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The Nation [Bangkok]
Wed Aug 25, 1999

EDITORIAL: Still not too late to send in peace-keepers

It is clear that with less than a week to go in the historic referendum
the United Nations and the global community have utterly failed the
people of East Timor.

The ballot has already been postponed twice because of concerns over
security and voter intimidation by pro-Jakarta militias. This time,
however, the UN is adamant that the Aug 30 referendum will go ahead
despite mounting violence, even as the campaigning moves into the final
few days.

On Monday about 450,000 East Timorese voters will choose between
accepting or rejecting autonomy under Indonesia. A ''No'' vote will
ultimately lead to independence for this half-island, which Indonesia
invaded in 1975. However, it is almost certain that the vote will be
carried out in most parts of the troubled territory in an atmosphere of
fear and intimidation.

The UN has been told time and again that the Indonesians cannot be
trusted to ensure security in the run-up to the vote. The few UN police
advisors who are there are so helpless in containing the violence that
they cannot even protect UN personnel, let alone the East Timorese.

UN offices and vehicles have been shot at or stoned by angry pro-Jakarta
mobs. In the latest incident, on Saturday, UN district electoral
officers came under militia attack at their home in the town of Ainaro.
No one was hurt, but the staff had to retreat to the police station for
safety. Death threats have also been issued against several UN
translators.

But most worrying are the growing attacks against East Timorese who back
independence. Many have sought refuge in churches; others are too scared
to campaign openly against autonomy. The pro-Jakarta militias' game plan
is clear, to stop independence supporters from turning out in force for
the vote. That Jakarta troops are the ''black hand'' in this plan is
beyond doubt. Not only are they unwilling to stop the violence, many
plain-clothes soldiers have been spotted taking part in pro-autonomy
rallies.

It is the post-referendum period that the UN, and the world, must worry
about most. While the referendum may be unfair and unfree, it is a
foregone conclusion that the result will be an emphatic rejection of the
autonomy offer. Pro-Jakarta forces have vowed that there will be war in
the event of such a verdict. Moreover a leaked government document
revealed that the Indonesian military could launch a scorch-earth
policy, burning, looting and destroying anything of value in East Timor
as they withdraw.

In the light of this, a group of three visiting US senators issued a
plea last Saturday for the immediate dispatch of armed UN peace-keepers.
Indonesia will no doubt vehemently oppose such an armed UN presence, but
it has only itself to blame. The agreement it signed with Portugal and
the United Nations in May stipulates that responsibility for the
security in the run-up to, during and immediately after the ballot rests
with the government. The mounting violence goes to prove that Jakarta is
unable to live up to the agreements.

It may be too late to send armed peace-keepers before the Monday vote
given the infamous inertia of the UN bureaucracy Deploying thousands of
troops from neighbouring countries could take weeks, and yes, the UN
does not normally deploy peace-keepers without the green light from
Washington, which has been unusually quiet on the subject. It is
surprising that a United States that is so missile-happy in Yugoslavia
should be so slow in responding to the growing mayhem in East Timor.

Nevertheless better late than never. Just about everyone is warning that
East Timor is a bloodbath waiting to happen. We must heed that warning.
In Rwanda the world sat on its hands despite numerous warnings of
possible bloodletting. We cannot and must not let it happen again, this
time to East Timor.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 25 Aug 1999 jam 23:15:49 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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