| Subject: IPS: E. Timor Refugees Left to
Fend for Themselves in W. Timor
Received from Joyo Indonesian News
Inter Press Service March 23, 2002
East Timor Refugees Left to Fend for Themselves
By Prangtip Daorueng
JAKARTA,
Two months after the Indonesian government put an end to humanitarian
assistance to East Timorese refugees living in West Timor, these displaced
people are on the brink of starvation, their lives mired in uncertainty.
Jakarta had hoped stopping the assistance would encourage the tens of
thousands of refugees to leave the camps and either return home or settle
in Indonesia, but this is not happening.
"We no longer have any self-respect," Gustaf L. Lapenangga,
coordinator of the East Timorese refugee camp in West Timor's Tuapukan
village, bitterly told the press. "We are hungry and even sleep in
wet places. It's as though we are animals."
Early this month, Gustaf and coordinators of other camps came to the
regional government office in Kupang regency in Indonesian-controlled West
Timor to ask for help. Many refugees, they said, were struggling to
survive, and emergency help was badly needed to prevent starvation.
Driven to desperation, some people are resorting to crime.
Jakarta says it stopped humanitarian due to a lack of funds. But the
government also hoped that it would ease what could well be a long burden
of hosting refugees, if cutting assistance speeds up the process of
repatriation or resettlement for the refugees remaining in Indonesian
territory.
"It is related. The fact that central government has withdrawn
support will make people decided weather to go back (to East Timor) or to
remain as a part of Indonesia," said M. Riefqi Muna, an expert on
East Timor and executive director of The Ridep Institute, a Jakarta-based
NGO focusing on Indonesian security affairs.
"This will help release the burden for the government since
Indonesia is now full of other problems to be solved," he added.
More than 250,000 East Timorese were forced to flee to West Timor in
1999 after pro-Jakarta militia groups, many backed by the Indonesian
military, went on a rampage of killings in East Timor after it voted for
independence from Indonesia.
With help from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
200,000 refugees have already returned home as East Timor prepares for
independence in May.
The number of refugees remaining in West Timor, however, is still
unclear. Reports from West Timor and inside Indonesia say that around
108,000 refugees are still in West Timor, but the UNHCR and the World Food
Program (WFP) put the number at 70,000 to 80,000.
Whatever the exact figure might be, what is certain is that the
remaining refugees have been suffering more hardships since humanitarian
assistance was halted.
Local media reported that food shortages are forcing people to cut down
on meals or to find alternatives to rice, like cassava. Many refugees have
been eating twice a day.
The situation has worsened since early March. Many desperate refugees
began to search for food in nearby forests around the camps. One camp
coordinator said that many are ending up eating leaves, fruits and all
kinds of tubers for survival.
The deteriorating situation in the camps also creates problems for
local communities near them, who say there have been more thefts and
robberies. Nikolaus Ria Hepa, a resident in Noelbaki village, told the
press: "With the scarcity of food as their motivation, they do what
they want."
In some areas of West Timor, the number of refugees has exceeded that
of local residents.
Meantime, local authorities are going to extremes to address reports of
crime. Recently, local military commander Maj. Gen. Wellem T. da Costa
ordered soldiers to shoot any East Timor refugee found committing violence
against villagers near the camps.
To reduce tensions, the West Timor provincial government announced on
Mar. 6 that it would provide rice to selected refugees in the most
vulnerable situations.
But beyond these issues, it appears that the Indonesian government has
all but decided to let the regional government of West Timor deal with the
refugee situation by itself.
International organizations have expressed understanding for Jakarta's
reasons for ending assistance. The English-language daily Jakarta Post
quoted UNHCR regional director Raymond Hall as saying that while his
organization was concerned about the financial woes that prevented
Indonesia's provision of aid, it was not willing to resume large-scale
humanitarian assistance in West Timor.
Instead, Hall said, UNHCR would only support Indonesia in repatriation
and local resettlement projects, because East Timor was ready to receive
the remaining refugees. "We have confirmed with them that various
assistance including food assistance and local resettlement are available
for them by the time they want to return to East Timor," he
explained.
But the bigger issue is why the tens of thousands of refugees in West
Timor still remain there more than two years after the 1999 independence
vote.
Some reports in the Indonesian media said that the refugees refused to
leave the camps until East Timor officially becomes an independent state
on May 20 this year.
But even before that, international organizations have said there were
obstacles in getting access to the refugees since 1999. Humanitarian
organizations had face high security risks and tight control of the camps
by militia groups.
A Human Rights Watch report in 1999 pointed out that militia groups
have been trying to prevent refugees from returning home.
Based on interviews with a hundred refugees who returned to East Timor
in 1999, the report said militia had used different tactics to discourage
them from leaving West Timor, such as the spread of false information on
security in East Timor, threats and violence.
There were also reports that convoys run by humanitarian organizations
to bring refugees back to East Timor were stopped.
As a result, said the HRW report, many refugees filled out a survey
form that they wanted to stay in West Timor instead of returning to East
Timor, out of fear that their lives would be threatened by militia groups.
"Certain militia groups have used them (refugees) to bargain with
the central government for protection from (East Timor government),"
added Muna of the Ridep Institute. "If the situation in the camps is
still the same (as in 1999 and 2000), it is still difficult for refugees
to make decision to return to East Timor."
Still, he said, he believes many refugees would consider returning
home. "I think they will go back, but on the condition that they will
be welcomed in East Timor. And I think the East Timorese will welcome them
back," he added.
East Timor's leaders have encouraged the refugees to return to help
rebuild the nation. This would also ease the touchy matter of refugees
between the East Timor and Indonesian governments.
Yet the refugees in West Timor are but some of Indonesia's internal
refugees, with many more in different parts of the country from ongoing
conflicts.
A WFP report in January said there are more than 1.3 million internally
displaced persons throughout Indonesia. This includes 260,000 in Maluku,
200,000 in North Maluku, 189,000 in Central and East Java, 301,000 in
Sulawesi, 48,000 from Aceh, and 16,000 in Papua.
Back to March menu
February
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/ |