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Timor
Australia continues push for control in East Timor
By Mike Head
7 July 2006
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Having secured the resignation of East Timor Prime Minister
Mari Alkatiri last week, the Howard government is continuing its
thinly veiled efforts, both internally and internationally, to
install a compliant administration and establish Australian domination
over a planned UN military and police force.
In the latest remarkable development, Australias favoured
successor, former foreign affairs minister Jose Ramos-Horta, has
assumed the previously unheard post of cabinet coordinator
of an interim government. President Xanana Gusmao has not formally
announced Ramos-Hortas appointment and the position has
no basis in the countrys constitution.
Under intense Australian pressure, Alkatiris party Fretilin
has apparently agreed that Ramos-Horta, a non-Fretilin member,
should assume day-to-day control of the state while a backroom
struggle continues over whom Gusmao will name to head a caretaker
government to run the country until elections scheduled for next
May.
Gusmao, who has clearly aligned himself with Ramos-Horta and
Australia, was last weekend forced to back away from an earlier
threat to dissolve the parliamentwhere Fretilin has a clear
majority of 55 out of 88 seatsand appoint an interim government
of his own choosing.
Ramos-Horta has made plain his willingness to serve Australias
interests. He chaired a meeting of a Council of Ministers from
the former Alkatiri government on Monday, just after calling for
Australia to keep its troops in East Timor for a year. I
hope that Australia takes the lead with the United Nations and
other countries in the region in having a strong robust (police)
presence for as many as at least five years, he told the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) radio.
How long Ramos-Hortas interregnum will last, and whether
he will succeed in replacing Alkatiri as prime minister, remains
entirely unclear, however. Howards government sent in nearly
2,000 troops and police in May on the pretext of restoring stability
and safeguarding democracy in the tiny neighbouring state, but
there is nothing democratic about what is taking place.
Ramos-Horta was installed after a week of intense political
manoeuvring. Alkatiri resigned on June 26, just as truck convoys
of Fretilin demonstrators headed toward the capital Dili to defend
his government. He and other Fretilin leaders feared the development
of a movement outside their control against Australias creeping
coup. For weeks, Fretilin had held back its supporters from rallying
against the protests and mob violence organised by opposition
politicians and rebel army and police officers.
The day after resigning, Alkatiri continued to try to contain
the pro-Fretilin protestors, meeting their convoy and appealing
for restraint. His appeals for them to delay their entry into
Dili until later in the week, however, only allowed anti-Fretilin
mobs to go on a fresh rampage in Dili, torching homes of Fretilin
leaders and further terrifying refugees from their previous rounds
of violence.
When about 5,000 Fretilin demonstrators eventually entered
Dili on June 29, some waving anti-Australian banners, Alkatiri
and Fretilin used their protests as a bargaining chip to seek
power-sharing concessions from Gusmao. They repeatedly appealed
for calm and worked closely with the Australian-led military contingent
to keep demonstrators under heavy guard. Troops in helicopters,
armoured vehicles and on foot escorted convoys of trucks and buses
along prearranged routes through Dili. Before entering the city,
the demonstrators were stopped and searched for weapons.
Alkatiri urged the demonstrators to accept his removal and
work instead to ensure that Fretilin retained its parliamentary
majority. He told a rally outside his former office that it did
not matter who was their leader. But to maintain national
unity, Fretilin must win again at the next election. At
the direction of Fretilin leaders, the demonstrators left Dili
peacefully the next night.
Following the Fretilin demonstration, UN officials apparently
vetoed Gusmaos proposal to call early elections. An unnamed
East Timorese official told the Australian: The UN
advised it was too short a time and, given the current situation,
it would be unable to prepare the logistics and organise voter
security, so that idea has been abandoned.
After Gusmaos backdown, Fretilin put forward several
prime ministerial nominations for him to consider. A weekend meeting
of Fretilins national political commission short-listed
Ramos-Horta, outgoing health minister Rui Araujo and agricultural
minister Estanislau da Silva, according to party sources.
But bitter infighting is obviously continuing, with the anti-Fretilin
factions threatening to bring protestors into Dili to demand that
Gusmao exclude any Alkatiri supporters in a new cabinet. Efforts
are also being made to drive a wedge through Fretilin, with an
anti-Alkatiri faction lodging a High Court writ to overturn his
re-election as party secretary-general at Fretilins national
congress in May.
