| Subject: BBC: Gusmao calls East Timor
refugees home
Thursday, 4 April, 2002, 13:59 GMT 14:59 UK
Gusmao calls East Timor refugees home
[Xanana Gusmao addresses refugees in Atambua]
Mr Gusmao told the refugees they were needed The East Timor
independence leader, Xanana Gusmao, has urged refugees still living in
Indonesian West Timor to return home in time for the 14 April presidential
elections.
Mr Gusmao told a crowd of some 10,000 refugees in the West Timor border
town of Atambua that they must experience the joy of independence along
with their compatriots.
The refugees fled from the east during widespread violence following
the vote for independence in 1999.
The number of refugees returning home has dramatically increased
recently. Four thousand people were repatriated last month, the highest
figure for two years.
The BBC's Richard Galpin says the refugees have been particularly
encouraged by Xanana Gusmao's decision, as the leader of the long
resistance to Indonesian rule, to contest the presidential election, which
he is widely expected to win.
But some 60,000 remain, many of them members of militia groups who
opposed East Timor becoming independent or are intimidated by the militias
into staying put.
Symbolic transport
Our correspondent, who is travelling with Mr Gusmao, says the
independence leader chose to travel by road rather than by helicopter to
demonstrate that he trusted the Indonesian security forces and the
West-East border route was now safe.
[Gusmao meets young refugees]
Gusmao promised the refugees they would be safe
His first stop was Atambua, where the majority of East Timor refugees
live.
"I guarantee security in East Timor. Therefore I am asking all of
you to immediately make a decision on returning to East Timor," he
told a cheering crowd
He pledged that none would face any serious acts of retribution, as law
and order had been restored.
But he warned that: "Freedom does not mean things will immediately
change for the better. That is why we have to work together".
Intimidation
The United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, says militia leaders seek
to persuade people it is still too dangerous to return home.
Mr Gusmao, a former guerrilla leader, has implemented a series of
initiatives to persuade the remaining refugees to return home before the
elections.
He has repeatedly said he supports granting amnesties to former
militiamen to encourage refugees to return to East Timor.
There are also cash incentives set up by the Indonesian Government to
encourage families to go home.
The UN will continue administering East Timor until it assumes full
independence next month, but the province has already held its first
democratic election, won last August by East Timor's veteran independence
party, Fretilin.
Fretilin - the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor -
spearheaded the fight for independence from Indonesia in East Timor, which
was a Portuguese colony before 1975.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1910000/1910863.stm
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