CNRT transition proposals; Socialist Party of Timor interview

From
Democratic Socialist Party
Australia
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

October 24, 1999

Dear friends,

On October 22, the National Council of Timorese Resistance (CNRT)
announced the formation of a Transition Council of "national unity" to
be the central Timorese organ for the transition period to independence.
According to the Portuguese news agency, Lusa, the council would be
headed by Xanana Gusmao as president, assisted by the former CNRT
representative in Lisbon, Roque Rodriguez, as chief of staff of Xanana's
office. The members of the council are Taur Matan Ruak,
commander-in-chief of FALINTIL; Jose Ramos Horta, CNRT Vice-President;
Joao Carrascalao, president Timorese Democratic Union (UDT); Mari
Alkatiri, FRETILIN vice-president; Avelino dos Santos (also known as
Shalar Kosi), Socialist Party of Timor secretary-general and Felicidade
Guterres, a representative of Timorese women.

The Transitional Council would be the main organ of dialogue with the
United Nations transitional administration.

Xanana Gusmao returned to Dili on October 22 accompanied by his
chief-of-staff Roque Rodrigues. Apart from Xanana and Roque Rodrigues,
Taur Matan Ruak, Avelino dos Santos and Felicadade Guterres are
currently based in Dili. CNRT continues to maintain an office in Darwin.

An Emergency Commission has also been established to organise the
humanitarian activities and to identify qualified Timorese to be
recruited into the United Nations transitional administration. In
addition an international team has been formed comprising Jose Ramos
Horta to deal with diplomatic issues and Mario Carrascalao to be in
charge of looking for overseas commercial investment.

CNRT leaders stated that they believed a united front of al groups was
necessary during the transitional period under UN administration in
order to defend the interests of the East Timorese people. Lusa also
reported Jose Ramos Horta as stating that political parties would now
also begin their own educational and mobilising activities as part of
the preparation for the establishment of a democratic political system.

Roque Rodrigues also announced that CNRT supported the use of the
Portuguese escudo as the currency for the period of transition as well
as Portuguese as the language of transition. CNRT supported, he said,
Tetum as the eventual national language.

We have attached below with this email an interview given by the PST
secretary-general Avelino dos Santos (also known as Shalar Kosi) to Max
Lane, and published in the August 18 issue of Green Left Weekly. (All
back issues are available on the GLW World Wide Web site:
http://www.greenleft.org.au/)

Further information is available from the extensive ASIET site, at
http://www.asiet.org.au. ASIET has now added a search engine to its
site.

Also visit the Democratic Socialist Party East Timor web site, available
at: http://www.dsp.org.au/etimor

In solidarity,

John Percy
national secretary
Democratic Socialist Party
Australia
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________
Green Left Weekly 372 August 18, 1999

Timor: `We need to mobilise people's power'

By Max Lane

JAKARTA - Shalar Kosi is the secretary general of the Socialist Party of
Timor (PST). In an interview with Green Left Weekly, he stressed that
the crucial question for socialists in East Timor is building bases
among the people.

"One of the frameworks for this has been the formation this year of
groupings in different sectors", he explained. "These include the
Workers Socialist Alliance, the Peasant Socialist Alliance, the
Socialist Youth Alliance, Socialist Alliance of Women and a Socialist
Study Centre. They are all at the early stages of development, although
many workers outside East Timor, such as in Lampung, are already
organised.

"In East Timor, we have the beginnings of bases among port workers,
construction workers and drivers. Among coffee farmers, both small
owners and labourers, we have some cells that are also developing
cooperatives."

A theme in Shalar Kosi's analysis is the necessity of a strategy of mass
action, both for the independence struggle and for a socialist East
Timor.

"We think the chances of victory in the referendum are good", he said, "
but we would have preferred that the movement reject the UN agreement on
May 5 and then apply pressure through mass actions for one where the
Indonesian army wasn't in charge of security for the referendum. Even
now, we think that there should be more pressure applied through mass
action, through people's power."

The PST, which was formed as a party in 1997, is not a member of the
National Council for Timorese Resistance (CNRT) nor of Fretilin. One of
the reasons is that the CNRT does not recognise the 1975 declaration of
independence that formed the Democratic Republic of East Timor (DRET).
There are other differences too, such as on people's power as a central
tactic.

The PST has helped form the People's Council for the Defence of the
Republic (CPD) which organised demonstrations soon after the May 5 UN
agreement was signed. The CPD, said Kosi, is a loose network, including
many non-party people who still support the DRET.

"But now we are working together with Xanana Gusmao and the CNRT to
mobilise for the referendum. We also support the proposal for a
coalition government after a referendum victory, which includes the
current pro- integration forces."

The PST was represented among the pro-independence groups that
participated in the recent "dialogue" between pro-Jakarta and
independence groups in Jakarta, which also included figures such as Jose
Ramos Horta.

According to Kosi, a coalition government should have only two tasks: to
keep the administration going and to prepare general elections. "We want
free multi-party elections as soon as possible after a coalition
government can be formed. Six months is preferable, but definitely no
more than two years.

"We would like to see a second referendum also, on whether people wish
to re-establish the Democratic Republic of East Timor that was
proclaimed in 1975. The people should have the right to have their say
on that too."

