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East Timor: Despite winning election, Fretilin likely to be
ousted
By Patrick OConnor
9 July 2007
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East Timors ruling party, Fretilin, won the parliamentary
election held on June 30 with 29 percent of the national vote.
Despite the result, however, three rival parties announced last
Friday they will form a coalition government headed by former
President Xanana Gusmao and his National Congress for the Reconstruction
of East Timors (CNRT). The Australian government is no doubt
exerting major behind-the-scenes pressure to ensure Fretilin is
ousted.
The CNRT won 24.1 percent of the vote. It has aligned itself
with the Association of Timorese Democrats-Social Democrat Party
(ASDT-PSD), which won 15.8 percent, and the Democratic Party (PD),
which received 11.3 percent. With the allocation of seats in the
65-member parliament based on proportional representation, Fretilin
is expected to secure 21 seats, the CNRT 18, ASDT-PSD 11, PD 8,
with the remaining seats going to a number of minor parties.
The post-election manoeuvring demonstrates the fraudulent claims
of a democratic vote. Held under Australian military
occupation, the election amounted to little more than a necessary
formality preceding the removal of the Fretilin government. No
other outcome would have been permitted by Canberra, which has
been pressing for regime change in Dili for more than
a year. The formation of an Australian-backed CNRT-led coalition
government marks the culmination of this campaign.
The Howard government regards the Fretilin administration in
Dili as a significant obstacle. Formerly headed by Mari Alkatiri,
the Fretilin government had forced a number of unwelcome concessions
during negotiations over Canberras illegal exploitation
of gas reserves in the Timor Sea. Alkatiri and his colleagues
had also sought to counter Australian domination of East Timor
by courting Chinese and Portuguese diplomatic and economic support.
In 2006, the Howard government seized upon unrest in Dili and
dispatched more than a 1,000 troops. After the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation televised bogus allegations that the prime minister
had armed a hit squad to assassinate his opponents, Alkatiri was
forced to resign and make way for Canberras preferred candidate,
Jose Ramos-Horta. The extraordinary campaign involved the mobilisation
of the most right-wing elements of East Timorese society, including
the Catholic Church, ex-Indonesian backed militias, and dubious
military rebels such as Alfredo Reinado.
Ramos-Horta was subsequently installed as president last May,
despite winning just 22 percent in the first round of the presidential
poll. The vote was held amid Fretilin complaints of interference
by some of the 1,250 Australian and New Zealand soldiers who remain
stationed in East Timor. Ramos-Horta aligned himself with the
Howard government throughout the 2006 crisis and in both of this
years presidential and parliamentary elections. Not surprisingly,
he welcomed a statement issued shortly after the June 30 vote
by Australian military chief Brigadier Mal Reardon that foreign
forces would remain in East Timor until at least 2008.
The parliamentary election outcome has made clear why Canberra
placed such importance on Ramos-Hortas presidential victory.
While the presidency is an ostensibly ceremonial post, the president
formally appoints the government. Article 106 of East Timors
constitution reads: The prime minister is nominated by the
most-voted party or by the alliance of parties with a parliamentary
majority, and appointed by the President of the Republic, having
heard the political parties represented in the parliament.
Ramos-Horta is now exploiting this constitutional provision
to sideline Fretilin by arrogating the authority to determine
the make-up of the government. I am the one who will make
the decision, based on the spirit and letter of the constitution,
which of the various parties can persuade me they are in a position
to form a government that is stable, that is long-lasting,
he declared.
The anti-democratic and anti-constitutional character of Ramos-Hortas
position was demonstrated last Thursday. Even before all the votes
had been tallied, he announced that the ruling party would not
form government. I do not believe that any major party wishes
to offer itself to a compromise with Fretilin, he told the
Canberra Times. It is evident that a Fretilin government
would not be able to have its programme, its budget, passed in
parliament.
This statement was intended to undermine coalition negotiations
already underway between Fretilin and the minor parties. However,
Fretilins secretary-general Mari Alkatiri, who was re-elected
to parliament, has reserved the right to form a minority government.
We are trying to make a coalition but the law allows us
to form a government even if we are a minority in government,
he stated. The constitution says a party or a coalition
with the majority in parliament and that is Fretilin.
As far as both Ramos-Horta and the Howard government are concerned,
it is simply irrelevant which party won a majority.
Xanana Gusmao, constantly hailed in the Australian press as
a revered independence hero, won less than a quarter
of the vote. In fact, his partys performance closely corresponded
with that of Ramos-Horta in the first round of the presidential
election, with most of its support centring in Dili. Notwithstanding
Gusmaos cynical appropriation of the CNRT acronymformerly
that of the Fretilin-backed pro-independence umbrella organisation
of the 1990sthe new party proved incapable of making a broader
appeal.
Horta and the Catholic Church
In a highly provocative move underscoring his contempt for
democratic norms, Ramos-Horta met with Catholic bishops from Dili
and Baucau on Saturday and Sunday to discuss the formation of
a new government. I met with Bishop Alberto Ricardo and
Bishop Basilio do Nascimento to consult the new government formation
and listen to their opinions to help me with my decisions,
the president declared. Hopefully by next week we will have
the formation.
The Catholic Church has long agitated for the removal of the
Fretilin government due to Fretilins continuing advocacy
of a degree of separation between church and state. In 2005 the
Church organised rallies in Dili aimed at bringing down the government,
and in 2006 senior Church leaders participated in the campaign
against Alkatiri.
Following their discussions with Ramos-Horta on the weekend,
the bishops left little doubt that they wished to see the formation
of an anti-Fretilin government. In church, the peoples
voice is Gods voice, so if the people want change, I think
everyone wants change, Bishop do Nascimento declared.
Ramos-Horta is yet to formally ratify any new government. Very
few details of the would-be CNRT-led coalition have yet been announced,
including the division of cabinet posts. While the Australian
media is presenting the formation of an anti-Fretilin government
as a done deal, there are significant divisions within the ranks
of the opposition parties. Establishing a stable coalition may
yet prove difficult.
The installation of a CNRT-led government will resolve nothing
for the East Timorese people. Gusmao has already made clear his
pro-Australian orientation, while his domestic agenda will be
dominated by the ramming through of pro-investment and pro-business
economic reforms. These measures will only exacerbate the extreme
poverty and inequality wracking the tiny half-island nation.
The right-wing agenda of the opposition parties has been facilitated
by the abject failure of the Fretilin government to improve the
lives of ordinary Timorese people. Fretilin won 29 percent of
the vote, significantly down from the 57.4 percent it won in the
2001 election. Ruling the country since so-called independence
in 2002, Fretilin has dutifully maintained the austerity measures
demanded by the International Monetary Fund, despite growing impoverishment.
An estimated ten percent of the population still lives in internally
displaced peoples camps and, according to the UN, more than
200,000 people require emergency food assistance. About 40 percent
of the population remain chronically malnourished.
See Also:
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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