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Subject: SMH: Guerilla veteran returns in triumph to Dili
Received from Joyo Indonesia News
Sydney Morning Herald
August 24, 2004
Guerilla veteran returns in triumph to Dili
By Jill Jolliffe in Dili
After a month in hiding, the guerilla hero known as L-7 has made a triumphal
return to the East Timorese capital and supported claims that police shot at him
and other demonstrators on July 20.
"They shot at me but missed, hitting Mario Mendes," said L-7, whose
real name is Cornelio Gama. Police also struck him twice with a truncheon after
pulling him from a taxi as he tried to leave the veterans rights demonstration,
he said.
The original allegations were made by his bodyguard, Oan Kiak, a fortnight
ago but were denied by the East Timorese Government.
Mr Gama arrived in Dili on Saturday from the eastern Baucau region with about
1000 supporters to attend a meeting of disgruntled veterans chaired by President
Xanana Gusmao.
The Prime Minister, Mari Alkatiri, and most of his cabinet attended, facing
angry criticism from a range of veterans' organisations who are pressing for a
cabinet shuffle and the dismissal of the Interior Minister, Rogerio Lobato.
On several occasions ministers were booed as Mr Gusmao struggled to cool
tempers. In contrast, Mr Gama was cheered when he spoke, and much of the debate
revolved around him.
Mr Gusmao had issued more than 2000 invitations to the meeting, some of them
to serving members of the newly formed East Timorese Army, who publicly joined
forces with jobless veterans for the first time.
An anti-Government petition signed by veterans, including army officers from
the rank of major down, was distributed. It called for the restructuring of all
state institutions and warned that East Timor was becoming unstable, and things
would get worse if the Government did not heed the veterans' demands.
There has been no independent verification of the shooting accusations,
although three other people have claimed police fired Glock pistols and teargas
at the crowd. They include Mario Mendes, who has a foot wound.
Mr Gama said his bodyguard's allegations were "not a lie", and that
he had been in hiding for most of the time since the demonstration because
police had been searching for him.
He said that after the demonstration he "changed houses for two or three
nights and then went on to Baucau".
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