| What
is the "international community" really doing in East Timor? John Pilger, Guardian, Tuesday October 5, 1999 |
| After
their arrival almost two weeks ago, Australian troops have secured only the capital,
Dili, and a few towns. In West Timor, fewer than a dozen foreign aid workers struggle
to guarantee the safety of 230,000 refugees, including 35,000 children, while
the power of life and death remains with the Indonesian military. An explanation is offered in a remarkable interview given by John Howard, the Australian prime minister, in which he described his government as Washington's deputy sheriff. What mattered was the "stability" of Indonesia, and the protection of western business interests. His honesty, or garrulousness, is to be applauded, along with his historical accuracy. From the Boxer rebellion to Vietnam, Australians have fought the battles of the great imperial powers. In 1989, Australian troops were sent to Bougainville, an island off Papua New Guinea, and site of a huge mining operation by the multinational Rio Tinto. The Bougainvilleans had taken over the mine and the island, in a bid for independence. East Timor is no exception. When Australia's then prime minister Gough Whitlam met the Indonesian dictator Suharto in 1974, his message was that the Portuguese colony was Jakarta's for the taking. The two leaders, reported the Melbourne Age, "agreed last weekend that the best and most realistic future for Timor was association with Indonesia". The East Timorese were not asked. One year later, Indonesia invaded. |
|
As the UN security
council deliberated on how to respond, the US secretly re-armed the invaders while
the Australian representative at the UN, Ralph Harry, presented the invasion as
a civil war with "elements" of the Indonesian military. In 1982, Whitlam, although
no longer in office, made an extraordinary appearance at the UN, where he declared:
"It is high time the question of East Timor was voted off the UN agenda." As
he spoke, the sea around East Timor was being explored by Australian companies
for vast deposits of oil and gas: a preliminary act of grand larceny at the centrepiece
of the Australian establishment's "special relationship" with the Indonesian
dictatorship. INSERT
END INSERT
A "historic" military pact with Jakarta followed, including plans for Indonesian-Australian operations in "counter-terrorism". The proud heirs of Anzac were formally integrated into Indonesia's war effort against the East Timorese. In July last year, a senior Australian aid worker in East Timor warned that the Indonesian military was setting up militia gangs. He was dismissed as "alarmist". In November,
Canberra was told that a 400-member assassination squad of the Indonesian special
forces, Kopassus, had been sent to East Timor. The defence minister, John Moore,
flew to Jakarta and reassured the regime that Australian policy was to "prop
up the institution [of the military] as best we can". The Australians can now stand back; other, more senior, deputy sheriffs are on the way. This week, a World Bank team arrives in Dili and the International Monetary Fund will follow soon. Unless Xanana Gusmao and his East Timorese leadership are both deft and bold, the freedom for which their people struggled alone for so long may be quietly lost and their devastated country, slotted neatly into the globalised system of exploitation, debt and poverty, known as "stability."
They deserve a great deal more.
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