Subject: NewMatilda: East Timor: The President's Man
http://www.newmatilda.com/
East Timor: The President's Man By: http://www.newmatilda.com/home/listarticlebyauthor.asp?articleID=1795
John Martinkus Wednesday 6 September 2006
What appear to be written orders from East Timor’s President Xanana Gusmão
to rebel former soldier Alfredo Reinado confirm the close relationship the now
escaped criminal who is wanted for murder and weapons offences had with
the President.
The hand-written note, seen by New Matilda and available <http://www.newmatilda.com/admin/imagelibrary/images/Gusmao_letterbv0Rd72Gts57q.jpg>here
(in Portuguese), on the letterhead of the President and signed by him, sets the
tone of the relationship between the two.
‘Major Alfredo, Good Morning!’ It begins. ‘We have already combined
with the Australian forces and you have to station yourselves in Aileu,’
writes the President, referring to the inland hill town an hour south of Dili
where Alfredo did go with his rebel soldiers.
The letter continues ‘I am also going to write to Lieutenant [Gastão]
Salsinha [the leader of the dismissed East Timorese soldiers who, unlike Reinado’s
men, left their barracks without their weapons] to implement this order.
Abraços a todos [Embraces to all], Xanana’.
Gusmão’s office could not be contacted for comment on the document.
The letter is dated 29 May this year only three days after the first
Australian forces had landed in Dili and seven days after Reinado had led his
men in an attack against the East Timorese national army, the F-FDTL, in the
hills to the east of the capital.
The letter confirms the close relationship between the President and the
breakaway officer at the time a relationship Reinado himself has never tried
to hide. When David O’Shea from SBS TV’s Dateline program interviewed him in
Dili just days before he was arrested on 26 July, Reinado said:
Until 22 May I [was] still bound to my General, Taur Matan Ruak [F-FDTL
Commander]. After I [was] attacked and I am defending myself I think I should
only follow orders from my Supreme Commander, the President. Until today,
anywhere I go, I always notice him and I always take order from him. Whatever I
am going to do, whatever order is being [given], as long as it is clarified and
justified, I’ll do it.
Reinado also revealed that he had been in close contact with the President
from 14 May, before the violence started. The exchange was as follows:
‘On 14 May on the Sunday I heard that you met with the President,’ says O’Shea.
‘Yes’ replies Reinado. ‘What did you discus then?’ ‘I’m going to
tell him why I left Dili. Because as the Supreme Commander he has to call me to
ask me that. Why I left Dili on 3 May. I am going there to explain why I left
Dili,’ says Reinado, referring to the day he left the army barracks in Dili
with 20 of his men and two ute-loads of weapons and ammunition. ‘And [Gusmão
] accepted your explanation?’ asks O’Shea. ‘Of course,’ replies Reinado.
When I interviewed Reinado on 11 June he was still in the hill town of
Maubisse. He was there with his heavily armed men and eight Australian SAS
guards. He said the guards were there for his security, but Head of the
Australian forces, Brigadier Mick Slater, said the detachment was there to
monitor him.
Reinado was his usual arrogant self loudly proclaiming that he was
fighting for the justice of his people and referring to so-called ‘atrocities’
by the F-FDTL, which he greatly exaggerated. When pressed on his plans to
disarm, he grinned and told me to talk to the President about that. He
proclaimed he was not a rebel and that he was still a member of the army and had
a right to carry weapons as he was still under the orders of the Supreme
Commander of the armed forces, the President Xanana Gusmão.
The circumstances of Reinado’s arrest also require examination. I was in
Dili that day, 26 July, and the incident started in the late morning. Reinado
claimed that he had been offered the use of a house by the President himself.
The house was situated directly across the road from the main gate of the
Australian military base at Dili’s heliport in the suburb of Bairo Pite. As he
was moving in, the Portuguese police (GNR), acted on a tip they had received,
and came and searched the house. They found nine handguns, thousands of rounds
of ammunition and grenades.
The day before had been the well publicised deadline for the handing in of
weapons, and Reinado and his men were clearly in violation of that. The GNR
wanted to arrest him. The Australian Federal Police were soon at the scene as
well as several Australian armoured personnel carriers. It was a stand-off that
lasted all day with the local and Portuguese press outside, and Reinado
occasionally sauntering on to the verandah and issuing statements such as ‘I
am a free man in a free country,’ much to the amusement of reporters.
(Meanwhile, at the President’s office across town, a series of meetings
were being held between officials and military and police representatives. No
press access was allowed.)
Finally, after dark, the press were told to leave, the Portuguese police
loaded the weapons in a vehicle and the Australian army moved across the road
and cordoned off the house. I waited in the dark and filmed as the Australians
led Reinado’s men out, one by one, bound in plastic cuffs, and photographed
them before marching them across the road to their base.
However, the Australians must have led Reinado out the back, as he was not
with his men.
The sequence of the day’s events and the way the Australians actively tried
to play down the event, gave me the impression that they had only reluctantly
arrested Reinado and his men, and that they had been forced to by the GNR’s
discovery of the weapons. The crisis meetings at the President’s office also
suggested Gusmão’s close involvement in the case.
The fact that Reinado was not arrested earlier raised many questions among
observers in Dili. Why, people were asking, was this man who was filmed shooting
at the army, and even declaring on film that he had ‘got one,’ still
remaining free? As one member of the UN investigation team said, ‘this guy has
some serious political top cover.’
The links between Reinado and the President are even more relevant now,
following his ‘escape’ from Dili’s Becora prison last week, when he and 56
others simply walked out the door. He has since recorded a half-hour interview
with local Timorese television. Those who watched it placed the interview as
having taken place at Daralau, in the hills above Dili. Incidentally, the
President’s house is also in the hills above Dili.
It is inconceivable that the Australian military and Federal Police cannot
place the backdrop to the interview as so many people in Dili have and
locate and arrest Reinado.
But perhaps that is not a high priority. Perhaps they are taking the position
of the President’s Australian-born wife, Kirsty Sword Gusmao, who told
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1731767.htm>ABC Radio this
week that Reinado ‘has been portrayed somewhat incorrectly in the Australian
media as being a renegade, a rebel.’ She added that ‘when he defected from
the military police, it was a protest action against what he saw as terrible
violations committed by our armed forces.’
There is still little evidence that the armed forces committed violations.
Claims of massacres and mass graves have never been backed up with facts, and
appear to be politically motivated allegations designed to discredit the F-FDTL.
One of the most prominent opposition figures to repeatedly accuse the F-FDTL
of massacres is Fernando De Araujo from the Democratic Party. When I interviewed
him for Dateline in August he told me that, even though former Prime Minister
Marí Alkatiri had resigned, the ‘plan’ had failed: ‘My plan was to have a
transitional government that the President controls and in six months have a
general election,’ he said.
It is similar to what Alfredo Reinado is now calling for, and from what one
can divine from the supporters of East Timor’s now famously silent President,
it is what he is positioning himself for as well.
---
About the author
John Martinkus covered the conflict in East Timor from 1995 until 2000. He
was resident correspondent in Dili for Associated Press and Australian
Associated Press, from 1998 until 2000. He is author of A Dirty Little War
(Random House, 2001), about the country’s violent passage to independence. He
recently co-produced the report http://news.sbs.com.au/dateline/index.php?page=archive&artmon=08&fyear=2006#
East Timor: Downfall of a Prime Minister for SBS TV’s Dateline, which aired on
30 August.
Back to September
menu
August
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu