----------------------------------------------------------
FREE for JOIN Indonesia Daily News Online via EMAIL:
go to: http://www.indo-news.com/subscribe.html
- FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE -
Please Visit Our Sponsor
http://www.indo-news.com/cgi-bin/ads1
----------------------------------------------------------

also: Comment re: first installment of 'East Timor's history ignored'

Jakarta Post
14 August 1999

East Timor's history ignored

Sri Pamoedjo Rahardjo

This is the second of two articles on East Timor.

JAKARTA (JP): The results associated with the rapid development of East Timor
included an increase in the local population's health status and survival
rate. The number of children entering their teenage years increased rapidly.
Despite immense amount of funds poured into the province, the size of the
local economy was not large enough to absorb an increased labor force.

Evidence showed that in the early 1990s, unemployment in East Timor among
East Timorese youth was quite high. Many of them could not be absorbed by the
local economy. This anomaly was due to a population boom, particularly as a
result of the generation born before and during the invasion of those who had
survived. They demanded a better life as a result of their improved education
and had developed a better awareness of their rights.

The demographic changes had obviously worried government officials at the
central level. Social safety valve strategies were hurriedly introduced.

One strategy was to introduce a continuing education scheme for East
Timorese. The youths were encouraged to pursue higher education. The scheme
was meant not only to improve the quality of the local human resources, but
also to delay the demographic pressures entering the labor market. Another
strategy was the offer of jobs to qualified East Timorese from some state
enterprises. However, only a few qualified East Timorese were absorbed in the
labor market outside East Timor.

Unfortunately, the schemes were not packaged and disseminated widely to the
public. Consequently, many did not understand and appreciate the strategy.
Dissatisfaction among youths continued to rise. These social disorders
apparently affected the growth capacity of the local economy. The mass of the
local indigenous economy remained small.

In order to maintain a conducive climate for development, the government had
warranted national stability as a political scheme. In conjunction with these
efforts, security measures were also imposed in East Timor. In order to
maintain internal security, the Armed Forces helped the local government
quell local threats.

At that time, the government had always maintained that local disturbances
should not get out of hand because they could become a threat to the entire
nation. The antiquated assumptions against insurgencies and disturbances
developed from the experience of low economic development levels in the 1950s
and 1960s.

Similar disciplinary actions may have been implemented throughout Indonesia
by local authorities. But in East Timor, the same disciplinary action was
received by some with hatred. The division worsened when the churches became
deeply involved; they interpreted these actions as an act of oppression
toward a minority group. Soldiers who were defending the Republic with their
own lives were seen as human rights violators. There is less media exposure
on the fate of soldiers on a military mission than on alleged human rights
abuses.

Similar responses are exacted from soldiers in other countries when they try
to defend their countries from the threat of attack. To take a few examples,
Filipino soldiers fought back when they were attacked by Moslem insurgent
groups. American soldiers even reacted with abuse during the Vietnam war as
in the infamous My Lai massacre. An over reaction on the part of Israeli
soldiers toward Palestinian civilians was also found. Yet, these actions were
generally considered appropriate.

All of a sudden, poorly informed UN officials heard the cry for "help" from
the affected East Timorese. A series of fact-finding visits by foreign
dignitaries, U.S. senators and congressmen and UN negotiators hurt the
Indonesians more than the help it purported to offer. The Indonesian
diplomats were only armed with their "smiles" which led to nowhere. Had the
international community put their feet in the shoes of the Indonesians,
ill-advised pressure would not have been imposed on the Indonesian
government.

The world body had been successful in denying Indonesia recognition of East
Timor as part of Indonesia. This was reversed when an Indonesian official
sent confusing signals with regards to the East Timor issue by agreeing to
put the matter to a ballot. Tagging prointegration proponents as
troublemakers did not encourage Indonesian leaders to put up a diplomatic
fight to retain East Timor. A few months ago, the same person who confirmed
the integration of East Timor as Indonesia's 27th province abandoned this
stand. No wonder, the prointegrationists out of control actions reflects
feelings of abandonment.

