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: Indonesia
Pressure stepped up for UN force in East Timor
By Nick Beams
7 September 1999
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Mounting pressure is being applied by the major Western powers
on the Indonesian government of President B. J. Habibie to invite
a United Nations military force to take over administration of
the former Portuguese colony of East Timor. The growing demand
for UN military intervention comes as Indonesian army backed militia
groups step up their terror campaign against the East Timorese
population following last Saturday's announcement of a 78.5 percent
vote for independence.
The United Nations Security Council has decided to send a five-member
mission to Jakarta to press the Indonesian government to urge
Indonesian authorities to reign in the militia forces. The Security
Council resolution said the mission would discuss with the
government of Indonesia concrete steps to allow the peaceful implementation
of the ballot result. The news agency AFP cited a source
who said the mission would also urge Jakarta to accept deployment
of an international military force.
Pro-Indonesian militia squads, supported by Indonesian armed
forces and with the tacit support of Indonesian police, have been
on a rampage since the ballot result was announced.
Unconfirmed reports said that at least 145 people had been
killed over the weekend as the militias torched houses and buildings
in the capital Dili and elsewhere and hunted down pro-independence
supporters. According to a Dutch journalist, militiamen had sprayed
automatic gunfire on a group of 1,500 refugees seeking shelter
in the compound of the UN Mission in Dili.
On Monday militia opened fire on hundreds of refugees camped
outside the home of Bishop Carlos Belo and then later set the
house on fire. At least 25,000 people are reported to have been
displaced from their homes in Dili and tens of thousands more
in the rest of the island. The Red Cross compound was attacked
by militia firing automatic weapons. After the shooting refugees
were forced from the compound and marched to the seafront.
The push for the so-called peacekeeping force is being spearheaded
by the government of Portugal, the former colonial power, which
has intimated that a force should be sent in even without the
sanction of the Indonesian government.
In an interview with CNN, Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio
Guterres said he had been speaking to UN Secretary General Kofi
Annan who was working actively to create the conditions
for a possible force to intervene.
While officially adhering to the position that a UN force would
require the agreement of Indonesia, Guterres said the overwhelming
vote for independence had created the democratic legitimacy
for the UN to intervene. Guterres said that we would like
to have Indonesia cooperating with us in sending in a peacekeeping
force. But I think that without that international element
of security, it would be impossible to restore law and order in
the territory.
The official Indonesian position is that under the terms of
the May agreement with Portugal and the UN, which authorised the
ballot on independence, it will not allow the UN to intervene
until after the MPR (national assembly) has met to consider the
result of the ballot. Such a meeting is not scheduled to take
place until next month, or possibly November.
The leaders of the East Timorese independence movement are
backing the Portuguese push. The leader of the National Council
for Timorese Resistance (CNRT) Xanana Gusmao, due to be released
by Indonesian authorities this week, has called for the UN to
send in military forces to save the East Timorese from a
new genocide. CNRT international spokesman Jose Ramos Horta
has called on the UN Security Council to act promptly
warning of an imminent, extraordinary human catastrophe
under its eyes.
Horta called on the Australian government to act and join New
Zealand in lobbying the UN Security Council for a limited
intervention.
The Australian government is working to put together a so-called
coalition of the willing comprising Australian troops
and forces from a limited number of other countries to go in prior
to the organisation of a UN force. But both Prime Minister Howard
and Foreign Minister Downer have said that such a force would
require the approval of both Indonesia and the UN Security Council.
The Australian media has been waging an increasingly bellicose
campaign for direct military intervention. According to the Sydney
Morning Herald foreign editor Hamish McDonald: At this
point, General Wiranto and Mr Alatas [Indonesian Foreign Minister]
should be told privately by interested powers that their persuasive
powers are seen as exhausted, and that Indonesia's claims to run
East Timor have been nullified by its repeated failure to clamp
down on the militias. They should be presented with an offer of
an outside force they cannot refuse.
Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand Evening Post
has pushed for multilateral peacekeeping operations.
Citing good humanitarian reasons, the editorial also
pointed to more direct interests.
