Int'l Federation for E.Timor Warns UN:Vote in Jeopardy Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit source - "John M. Miller" For Immediate Release May 24, 1999 Contact: Charles Scheiner, 914-428-7299 John M. Miller (718)596-7668 Int'l Federation for East Timor Warns That East Timor Vote in Jeopardy IFET Urges UN to Take Charge of Security in Indonesia-Occupied Territory NEW YORK - The International Federation for East Timor (IFET) in a letter to Secretary-General Kofi Annan called for "determined action ... by the United Nations to curtail the activities" of paramilitary militias controlled by the Indonesian military now "sabotag[ing] your efforts to solve the problem of East Timor in a peaceful, democratic and fair manner." The letter, sent to Annan and members of the U.N. Security Council, said the U.N. must step in to assure security during the early August vote by the East Timorese on their political status. "We urge you to ask the Security Council for authorization to send U.N. peacekeepers to East Timor - not merely to advise the Indonesian police, but to replace them with people who take the responsibility to protect the population seriously, IFET wrote.=20 "The Indonesian military and its civilian leadership are playing the international community for fools, and the credibility of the United Nations itself is at stake," said IFET. "When you report to the Security Council tomorrow [Monday], we urge you to ask for more than authorization to continue with the process agreed upon on May 5.... [I]n the last two weeks, the Indonesian government has shown no good faith, no indication that it respects the papers it has signed, the institution of the United Nations, or the collective wishes of the international community," the IFET letter added. Since early May, "the militias and their Indonesian military sponsors have become more blatant in proliferating terror throughout East Timor. Since the beginning of 1999, they have forced more than 35,000 East Timorese people to flee their homes, many into paramilitary-controlled virtual prison camps. Killings continue almost every day. The close cooperation between Indonesian police and military personnel and the paramilitaries has become even more visible." IFET has member organizations in 19 countries and includes three international networks. For contact information on IFET members see http://www.etan.org. --30-- The International Federation for East Timor today sent the following letter to the U.N. Secretary-General and Members States of the Security Council International Federation for East Timor (IFET) U.N. Representative: Charles Scheiner PO Box 1182, White Plains, NY 10602 USA Tel:1-914-428-7299 fax:1-914-428-7383 ifet@etan.org May 23, 1999 Hon. Kofi Annan United Nations Secretary-General New York, NY 10017 By fax to 212-963-2155 Dear Excellency, When we wrote to you before you negotiated the May 5 Tripartite agreement, we were concerned about aspects of the popular consultation in East Timor. We are gratified that some of our points were addressed, although the most important ones were not. We understand the importance you place on moving the process forward, with the intention that when a U.N. team was in East Timor it would be possible to increase the pressure on Indonesia to take its security responsibilities seriously. We are encouraged by your selection of Ian Martin to head UNAMET, by the serious commitment to a meaningful peace process we have heard during discussions with U.N. personnel over the past two weeks, and by the forthright statements issued by UNAMET's press spokesman in Dili. Eighteen days have passed since the New York agreements were signed - 20% of the way to August 8. During this period, the militias and their Indonesian military sponsors have become more blatant in proliferating terror throughout East Timor. Since the beginning of 1999, they have forced more than 35,000 East Timorese people to flee their homes, many into paramilitary-controlled virtual prison camps. Killings continue almost every day. The close cooperation between Indonesian police and military personnel and the paramilitaries has become even more visible. In our May 3 letter to you, we expressed concern that Indonesian forces, rather than the United Nations, were given responsibility for security in East Timor during the August consultation. When this was raised after the signing ceremony on May 5, you expressed the need for realism, and asked the journalists "What would you suggest?" Regrettably, during the last two weeks it has become abundantly clear that the Indonesian military are doing everything they can to sabotage your efforts to solve the problem of East Timor in a peaceful, democratic and fair manner. It is as if the April 21 Peace Pact, in which Mr. Alatas placed so much stock during the tripartite negotiations, does not exist. East Timor has become a law-free zone, where Indonesian-backed militias murder and commit mayhem with impunity. When UNAMET spokesman David Wimhurst decries unprovoked militia killings of unarmed civilians, Col. Tono Suratman demands to censor his statements. The Indonesian Foreign Ministry calls U.N. people "biased" when they criticize paramilitary violence. Although U.N. personnel personally observed Indonesian armed forces training militias a few days