Precedence: bulk


Sidang Pembaca MateBEAN yang budiman

Di bawah ini kami muat pidato Xanan Gusmao di London pada tanggal 6 Oktober
lalu. Sangat terlambat memang, tetapi karena isinya cukup penting untuk
dijadikan referensi dalam membaca situasi Timor Loro Sa'e, Redaksi
memutuskan untuk memuatnya.

Salam, Redaksi MateBEAN
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SPEECH BY KAY RALA XANANA GUSMAO
to CHATHAM HOUSE
London, 6 October 1999

At the end of the twentieth century, at the beginning of a new millennium,
the world has progressed to the point where it is now able to watch genocide
live on television. The genocide in East Timor challenges the entire
international community, because it has come about due to my people having
put their faith in the promises of the international community, through the
United Nations, to safeguard their passage to democracy. Twice this century,
my people have placed their trust in the promises of nations, only to see
this trust betrayed. I think it is time now for the international community
to put its trust in the people of East Timor.

East Timor may well be the first new nation of the twenty-first century.
This is a nation that has waited too long to be born. For four hundred and
fifty years my people laboured under the colonial rule of Portugal. East
Timor was invaded and re-colonised by Indonesia. Over the past twenty-five
years over 200,000 of my people have died, as a direct consequence of their
desire to be free.

On 30 August 1999 my people finally won the right to vote to decide their
future as a nation. In this UN-sponsored ballot they were given two choices.
They could vote to be part of the Republic of Indonesia, represented on the
ballot paper by the Indonesian flag. Alternatively, they could vote for
independence. This choice was represented on the ballot paper by the flag of
the National Council of Timorese Resistance, CNRT, of which I am honoured to
be President.

Anti-independence forces resorted to every possible means of intimidation
and terror to prevent my people from participating in the ballot. However my
people refused to be cowered, and responded magnificently. 98.5% of
registered voters went to the polls. 78.5% voted for independence.
Unfortunately this decision was not respected by elements of the Indonesian
army (TNI) and their militias. They attacked and killed local staff of the
United Nations Mission in East Timor and launched a systematic campaign to
destroy the entire civil society of my country. Denounced by the Vatican as
genocide, this campaign stunned the international community. Diplomats
looked on disbelieving, as Indonesian soldiers and police openly assisted
militia in the total destruction of Dili and the forced evacuation of
UNAMET, firstly from rural towns, and then from the capital itself. Former
local UNAMET staff and associates were left to be slaughtered, along with
the untold numbers of independence supporters. Previously inviolate
institutions such as the Red Cross and the Catholic Church were not spared.
Red Cross workers, priests, nuns and traditional village leaders were shot
and hacked to death.

The final death toll in this Asian holocaust is still unknown. However, the
UNHCR has estimated that the entire population of East Timor, 800,000
people, have been displaced. Over two hundred thousand were transported in
Army trucks at gunpoint to West Timor and other islands of Indonesia. Here,
as the world saw happen in the Congo, they are being held hostage in
concentration camps under the total control of armed militia led by Kopassus
Special Forces troops.

In these camps, boys of ten years of age are being rounded up and sent to
militia training camps, to be conscripted to fight the UN forces. Hundreds
of thousands of my people are still in hiding in the mountains of East
Timor, some seeking refuge with the Falintil, the army of the Resistance. In
Java, Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Bali and other centres, some three
thousand East Timorese students, workers and their families have been
threatened or physically abused and forced to abandon their homes. They are
currently seeking international safe havens from which they may return to
East Timor as soon as possible.

In the present emergency, we may first ensure the physical safety of our
citizens displaced inside East Timor or held hostage in Indonesia. Food,
medicine, clothing, and shelter must be provided to all my people, and the
Indonesian government must assist UNAMET, UNHCR and the UN-sanctioned
multinational peacekeeping force to disarm the militias and free the
hostages in West Timor. Secondly, my people need to be assisted to freely
return home and start a new life in peace. With these two immediate goals
being achieved, there will be two short to medium-term objectives. My people
who have returned home will require the tools and resources necessary for
them to rebuild the framework of civil society. They will need to
re-establish Government and non-government organisations and institutions to
take charge of the process of physical, social and psychological repair,
reconstruction, reconciliation and re-integration.

