----------------------------------------------------------
Visit Indonesia Daily News Online HomePage:
http://www.indo-news.com/
Please Visit Our Sponsor
http://www.indo-news.com/cgi-bin/ads1
----------------------------------------------------------

Jakarta Post
18 August 1999

Opinion

East Timor: Waiting for Pandora's Box?

By Aboeprijadi Santoso

YOGYAKARTA (JP): UN envoy Jamsheed Marker's recent visit indicates the
seriousness of international concerns on post-ballot security in East Timor.

However, the East Timorese are no more prone to internal conflict than any
other people. The society should rather be viewed as a Pandora's box, which
time and again tends to open whenever an outside force meddles without
regards to the inhabiting people.

After centuries of colonialism and ignorance, the former Portuguese colony
seems to harbor forces that can mobilize and (re)energize its society
whenever it processes a chance to acquire greater freedom.

The first opening of Pandora's box came when school teachers in Viqueque
protested against the colonial education system in 1959. The uprising --
which might incidentally have been encouraged by Indonesian refugees in the
aftermath of the Permesta rebellion -- was quickly crushed by the Portuguese
army.

Of far greater significance was the second Pandora's box opening: the Anjer
revolution in Portugal in 1974. As soon as some freedom was introduced in
East Timor, political parties sprang up, with a few forces even grabbing
power. The result is well known: civil war, invasion and decades of fighting
and occupation.

But two fundamental aspects should be noticed. First, as John Taylor and
others have shown, Fretilin, the most popular political party, was capable of
mobilizing and energizing the people because they introduced the alphabet and
land reform so as to gain greater leverage vis-a-vis other forces.

Second, this social movement could only be halted when a mighty military
force brutally intervened in the development.

The significance of the 1975 "civil war" should therefore be seen against the
background of foreign military intervention, which started a year earlier
with a military campaign to destabilize the society.

As Col. Dading Kalbuadi, who led this military-intelligence operation, told
the writer in 1995, the operation was inspired by the myth of Lawrence of
Arabia's colonial adventure in the Middle East. A series of attacks to
stimulate a local rebellion in the western districts against society's
mainstream were carried out -that is against the kind of social life under
Fretilin's rule.

The 1974-1975 aggression and invasion were fundamental because they started a
totally different cycle of trouble.

Once East Timor was harshly put under Soeharto's New Order military, which
came into full force in the seventies and eighties, the chances of a new
Pandora box being opened, became very dim indeed.

Increasing suffering and political frustrations strengthened the Catholicism
as a new powerful ideological force. Simultaneously, resistance grew as the
first ever negotiated cease fire, agreed by Fretilin's commander Jose
Alessandro "Key Rala Xanana" Gusmao and Col. Purwanto and implemented with
the consent of then ABRI Commander Gen. M. Jusuf, failed when Gen. L. Benny
Moerdani in 1983 took over the command and renewed the war.

However, thanks to the efforts of the new Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ali
Alatas, the decade ended with the opening up of the territory.

The next Pandora's box opening, therefore, came with the Papal visit and new
diplomacy. Bishop Carlos Belo's intercepted letter requesting a United
Nations referendum, and the unrest, the flying chairs and the call for
referendum at a mass meeting welcoming Pope John Paul-II in 1989 -- were
clear signs of the rising popular resistance.

But it was not until two years later that Pandora's box was reopened
resulting in bloody repression. A new initiative to gauge the opinion of the
East Timorese by the Portuguese parliamentarians and the international press
incited great expectations.

But the initiative failed, and hopes were dashed resulting in a strong public
call for independence at the Santa Cruz cemetery on Nov. 12, 1991. It ended
with massacres and the world witnessed the Timor Pandora's box being brutally
shut up again. The impact was great.

In real terms, though, East Timor remains truly part and parcel of the
Indonesian fabric of state and society. For as Indonesia changed resulting in
the ousting of Soeharto, East Timor too gained a new momentum.

The fourth Pandora's box opening came as May 1998 saw a new student movement
campaigning for transitional autonomy under the leadership of the East Timor
Students and Youths Solidarity Council (DSMPTT).

At the same time the hitherto clandestine resistance came into the open and
joined the new movement. As the pro-independence campaigns were widespread,
hundreds pro-Indonesia residents, mostly teachers, fled.

However, the state's response, this time, was not a sudden action -- but no
less violent. As President Habibie surprised the world with the two- option
policy last January, it became obvious that some state elements had started
to (re)activate armed militias that were staunchly pro-Indonesia.

To let East Timor be an independent neighbor would fully expose the army's
past atrocities and do a great damage to its esprit de corps.

The answer, therefore, is -- alas -- violence with impunity. Will Pandora's
box be closed again by a repetition of "1974-scenario" and in the presence of
the UN?

Given this perspective, it seems logical there would be many concerns about
the post-ballot situation. The Pandora's box dialectic and the issue of "the
morning after (Aug. 30)" should remind us of the founding fathers of this
republic.

Instead of drawing inspiration from a British colonial officer known as
"Lawrence of Arabia", it would be truly wise to learn from one of our own
guru bangsa (national teacher), Ki Hadjar Dewantara.

Had not Ki Hadjar in 1915 already warned state rulers and pressed them to
respect small, different ethnic groups in state life in order to be able to
stand tall with dignity? Ki Hadjar Dewantara wrote it passionately in Dutch
in a pamphlet called Als ik eens een Nederlander was (If I, for a while,
become a Dutchman) that warned the Dutch colonialists of the injustice they
did to the Indonesians.

Incidentally, sometime in the 1980s, an anonymous East Timorese student,
ironically not knowing anything of Ki Hadjar, wrote an unpublished pamphlet
with a similar title: Andaikata Saya Orang Indonesia (If I were an
Indonesian). Like Ki Hadjar, he too raised his voice against "colonialism".
The UN direct ballot will hopefully end the tragic Pandora's box cycle with
the kind of spirit and justice demanded by Ki Hadjar Dewantara and many
others.

The writer is an Indonesian journalist based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Didistribusikan tgl. 17 Aug 1999 jam 20:52:37 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Kirim email ke