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August 26, 2001 Los Angeles Times
THE WORLD / EAST TIMOR
The Little Country That Wants to
By DAVID DEVOSS, David DeVoss is a former Time magazine bureau chief
for Southeast Asia who helps coordinate a print-media development program
for Internews in East Timor
The East Timor branch of Portugal's Banco Nacional Ultramarino in Dili
looks like a modern financial institution. It has a smiling receptionist,
an unctuous guard and executives seated behind desks papered with
documents. But don't bother asking for a Visa card, a letter of credit or
interest on any money you might deposit. The bank's deputy director, Rui
Peixe, can't even extend home loans to deserving families.
"How do you expect me to extend mortgage loans when all the land
titles are destroyed?" he asks with a sigh. "I'm working in a
country that's still writing all the rules. This is frontier
banking."
That East Timor even has an air-conditioned building that calls itself
a bank is something of an accomplishment, given the fact that 80% of the
country's houses, government buildings and municipal utilities were
destroyed two years ago after 78.5% of the population voted to secede from
Indonesia. That remarkable act of democracy was followed by a paroxysm of
hellish violence, during which 1,000 people died and 300,000 were driven
from their burning homes by Indonesian army officers and their militia
compatriots. When a United Nations peacekeeping force composed of
Australians and New Zealanders arrived three weeks later, what once had
been Indonesia's 27th province lay broken, charred and silent. This week,
East Timor will hold another election. Under the fretful gaze of the U.N.,
qualified voters will go to the polls on Aug. 30 to elect a constituent
assembly charged with writing a formal constitution. Once that task is
complete, Timor will elect a new president and formally declare
independence. Most Timorese hope the process will conclude by Nov. 28.
That was the day in 1975 when the former Portuguese colony declared
independence before being overrun nine days later by Indonesia.
This is the first time the U.N. has attempted to create a new country.
To ensure success, it annually spends $563 million in support of a mission
second in size only to the one administering Sierra Leone. The 11,000
soldiers and civilians who comprise the United Nations Transitional
Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) accomplished a lot in two years.
Peace has been restored and all but 40,000 refugees in Indonesian West
Timor have been repatriated. There is a credible defense force, a
functioning constabulary and an indigenous civil service ready to take
over when the U.N.'s civilian workforce departs. "Even the harshest
critics must be surprised that the United Nations has turned ashes and
debris into a functioning state heading fast toward a democratic
future," boasts Sergio Vieira de Mello, the U.N.'s chief
administrator.
Unfortunately, Timor's success is by no means assured. The government
that emerges from next week's election will be an international mendicant
that relies on foreign aid for two-thirds of its $65-million budget.
Outside of Dili, the roads are crumbling and electricity is sporadic. In
the isolated enclave of Oecussi, which the U.N. has made no attempt to
rebuild, the situation is so bleak that some leaders believe the
district's survival will hinge on reintegration into Indonesia. How can
the U.N. assume absolute control of a place without ensuring pure drinking
water, regular trash collection or adequate transportation? "Because
our job is to provide administration, not government services,"
explains Peter W. Galbraith, UNTAET's top-ranking American.
The difference between expectation and reality lies in the divide
between $65 million--the amount spent rebuilding East Timor--and the $365
million that goes to employ, shelter and air-condition U.N. peacekeepers
and bureaucrats. The international lifestyle long has been a source of
resentment for Timorese living in Dili. Some worry the subdued anger could
flare when foreigners begin to depart, taking with them all the U.N.-owned
SUVs, computers and air conditioners that have been reserved for their
personal use.
Ironically, the U.N.'s departure could hasten the redevelopment of
Timor's crumbling infrastructure. Under UNTAET, responsibility for highway
maintenance and repair has been given to a battalion of engineers from
Bangladesh who favor smudge pots and hazard tape over rebar and asphalt.
Not surprisingly, roads leading from Dili into the interior often resemble
those linking Chittagong with Dhaka. A shift to bilateral assistance will
remove the U.N. bureaucracy and allow funds to go to experienced private
construction firms.
For two years, the United Nations' presence has masked the looming
reality of Indonesia, a powerful neighbor that must be mollified if East
Timor is to survive. Under recently deposed President Abdurrahman Wahid,
Jakarta did little to disarm militias or reform its rapacious army. New
President Megawati Sukarnoputri says she wants to expand the scope of an
Indonesian human-rights tribunal investigating violence in East Timor, but
her ability to control the army remains in doubt. Army leaders have
denounced UNTAET's decision to keep a "robust presence" guarding
the border after the election. But it is exactly such a presence that
could be the key to maintaining peace on the divided island.
One immediate act of good faith that would signal an improved
relationship would be for Megawati to honor an agreement that was signed
and immediately forgotten by Wahid more than a year ago. It calls for
reopening the border separating East and West Timor to commercial traffic.
The move would provide a market for Oecussi cattle ranchers and allow West
Timor vendors to supply goods that currently must be shipped in from Java
because of the 200% export tax arbitrarily imposed by the Indonesian
military.
A recent study by the National Democratic Institute for International
Affairs suggests that "there is significant fear [in East Timor] that
multiparty political competition will lead to conflict and violence,"
but most observers believe next week's election will be peaceful. They are
less sanguine, however, about the presidential race, which revolutionary
leader Jose Alexandre "Xanana" Gusmao is expected to win. Xanana,
like 1996 Nobel Peace Prize-winner Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, is a
living icon in East Timor. But several recent business deals--one of them
involving $2 million received for an illegal shipment of teak--raise
questions about the type of government he might form.
East Timor's new president won't be strapped for cash. Offshore oil and
gas reserves discovered and developed by Australia are expected to provide
close to $7 billion in revenues over a 20-year period once a pipeline to
Darwin, built by Phillips Petroleum, is completed in 2004. Shipped across
the Pacific to a regasification terminal currently being developed by
Phillips and El Paso Energy Corp., most of the 680 million cubic feet of
natural gas produced each day will be sold to energy-hungry California.
One potential threat to stability is the generational divide separating
the country's Portuguese-speaking political establishment from the
Indonesian-educated younger generation. Neither feels much kinship for the
other, and existing differences are exacerbated by the presence of 1,350
Portuguese nationals, many of them teachers, who, having failed to get the
escudo named East Timor's national currency (that distinction belongs to
the U.S. dollar), now hope to make Portuguese the official language.
The Portuguese deny their goal is to resurrect a colonial relationship.
"We are here because of the heart," explains Luis Miguel Ribeiro
Carrilho, who heads the U.N. civilian police force. "We must repay
our debt to history."
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