A decade after independence, East Timor's surprising best friend? Indonesia.

Ten years ago, East Timor was reeling from Indonesia's scorched-earth 
withdrawal after two-plus decades of occupation. Today it sees its huge 
neighbor as a crucial partner.

By Edward Rees, Contributor / May 23, 2012 

Dili, East Timor

Last weekend, a number of uniformed Indonesian military officers were lounging 
about the Dili Beach Hotel drinking coffee, laughing, and shooting pool.

That would have been a shocking sight a decade ago, when tiny East Timor 
(Timor-Leste) was still crawling out of the ashes of a scorched-earth 
withdrawal by Indonesian forces after a 24-year military occupation.

But now, Indonesians are practically everywhere you look in East Timor, never 
more so than this past weekend, when the soldiers were just the advance team 
for the star of the show: A beaming Indonesian President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono, who attended the country’s 10-year independence anniversary as a 
guest of new President Taur Matan Ruak.


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As Asia’s youngest and poorest state enters a new era, it’s doing so with its 
old foe Indonesia as a crucial partner – a once unthinkable proposition after 
the war crimes committed in 1999. But what was once unthinkable is now a 
necessity, and no one knows that more than President Ruak, a former guerrilla 
commander whose forces were once hunted by a younger Yudhoyono, when he was a 
battalion commander here.

Indonesia is home to 240 million people and continues to hold the western half 
of Timor Island. For East Timor’s 1 million people, it is both a potential 
source of capital, expertise, diplomatic assistance – and trouble, as the 
recent past makes all too clear.

Trouble is the last thing East Timor wants again. East Timor has occasionally 
tottered in the 13 years since its independence referendum and the 10 since the 
UN, which administered the country in its most ambitious nation-building 
effort, returned full sovereignty. In the years after the referendum, Indonesia 
permitted cross-border raids by militias. In 2006, a civil war was averted by 
the return of Australian troops and a new UN peacekeeping mission.

New money

Since 2008, East Timor has undergone a dramatic transformation, powered by new 
oil wealth and the rapidly evolving relationship with Indonesia. In 2005 
Timor-Leste’s annual national budget was $200 million. Today, it’s a staggering 
$1.7 billion, thanks to oil production in the Timor Sea, which has swollen the 
coffers of the government’s Petroleum Fund to nearly $11 billion. 

The money has provided the self-confidence and the means whereby the Timorese 
can reengage with Indonesia and the country is awash with Indonesian 
contractors and businesses. Armed with skills and capital, they renovate the 
homes of the new Dili elite, build bridges and extend the power grid into the 
mountains.

They’re also making their mark at the bottom rung of the economy. Groups of 
young Javanese laborers are now seen all over the country. Easy oil money has 
many Timorese unwilling to work for wages, and the underemployed of East Java 
frequently beat the skills and wage demands of those who will.

All this has created ferocious economic growth, although not changes in the 
skills or positions of the workforce. GDP has expanded by more than 7 percent a 
year since 2007, but has come at the price of dramatic inflation, growing 
corruption, and a widening gap between rich and poor.
 
 Humvees and BMWs are 
the vehicles of choice for the nouveau riche in Dili. Timorese and Indonesians 
huddle everywhere making deals. Rich wives sport Louis Vuitton handbags, their 
husbands', flashy gold watches. This new class seeks medical care in Surabaya 
and Singapore, and they pay cash.

But there are concerns that Dili’s oil bubble is dangerously unsustainable, 
with much of the money stolen or wasted. The economy is now 95 percent 
oil-reliant, yet the petrodollars may dry up as early as 2022. Time is short, 
and the list of needs is long. 

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Democratic progress: East Timor election proves peaceful 
Australian-led peacekeepers hunt for rebels in East Timor 

The road network is crumbling, reliable electricity supply remains elusive, and 
the majority of the population remains subsistence farmers who earn less than a 
dollar a day and survive on what they grow. 

Indonesia at the center

President Ruak will be guiding a National Development Plan that projects that 
East Timor will become a middle-income country in the next generation. That 
ambitious goal has Indonesia at its center.

The occupation, generations of intermarriage, and geographical proximity are 
the foundations for the expanding relationship. Some 6,000 Timorese are 
studying everything from human rights to chemical engineering at Indonesian 
universities.
 
Believing that integration into the region is critical, the 
Timorese have made a bid to join the Association of Southeast Asian Nations 
(ASEAN). Singapore blocked the move last year, but the Timorese have Indonesia 
in their corner on the bid. As the largest member of the group, Indonesia 
carries a lot of weight. 

And ties to the once-hated Indonesian security establishment have been 
expanding. Last year, Indonesia's Gen. Tri Sutrisno (ret.) attended a ceremony 
with senior military officials to commemorate the founding of FALINTIL, the 
independence army that fought Indonesia for almost 20 years. Sutrisno presided 
over the 1992 capture of Timorese independence hero Xanana Gusmao, who became 
East Timor's first president and is the current prime minister.

The youthful Julio Pinto, currently secretary of State for defense, arranged 
that visit ,and he represents one vision for the future. Mr. Pinto has warm 
relations with the Indonesian defense and security establishment and was 
educated in Indonesia, where he converted to Islam. He’s also the nephew of 
Ruak.

The military ties have left many Timorese uncomfortable. Many complain that no 
Indonesian military officers have ever been tried for the crimes against 
humanity for which the UN indicted them in 2003. While the lack of justice 
remains a sore point, the official stance in Dili is that Timorese must allow 
Indonesia to reform at its own pace, and that they are in no position to press 
the issue. Washington, London, Canberra, and Tokyo are also mute on the matter.

Since Sutrisno’s visit, a wide array of joint defense and security initiatives 
has been under discussion. At the independence commemoration, and with 
Yudhoyono looking on, Ruak appeared to call for a formal military alliance to 
“safeguard the security ... and well being of our peoples.” 

With general elections planned for July 7, Prime Minister Gusmao seeks to 
continue his program of rapid and dramatic reconstruction of East Timor. He is 
counting on Indonesia’s help. In a recent fundraiser for his National Congress 
for Timorese Reconstruction Party, more than $2.5 million was raised to support 
his reelection campaign, of which 25 percent came from Indonesian companies 
heavily involved in rebuilding East Timor’s infrastructure.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pac ... esia/(page )/2

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



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