Political struggle

Kosi expressed caution on whether Jakarta would abide by the results of
the referendum if the independence option won. There was still a
question whether the Indonesian army (TNI) would withdraw as required
and whether it would leave armed militias behind.

"Again, we will need to mobilise people's power. We will need stronger
organised bases among the people."

Kosi stated that people's power would be as effective as the role of
Falintil, the resistance army. History had shown that guerilla struggle
and people's power can be a very powerful combination. "We also have no
problem with the disarming of Falintil together with the militias. This
will open up more space, make it easier for mass mobilising."

He was confident that the pro-integration militias could be defeated in
this manner. "They have no basis, apart from the backing from the TNI.
They will wither under the force of people's power. But we must still
recognise the danger that a withdrawing TNI may try to start a civil
war."

Kosi also emphasised that a key part of defeating the occupation was
cooperation with the Indonesian democratic movement. "We worked together
with the PRD [People's Democratic Party], for example, in the 1994
occupations of the Dutch and Russian embassies. The struggles in East
Timor and Indonesia cannot and must not be separated."

While a united front to win the referendum, establish a transitional
coalition government and force the TNI to withdraw remains the central
tactical priority, Kosi emphasised that laying the basis for a socialist
East Timor remained the fundamental goal of the PST.

"Of course, at the moment, the people look to Xanana as the leader or
symbol of the fight for independence. Or they relate to Fretilin as the
organisation that fought for independence in the 1970s. Our influence at
this point is limited. We have no illusions about that. But we also
think that the prospects for the socialist movement in East Timor are
good."

Behind this optimism is the assessment that an East Timorese capitalism
has not yet taken root and that building a socialist East Timor would
not require great efforts to demolish a deeply rooted capitalist system.

It is also based on the PST's assessment that while both Xanana and
Fretilin have great authority and popularity, they have not developed
functioning party structures among the people. "The coming period will
be a period of ideological clarification among all the political
forces", Kosi added.

"The PST is still small, with about 300 cadre in East Timor and slightly
less in Indonesia. The 300 in East Timor include 70 new members who have
just been through classes. In Indonesia, we have branches covering East
Java and Central Java as well as the worker groupings in Lampung.

"On August 1, the PST set up an open legal office in Dili. Our
chairperson, Saruntu, is based in Dili. Our position is that the
socialist forces should come out from the underground and declare their
presence. This is the only way we can win people to our ideas and
strengthen our base."

As part of this coming into the open, the PST has launched a newspaper
in a tabloid format, Tuba. Two issues have been published over the last
two months, and the party is confident of it continuing on a regular
basis.

"We have distributed 5000 copies in East Timor. They are sold by our
members to supporters and sympathisers. The newspaper not also debates
and analyses current political developments in relation to the UN
referendum and the situation in East Timor but also carries educational
material on the East Timorese social structure as well as the prospects
for socialism in the region as a whole."

Origins

The PST was formed in 1997, but Kosi traces its origins back much
further. A few left-wing youth, having received some education from
leftists in Fretilin, had established the youth organisation Ojetil in
1981 although " Ojetil now is a completely different organisation".

This attempt to build a socialist-oriented youth group failed in the
context of a trend towards a politics of "national unity", which
included disconnecting the guerilla forces from Fretilin, a
rapprochement with the conservative Christian Democrat-oriented UDT
[Timorese Democratic Union], a non-party orientation by other student
groups such as Renetil and Xanana's resignation from Fretilin and the
formation of the National Council of Maubere Resistance (CNRM).

According to Kosi, between 1981 and 1989 the left-wing elements in the
resistance were in retreat. Some left leaders in the guerilla movement
disappeared from the struggle.

Then in December 1989, three of the original members of the 1981 Ojetil
formed the Clandestine Student Front for the Liberation of East Timor (
Feclitil). This was based outside East Timor. Its first action was a
joint protest with Renetil and unaffiliated East Timorese students in
Jakarta against the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre. In December 1991, 10
people gathered to form the Timorese Socialist Association.

In the initial period, said Kosi, the PST was the subject of
considerable slander and gossip, even to the extent of rumours that the
head of the PST was Abilio Araujo, a former president of Fretilin who
became a pro-Jakarta figure.

"However, by 1995 we were able to establish formal contact with Xanana
Gusmao and engage in some cooperation, while maintaining our right to
make criticisms and to stay outside of CNRT. Actually, we were also
ready to join Fretilin if Fretilin was able to transform itself into a
united front of left or progressive forces within CNRT, but it seems
Fretilin wants to be a party of its own, perhaps with a social
democratic platform. Maybe there will be possibilities of a coalition in
the future."

Kosi explained that the PST's socialism bases itself on Marxism and
rejects the Stalinist version. "We also try to learn from the
contributions of revolutionary socialist leaders, such as Lenin and
Trotsky. But we are short of readings and materials, so we are still
studying.

"We think that the socialist forces throughout the Asia-Pacific region
need to collaborate and work out common approaches to issues. This
region is going to be a centre of conflict between socialist and
capitalist forces in the coming period, especially with the real
potential for social revolution in Indonesia. An early victory for
socialism in East Timor with its weakly developed indigenous capitalism
and its small size and population could also be an inspiration for
socialist forces throughout the region."

____________________________________

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_____________________________________






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