ago, President Habibie says he needs proof that "rogue elements" of his military are supporting the violence. But it is not "rogue elements"; it is the military from the top down. A few days ago, Gen. Wiranto belittled the U.N. role in East Timor: "They will only give suggestions to the Indonesian Police." Every U.N. person we have spoken with acknowledges that a popular consultation in the current climate of fear would not accurately reflect the wishes of the people of East Timor. Yet the climate continues to worsen, and the U.N. process is proceeding. If the people of East Timor are not able to return to their homes, to live without fear of terrorism, that process will be a cruel hoax. We believe it can still be salvaged, but only through prompt and effective United Nations action to control the military/paramilitary violence. There are fewer than eleven weeks remaining. The International Federation for East Timor will send teams of non-partisan NGO observers to East Timor before and during the August 8 vote, to assist the U.N. in ensuring that the vote is free and fair. U.N. personnel have told us that they will not be responsible for the safety of our observers, and we do not expect any special treatment. But the United Nations is conducting the popular consultation and is therefore responsible for the safety of all people in East Timor people during that period, be they East Timorese, Indonesian, or other nationals. And the U.N. is failing in that responsibility. When you report to the Security Council tomorrow, we urge you to ask for more than authorization to continue with the process agreed upon on May 5. That agreement assumed the good faith of Mr. Alatas and the government he represents. But in the last two weeks, the Indonesian government has shown no good faith, no indication that it respects the papers it has signed, the institution of the United Nations, or the collective wishes of the international community. Their recent unilateral attempt to change the date of the consultation is another example of the low regard in which they hold the agreements they have made with you. In our May 3 letter to you, we asked the United Nations to take responsibility for security in East Timor. Events since then have made that request all the more imperative. We urge you to ask the Security Council for authorization to send U.N. peacekeepers to East Timor - not merely to advise the Indonesian police, but to replace them with people who take the responsibility to protect the population seriously. This must be done as rapidly a possible - each day of delay allows paramilitaries to kill new victims. We suggested that you go to Jakarta to meet with President Habibie to underscore the importance of restoring peace to East Timor; that would still be useful. Perhaps you could go to East Timor as well, to further demonstrate to the Indonesian government and the international community the seriousness of the U.N. commitment to making this process work. On May 17, UNAMET spokesman David Wimhurst said "Words by the Indonesian Government are not enough. Determined action must be taken by the appropriate Indonesian Security authorities to curtail the activities of the armed militias." Words by the United Nations are not enough, either. Determined action must be taken by the United Nations to curtail the activities of the militias. The Indonesian military and its civilian leadership are playing the international community for fools, and the credibility of the United Nations itself is at stake. Thank you for your attention, and for your continued commitment to a just peace process in East Timor. Sincerely, /s/ Charles Scheiner United Nations Representative cc: Security Council Member States, media IFET Member Organizations National Council of Timorese Resistance (East Timor) East Timor International Support Center (Australia) East Timor Relief Association (Australia) Australia-East Timor Association Australians for a Free East Timor Hobart East Timor Committee (Australia) Friends of East Timor, Western Australia East Timor Alert Network (Canada) Canadian Action for Indonesia and East Timor Pacific Concerns Resource Centre (Fiji) Agir Pour Timor (France) Association Solidarite Timor-Oriental (France) Watch Indonesia! (Germany) Gesellschaft fur Bedrohte Volker (Germany) Asian Centre for the Progress of Peoples (Hong Kong) East Timor Ireland Solidarity Campaign Indian Society for Human Rights Free East Timor - Japan Coalition East Timor Information Network (Malaysia) International Platform of Jurists for East Timor (Netherlands) Norwegian Cooperation Council for East Timor and Indonesia Asia-Pacific Coalition on East Timor (Philippines) Com. para os Direitos do Povo Maubere (Portugal) Paz e Justica para Timor Leste (Portugal) A Paz e Possivel em Timor Leste (Portugal) Movimento Christao para a Paz (Portugal) Instituto de Estudios Politicos para America Latina y Africa (Spain) Esttimor Kommitten (Sweden) TAPOL (U.K.) British Coalition for East Timor East Timor Action Network (USA) International Secretariat, Parliamentarians for East Timor ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us 339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org e-mail: nyt@blythe.org ================================================================= nytpac-05.26.99-12:16:29-6125