For New Zealand, the implications of regional instability
have the potential for enormous repercussions, not least because
Indonesia is a potent, if volatile force in South-East Asia. It's
a lucrative market given the right conditionsNew Zealand's
fortunes would be affected without itbut it's also important
for this country to be actively interested in regional peacemaking
solutions. Indonesia simmers with contestable factions seeking
to profit while economic restructuring sputters along in the wake
of last year's economic collapse, and it will take patience and
constructive diplomacy to ensure New Zealand's attitudes aren't
misunderstood.
A report in the Australian Financial Review on Monday
suggested that Australian troops could be sent within a week and
that Indonesia's military chief General Wiranto had indicated
that he had no objections to a UN force. Citing Australian diplomatic
sources, the report said that Wiranto's agreement had removed
a major domestic obstacle to President Habibie formally requesting
peacekeepers as without the backing of the army he could
not agree to a UN peacekeeping presence.
However, Wiranto is still maintaining publicly that East Timor
remains part of Indonesia until the vote for independence is officially
ratified by the MPR.
One of the army's main objectives in East Timor is to set an
example to other regions of the archipelago, including Aceh and
Irian Jaya, as to the violent response they can expect if they
push for secession.
A crucial factor in its calculations is the position of the
United States. While the US appears, at least at this stage, to
have ruled out direct involvement of its forces and will provide
only technical assistance and support, it is bringing intense
economic pressure to bear.
A letter from Clinton to Habibie late last month, described
by administration sources as very tough, warned of
possible cuts in economic aid provided by the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank.
It was duly followed up by a statement from the IMF itself
indicating that it was closely watching East Timor
along with other international institutions. Indonesia,
which is making progress in its program of economic reform and
recovery supported by the international financial community and
through the IMF, should have every interest in seeing the process
in East Timor unfold smoothly and without violence, in accordance
with internationally recognised norms, the statement said.
On the military front, an article in the Sydney Morning
Herald cited comments by US academic Professor Tom Plate pointing
to behind-the-scenes manoeuvres between the US administration
and the Indonesian regime. I believe that a deal has been
cut with the US by which Jakarta will recognise and honour the
results of the East Timor referendum in return for American support
for suppression of any other separatist movementsthat America
will kind of look the other way and not make it an issue,
he said.
The British Labour government, which has been a key supplier
of arms to the Indonesian regime, is also pushing for UN intervention.
Foreign Secretary Robin Cook said he had placed the destroyer
HMS Glasgow, currently operating in the South China Sea, on standby
for possible East Timor operations.
If the government of Indonesia cannot get its own security
forces to restore order, it should allow the international community
to assist in securing an orderly transition to independence in
East Timor, he said.
While the major powers are citing humanitarian interests
and concerns for democracy as the basis for their
intervention, even a brief examination of the history of the region
shows that they are directly responsible for the crisis now unfolding.
The US was directly behind the military coup which brought
the Suharto military regime to power in 1965 and helped organise
the massacre of more than half a million workers and peasants,
supplying the regime with the names of Communist Party activists
and leaders. In 1975, the Indonesian invasion came the day after
a visit to Jakarta by President Ford and Secretary of State Kissinger
who emphasised that the region had to be stabilised
following the US defeat in Vietnam.
The Australian government backed the Indonesian annexation
of East Timor and continued to supply military assistance and
training for its armed forces as they suppressed East Timorese
resistance, at an estimated cost of 200,000 lives. Not the least
of its concerns is the lucrative Timor Gap Treaty with the Indonesian
regime under which Australian interests receive 59 percent of
the oil wealth in the Timor Sea.
Likewise the government of Portugal, whose 400-year rule reduced
the East Timorese to among the most impoverished peoples of the
world, has never relinquished its colonial position and is eager
to re-establish its interests in exploiting the resources of the
region.
The establishment of a UN protectorate in East Timor, with
or without the permission of the Indonesian regime, will not secure
peace and prosperity for the East Timorese people. Rather it will
be the mechanism through which the major powers fight to secure
their economic and strategic interests in the region.
See Also:
After vote for secession:
Western powers accelerate plans for military intervention in Timor
[4 September 1999]
The political tasks facing
the working class
The Indonesian elections and the struggle for democracy
[21 May 1999]
Indonesia
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