| Subject: E. Timor Moves Toward Independence
E. Timor Moves Toward Independence
By SLOBODAN LEKIC
DILI, East Timor, Aug. 30 (AP) - Women nursed babies held in shoulder
slings and people joked with U.N. monitors as they waited in long lines to
vote Thursday in a election seen as a historic step toward nationhood for
East Timor.
International monitors hailed the vote as a success and officials
estimated voter turnout at 93 percent. Vendors sold sweets and cold juices
to crowds of voters, who were waiting to chose an assembly that will write
the fledgling nation's constitution.
The vote moved East Timor nearer full nationhood after three centuries
of Portuguese colonial rule, 24 years of Indonesian occupation, and two
years of transitional U.N. administration. A head of state will be
election next April and the 88-member assembly will become the nation's
first parliament.
``Aug. 30, 2001 will be remembered in the history of East Timor as a
demonstration of the capacity of its people to ... confront their
differences in the context of a multiparty democracy,'' said chief U.N.
electoral officer Carlos Valenzuela.
Unofficial results are expected to be announced next week.
There was little doubt the winner would be the Revolutionary Front for
an Independent East Timor, which led the country's independence struggle.
Charismatic resistance leader Xanana Gusmao is expected to become the
Asian nation's head of state after the constitution is adopted.
There had been fears of clashes between supporters of the 16 political
parties competing, but reports said no incidents marred the ballot.
``There was a kind of determination. But it was without tension,'' said
James Kelly, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific
Affairs.
Kelly was among dozens of diplomats and 800 monitors on hand to ensure
that voting took place without intimidation.
``Everything went off so well, it was scary,'' said Saskia Heinz, a
Dutch official at a polling station in Dili.
The only problems reported were overcrowding at some polling stations
and minor glitches such as malfunctioning equipment and missing keys.
Thursday's vote came two years to the day after four-fifths of East
Timorese voted to end Indonesia's bloody occupation of their half-island
province in a U.N.-sponsored referendum. Indonesia invaded East Timor in
1975, after Portuguese rule collapsed.
The Indonesian army and paramilitary groups reacted to the 1999 vote by
going on a rampage of murder, burning and destruction in which hundreds of
civilians were killed and much of East Timor was devastated.
``We struggled for more than 24 years for independence,'' said Mari
Alkatiri, who is tipped to become the first prime minister. ``We've
learned the lesson that even small people have a voice.''
In Liquica, a town 25 miles east of Dili, thousands of people lined up
before polling stations opened at 7 a.m. Officials said almost all its
3,900 registered voters had cast their ballots by midday.
The town gained notoriety before the 1999 referendum when Indonesian
police and members of a militia gang known as Red and White Iron hacked to
death more than 50 people inside the main church.
On Thursday, U.N. peacekeepers and townspeople joked as they waited in
the scorching sun. Some voters used umbrellas or wide-brimmed hats to
block the sun, others shielded their faces with the large UN voter
information sheets.
``This sure ain't like any election I've ever seen back home,'' said
Roger Oglesbee, a U.N. policeman from Vanwert, Ohio.
August Menu
July
World Leaders Contact List
Human Rights Violations in East Timor
Main Postings Menu
Note: For those who would like to fax "the
powers that be" - CallCenter is a Native 32-bit Voice Telephony software
application integrated with fax and data communications... and it's free of charge!
Download from http://www.v3inc.com/ |