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Subject: Why East Timor Has Declared War on Ninjas
Time Magazine
Why East Timor Has Declared War on Ninjas
By <http://www.time.com/time/letters/email_letter.html>Ishaan
Tharoor Thursday, Apr. 22, 2010
-For most, the presence of an outfit of ninjas conjures scenes of
Japanese comic book assassins or, perhaps, of mutant turtles dwelling in a
sewer. But in East Timor, ninjas have become a national security threat.
The impoverished country, perched on the fringes of the Indonesian
archipelago, is in the grips of a six-month campaign aimed at curbing
"ninja" activities a euphemism, ostensibly, for clandestine,
anti-government militancy. Earlier this year, Longuinhos Monteiro, East
Timor's police chief, donned commando fatigues and personally led an
operation into the country's western marches. He sent out a warning via
the press: "Any ninjas who want to take us on, your final stop will
be Santa Cruz cemetery [in the capital, Dili]."
To understand the way of the East Timor ninja, one has to look at the
nation itself. After becoming formally independent in 2002, East Timor
remains very much a fledgling even experimental state with a pack of
international institutions and NGOs propping up a government that has
limited capabilities of its own. The police chief's ninja-fighting bravado
was spurred by the mysterious murders of a teenage girl in December and an
infant child in January. But, critics say, his campaign masks the misdeeds
and brutality of the country's own police, who are slowly taking back
control from a force of international peackeepers. Moreover, the threat of
"ninjas" resonates deep in the psyche of a nation still
traumatized and torn by years of occupation and civil strife. "This
idea of a masked man, of a covert agent that's difficult to identify a
kind of ghost haunts this place," says Silas Everett, country
director for East Timor at the Asia
Foundation.<http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1715462,00.html>
(See pictures of Timor's turmoil.)
The term "ninja" in East Timor doesn't quite evoke a real
band of fighters, but a hidden, sometimes imaginary menace stalking the
country. It came into parlance in the 1990s, when shadowy militias backed
by the Indonesian army targeted East Timorese independence activists.
Villages were terrorized and countless people kidnapped and killed in the
dark by men garbed in black. It's estimated that over 100,000 East
Timorese lost their lives during Indonesia's 24-year-long occupation of
the former Portuguese colony. (The country's current population is a
little over one million.) The fear of the death squads played into ancient
archipelago lore of a lurking, shapeless apparition that snatches babies
and horses in the dead of the night. In a country where forms of
witchcraft and sorcery are still widely practiced, the new, real danger of
the ninja acquired mystical properties. It's still not uncommon, say
researchers, for East Timorese to leave a glass of water outside their
door, a knife bobbing within, to ward off the nocturnal ninja.
The new police campaign has not turned up anything quite as
fantastical, arresting 20 members of a ragtag dissident group in February.
Observers and members of Dili-based NGOs say the police are possibly
exploiting the specter of a ninja threat to settle political scores. This
is not uncommon in East Timor despite its small size, the country is
riven with a tangled mess of factions and enmities. Fissures remain
between those from the west and east of the country, as well as camps once
loyal and once opposed to colonial rule under Lisbon and later Jakarta.
Divisions within the army led to widespread violence in 2006 that was
calmed only by the intervention of peacekeepers sent by Australia and a
handful of other nations. In 2008, a unit of renegade soldiers nearly
succeeded in a brazen attempt to assassinate both East Timor's President
Jose Ramos-Horta, a Nobel laureate, and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao. With
society so fragmented and law and order so fragile, gangs have come to
fill the void.
While nobody in East Timor would ever self-identify as a
"ninja," as many as 90,000 people almost a tenth of the
population may belong to one of the country's fifteen-odd "martial
arts" groups, or gangs, according to James Scambary, an Australian
researcher who is a leading authority on gang culture in the country. Some
of these organizations began as cells of resistance to Indonesian
occupation between 1975 and 1999; others were first set up by Jakarta as a
means to foster patriotism. The end result is a country full of
militarized communities with deceptively fanciful names like the
"Wise Children of the Land" or "Brotherhood of the Faithful
Heart of the Lotus Flower." They have come to swallow up and
represent whole neighborhoods and villages, engaging in extortion and
fighting with rival gangs over property and turf and, on occasion, over
differing political affiliations. "All of these groups see themselves
not as gangs, but as security," says Scambary. "They're organs
of their communities and provide a form of welfare and protection."
Scambary notes that, parallel to the growing predominance of these
violent martial arts groups, there has been an emergence of new
apocalyptic, millenarian cults in East Timor, where deeply rooted animist
traditions mix with colonial Portuguese Catholicism as well as a new wave
of Brazilian Pentecostalism. One group is reportedly parading an
11-year-old boy around as the son of Christ. The head of another claims to
be Christ's brother; he is also a member of parliament in Dili. These
sects are increasingly engaging in criminal activity, though on a smaller
scale than the martial arts groups. Still, says Scambary, they, too, are
"harbingers of the sort of social discontent" and disorder that
led up to the chaos of 2006.
East Timor ranks near the bottom of the United Nations' human
development index. Nearly half the country is illiterate and 40% of its
male population is unemployed. Newly found reserves of offshore oil and
gas are slowly enabling the government to fill its meager coffers, but
East Timor's political leadership is considered too mired in its own
squabbles to steer the country toward safe ground. A backlog of some 4000
cases in the courts feeds into a culture accustomed to vigilante justice.
Despite a significant U.N. program to nurture its development, the
country's police force is widely seen to be ineffectual, as well as caught
up in gang rivalries. Yayasan HAK, a Dili-based human rights group, says
it has evidence of police abuses committed during the recent anti-ninja
campaign detainees who refused to admit being ninjas were allegedly
kicked and beaten with rifle butts.
Indeed, in this environment of instability and uncertainty, the
mythical figure of the ninja proves all the more unsettling. Everett of
the Asia Foundation recounts a story told to him by U.N. officials who had
been summoned to an outlying district of the country by villagers,
claiming they had seized a ninja. Upon arriving, they were directed toward
a woman said to be literally holding the would-be assassin. They found her
and looked on in disbelief. Says Everett: "She was clutching nothing
but air."
Read more: <http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1983217,00.html?xid=rss-world#ixzz0lpn8hpYT>
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1983217,00.html?xid=rss-world#ixzz0lpn8hpYT
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