http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,20077412-2703,00.html

Official admits mistakes in Timor
Stephen Fitzpatrick, Jakarta correspondent 
August 10, 2006
ONE of Indonesia's most senior officials has admitted that his country was 
directly responsible for failing to stop the murderous chaos that accompanied 
its withdrawal from East Timor in 1998.
Dino Patti Djalal, a senior Foreign Ministry staffer at the time, said the 
withdrawal was conducted in an "irrational" manner and that Jakarta never 
displayed the "heart and will to rein in" Indonesian-backed militia groups who 
slaughtered thousands after East Timor's independence referendum in 1999. 

Speaking at the launch of an analysis of the period by former foreign minister 
Ali Alatas, Mr Djalal - now President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's official 
spokesman - made an impassioned plea for Indonesia to learn from its mistakes 
in East Timor. 

He said that if those lessons were not learned "by political officials and 
security officials, it will not be possible to solve the problems of Aceh, Poso 
and Papua" - all regions that have experienced extreme ethnic and nationalist 
revolt. Aceh has recently come under a new autonomy law after a decades-long 
independence struggle. 

Launching his book, The Pebble in the Shoe: The Diplomatic Struggle for East 
Timor, Mr Alatas claimed that the Suharto regime's 24-year occupation of the 
tiny country had been more benign than was generally recognised and that it was 
Suharto's erratic successor, BJ Habibie, who was responsible for the poor 
decisions. 

Speaking from the floor during a question-and-answer session afterwards, Mr 
Djalal went further, saying Indonesia had misruled East Timor but laying the 
blame for the chaos that accompanied its withdrawal squarely at Dr Habibie's 
feet. 

Dr Habibie, who had replaced the dictator Suharto in 1998, responded petulantly 
to a letter from John Howard at the end of the same year suggesting an autonomy 
option for East Timor. His offer of a referendum proposing independence or 
integration with Indonesia was made in haste and without regard to "the 
situation on the ground", Mr Djalal said. 

"When you sent me to East Timor to assess the situation (in 1999), it was clear 
that the people were not ready there, they did not know the concept (of 
independence)," Mr Djalal told his former boss, Mr Alatas. 

"I have spent many sleepless nights thinking about this because we put a 
timetable straitjacket on the referendum and all because BJ Habibie wanted to 
take the result to the MPR (Indonesia's upper house of parliament). It was not 
rational. 

"We thought we could just splash lots of money about and that would signify 
something. We were wrong. East Timor became a police state, we were bribing 
people we thought were loyal to us, and doing horrible things to people we 
thought were not loyal to us." 

Dr Habibie's eccentric and unpredictable rule has been criticised from outside 
Indonesia but last night's statements were among the strongest to have been 
made at official levels in Jakarta. 

Mr Djalal's assessment was backed last night by a one-time senior Suharto 
administration figure, former industry minister Hartato, who said from the 
floor that the occupation of East Timor was "still an extremely important 
problem for Indonesia" and that it "must become an issue of extreme 
introspection for us -- I very much agree with what the young man has said". 

Mr Alatas responded to Mr Djalal's comments by agreeing that Indonesia must 
learn from its East Timor mistakes and be careful "not to disregard our 
problems in the regions, such as in Aceh and Papua". 

Former ambassador to Australia Sabam Siagian, unlike Mr Djalal an official 
speaker at last night's launch, warned that there was still an overwhelmingly 
Java-centric approach to the way Indonesia's outer islands were administered, 
something that had contributed to the disaster of East Timor and could continue 
to create problems.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. 
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