http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/JI18Ae01.html

Sep 18, 2008 

Jackie Chan takes on Timor's karate kids
By Sheila Oviedo 

East Timor's youth gangs, flaunting names like Devoted Heart Lotus Brotherhood, 
Sagrada Familia, Seven-Seven and El Diablo, have been more than a headache for 
the nation's new government. Notorious gangsters such as Lito Rambo, Ameu Van 
Damme, and Kung Fu Master were behind the country's first post-independence 
outbreak of mass violence in 2006. 

But this summer, after riots resulted in 30 deaths and the displacement of 
around 200,000 people in Dili, gang violence appears to have subsided as a 
result of intensified government and initiatives from non-government 
organizations (NGOs). 

The prize for good behavior: a visit by legendary martial artist Jackie Chan. 
For three days in June, Chan toured East Timor to spread a message of hope and 
lead thousands of young men and women in martial arts training. 

"It does not matter what school of martial arts we are from as long as we are 
united. Training for martial arts helps you to strengthen your eyes, your mind 
and your body. When you have a good body and mind, let's help people. Don't 
harm them," was the message from the kung fu master. 

Chan was the logical choice to help tame Timor's gangs. A 2006 study 
commissioned by the Australian Agency for International Development (AUSAID) 
noted that of the 100 known youth gangs in East Timor, approximately 15 to 20 
were martial arts groups, or gangs formed out of martial arts clubs. An 
estimated 70% of Timor's 230,000 young men and women may be active or involved 
in martial arts gangs. 

Many gangs in East Timor have been linked to extortion, theft and illegal 
drugs, which serve as the primary means of livelihood for their unemployed 
members. Gang rivalries are fierce and incidents of gang violence have been 
particularly vicious. Some members killed during gang fights have been beheaded 
by rivals, and there have been cases in which gang members were pulled out of 
hospital beds to be executed. 

Many gangs are also allied with political factions and have carried out various 
acts of political intimidation and harassment, including during the 2007 
national elections. Gangs were used extensively by political factions in 
fomenting the 2006 riots. 

Plan International, an international youth development NGO with offices in 49 
countries, found that 10% to 25% of Timor's youth were involved in the 2006 
riots. This figure is lower than originally thought, but the image of young, 
drug-crazed Timorese men wielding machetes and setting homes on fire will not 
easily be forgotten. 

Timorese gang culture predates independence. Many groups were formed during the 
20-year Indonesian occupation, either as militias for the Indonesian military 
or as part of the Timorese resistance movement. Many are therefore intimately 
linked to the raging social divides in post-conflict Timor. Meanwhile, other 
groups were formed after independence to make up for weak law enforcement and 
the persistent feeling of insecurity. 

The AUSAID-commissioned study noted that youth involvement, particularly among 
males, was fueled by "a sense of disenfranchisement due to a range of factors 
including unemployment, security concerns, and a lack of education". 

In some ways, the gangs in Timor are no different than disaffected youth gangs 
elsewhere, on the streets of countries like Brazil, Colombia and Honduras. But 
Latin American gangs have become more sophisticated over time, transforming 
into transnational criminal networks that operate locally as well as in the 
United States. Central American gangs have an estimated 70,000 to 100,000 
members, including some who have been deported from the United States. They are 
well armed, usually with assault weapons, and have strong links to the illegal 
drug trade. 

Gangs in the Brazilian capital Rio de Janeiro control the favela shantytowns 
and mete out their own justice. 

The Timorese gangs more resemble the youth gangs that proliferated in Sao Luis 
in northern Brazil in the 1990s. Groups named Lack of God, Messengers from Hell 
and Crazy Ducks were also comprised of marginalized young men and women who 
were pushed into gang culture by poverty and lack of opportunity. The Sao Luis 
gangs engaged in various crimes using knives and machetes, sometimes under the 
influence of drugs and alcohol. 

Similarly, the Timorese gangs do not have sophisticated weapons at their 
disposal. Some carry machetes, arrows, stones, slingshots and poisonous darts 
which they use to execute rivals. These weapons are more than enough to sow 
fear among the populace. Foreign aid workers and UN peacekeepers are all too 
aware of the risks of straying from safe routes and into gang-controlled 
territory. Gangs have been known to pelt stones at UN vehicles passing through 
refugee camps. In November 2006, a Brazilian missionary was killed by gang 
members near a hospital in Dili. 

While Timor's problem with gangs appears small by Latin American standards, it 
remains a serious concern. Timor has one of the world's youngest populations, 
with 45% of its population 15 years old and under, according to the UN 
Development Program. Illiteracy and unemployment rates greater than 50% suggest 
a population highly vulnerable and available to gang culture. 

Large-scale efforts to redirect the energies of Timorese youth started early in 
the post-independence era, but the drive intensified after 2006. Chan's visit 
capped efforts by the Timorese government and various NGOs to curb gang 
violence and thus improve Timor's law and order. The initiatives range from 
peace-building training sessions on human rights and non-violence, to 
government-initiated meetings to bring rival gangs together, to youth civic 
education projects and foreign-funded sports clubs and programs including a 
"peace and sport" initiative supported by the government of Monaco. 

The results have been encouraging. Atul Khare, the UN secretary general's 
special representative for Timor-Leste, recently told a forum in New York that 
criminal incidents in Timor this year dropped to 35 incidents per week from 55 
per week last year. In August, two rival martial arts gangs signed a peace pact 
and apologized for their role in the 2006 riots. 

Did Chan's visit lead to this change of heart? It's difficult to say, but it 
looks like kung fu is becoming a positive force in Timor. 

Sheila Oviedo joined the GPI Global Internship for autumn 2008. She is an MS 
candidate at the New School University's Graduate Program in International 
Affairs, concentrating on security and development. 

(Published with permission of the Global Policy Innovations program at the 
Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. 

(Copyright 2008 Global Policy Innovations

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