Subject: Ex-Militia Members Set Up Organization
The Jakarta Post
Monday, November 28, 2005
Ex-Militia Members Set Up Organization
Yemris Fointuna , The Jakarta Post, Kupang
Former members of the pro-Jakarta militias that rampaged through East
Timor in 1999 are forming an organization to protect the rights and
privileges they feel the government they fought for is now denying them.
The organization will be chaired by Eurico Gueterres, a militia leader
found guilty of atrocities in East Timor, now Timor Leste, before and after
the 1999 independence referendum in the former Indonesian territory. The
group's secretary-general will be Joanico Cesario, a former militia leader
in Baucau, East Timor.
Eurico, whose appeal of a five-year jail sentence for his activities in
East Timor is waiting to be heard by the Supreme Court, said the
organization was established to assist former militia members who had been
largely abandoned by Jakarta since Timor Leste gained independence from
Indonesia in 1999.
He said many former pro-Jakarta militia members were still living in
decrepit camps along the Indonesian border with Timor Leste, forgotten by
the government they fought for.
"They fought to keep Indonesia intact, risking their lives, but the
Indonesian government has ignored their sacrifices," said Eurico.
He said the government treated former members of the separatist Free Aceh
Movement better than those who fought for Indonesia in East Timor, giving
the former rebels amnesty and money to help ease their return to society.
"It is ironic," said Eurico, the former commander of the Red White Iron
militia.
He said a formal announcement would soon be made on the establishment of
the organization, claiming that the group had already set up offices in
several regencies and cities in East Nusa Tenggara and had thousands of
members.
The pro-Jakarta militias, which the United Nations has said were
recruited and directed by the Indonesian Military, went on an arson and
killing spree before and after the East Timorese voted for independence in a
UN-sponsored ballot in August 1999.
They reportedly killed about 1,400 independence supporters and laid waste
to much of the infrastructure in the half-island, which was a Portuguese
colony before Indonesia annexed and invaded it in the mid-1970s.
Members of the pro-Jakarta militias were denied citizenship by the Timor
Leste government and many former militia members are now living along the
border between Timor Leste and Indonesia.
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