| About East Timor and the East Timor Action
Network Estafeta is the Portuguese word for messenger. In East Timor, it is
used for the young people who, with great courage and ingenuity, carry messages throughout
the resistance and civilian underground.
East Timor is a
half-island the size of Massachusetts located 400 miles northwest of Australia. It was a Portuguese colony for four centuries, and its 600,000 people briefly
tasted independence following the anti-fascist Portuguese revolution in 1974. But peace
and nationhood was short-lived.
On December 7, 1975, Indonesia invaded East Timor after getting the "green
light" from President Ford and Secretary Kissinger. Indonesian armed forces still
occupy East Timor, with essential military and diplomatic support provided by the United
States.
More than 200,000 East Timorese people (one-third of the pre-invasion population) have
been killed by massacre, forced starvation and disease. But the people of East Timor
continue to struggle for their legal and moral right to self-determination.
Systematic campaigns of rape, murder, torture and arbitrary
arrest have terrorized the population, and natural resources (including oil, coffee
and marble) were pillaged by Indonesian dictator Suhartos military-business complex.
Massive human rights violations persist: during 1997, the East Timor Human Rights Centre
documented 771 arbitrary arrests, 52 deaths, and 155 incidents of torture, in spite of
increased attention following the award of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize to two East
Timorese leaders.
Heightened international awareness of the horror of East Timor arose after November 12,
1991, when Indonesian soldiers acting under high-level orders killed more than 270 nonviolent demonstrators at Santa Cruz Cemetery in Dili, East Timor. Unlike many
previous such massacres, this one was witnessed
by foreign journalists, whose video footage and photographs documented the incredible
courage of the youthful demonstrators and the horrific inhumanity of the Indonesian
army.
The East Timor Action Network was created in response to the Dili massacre. ETAN
is a grassroots movement of more than 7,000 members, with local chapters in 18 cities and
states. We work for human rights and political
self-determination for the people of East Timor. Changing US government policy is key to ending Indonesias occupation. We in the US have the freedom to
engage in peaceful protest with (to say the least) much less risk than East Timorese and
Indonesians; its a privilege we shouldnt take for granted.
East Timor is not essential to Indonesia - Foreign Minister Ali Alatas has called it
"a pebble in our shoe." ETAN embraces tactics from public education to protest,
lobbying to local
organizing, resource production to media work. We helped stop US
military training aid to Indonesia in 1992, and have maintained limitations on such aid
ever since. Our grassroots pressure led to cancellation of several major weapons sales to Indonesia, including F-5 and F-16
warplanes, and helped to achieve a prohibition on US exports to Indonesia of small arms,
riot control equipment, armored vehicles and helicopter-mounted equipment. Last November,
we pushed into law an effective ban on the use of US weapons in
East Timor, and we are now working to stop all US military
support for the Indonesian army.
More and more Indonesians are working to replace Suharto with a
democratic government, and many in that movement endorse self-determination for the East
Timorese. ETAN works closely with such Indonesians and others struggling against the
Jakarta regime.
Since ETANs formation in 1991, Indonesia has spent many times our budget for
lobbying and public relations. But we have what their money cant buy - the support
of people who believe in basic human values. We maintain an office in Washington, where
staffer Lynn Fredriksson educates politicians and
increases East Timors profile among other groups in the capitol. Kristin Sundell, our full-time field organizer,
travels the country, training activists, starting new ETAN chapters and sparking
grassroots pressure on elected representatives and corporations.
ETAN is made up of people
like you who contact their representatives in Washington,
protest, and educate others about the situation in East Timor. We survive on your generous
donations of time, talent and money. Please join us, and thank you. |