Precedence: bulk


TIME Magazine, September 6, 1999

MEGAWATI AND THE ARMY MUST ACCEPT THAT EAST TIMOR ISN'T INDONESIA'S

By JEFFREY A. WINTERS 

After months of uncertainty over the fate of East Timor, the following 
scenario now seems likely: Timorese will vote overwhelmingly for 
independence; Megawati Sukarnoputri will become Indonesia's president in 
November; the military will continue to use violence to poison the situation 
in East Timor; foreign forces will be deployed to carry out the referendum's 
mandate. It is a complicated picture that will severely test the quality of 
statesmanship in Asia and beyond. 

So far, the track record of nearly everyone involved is poor. But the vote 
scheduled for this week presents an opportunity for all of the players to 
finish well, and there is ample justification for both optimism and caution. 
In the leadup to the referendum, the vast majority of East Timor's people 
conducted themselves with restraint and dignity. This bodes well for a 
peaceful future. Last week Xanana Gusm�o, the Timorese leader currently under 
house arrest, showed genuine statesmanship in calling for peace after the 
referendum and proposing a blanket amnesty for anyone involved in atrocities 
against his people. Indonesia's President B.J. Habibie has also generated 
optimism by upholding his commitment to allow the referendum and by 
announcing last week that Gusm�o would soon be released. Habibie and his 
advisers deserve credit, particularly because Indonesia's military leaders 
oppose such moves. 

More worrisome are the positions of Megawati and the army. Megawati is so 
consumed by domestic matters, especially with holding the country together, 
that she has trouble appreciating that East Timor is an occupied territory 
that has little in common with the other regions agitating for greater 
autonomy from Jakarta. She has consistently misread the warm receptions she 
receives in East Timor, just as the Timorese have consistently misread 
Megawati. Pro-independence activists, especially the younger ones, have long 
viewed Megawati as someone who would help bring them freedom. When Megawati's 
entourage campaigned in Dili during national elections last June, her 
handlers expected the masses who assembled at a stadium to join her in 
singing the Indonesian national anthem. That's tantamount to expecting slaves 
in the American South to sing Dixie. When I asked Megawati just afterward if 
she had noticed that not a mouth in the crowd had moved, she conceded: "It 
was hard not to notice." 

Megawati was bold and statesmanlike in a speech last July, in which she 
stated clearly and for the first time that she would accept the results of 
the referendum. She also said that the demand for independence in Timor was 
unique and not an option for any other part of the archipelago. But in the 
same breath she muddled the message by attacking as unconstitutional 
Habibie's stunning move last January to permit Timor to organize the 
referendum that is taking place this week. And when she visited Dili last 
week she shocked the international community by criticizing the United 
Nations Mission in East Timor as biased in favor of Timorese independence, 
while saying nothing about the violence unleashed by Indonesia's military 
through its militia. 

As the person who will likely lead Indonesia for the next five to 10 years, 
Megawati is justified in her concerns about centrifugal forces. But it is 
unacceptable to penalize the Timorese for Suharto's three decades of 
regionally divisive rule. If Megawati could concede that East Timor was never 
legitimately Indonesia's 27th province, it would be much easier for her to 
accept that it never will be. 

Indonesia's armed forces remain the greatest obstacle to a peaceful 
resolution of the Timor conflict. By arming and funding the civilian militia, 
the military has been able to position itself as a disinterested peacekeeper 
between rival East Timorese forces. But whether by proxy or directly, the 
army has proven beyond any doubt that it cannot be entrusted with the task of 
maintaining peace and stability in East Timor. And the military is not likely 
to stop its campaign of terror after the votes are counted. 

Since Indonesia has blown the chance to be a peacekeeper, the international 
community must bear responsibility for ensuring peace in East Timor. This 
will be a critical test of international statesmanship. Apart from the normal 
questions of costs and logistics, there is the diplomatic obstacle posed by 
China, which is suspicious of international military actions so close to 
home. Beijing should be sent an unequivocal message that the question is not 
if international forces will be deployed, but only how and by whom. 

The ideal arrangement in East Timor would involve creating a United Nations 
peacekeeping force with Chinese participation and support, or at least 
without Beijing's opposition. Even if China blocks the U.N. option, it would 
be proper and responsible for the United States and Australia to move forward 
jointly. As these options are explored, it is worth remembering that it was 
the unyielding resistance of the Timorese that made this historic opportunity 
for freedom possible. They have also given others around the world who failed 
East Timor in the past a second chance to show what statesmanship can 
achieve. 

(Jeffrey A. Winters, a professor of political economy at Northwestern 
University in the U.S., is the author of Power in Motion: Capital Mobility 
and the Indonesian State)

----------
SiaR WEBSITE: http://apchr.murdoch.edu.au/minihub/siarlist/maillist.html

Kirim email ke