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The Times [London]
September 24 1999 

Janine di Giovanni witnesses events turning sour on the fourth day of 
liberation 

FEARFUL REFUGEES HEAD BACK FOR THE HILLS 

IT IS the dry season in Dili and a strange, forceful wind blows through the 
town. Suddenly the wide streets, which two days ago were full of refugees 
returning home, are deserted. 

On the beach, mattresses and plastic chairs that served as makeshift homes 
are quickly being loaded on to taxis. By the porch, which was recently full 
of sleeping mats and screaming children, there is a disturbing stillness.
The refugees do not feel welcome in Dili. 

"We're going back to the mountains," said Joao, who refused to give his last 
name but who was walking towards Dare in the hills with his wife and two 
children, carrying heavy sacks of rice. "It's still not safe, the militias 
are everywhere." 

On the fourth day of liberated Dili, things are turning sour. It is partly 
the presence of militia attempting to regroup and re-establish their 
footholds, partly the aftermath of the murder of a Dutch journalist and 
partly the absence of aid workers and a civilian population, aside from the 
media. Despite the UN's robust efforts, it appears that the militias are 
shifting the balance of power. 

Since Wednesday the refugees have been turning around, packing up and going 
back to their mountain hiding places. Yesterday a lorryload of long-haired 
Indonesian Army territorial soldiers approached a UN checkpoint as if to
test how far they could go, before turning south and heading towards the port 
where they fired their guns in the air on three occasions. A lorryload of 
BMP, one of the more vicious militias, rode brazenly through the town and 
there were reports of rogue militiamen roaming the streets. 

There has been a steady exodus of journalists since the murder and tension
is high. The Hotel Turismo, where some journalists and Australian troops are 
staying, is being reinforced with extra barbed wire, and evacuation plans
for journalists are discussed during briefings. 

Philip Marr, an aid worker with World Vision, which has had a development 
programme here for five years, said: "It looks like it's turning into a
ghost town. It's pretty eerie, eerier than it was before." 

Mr Marr is one of the few aid workers in town. The Red Cross and the UN 
refugees' agency have maintained a skeletal staff but yesterday M�dicin du 
Monde arrived in Dili, turned round, and flew back to Darwin. 

The UN denies that there is a need for panic but the Australian soldiers
seem extremely tense.

- Australia's military urged journalists to leave East Timor yesterday. A 
spokesman said that more than 300 foreign reporters were in East Timor but 
the peacekeeping mission could provide protection only for the 41
journalists who accompanied the first wave of troops. ###

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