|
Subject: Urban conflict in East Timor
eastasiaforum.org/2009/09/18/urban-conflict-in-east-timor/
<eastasiaforum.org/2009/09/18/urban-conflict-in-east-timor/>
Urban conflict in East Timor
September 18th, 2009
Guest Author: James Scambary, Swinburne University
It has been almost two years now since the end of the intense communal
conflict that engulfed East Timor between 2006 and 2007. The events of
this period proved a salutary experience for a range of nation building
enterprises, not least of which were security and peace-building.
There has been considerable soul searching over the events of that two
year period. We now know that East Timor is not the unified, homogenous
society forged in the firmament of the resistance, as previously thought.
We now know that the national police force is highly factionalised and
manifestly unprepared to resume active duty. It is also recognised that if
attempts are not made to sort out the mess of property law, stimulate the
economy, and create some jobs, there will be a similar conflagration in
the near future.
This is largely where the lesson ended. Most analysis of this period,
curiously, focuses on the events of April to June 2006. This is reflected
in the much quoted casualty figures of 37 fatalities, which was the tally
after the bloodletting between the police and army ended in May 2006. Some
reports don't even mention the violence of 2007 at all, and yet the
conflict ran for another 18 months. According to UNMIT estimates, in 2007,
over 100 people died in the January to October period alone. This gap in
understanding of that conflict is highly revealing of the gap in knowledge
about East Timorese society itself.
There were two distinct phases in the conflict between two different
sets of antagonists. While the first phase in 2006 featured broad regional
and ethno-linguistic divisions, the second phase was characterised by
conflict between villages and families, the most basic unit of East
Timorese society. There are a number of implications for peace-keeping and
peace-building as a consequence.
The patterns of conflict of this second phase, for example, showed a
strong symmetry between gang or martial arts group and family membership.
In East Timor, a village is more or less an extended family. While this
nexus is strongest in the rural areas, it is also highly prevalent in the
city. This overlapping nature of martial arts group or gang membership
with kinship networks makes mediation and policing highly complicated,
also making it difficult to distinguish between a gang conflict or a
communal conflict. In many cases it is both.
Also, East Timorese urban neighbourhoods, especially in the densely
packed areas to the west of the city with high rural migrant populations,
are a complex patchwork of often competing ethno-linguistic groups.
Traditional leaders are habitually included in mediation processes, but
some may have authority over only a small area or group, or no authority
at all. Circular rural urban population movements mean that such urban
centres are fluid and dynamic, and that authority is sometimes ephemeral
at best. In many cases, real traditional authority actually resides in a
group's rural district of origin.
Sometimes there is even confusion about who is being mediated, or which
dispute is being mediated. Some village heads have commented that in some
instances, villages were mediated who were not even in conflict. Some also
observed that while the issues surrounding the east/west conflict of 2006
were mediated (at least temporarily) issues arising from the 2007 conflict
had not been. Therefore, some communities have accepted internally
displaced families back from the first phase, but not from the second
phase. As many as 45 per cent of returnees in one area of Dili have faced
continued conflict as a consequence.
There are implications for policing too. International police have
often described their frustration in locating conflict sites and
discerning between victims and perpetrators. Most agreed that more
detailed local knowledge would enable them to be more efficient and
discerning in their responses. Unfortunately, as they admit, with such
high rotation of international police and army personnel, valuable
institutional knowledge is not always retained.
The situation is stable now, but only if stability can be measured as
lack of conflict. If civil society and the security forces are to be more
effective in their response next time around, there will need to be a
deeper ethnographic or evidence based understanding of the cultural and
social dynamics of East Timorese society, especially of contemporary urban
settings. Current state-centric and donor-driven approaches to policing,
justice and development have also so far proven inadequate. During the
conflict of 2006-7, 1300 international security forces and an army of
international aid workers did little more than stem the level of violence,
but could not stop it. That it ended was a decision taken by East Timorese
themselves. Therefore, the solution must ultimately come from the
community itself.
Listen to the audio of James' presentation held on August 31 at ANU.
http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/podcasts/Patterns_of_urban_conflict_in_East_Timor.mp3
James Scambary is a Research Fellow at the Swinburne Institute of
Social Research.
Back to September Menu
August
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu
|