Gusmao, who was due to meet a Fretilin delegation today, has
said nothing publicly for days. Ramos-Horta hinted on Wednesday
that the announcement of an interim government could be delayed
for a week or two.
One issue being thrashed out is what to do about the accusations
of distributing arms to Fretilin supporters that were brought
forward against Alkatiri as a means of forcing him to resign.
The Australian media, with the ABC in the vanguard, dug up the
unsubstantiated allegations from Alkatiris bitter political
enemies. No charges are being laid against pro-Australian rebel
soldiers, such as Major Alfredo Reinado, who initiated armed attacks
against the government and Fretilin members.
Alkatiri refused to heed a summons from the prosecutor-general
to be questioned last Friday and Fretilin MPs have backed his
claim to parliamentary immunity. In order to secure the prime
ministership, Ramos-Horta appears ready to strike a deal with
Alkatiri. He said Alkatiri was probably guilty of crimes against
the state, but any sentence would be commuted by parliament.
Whatever the outcome of the machinations, Canberra will have
the political veto. The Australian reported on July 1:
Although finding a suitably qualified administrator to replace
Alkatiri is proving tough, there are a number of people who would
be acceptable to the Howard government, including former defence
and foreign minister (and Nobel Peace Prize laureate) Jose Ramos-Horta.
In an interview published yesterday in the Melbourne Age,
Alkatiri pointed to Australias involvement in his ousting,
saying its media had demonised him as part of an orchestrated
plot because of his tough stance in talks over oil and gas
reserves in the Timor Sea. He refused to name the culprits, saying,
Im sure that one day it will all come out.
Within hours, after objections from Howard and the ABC, Alkatiri
denied making any suggestion that the Australian government plotted
his removal. His spokesman said he never blamed Australia,
and never said Australia was behind all of this and that
he fully supported the Australian military presence.
Alkatiris retraction is one more in a growing list of
backdowns which began in May when, under considerable pressure
from Canberra, the prime minister and Fretilin acquiesced in issuing
an invitation for Australia to intervene militarily.
Fretilins backpedalling reflects its basic political perspective
and class outlook: far from challenging imperialism, it has always
sought to accommodate to, and balance between, rival major powers
in order to establish its own state.
With its considerable oil and gas reserves and strategic location
at the eastern end of the Indonesian archipelago, East Timor has
become a battleground in escalating global conflicts over energy
sources and spheres of influence. Canberra has intervened twice
militarily with US backingin 1999 and 2006to secure
its interests in the Timor Sea fields and assert its wider authority
in the Asia-Pacific region.
Alkatiri and his government had granted oil and gas rights
to European and Chinese companies as a means of countering pressure
from Australia and the US, and may be looking for support in these
quarters. On July 3, the European Union (EU), which represents
the interests of Portugal, announced that it would send a senior
envoy, Miguel Amada, to contribute actively to a peaceful
and constitutional settlement to the current political crisis
and establish an EU delegation in Dili.
Brazilian Paulo Sergio Pinheiro has also been appointed to
head a UN inquiry into the civil unrest in East Timor. Its investigations
into the clashes between rival security force factions on April
28-29 and May 23-25 could become a vehicle for raising questions
about Australian involvement.
Backed by Washington, Australian Foreign Minister Alexander
Downer has been personally lobbying Security Council permanent
members, including Britain and France, for Australian control
of any UN mission. Obviously having France and Britain and
clearly the United States working very closely with us in the
Security Council is going to make a very big difference to us
getting the sort of successor mission for the UN that we would
like, he told reporters while in Europe.
This behind the scenes maneouvring is clearly a major factor
in the unresolved political crisis in Dili, as each of the international
powers seeks an administration amenable to its interests. Far
from ending the danger of civil war in East Timor, the Australian
military intervention is fuelling a struggle for power that could
well precipitate such a conflict.
See Also:
Australian-led campaign pressures
East Timorese prime minister to resign
[27 June 2006]
Australian government presses
ahead with plans to dominate East Timor
[20 June 2006]
Oppose Australia's neo-colonial
occupation of East Timor
[1 June 2006]
Why Australia wants "regime
change" in East Timor
[30 May 2006]
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