http://newsweek.com/nw-srv/issue/12_99b/printed/int/wa/ov2512_1.htm


Blame It on Habibie

A leading opposition figure says the world shouldn't
confuse the discredited
government with the Indonesian people

By Megawati Sukarnoputri

Indonesia's international reputation has suffered
terribly as a result of
the human tragedy in East Timor. The daily barrage of
news about our country
and people portrays us as a nation that loves to kill
and torture. Friends
and associates abroad report that Indonesians are
subjected to taunts and
disdain everywhere they go. We are accused of murder,
torture and violations
of basic human rights. The outside world seems to
believe that we have lost
our sense of humanity. It is as if the tragedy of
East Timor has not claimed
enough victims - now the whole Indonesian people have
been dragged unfairly
into the mess. As an Indonesian citizen, I am
saddened, concerned and
ashamed.
I would like to assure the people all over the world
who are shocked and
outraged by the terror they are witnessing in East
Timor that the Indonesian
people share these same feelings, and more. I stress
the Indonesian people -
because they should not be equated with the
transitional government of B. J.
Habibie, a regime that neither represents nor
reflects the views and
aspirations of its constituents. The root cause of
this dual tragedy, both
East Timor's and Indonesia's, can be found in the
attitude and stance of a
government that sacrifices the public interest for
its own narrow political
and personal interests.
To many leaders of the world, Habibie appears to be a
democrat, a supporter
of human rights. That is a pity. The international
community, including the
world's media, has elevated him to this undeserved
stature. In fact,
Habibie's government is a continuation of Suharto's
New Order regime; they
are one and the same. The facts speak for themselves:
violations of human
rights have not let up; state funds are
misappropriated on a staggering and
damaging scale. The most telling sign of Habibie's
undemocratic attitude is
his rejection of the results of the June general
election. To date, he
refuses to accept the victory of the Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle
(PDI-P) under my leadership. The vast majority of the
Indonesian people have
rejected Habibie and his Suharto-clone regime. So he
is pushing to retain
power by any means necessary - which leads directly
to the pervasive fear
and upheaval throughout the country. His latest
political victims are the
people of East Timor.
The recent round of trouble began last January.
Habibie suddenly and
irresponsibly announced that the people of East Timor
could hold a
referendum to choose between autonomy within
Indonesia and independence. Why
did he do it? To score political points as a
"democrat" and supporter of
freedom and justice. At first, it worked; the news
drew praise from around
the world. People thought the president was opening
the door to freedom for
the Timorese; in fact he was opening the door to
disaster.

I was the first leader of a political party to
express concern that a
tragedy - such as we are now witnessing in East Timor
- could occur if the
referendum proceeded under the terms Habibie had
proposed. I was fully aware
of the risks I was taking by raising these objections
- some have
subsequently tried to portray me as a foe of Timorese
self-determination.
>From the beginning, I have endorsed the substance of
the referendum. But its
procedures were flawed. We are in the middle of a
political transition in
Indonesia. The current government is headed by a
transitional figure who is
tainted by his association with the Suharto regime
and by countless scandals
since Suharto stepped down. Habibie lacks the
political legitimacy and
popular support to handle sucessfully a referendum on
East Timor's freedom.
What was the international community thinking when it
joined with Habibie on
this dangerous course and schedule for East Timor?

I met with diplomats from many countries and
registered my concerns about
what could happen in East Timor if the referendum
were held under
Indonesia's uncertain political conditions. At my
last such meeting, with
the special envoy of the secretary-general of the
United Nations to East
Timor, Ambassador Jamsheed Marker, I urged a delay -
not a cancellation - of
the referendum. My proposal was to hold off on the
referendum until we had a
change of government, a new Parliament and a stable
and legitimate national
leadership. No one listened. Now my worst fears about
East Timor have come
true.

The way forward is clear. First, the international
community should halt the
demonization of the Indonesian people. We know too
well about violence and
abuses of human rights - but as victims, not
perpetrators. Second, the
violence and terror in East Timor must stop
immediately. And third, the
government of Indonesia, the United Nations and the
entire international
community must work together to build a lasting peace
that will allow the
East Timorese to pursue a safe and secure future of
their own choosing.

Sukarnoputri is Indonesia's leading presidential
candidate.

Newsweek International, September 20, 1999





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