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Timor
A regime made in Australia
Gusmao appointed East Timors prime minister
By Richard Phillips
10 August 2007
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Angry rioting and protests erupted in East Timor this week
after President Jose Ramos-Horta appointed Xanana Gusmao as prime
minister. Gusmaos 12-member cabinet includes Jose Luis Guterres
as deputy prime minister. Guterres challenged former Prime Minister
Mari Alkitiri for the leadership of Fretilin last year and now
heads a breakaway faction from the organisation.
More than 70 people were arrested during the protests, mainly
in the capital Dili and Baucau, on Monday and Tuesday. Australian
troops and United Nations police fired hundreds of tear-gas shells
and rubber bullets during street clashes.
Some demonstrators chanted Down with John Howard
and called for a Fretilin government, while banners accusing Ramos-Horta
of being a puppet of the Australian and US governments began appearing
in Dili refugee camps.
Fretilin immediately declared the government unconstitutional
and threatened to have Gusmaos appointment overturned by
legal action. According to the East Timor constitution, Fretilin,
which won 21 seats in the June elections and is the largest single
party in the 65-member parliament, should have been given the
first opportunity to form a government.
Gusmaos National Congress for the Reconstruction of East
Timor (CNRT), which won 18 seats in the national ballot, claimed,
however, that it had the right to govern after it formed a post-election
alliance with the Association of Timorese Democrats-Social Democrat
Party (ASDT) and the Democratic Party (PD). This gave it a bloc
of 37 parliamentary seats.
After protracted negotiations involving Fretilin and the CNRT
coalition, the talks collapsed late last month and Ramos-Horta
appointed Gusmao prime minister on August 6.
The Howard government immediately congratulated the new government
but made clear that Canberras almost 1,000-strong contingent
of troops and police would remain in the country on a long-term
basis. The US State Department issued a statement hailing the
peaceful, free, and fair presidential and parliamentary
elections, while Washington said it would assist Gusmao
in meeting the challenges ahead.
Gusmaos regime is not the product of a free and
fair electoral process but the end result of the Howard
governments political campaign against the former Fretilin
government, which held power in East Timor since its formal independence
in 2002.
Canberra has secured the lions share of East Timors
substantial offshore gas and oil resources in the Timor Sea, and
has systematically intervened to block any challenge to its political
and economic domination of the tiny nation.
When Alkitiri and the former Fretilin-led administration, which
tentatively attempted to secure economic and diplomatic support
from China and Portugal, forced some concessions from Australia
during new negotiations over gas resources early last year, Canberra
reacted with fury.
In May 2006, the Howard government seized on rioting that erupted
in Dili as the pretext for sending naval ships and troops to the
country to restore calm. Aided and abetted by the
Australian media, Horta, Gusmao and East Timors clergy,
Canberra unleashed a dirty tricks campaign against Prime Minister
Alkitiri to force his resignation as prime minister and undermine
the Fretilin government (see How
Australia orchestrated regime change in East Timor).
While the Australian government disingenuously claims to have
had no influence in the appointment of Gusmaos CNRT government,
late last month, and in the midst of the post-election arm-twisting,
Howard suddenly visited East Timor and met with Ramos-Horta.
The Australian prime minister told journalists that he also
planned to meet with Gusmao, describing him as the likely
next prime minister. He also declared that Australian troops
would remain in East Timor for as long as Canberra saw fit.
Unstable regime
Ramos-Horta and Gusmao are tried and tested stooges of Australian
imperialism. But concerns remain within the Australian ruling
elite as to whether the fragile new government can contain mounting
social and political tensions produced by deepening poverty, unemployment
and popular opposition to Australias economic domination.
Anticipating an explosive reaction to Gusmaos appointment,
Ramos-Horta met with heads of the East Timorese police (PNTL)
and the local military (F-FDTL) a week before his announcement
of the new government.
Ramos-Horta told PTNL commander Alfonso de Jesus that the police
had to remain neutral while F-FDTL commander Brigadier
Taur Matan Ruak told the media he was ready to follow instructions
given by the leaders who run this nation.
At the same time Australian Army Brigadier John Hutcheson replaced
Brigadier Mal Rerden as head of the so-called International Stabilisation
Force in East Timor.
Hutcheson has close relations with the East Timorese military
and served in the country as defence advisor in 2001.
More significantly, he led the military component of Australias
Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands (RAMSI), which
took control of that countrys major institutionsthe
police, courts, prisons, media outlets and the finance departmentin
2003.
The Australian media predictably responded to the new government
and the outbreak of rioting with praise for Ramos-Horta and Gusmao
as democrats and beloved freedom fighters,
combined with denunciations of Fretilin and Alkitiri.
Greg Sheridan, foreign policy editor of Murdochs Australian
newspaper, issued an ultimatum to Fretilin, declaring that it
had to decide whether it was an armed militia or a respectable
political party. This required the organisation to accept
the new government and discipline its angry supporters, he wrote.
Likewise, an editorial in the Sydney Morning Herald,
bluntly accused Fretilin of being the greatest source of
instability in the country. We must try to ensure
that East Timor does not turn into another Solomon Islands, or
Papua New Guinea. Australia does not need another failing state
for a near neighbour.
The failing state label has become the pretext
for every act of political and military aggression by Australia
in East Timor and the South Pacific over the past decade.
This was further underlined by Foreign Minister Downer in a
major foreign policy speech in Canberra on Wednesday night. Downer
specifically named China and Taiwan as major rivals in the region
and emphasised that Australia would not hesitate to mount further
military interventions to maintain its domination.
He claimed that Chinas increasing presence, and its competition
with Taiwan as an aid donor in the South Pacific, was undermining
Australian attempts to establish good governancea
code phrase for political submission by governments in the South
Pacific and East Timor to Australian dictates.
Downer also denounced those criticising Australian violations
of national sovereignty in the region. The cry of sovereignty,
he declared, was being used as a smokescreen to distract
attention from corrupt and illegal behaviour.
Canberras neo-colonial bullying further underlines the
issues at stake for the Australian government and its big business
backers.
As competition intensifies between regional powers for valuable
resources and strategic positions, Australian imperialism cannot
tolerate any attempt by any section of the ruling elites in East
Timor and the south west Pacific to develop alternative economic
and political alliances.
While Fretilin and Alkitiri continue to denounce Ramos-Horta
and Gusmao, they have no fundamental differences with the new
regime. Like it, they have worked to block and dissipate any mass
opposition that threatens to get out of official control. Alkitiri
has bent over backwards trying to accommodate himself to the CNRT,
offering to back Gusmao as prime minister if he formed a coalition
government with Fretilin.
In power from 2002, Fretilin maintained a pro-business regime,
implementing the dictates of the International Monetary Fund and
the same sort of free market program as that espoused by Ramos-Horta
and Gusmao. It has no progressive solution to the immense social
problems wracking East Timor, one of the poorest countries in
the world, where almost half the population lives below the poverty
line. Six years after so-called independence, the
average income is 55 US cents per day, unemployment is 40 percent
and life expectancy under 57 years of age.
See Also:
East Timor: Despite winning
election, Fretilin likely to be ousted
[9 July 2007]
East Timors election
held under shadow of Australian military
[30 June 2007]
East Timor: Ramos-Horta wins
presidential election
[14 May 2007]
How Australia orchestrated
regime change in East Timor
[27 July 2006]
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