[Kabar-indonesia] ETAN Statement on Recent Events in Timor-Leste

ETAN etan at igc.org
Tue May 9 08:08:47 MDT 2006



ETAN Statement on Recent Events in Timor-Leste

Country Fragile, International Assistance, Justice Still Needed

The East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) has followed 
recent events in Dili with deep concern. The recent riot regrettably 
resulted in injury and death, as well as property damage. As longtime 
supporters of Timor-Leste's self-determination and independence, we 
hope the peace that has prevailed on Dili since April 29 continues, 
and that those who fled in fear will soon return. While property can 
be rebuilt and political problems resolved, the traumatic experiences 
from several decades of repressive occupation and Indonesia's 
destructive withdrawal in 1999 continue to have serious impacts on 
the Timorese population.

Timor-Leste, a new nation borne of decades of military occupation, 
has made remarkable progress since 1999. However, its democracy, as 
well as public confidence in the leaderships' ability to peacefully 
resolve conflicts, are fragile. Trauma recovery, economic 
development, the creation of a competent public administration and 
building physical and governmental infrastructure are long-term 
processes. Patience is required by the government, the population, 
and all others committed to a democratic Timor-Leste.

The inadequacies of governmental leadership and the shortcomings of 
international support for the transition to self-government have been 
illustrated by recent events. There are many lessons to be learned. 
We urge all parties to the recent disagreement within the military to 
seek a peaceful and lasting solution. As long as Timor-Leste has a 
military, structural and institutional weaknesses within that force 
must be addressed. The spirit of national unity and public service, 
which provided the foundation for the independence movement, must be 
re-established among military and civilian public officials. The 
government commission's investigation of the fired soldiers' 
grievances, as well as any evaluation of the behavior of the police 
and military during recent months, must be transparent with results 
made public in a timely manner.

After so many traumatic experiences since 1975, Timor-Leste's 
population is especially sensitive to rumors and displays of force, a 
situation worsened by an absence of accurate information. The 
telephone system must therefore be made reliable under peak loads, 
and with wider coverage. Journalists and other media personnel, both 
Timorese and international, need to better understand and avoid the 
inflammatory effects of unverified reports. To help regain public 
trust, the government should release the long-completed reports on 
the December 4, 2002 unrest in Dili, when police killed several demonstrators.

The Timor-Leste government and the international community should 
heed the Timorese people's cry for justice for crimes committed 
during the quarter-century Indonesian occupation. The UN and key 
governments, including the United States, must move beyond platitudes 
and actively pursue real accountability. We cannot but wonder if 
international and Timorese failures to ensure justice have led some 
in Timor-Leste to believe that their own use of violence would be met 
with similar impunity. As described in the recent report of 
Timor-Leste's Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation 
(CAVR), several countries - including the U.S., U.K., and Australia - 
bear a special responsibility to ensure justice and accountability 
due to their actions and inaction from 1975 on. Reparations, as 
called for by the CAVR, would help alleviate the poverty and 
joblessness that has fueled some of the unrest and help rebuild the 
country's infrastructure, which the Indonesian military so thoroughly 
destroyed during the brutal occupation supported by these countries.

The international community has invested heavily in Timor-Leste since 
1999, but their job is not complete. Transforming a guerilla 
resistance into an official military is always difficult, but the 
roots of many of the current problems in Timor-Leste's UN-designed 
military grow out of the international community's failure to help 
Timor-Leste define and implement a clear mandate for and effective 
training of the defense force.

We urge the international community and the UN, especially the 
Security Council, to work with Timor-Leste to complete the 
nation-building and development tasks to which it has already 
committed. Security Council members should favorably consider the 
Timor-Leste government's request for a special UN office until after 
next year's presidential and parliamentary elections. These national 
elections, the first in independent Timor-Leste, will help determine 
if democracy has staying power in this new nation. In addition to 
electoral assistance, the Secretary-General has proposed continued 
human rights monitoring, military liaisons, police training advisers, 
and other assistance to improve the competence of government 
institutions. A formal mission will also increase the East Timorese 
people's sense of security over the coming year, whereas a premature 
end to the mission could escalate public fear.

International support and expertise are still needed but must be 
geared toward empowering the Timorese people to take full charge of 
their own destiny. It is not too late to keep Timor-Leste from 
joining the ranks of post-conflict "failed states." However, the 
people of Timor-Leste will require further assistance to reach that 
goal -- to secure the self-determination for which they struggled 
many years and at such great human cost.

ETAN advocates for democracy, justice and human rights for East Timor 
and Indonesia. ETAN calls for an international tribunal to prosecute 
crimes against humanity committed in East Timor from 1975 to 1999 and 
for restrictions on U.S. military assistance to Indonesia until there 
is genuine reform of its security forces. For additional background, 
see www.etan.org.

-30-

Posted at http://etan.org/news/2006/05dili.htm  





More information about the Kabar-Indonesia mailing list