| Subject: GLW: Jakarta's militia terrorise
refugee camps
TITLE: Jakarta's militia terrorise refugee camps
SOURCE: Green Left Weekly - September 12, 2001
Jill Hickson -- "Where are our missing children? We have nothing
-- no land, no houses, nothing to do, no materials to work with to make an
income. The women here are dying from childbirth because they have no
money for doctors, there is little food and in some camps little water. We
cannot afford to send our children to school or to the doctor." These
were the cries of the women in the refugee camps in Kupang and Atambua
that were heard by six women who visited West Timor in late July as part
of an women's solidarity tour organised by the Asia-Pacific Coalition on
East Timor (APCET).
The women in the delegation were from the Philippines, Malaysia, East
Timor, Indonesia and Australia. The visit was to focus on the plight of
the women and children refugees who were removed, forcibly in many cases,
by the Indonesian military in the days after the East Timor referendum on
independence in August 1999.
I joined the delegation as an independent film-maker and member of
Action in Solidarity with Indonesia and East Timor (ASIET). I was
interested in documenting the situation in West Timor in the same way I
did on the July 1999 APCET women's solidarity delegation to East Timor.
During that visit, I met with East Timorese women who highlighted the
brutality suffered by women at the hands of the Indonesian military
rulers.
Our mission in West Timor was to meet with the women in the camps to
find out their problems and to gauge the sentiment of the women for their
return to East Timor. Although the Indonesian government claims to have
disbanded the militia groups in the camps, we were advised to limit our
discussions to humanitarian issues only.
We visited six camps. Camp Noelbaki is 15km from Kupang and is home to
around 5000 refugees. Tupaukan is 21km to the east of Kupang and has
13,000 refugees. In Atambua, we visited the Haliwen camp, located inside
the stadium with 4000 refugees; Lolowa camp with 3000 refugees; the Tirta
camp with 3000 and Lebur A with 2400 refugees.
In each camp, the refugees tend to come from the same area in East
Timor. For example, in Haliwen, the people are from the Ermera district;
in Lolowa they are from Dili; in Tirta from Manatuto; and in Lebur A from
Aileu.
As we approached Atambua, the capital of the Belu district, some 30km
from the border with East Timor, we were stopped by police and informed
that we would be accompanied throughout our stay in the area.
They claimed this was necessary for security reasons as there has been
an incident in Atambua that day where five houses had been damaged in a
fight between young refugee men and the local people. The local people are
unhappy about the refugees living in their area, especially as they are on
land that used to be accessible to the local people. The next day the
local West Timorese people were planning a protest march in Atambua and
the police feared there would be more violence.
It was in Atambua last September where the militia killed three United
Nations High Commission for Refugees aid workers. Since then UNHCR and
other international organisations assisting the refugees have pulled out
of West Timor. Atambua has been under a "high-level alert" ever
since. The United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET)
has a security rating of "five" on the area, the highest rating.
Throughout our visit to the Atambua camps, we were escorted by four
police officers. They were from the intelligence section of the regional
police department, three of them has been in East Timor before the
referendum. All spoke English so they could listen to our conversations.
Manipulation
We also met with a number of non-government organisations and religious
groups and were able to talk more frankly about violence in the camps and
about the recent registration process undertaken by SATGAS PMP, the
Indonesian East Timor Refugees Task Force set up by the Indonesian
government. In June, the Indonesian government announced that 97% of the
refugees had voted to remain in Indonesia.
While in West Timor we were hosted by the Centre for Internally
Displaced People's Services (CIS GAMKI-GMKI), which, to combat militia
intimidation, provides humanitarian support, investigates human rights
abuses, counsels women victims of violence and disseminates information to
refugees on repatriation.
We also met with the district commander of Kupang, Lieutenant Colonel
Aritonang.
Our meetings with the refugee women and also with Major Rudolf Roja,
the commander of the Mobile Brigade in Kupang who supervised the
registration process (he admitted there had been discrepancies in the
voting), convinced us that the registration process had been manipulated.
The Indonesian government offered to relocate the refugees to an island
off the coast, where the refugees could begin to make a new life for
themselves. The refugees refused to be relocated, stating that they wanted
to remain close to East Timor so they could return in the future. Major
Roja was perplexed at this.
It was clear to the women in the APCET delegation that the recent
registration vote in June was not a true indicator of the desires of the
refugees. For example, the district commander told us that he thought the
refugees were "crazy". He said that people who two days before
had voted to stay in Indonesia, turned up at his office asking to be
repatriated to East Timor.
Another story we were told involved a number of women who voted to
return to East Timor. When the camp coordinator collected the voting
papers, he was so outraged that he called a meeting of the women and
intimidated them into changing their votes. There were also incidents
reported in which women did not get to vote because the men filled in the
voting cards for them.
Conditions in the camps
The majority of the camps we visited were without adequate housing.
They were constructed with tarps and other inadequate materials and had
uneven dirt floors. There was a lack of cooking facilities, privacy and
adequate space. The only camp we visited which had houses was the one that
accommodates the families of the East Timorese members of the Indonesian
armed forces (TNI).
The women at all the camps complained about the inadequate and unequal
distribution of food. The Indonesian government gives 4 kilograms of rice
and 1500 rupiahs per person per day except for infants under 12 months.
