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JAPANESE BISHOPS' LETTER TO BISHOP BELO AND BISHOP NASCIMENTO OF EAST TIMOR

Letter of solidarity to Bishop Belo and Bishop Nascimento of East Timor 
from the bishops of Japan

Their Excellencies
The Most Reverend Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo and 
The Most Reverend Basilio do Nascimento

Warmest greetings to you is this, the month of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. 
We, the bishops of the church in Japan,would like to express our sincere 
solidarity with you and all your people in East Timor. May Jesus, who 
loved us so much that he sacrificed Himself for all of us, keep each of 
you deep in His heart and encourage you in his love.

Gathered now in our annual General Assembly, all of us remember once again 
the long history of East Timor's struggle for peace and freedom. We came to 
know of the tragedy of East Timor when your predecessor, Monsignor Martinho 
da Costa Lopes, came to Japan to appeal on behalf of his people. Since then,
we have been keeping in our prayers all the suffering people of East Timor,
particularly you, the leaders of the church, because we can imagine the 
heavy responsibility you bear on your shoulders.

On the 5th of last May, we were delighted to hear the good news of the 
tripartite agreement on the peace process for East Timor, but unfortunately
our
delight was not very long-lived. The news from your land which has reached us
since then has been worse every day, and now we are extremely worried@about
what might happen in relation to the vote on the 8th of August.

We know enough about the East Timor issue to recognize that we, the people 
who are part of the "international community," bear much of the blame for the
present situation. Today the armed militias believe they can perpetrate 
violence against the defenseless population with impunity because they have 
seen how slow the international community has been to condemn the violence 
perpetrated by the Indonesian military over the past twenty-three years. 
Our country, Japan, is particularly culpable. Not only did our troops
occupy your 
land during World War Two, but after the invasion by Indonesia, our country 
continued as the biggest donor of economic assistance to Indonesia, thus 
enabling, albeit indirectly, Indonesia to carry out its cruel occupation of
your
land. In this, the month of the Sacred Heart, we humbly renew our resolve
to stand beside you in stronger solidarity.

We promise you to do everything in our power to assist in the creation of a
suitable atmosphere in which to hold the coming vote in East Timor, by 
appealing to as many international and national organizations as possible.

Lastly we offer our prayers so that the Lord, Almighty God, be with each 
individual of East Timor, protect him/her from all evil, and lead the whole 
population to true peace and freedom.

16th June, 1999
 Signatures of all the bihops of the Japanese Bishops' Conference:
Francis X.Kaname SHIMAMOTO, Archbishop of Nagasaki
Augustine Jun'ichi NOMURA, Bishop of Nagoya
Peter Cardinal Seiichi SHIRAYANAGI, Archbishop of Tokyo
Leo Jun IKENAGA, Archbishop of Osaka
Paul Shin'ichi ITONAGA, Bishop of Kagoshima
Peter Takaaki HIRAYAMA, Bishop of Oita
Joseph Satoshi FUKAHORI, Bishop of Takamatsu
Joseph Hisajiro MATSUNAGA, Bishop of Fukuoka
Paul Kazuhiro MORI, Auxiliary Bishop of Tokyo
Joseph Atsumi MISUE, Bishop of Hiroshima
Francis Kiichi SATO, Bishop of Niigata
Peter Toshio JINUSHI, Bishop of Sapporo
Peter Takeo OKADA, Bishop of Urawa
Berard Toshio OSHIKAWA, Bishop of Naha
Paul Yoshinao OTSUKA, Bishop of Kyoto
Rapahel Masahiro UMEMURA, Bishop of Yokohama
Michael Goro MATSUURA, Auxiliary Bishop of Osaka

P.S. The attached letter is the copy of the letter we have sent to Mr.Kofi A
nnan, the Secretary General of the United Nations, regarding the matter.  We
send it for your reference.
We inform you that the copies of the two letters have been sent to Mr.Moezda
n Razak, the Indonesian Ambassador to Japan.


Letter from the bishops of Japan to the United Nations Secretary General

Dear Secretary General of the UN
Mr. Kofi Annan

We, Japanese Bishops gathered in our General Assembly, express our sincere
appreciation for what you have been, and are now doing to achieve a just 
solution to the issue of East Timor. We were particularly pleased with the 
reaching of agreement on the 5 of May, agreements which would hopefully 
lead to the final and long-awaited phase of the issue.

However, the recent reports coming from the territory have robbed us of our
hope. They indicate that, far from improving, the situation is going from@
bad to worse in terms of the rights of the people of East Timor. The hopeless
people of East Timor are reported to be subjected to intimidation and terror
to force them to vote for integration against their will, a situation which
puts the U .N. officials themselves in an extremely difficult position.

We feel very sorry to have to convey to you that the one aspect of the May 5
agreement which worried us, namely the entrusting to the Indonesian
government responsibility for guaranteeing security for the vote, has
turned out to
be a fatal flaw. It now seems clear that there cannot be a fair vote on the
8th of August as long as the present situation of intimidation by the
Indonesian-backed militias continues.

We therefore urgently appeal to you to take all necessary steps to remedy 
the situation and respectfully propose that you:

-Make a fresh appeal to as many countries as possible to send civilian 
police to East Timor and in far greater numbers than at present.

-Convey to the Indonesian government in no uncertain terms the necessity to
totally disarm its military forces in East Timor and the militias who are
operating under the military's protection, and to swiftly bring to justice all
those members of the military or the militias who are terrorizing the 
unarmed civilian population in East Timor.

-If the Indonesian government is unwilling or unable to promptly and fully
carry out its obligations , set up a Peace Keeping Operation in East Timor, 
as Bishop Belo himself has called for.

-Urge the Indonesian government to allow international parliamentarians, 
NGOs and volunteer delegations to assist in monitoring the vote.

We pray that God will bless and strengthen you in this most important mission.

16th June, 1999

Signatures of all the bihops of the Japanese Bishops' Conference:

Francis X.Kaname SHIMAMOTO, Archbishop of Nagasaki
Augustine Jun'ichi NOMURA, Bishop of Nagoya
Peter Cardinal Seiichi SHIRAYANAGI, Archbishop of Tokyo
Leo Jun IKENAGA, Archbishop of Osaka
Paul Shin'ichi ITONAGA, Bishop of Kagoshima
Peter Takaaki HIRAYAMA, Bishop of Oita
Joseph Satoshi FUKAHORI, Bishop of Takamatsu
Joseph Hisajiro MATSUNAGA, Bishop of Fukuoka
Paul Kazuhiro MORI, Auxiliary Bishop of Tokyo
Joseph Atsumi MISUE, Bishop of Hiroshima
Francis Kiichi SATO, Bishop of Niigata
Peter Toshio JINUSHI, Bishop of Sapporo
Peter Takeo OKADA, Bishop of Urawa
Berard Toshio OSHIKAWA, Bishop of Naha
Paul Yoshinao OTSUKA, Bishop of Kyoto
Rapahel Masahiro UMEMURA, Bishop of Yokohama
Michael Goro MATSUURA, Auxiliary Bishop of Osaka

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