During this emergency period I would urge the international community to
immediately provide assistance. A decision to wait until the Indonesian
Parliament (the MPR) formally ratifies the result of the ballot in November
would lack humanity. The MPR ratification is solely an internal matter of
the Indonesian State. The United Nations has never recognised Indonesian
sovereignty over East Timor. Australia, the one nation that has legally
recognised Indonesian sovereignty, is currently leading the UN Multinational
Force and relief efforts.

East Timorese will have to contribute to the process of reconstruction of
our country. Of course, this will be difficult as our cities and towns have
been bumed and our people have lost all their belongings. But what my
country may lack in material resources is far outweighed by the
resourcefulness of my people. Over the past two decades my people have shown
the strength of spirit necessary to conquer the challenge of developing a
self-sufficient nation. They have demonstrated this strength to an admiring
world in three ways. First, from 1975 to 1999 the resilient people of East
Timor maintained their struggle for freedom with no assistance at all from
the outside world. Second, in 1999, despite every effort to terrorise them,
the courageous people of East Timor did not give up their democratic right
to vote. Third, despite all the slaughter by the Indonesian armed forces and
militias, the disciplined people and the Falintil Army of East Timor kept
their word to the United Nations and refused to be provoked into responding
to violence with violence. Therefore I can say that while my people may
offer no bank guarantees, we can give you the guarantee that we will remain
resilient, courageous and disciplined in our commitment to rebuilding a
just, prosperous and democratic nation of East Timor.

But we have been aware for some time that our people's qualities of
resilience, courage and discipline are not enough for our nation to be
prosperous. Long-term sustainable development demands good governance and
much-needed capitai investment, skills and expertise. As our struggle enters
into its final phase the CNRT met to chart a direction and plan a vision for
the future Republic of Timor Loro Sa'e.

>From 21 to 25 October 1998 in Algarve, Portugal, the CNRT convened a
conference to draft general guidelines for a National Development Strategy
Plan for East Timor to be prepared at a follow-up meeting in April 1999 in
Melbourne Australia. Multi-disciplinary working groups of East Timorese
professionals came from inside East Timor, Australia, Mozambique and Europe.
They made a preliminary assessment of the situation in East Timor and then
drew up guidelines for the priority sectors of agriculture, economy, health,
environment, education, infrastructure, legal system and the public service.
These guidelines attempted to balance problems against the broad objectives
of sectoral development and sought to identify how these objectives might be
achieved. Existing East Timorese resources, including human resources, were
surveyed, and recognition was made of the need to relate development
strategies to traditional ways and culture. These guidelines were a landmark
beginning by East Timorese to map out a vision for a free East Timor.

Public sector, Governance & Mass Communication

Legal and Judicial Systems Economy, Agriculture and Tourism, Education
Health Infrastructure & the Environment

Looking elsewhere for models only show the failure of the majority of
developing countries to support continuous economic growth without incurring
heavy external debt. While poor economic management and inappropriate
development strategies have been major causes of such failures, East Timor
has had a spectacular lesson in the past two decades of the necessity for
good governance. We will therefore be diligent in promoting total
transparency within the apparatuses and organisations of power and, in the
management and accountability of funds provided by international aid to
civic and social organisations so that from the first moment we can firmly
combat corruption and all temptation to debase the objectives of sustainable
development. Only with such political commitment can we improve the living
conditions of the rural people who will be called on to play an integral
role in the gradual and persistent elimination of the main causes of poverty.

We are moving toward constructing a new government that can be supported by
a viable economy within its geographical setting. This is to say that we are
giving priority to build democratic institutions along with developing the
economy to give prosperity to the East Timorese. The democratic system that
we are envisioning is the one that allows a genuine representation where all
democratic elements, such as the press and the non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) also have a substantial voice in the decision making
process.

Our view is to build an effective administration with a minimum number of
people but is able to deliver the basic services that the country and the
community needs. Therefore, we will seriously pay attention to the
recruitment, placement, and wage systems.

Last April, I declared that we saw East Timor as practically starting from
zero in all areas. Now I see we are starting from below zero. We are minus
what little basic infrastructure we could have inherited, and we are minus
almost all our settled population. But we know we cannot remain captivated
by methodologies of solving social emergency problems, or stay preoccupied
with questions of security. We know we must design and deliver to our people
structured projects that guarantee sustainable development in East Timor.