Indonesians should have emulated the ASEAN commitment to achieve harmony in
East Timor. After all, Indonesia was committed to ensuring regional security.
Peace in the region had been achieved through Indonesia's active involvement
in peacekeeping efforts in Cambodia and the Philippines. The country's
achievement of relative harmony and peace in East Timor in these last years
was wrested by outsiders from the ASEAN region.

Indonesians should learn from history how a country disintegrates. After the
Soviet Union introduced Perestroika, the integrity of the European communist
countries began to collapse. New countries were born. The Soviet Union,
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia disappeared from the world map. The part of
Yugoslavia that refused to comply with disintegration efforts was deemed a
Serbian ethnic cleansing scheme. Will Indonesian be next on the
disintegration and disintegrated agenda?

The presence of Rapid Deployment Forces close to the East Timor's southern
border implies a possibility of foreign intervention in the event that
Indonesia does not compromise. Unfortunately, our politicians were busy with
issues on the distribution of election seats, and the government, trying hard
to be associated with populist moves, forgot the importance of this threat.
This is in contrast to our ASEAN friends' minimum reaction toward the East
Timor issue, which shows respect for the sovereignty of the Republic of
Indonesia.

The escalated conflict in East Timor could have been avoided, had the
international community been willing to respect the background of the
Indonesian presence in East Timor. The underlying fact is that the move was
not an act of colonization. The Indonesians were invited to help stop the
bloodshed in 1975 that threatened to spill over its boundaries, a move that
would have won approval even from human rights proponents then. The heart of
the issue is the perceived inequitable development, the unequal capacity to
compete for local opportunities, and an absence of cultural sensitivity on
the part of some individuals in the government and local settlers.

In conclusion, all Indonesians, including all our brothers and sisters in
East Timor, should wake up and resolve to solve threats toward national
disintegration. The lower rupiah value means loss of the people's trust in
the economy, but it should not result in a loss of nationalism. With double
standards around the globe, what is justifiable for one country may not be
seen as such in another. The conflict in Northern Ireland between Catholics
and Protestants and in the Middle East between Israelis and Palestinians is
just the same wine in different bottles.

The writer is a social and economic observer.

------------

Comment by James Dunn re: first installment of East Timor's history ignored

It is really important that Indonesians should get the history of
integration right. It was not like Goa at all. In the case of Goa, which was
seized at a time when the Portuguese dictator, Dr  Salazar, was refusing to
talk to the Indians over their claim to the colony. And while it was a
miilitary invasion there were few casualties, for the invading troops acted
with considerable restraint and sensitivity. In Timor's case when the
invasion occurred a programme of decolonisation, with the option of
integration clearly on the agenda, was under the way, and Indonesia's
official position was that it had no claim to East Timor. The territory's
future was up to the Timorese people to decide. And most Timorese clearly
wanted to go their own way, as should have been expected because of their
separate identity and distinctly different hostorical experience. The
military intervention was not in response to a genuine Timorese invitation,
not least because it really began more than a month before the so-called
Balibo Declaration, a document which seems to have been drawn up not by
Timorese Apodeti members but by Bakin operators led by Colonel Sugianto.

In short ABRI's intervention was not in response to a Timorese invitation,
but the culmination of a conspiracy by a group of Suharto's generals to
prevent East Timor from becoming independent, and to bring about integration
by stealth. The reality contradicts the legitimacy of Indonesia's military
intervention, and explains the tenacious Timorese resistance to integration.
The forthcoming plebiscite is in effect the act of self determination the
people of East Timor were denied 24 years ago. It offers both Indonesia and
the people of East Timor an opportunity to restart their relationship on the
basis of truth as well as justice, and develop a relationship that will
blossom and endure.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Didistribusikan tgl. 14 Aug 1999 jam 00:40:42 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Kirim email ke