However, distribution is controlled by the camp coordinators, who are
usually militia leaders.
The camp coordinators give the money allocated by the government to the
heads of the families, which in most cases are men. The women complained
that the money generally was used for the activities of the men, such as
drinking and gambling. Money and rice were given at irregular intervals,
sometimes monthly or even longer. We heard that two days before the
registration process, there had been deliveries to all the camps of rice
and money.
The women explained that they and their children had many serious
health problems, but there were no doctors in the camps and they could not
afford to pay to see a doctor outside or pay for medicines. Many of the
traditional midwives had returned to East Timor leaving the women without
assistance during childbirth.
At one camp, the deaths of 10 women from childbirth complications in
the month of June were reported. In another, five women had died in one
month. Each visit to a doctor costs R100,000 and the women have no way of
getting the money. The low level of nutrition in the camps was clear from
the appearance of the women and children who displayed a number of
diseases and most had dull eyes.
Due to resentment by the West Timorese of the refugees' use of land
that was previously used by the locals, refugee children are not attending
local schools. Where the Indonesian government had provided schools near
the camps, the women complained that it was compulsory for the children to
wear a uniform that costs R25,000 and they have to pay R10,000 fees per
month for each child. This prevented children from attending school.
The women expressed frustration at the fact that they have nothing to
do. Those with agricultural skills have no land to cultivate. Those with
handicraft and weaving skills have no materials to work with. The women
all expressed the desire to be trained in new skills which would allow
them to generate an income to help overcome some of the problems they
face.
Except for the camp that housed the families of the East Timorese TNI,
all the camps have inadequate toilet and sanitation facilities. The women
expressed concern at the health risks this was creating.
The women also talked of the inadequate clothing available to them. A
lack of underwear for themselves and decent clothing for the children was
seen as a major problem.
Violence
In one camp, women cried as they talked about their missing children,
left in East Timor or their whereabouts unknown. A UN worker in East Timor
informed us that they had located a large group of children in Central
Java who had been removed from East Timor by the Indonesian authorities.
They were negotiating their return to East Timor.
While we were unable to discuss openly the violence they experience, we
had some discrete discussions with individuals and we were able to discuss
the issue with the West Timorese NGOs working in the camps.
Outside the camps there is conflict with the local West Timorese
communities and the refugees. Often the water supply outside the camps,
used by both communities, has been the source of tension. Land access is
another.
Tensions and conflicts in the camps often results in violence among the
men, and between different camps.
The incidence of violence against women, including domestic violence
and sexual assaults, are rife in the camps. Sexual violence includes rape,
forced marriages, husbands having many wives (up to 11 in some cases), the
making and distribution of pornography, and the incidence and spread of
sexual health problems. Payment for prostitution is as low as a packet of
noodles, indicating the desperation of the women for adequate food.
The high incidence of adultery meant that many women suffered abuse by
men who were not their husbands as well as their husbands and this was
also a source of conflict among the men.
In all cases, men perpetrate the violence. The Indonesian government
organisation SATGAS, which carried out the registration process, told us
that the militia were still operating in the camps. The women in the camps
generally referred to them as the "elites" running the camps and
controlling the distribution of food, materials and money.
This situation has created a climate of fear, which has continued
throughout the two years most of the refugees have been in the camps. This
causes a great deal of stress on the women and children. For many of the
women it is a continuation of what they experienced in the past two
decades in East Timor under Indonesian military occupation. This reminded
me of the women we met who had suffered repeatedly under Indonesian rule.
Escape difficult
The social construction of the camps means that many people are unable
to escape. The outer houses surrounding the camps are occupied by the
families of the East Timorese TNI, in the next circle live the members of
the intelligence service and plain- clothes police, and the next circle is
inhabited by militia families.
Inside these live the rest of the refugees. It is not possible to pass
through the camp to the outside without the knowledge of the camp
coordinators. We were told stories of people who had walked out of the
camps, saying they were going up the road to get water and the escaped by
foot to the border without their possessions.
The UN has a border area set aside for refugees who want to return to
East Timor where they can be assessed and their repatriation facilitated
quickly.
Many of the women we met were wives of the militia and TNI. They
expressed their desire to return to East Timor after the constituent
assembly election but they have been told that violence would disrupt the
elections. Some of the men told us they would only return to East Timor
when they knew what would happen to them.
Militia members who have returned to East Timor have in many cases been
sentenced to community work for their crimes. The harshest sentence has
been 12 years' jail.
In one camp, the men interrupted the women and told us that they would
only return with guns in their hands and with the Indonesian flag. It was
here that we got the real sense of the situation in the West Timor camps.
Since the Indonesian military were forced to leave East Timor, the
people there have returned to a normal if somewhat poor existence. The
communities have been rebuilding their houses and their lives and are in
no mood to tolerate being lorded over by the militia. Therefore many
militia-linked men are content to remain in West Timor where they can
continue to control more than 100,000 or more refugees.
When we returned to Dili, in East Timor, the APCET delegation held a
press conference to announce its findings and make a number of
recommendations, the most important being that the Indonesian government
must disband the militia. The UN and international NGOs should take
control of the camps, solve the social problems and facilitate the
repatriation of the majority of the refugees. People who wish to stay
should be given houses and the camps closed down.
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