| Subject: AU: Tainted Jakarta lobby left
stranded by history
Tainted Jakarta lobby left stranded by history By Scott Burchill
20may02
AS the East Timorese celebrated their hard-won independence overnight,
spare a thought for the Jakarta lobby in Australia, including luminaries
such as Dick Woolcott, Gough Whitlam, Gareth Evans and Paul Keating, to
name only a few. How must they feel?
These men have dedicated much of their professional lives to opposing
just such an event.
Some of them schemed with the Indonesians prior to the 1975 invasion,
receiving a detailed forewarning of the attack without passing it on to
the East Timorese. The result was the greatest mass killing, as a
proportion of the total population, since the Holocaust.
A number sought to regularly protect and exculpate the Suharto regime
from international criticism by understating or even denying Jakarta's
crimes in the territory, while branding critics of the regime's brutality
"anti-Indonesian" and "racist" (Woolcott). Others used
space in Australian newspapers to urge the East Timorese to accept that
their occupation by Indonesia was "irreversible" (Evans) and to
give up their independence struggle as a "lost cause" (Woolcott).
A range of strategies was employed in the effort to thwart East Timor's
independence. Australians were told that Indonesia's boundaries would
"Balkanise" if East Timor was "allowed" to become
independent. In one instance history was rewritten so that the 1990 Dili
massacre, just one in a long sequence of Indonesian atrocities, could be
presented as an "aberrant act" (Evans).
Canberra was convinced to train Kopassus officers, the most brutal
human rights violators in Indonesia's armed forces, and then sign a
resource agreement to share with Jakarta the spoils of their occupation.
Even the right to self-determination was attacked as "not a sacred
cow," at least when it came to East Timor (Woolcott).
Perhaps most shameful of all was Canberra's decision to extend
diplomatic recognition of Indonesia's occupation of East Timor, in
defiance of the UN and the overwhelming wishes of the international
community.
Throughout the dark years from 1975-1999, the Jakarta lobby showed
greater understanding to the perpetrators of crimes committed in East
Timor than for their victims. None has apologised for their behaviour or
admitted their mistakes.
Last night's festivities were not just a remarkable tribute to a people
who fought against enormous odds to win their freedom. It also marks the
moment of ultimate failure for a group of Australians who worked so
assiduously to prevent them from ever taking place.
Scott Burchill is a lecturer in international relations at Deakin
University in Melbourne.
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