East Timor Independence
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Conclusion
On August, 30th, History was written in East Timor: 98.6% of
registered voters exercised their democratic right in a UN-organised
referendum, considered by the Indonesian authorities as "free and fair".
Defying eight months of intimidation by indonesian-armed militiamen, mostly
transmigrated from West Timor, the population stood in long queues at the
ballot sites, in some cases waiting hours in the sun after walking
kilometres to the nearest polling station.
Hardly anybody partied in Dili, though, or in the rest of the
territory; celebrations were held abroad, though, in Australia, Portugal, the United States, Ireland, England, Mozambique, even Indonesia, wherever a
Timorese community is to be found. But inside the new Nation, just four
hours after the official announcement, the defeated militia gangs started
to set East Timor on fire. BBC, CNN, and other international TV stations
broadcasted to the world images once seen in other war scenarios - fire of
automatic weapons, houses set on fire, innocent civilians seeking shelter
in the schools, the churches, the neighbouring mountains. International
media reports mentioned 145 deaths in Dili only, in the 48 hours following
the announcement. On September, 5th and 6th, most international observers, journalists and the civilian personnel of UNAMET were evacuated from the
territory, either by chartered planes or the Australian Air Force. On the
afternoon of September, the 5th, four indonesian ministers - including
Defence and Foreign Affairs holders, General Wiranto and Mr. Ali Alatas -
and one secretary of State paid a 4-hour visit to Dili - though they never
left the airport "for security reasons".
On the evening of that same day, the UN Security Council, gathered on
an emergency meeting in New York, once more abstained from sending in a
peace-keeping force. The Indonesian authorities claimed to be able to
restore peace and tranquility, though 20.000 men already stationed in the
territory failed to do so until now, and were even reported to have
participated, in some cases directly, in the new mass killings started on
September, 4th. TV, photographic and oral evidence from UNAMET staff and
international media wasn't enough, so the Council decided to send a "fact-
finding mission" to Jakarta.
On the morning of September, the 6th, the home of Nobel Peace Prize
winner, Ximenes Belo, was set on fire. The bishop seaked refugee in Baucau, though he was impotent to save the hundreds of refugees in his frontyard, now facing death or deportation to West Timor, like so many before them.
More than 1,000 refugees were sheltered at the UNAMET compound in Dili, and
the UN convoys were shot at in the road to the airport.
Despite several United Nations Resolutions on the right of the
Timorese to self-determination (the UN has never recognized the indonesian
annexation of the territory), the international community has been blind to
the fight of its inhabitants. Only since November 12th, 1991, when more
than 250 youngsters were killed during a brutal massacre occurred in a
cematery in Dili (the capital city of East Timor), have the "civilized"
nations condemned Indonesia in a more consistent way. But words of
condemnation sound empty when the same countries sell arms to the regime (a
dictatorship ruling Indonesia for decades), and strengthen the economic
ties binding European and American states to Jakarta.
The five days which mediated until official results were announced
were days of tension, with frequent militia attacks in Dili and other spots
in the territory. But on the morning of September, 4th, UNAMET (United
Nations Assistance Mission to East Timor) leader Ian Martin announced the
results, minutes after the United Nations' Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, had done the same in New York: 21.5% of the voters had chosen to accept the
Special Autonomy offered to the territory by Indonesia, while an
overwhelming majority of 78.5% reffused it, thus laying the path to
independence.
The sources
. Aditjondro, George J In The Shadow of Mount Ramelau: The Impact of the
Occupation of East Timor, The Netherlands, 1994
. Aubrey, Jim Free East Timor – Australia’s Culpability in East Timor’s
Genocide. Vintage – Random House Australia
. Carey, P & GC Bentley East Timor at the Crossroads, The Forging of a
Nation, Cassell, NY, 1995
. CIIR/IPJET International Law and the Question of East Timor, London, 1995
. Cox, Steve Generations of Resistance: East Timor, Cassell, UK, 1995
. Dunn, James 1. East Timor - the Balibo Incident in Perspective, Sydney,
1995
. Timor: A People Betrayed , ABC Books, Sydney, 1996
. East Timor: No Solutions Without respect for Human Rights: Bi-Annual
Report of Human Rights Violations, January to June 1998
. Violence by the State Against Women in East Timor: A Report to the UN
Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, Including its Clauses and
Consequences
. East Timorese Political Prisoners
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