The challenge that is facing us is one of whether will we be able to produce
something that truly represents a strategy for development, which has as the
main objective the improvement of the living conditions of our people? Will
we also be able to produce something here that guarantees to the
international community that the Timorese are prepared to avoid the mistakes
of other developing nations, and that shows the beginning of the principles
of co-operation that do not entail total or prolonged dependence on our
partners?

Just as any other small country in the Pacific, Caribbean and other parts of
the world, East Timor will be dependent on international trade and
international aid. We were delighted to learn from the World Bank in July
this year that, on average, small countries has a higher income per capita
than their larger neighbouring countries.

East Timor is most fortunately located at the confluence of the commercial
routes between Asia and Oceania, the Indian and Pacific oceans. We intend to
draw the maximum benefit from our country's geo-political situation to
define a policy of fiscal and custom incentives that encourage and stimulate
investment in the production sector so as to replace imports, increase
exports and stimulate investment.

In pursuit of this economic policy, Timor Loro Sa'e will facilitate the
creation of some special economic zones in order to stimulate employment for
the East Timorese, through the development of an off-shore centre consisting
of a modern financial hub.

As far as the economy is concerned, there is a huge task to begin with. As
all of you know, our infrastructure is totally destroyed. Therefore, the
first priority of economic reconstruction is to restore these services.

The outflow of capital, professionals and labour, and private assets in
addition to the destruction of the basic infrastructure resulted in a
substantial contraction of the economy.

Nevertheless, this destruction also brings additional motivation for the
East Timorese to rebuild their country, and provides for higher levels of
immediate unskilled and semi-skilled employment in labouring and
construction work.

Two other priorities that we will embark on are education and health.

The agricultural sector is the major sector in our economy. Around 80% of
the population derive their income from agricultural related activities.
Thirty percent of the GDP of East Timor comes from the agricultural sector.
Given such substantial role, our economy will be developed around this
sector. This is to turn the subsistence agriculture into a commercially
oriented agricultural system East Timor can produce a wide range of
agricultural products. Among those are rice, coffee, livestock and coconut.

With its fertile land in the southern bell, I believe that East Timor can be
self-sufficient in rice production provided that we can use all of our
dormant land and build an appropriate irrigation system. Besides coffee,
livestock and coconut we also have a potential for exports.

We understand that the private sector is vital to the development of an
economy. Therefore, the new Republic of Timor Loro Sa'e will also give
incentives to the pnvate sector to grow. This is even more important given
the fact that the government of Timor Loro Sate will have limited capacity.
Timor Loro Sa'e encourages the transfer of resources available abroad and
their channelling into fruitful investments in the country. To this end, a
specific bill protecting national and foreign investments will be enacted.
As it is the practice in the international banking, the State will protect
banking secrecy by law.

With the intention of attracting foreign investment to complement domestic
resources and the creation of jobs, the government of Timor Loro Sa'e will
develop technical, scientific, economic, social and cultural co-operation,
on the bilateral and multilateral level, with different countries and
international institutions.

Having said that we also understand that the market does not provide all
solutions for economic and social problems. Therefore, the government of
Timor Loro Sa'e will introduce selective intervention to ensure efficiency
and equity within a diversified economy.

East Timor will engage in international trade through exports of coffee, oil
and gas, and tourism as well as importing goods and services from overseas.
Nevertheless, we will emphasise on developing the agricultural sector
together with small and medium industries as the engine of economic growth.

Many of you know that East Timor has limited resources, especially capital
to finance its activities. Nevertheless we will work hard to raise our
internal revenue side by side with the inflows of support from the
international community. East Timor will not allow the shaping of a culture
of dependency from international aid and assistance. We will also give
priority to grants and soft loans while for long-term loans we will consider
it carefully to minimise any long-term implications for our economy.

The road ahead of the East Timorese People is not only winding and intricate
but also one that needs careful and balanced designing and mapping. The year
2000 will be one of emergency planning, assistance and work. The East
Timorese will now face further sacrifices and hardship in the tremendous
task ahead to rebuild the country. However, I am confident that side by side
with the international community and continued solidarity and work from all
our many friends around the world, the People of East Timor will initiate
the Transitional period towards Independence with great hope and
determination. A free and independent East Timor will soon be born from the
ashes of our devastated and destroyed Homeland.

We welcome you to the new Nation of East Timor.

Thank you,


London, 6 October 1999
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