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The Australian, 21 February 2000

Diggers Leave Behind Sex Scandal

By MICHAEL WARE in Dili
21feb00

AS the last Interfet troops return home from East Timor this
week, Australian soldiers have become embroiled in another
embarrassing sexual harassment allegation, which the military
has vehemently denied.

An East Timorese human rights watchdog, Yayasan-HAK, says young
women in the town of Maliana, 70km south-west of Dili, claim
drunken Australian soldiers indecently exposed themselves.

The incident allegedly took place on January 9, just weeks after
Interfet units were put on notice after two previous cases of
sexual harassment.

The women involved in the latest incident complained to Interfet
that about six Australian soldiers had been drinking at a
roadside kiosk.

They claimed the men were urinating at the back of the kiosk
when at least one man displayed his genitals and made sexual
advances.

Force commander Major General Peter Cosgrove yesterday told The
Australian a "pretty comprehensive" investigation had found no
substance to the sexual harassment aspect of the complaint.

But he confirmed the army was searching for the soldiers
suspected of being involved so they could be questioned.

General Cosgrove said the men "shouldn't have been there, I'm
not sure they were out of bounds, but they shouldn't have been
where they were".

"First we'd like to find them and then we'd ask them questions,"
he said.

The Military Police's preliminary investigation into the sex
claims has been completed but the file will remain open until
the men are found.

"I was, I guess, relieved that what was a nasty allegation had
no substance in that (sexual) particular," General Cosgrove
said.

But Yayasan-HAK spokesman Joaquim Fonasca said the women
maintained their allegations.

The Maliana allegations follow well-publicised incidents in
November and December where groups of soldiers entered the Dili
home of a family of sisters at night shouting they "wanted a
lady".

When the incidents were made public in mid-January General
Cosgrove said he had no reason to doubt the women's word, that
he "deplored" the acts reported and they were extremely
isolated.

General Cosgrove yesterday produced figures showing only 3.5 per
cent of Australian troops in East Timor had been subject to
disciplinary proceedings, while 8.8 per cent had during the
operation in Somalia and 17 per cent in Rwanda.

In the more recent harassment claims, it is understood the
Australian army units in the area at the time have left Maliana
and recently arrived in Australia or are completing their
repatriation process out of Dili. The soldiers who had been at
the kiosk are suspected to be included somewhere in those
groups.

General Cosgrove seemed to indicate his investigators had not
found the young women allegedly harassed, but had spoken to the
kiosk operator who confirmed the drunken soldiers had been there
but had not abused her.

Mr Fonasca said "the story had been kept closed for some time"
and the human rights staff had only recently been called on.

"Up to some time, Interfet was very careful and endeavoured very
hard to protect and preserve its good image in front of the
international community and the East Timorese community," he
said.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 24 Feb 2000 jam 05:20:28 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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