result was known -- and if it
favoured independence -- there would be a massive violent
backlash.

And yet the international community had nothing in place to
protect those people.

Promises not honoured

Q: So what did the United Nations actually do after the election?
Did they start pulling out?

Yes, even before the election result was known, we were being
shipped out from our provinces.

In my case, we were based three hours drive away from Viqueque.
We were driven to Viqueque in convoy, then we were taken by
helicopter to Dili and flown out from Dili very quickly.

They quite clearly realised that once the result was known the
shit would hit the fan and our lives would be in even more danger
than usual.

And yet the local people working for the UN were just left. They
wanted to run away and hide, but many of them had to remain
behind to wait for their salaries which Dili was tardy in
providing. Surely to God it should have been an absolute priority
to get their salaries in their hands very fast.

When they were shooting around us at the Viqueque UNAMET
headquarters, it coincided with a conference of district
electoral offices. We were all there.

Then we heard the gunfire in the next street to us and we heard
the terrible sound of people wailing and screaming so we all
clustered inside.

The local people, our interpreters and drivers, had invested us
with a protective ability for them. When they saw us scattering
and hiding they must have realised with a terribly rude awakening
that look, UNAMET is not going to be protecting you guys.

Q: It must make you wonder about the UN?

I think its bound with red tape and bureaucratic and diplomatic
niceties. Jamsheed Marker [UN special representative for East
Timor] keeps saying the Indonesian Government have given
assurances to safeguard security in the province, but it's
absolute bullshit.

Charnel house

Q: What do you think will happen now?

I think that eventually there will be a multinational peace
keeping force which may not wear blue berets, it may not be a UN
force, in fact I don't think it will be a UN force. It may be
Pacific Rim countries, what they call a coalition of the willing.

But I'm afraid that by the time that this force gets into East
Timor, I'm afraid they are going to find a charnel house.

In Rwanda, 800,000 people were machettied to death in 100 days;
here we are talking about people under the discipline and
direction of an Australian-trained military and armed with
automatic weapons and hand grenades, not just machetes.

I think the killing rate will be far higher than Rwanda. It will
be an East Timor equivalent of Hiroshima.

The Indonesians have been in East Timor for a quarter of a
century. Of the four thousand two hundred people we registered,
99 percent could not even sign their own names.

Young people in their 20s, beautiful young people, idealist,
strong young people. When we offered them a pen to sign their
names, they had to turn it down and put their thumbs on an ink
pad and put a thumb print on a registration card.

What a bloody condemnation!

Most of the rivers have no bridges over them. We had to drive
over rocks and pebbles on the river bed to cross the river. In
the wet season the river is totally impassable.

And yet, if by any freak of the imagination this little tiny
country gets its independence, the Indonesians are going to
destroy -- blow up with high explosives -- every single thing
that Indonesia may have built in East Timor. They will have
trashed all that they can use. There will be no infrastructure.

All the doctors, teachers, nurses, they've already gone from East
Timor, fled, pulled out.

Australian trained

I went to a party held in our honour by Bupati, the "top dog"
representing Indonesia in Viqueque; I'm sitting next to a
closely-cropped individual who spoke perfect English. I said, "I
must compliment you on your English, it's excellent. Where did
you do your studies?".

"Oh", he said, "I've spent quite a bit of time in Australia at
Kanungra [the military base south of Brisbane on the Gold
Coast]". So here we have, on the ground in East Timor, a colonel
in the Indonesian army who has been trained in Australia.

When we raised this matter with the Department of Foreign Affairs
and Trade, the response was, "Oh, but look, when we train the
Indonesian military we train them like we train our own; we train
them about human rights, we train them about military law".

All I have to say is: look at the results.

Where is the benefit to be seen in all this Australian investment
with the training of Indonesian military? They've just been
taught to kill better. That's all they've learnt.

Australian weapons

Q: What weapons does Australia supply?

Australia's assistance includes supplying Indonesia with the
Australian army rifle, the Steyr, which is one of the most
advanced weapons in the world.

Some people with detailed military knowledge had induced one of
the police to part with his automatic weapon and examined it
closely.

They told me that the barrel of that gun was a modification to
make it a higher-velocity-firing weapon so it had greater
penetrative ability and that the modification had been supplied
by Israel.

So we've got collusion from many countries here.

Australia's obligations

Q: What can the Australian people do and what should we be
pressuring the government to do?

Well the very first thing is the immediate cancellation of the
recognition of the legality of Indonesia's invasion of East
Timor.

It's because of our recognition that John Howard now is
hamstrung, assuming that he has the will to act, because he says,
"We have to have Indonesia's permission".

Why? Because East Timor is recognised by Australia as legitimate
Indonesia's property. The rest of the world doesn't and neither
does the UN recognise that. So that's the first thing that has to
be completely reversed right now.

All military co-operation with Indonesia has to be cancelled.

I think strenuous action needs to be taken to get Australia to
apply pressure in the international arena to persuade Japan, the
IMF and the World Bank to cancel large loans to Indonesia.b

The Suharto family and their cronies must have all their
investment accounts in Australia frozen.

All their property in this country must be confiscated; they have
large holdings of land here and prime building sites in our
central building districts. For example, Raine & Horne, the real
estate agents, have links to the Suharto family, so does Video
Ezy.

All that wealth needs to be frozen, so it can be returned to the
legitimate owners, the people of Indonesia and the people of East
Timor.

The Timor Gap Treaty needs to be rescinded by Australia and we
need to facilitate in Australia the setting up of an East Timor
Republican Government.

We must ensure that Xanana Gusmao can leave the Jakarta British
embassy and find political asylum here in Australia so he can
work with his colleagues as a government in exile, supported and
funded and helped in every way by Australia.

Australians should boycott Indonesian-made goods, should boycott
Garuda Airlines.

There is so much that we can do right now to make life hellishly
difficult for the Indonesian bureaucracy.

I'm glad to see the unions are taking a lead. Who would be doing
that if it weren't for the unions? No one. So God bless them.

Given that [former Labor Prime Minister] Keating always boasted
of his fabulous relationship with Suharto and Habibie and no
doubt [former Labor Minister for Foreign Affairs] Gareth Evans
had his special links and connections -- where are these "prime
movers" in the Australian-Indonesian relationship? Why aren't
they in Jakarta right now brokering deals?

Malcolm Fraser went all the way to Yugoslavia to negotiate for
Pratt and the other guy -- two people. I think the media here
ought to be beating a path to Keating's door and saying, "What
the hell are you doing about this? You've been the architect of
this?"

Q: You've seen and experienced some awful things. And it must be
hard knowing you've had to leave behind people who are now going
through a worse time.

Yes. How many of them are alive now? They said, "Mr Gareth,
please tell everybody about us and what's happening.

"I promised them I would do that, and that's exactly what I'm
doing and thankyou for assisting me."







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