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The Australian
24 July 1999

Guerillas take battle to ballot

After 24 years of fighting, East Timor's Falantil guerillas want ballots not
bullets, writes SIAN POWELL in Dili.

"THEY kill our people", he said. "But we cannot shoot them; if we shoot them,
they kill more people."

Fuik, the deputy commandant of a cadre of Falantil, the East Timorese
resistance fighters, has known the frustration of staying his hand while
militias and, he says, the Indonesian army, terrorise and intimidate the
people of the mountains west of Dili.

A thick-set man dressed in ordinary trousers and a T-shirt, he appeared out
of the darkness late on Thursday night to sit in a smoky, candle-lit hut and
tell Falantil's story.

Fuik means animal of the jungle in the East Timorese language of Tetum and,
although he did not want to give his name for obvious reasons, his nom de
guerre is oddly appropriate.

Like many of the other 700 members of Falantil in his region, which covers
most of the western part of the province, he spends a great deal of time
living rough in the bush, eating cassava and, occasionally, when times are
particularly hard, leaves from trees.

Times have been hard lately: Fuik estimates that 2300 refugees are now living
with Falantil in the forest in the western region, driven from their homes by
militia threats and outright violence. Malaria is rife and food is in short
supply. The people of the local villages do their best to help.

"Sometimes we have many problems with food, but our local people support us.
The aid agencies are not here," he said.

The fear of punitive retribution on villagers and the edict from Xanana
Gusmao, the imprisoned hero of the resistance, has kept Falantil from
wreaking revenge. The last substantiated Falantil killings were in May, when
three members of TNI, the Indonesian army, were executed near Viqueque. It is
the TNI that draws most of Falantil's wrath, despite the havoc wrought by the
militias.

Both the Besi Merah Putih and Naga Merah militia groups have strongholds in
nearby villages. Yet Fuik said many members of the militias had no choice but
to sign up. It was join or be killed.

"A lot of the militias are not bad people, they are our people," he said.
"Some of the militia are my friends."

Fuik said a local ceasefire, agreed to by the Falantil, the police and the
TNI on Tuesday, might finally allow some members of the local brigade to
return to a more normal life.

They want to register for the vote on independence, which is now scheduled
for August 21 or 22, and some of them at least, want to come down from the
forests and campaign for freedom. "We want to campaign to fulfil the rules of
UNAMET (the UN mission in East Timor)," he said.

"But I don't think we need to campaign, because the public already knows what
we think."

Fuik is 36 and he is one of the lucky ones. He sent his wife and three
children to Melbourne three months ago to stay with his grandmother, to keep
them from the militias' violence. The families of others in the resistance
movement, who are often known to militias, are routinely terrorised. "They
must survive," he said.

The battle, of course, is for the future of East Timorese children. Fuik is
reasonably sure that, after an initial shaky decade of independence, East
Timor, sustained by oil reserves, could maintain some form of stability.

If independence is not won, Fuik, along with most of his comrades, will carry
on the battle. "Before Indonesia invaded, we were free, and for the past 24
years we have learned a lot of lessons from the Indonesians; 250,000 of our
people have been killed," he said. "Independence is our only choice."

A vote for independence would by respected by Indonesia, he thought, for
purely pragmatic reasons. "We believe in the international community and we
think that Indonesia has already experienced a huge problem, and they won't
be brave enough to make an open war. But we are always cautious because for
24 years we have come up against the Indonesian army."

He said he could not imagine that the majority of East Timorese would vote
for autonomy within Indonesia: "It is impossible, it is impossible."

Yes, he said, the people were afraid but they would vote for freedom when the
crunch came. "For 24 years, our people have suffered. This is a golden
opportunity that will not be repeated."

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is expected to decide on Monday whether
conditions in East Timor will allow a vote on its future next month, UNAMET
spokesman Hiro Ueki said yesterday.

He said UNAMET began its own progress review yesterday, which could be
crucial in determining whether the vote will proceed as planned.

"A series of (review) meetings are scheduled for this weekend," he said,
adding UNAMET chief Ian Martin would then forward his assessment to Mr Annan,
who will make the final decision.

Mr Annan said in New York on Wednesday that, despite some "positive
developments", he was still dissatisfied, urging Indonesia to make further
efforts to rein in anti-independence militias.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 23 Jul 1999 jam 20:33:26 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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