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Australian government presses ahead with plans to dominate East Timor
by Peter Symonds via sam Wednesday June 21, 2006 at 12:53 PM

Neither Horta nor his Australian backers want to test this “tremendous support” at elections due next year. “The problem is, obviously, can the country afford the next six months, the next nine months of this continued pressure on the prime minister to resign?” Horta asked. “Can we afford this increasing loss of credibility of the government and the poor image of the country? Or should the prime minister say, ‘Well, I step aside in the interests of my own party. It seems that I am a liability to my own party, if not the country’.” The threat of criminal charges is obviously designed to compel Alkatiri to make that decision.

Australian governmen...
two_boys_militant.jpg, image/jpeg, 200x150

Having established an army of occupation in East Timor, the Australian government is engaged in ongoing political warfare on several fronts to ensure its predominance over the half-island. In the United Nations, Australian diplomats are pressing to ensure that Canberra retains control over any new UN mission. As part of this offensive, the Australian media is conducting an unrelenting campaign against Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri, who is regarded as too close to rival Portugal and thus an obstacle to Australian interests.

Murdoch’s Australian has again outlined the agenda most openly. In a comment on Saturday, foreign affairs editor Greg Sheridan argued that while other countries needed to contribute to the reestablishment of a police force in East Timor, Canberra had to retain overall control. “The UN Security Council is considering East Timor and its future policing requirements right now. It is a vital task for Australian diplomacy to get the form of this right,” he stated.

Sheridan declared it was vital that “Australian do the job alone” in police training. “The UN in Timor has been a route to confusion and dysfunction. In particular it has been a route to Portuguese influence, a baneful business indeed.” Early this month, Sheridan branded Portugal as “Australia’s diplomatic enemy in East Timor” and identified Alkatiri as “the key to their influence”.

While the Howard government cannot afford to be so open, with the backing of Washington, it is involved in a diplomatic offensive to guarantee that Australia leads any UN operations in East Timor. The push is particularly cynical as the US and Australia have consistently opposed calls by the UN, East Timor and Portugal for an extended UN presence in the country. As recently as early May, Canberra and Washington vigorously opposed any extension of the UN mission.

Differences surfaced openly in the UN Security Council last week when Australian ambassador Robert Hill opposed a proposal by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan for a formal peace-keeping operation to take over from the present Australian-led military force. The Howard government’s plan, modelled on the Australian-led occupation of the Solomon Islands, is to retain exclusive military control, while at the same time presiding over a multi-national police force and installing Australian officials in key administrative posts. Hill argued for a foreigner to be put in charge of the East Timorese police force, privately suggesting former Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Palmer for the post.

Portugal and Malaysia, both of which have police contingents in East Timor, backed Annan’s call for the UN to take full control of the military and police presence. Portugal’s ambassador Joao Salgueiro told the Security Council: “Timor-Leste is a child of the United Nations. So it needs the universality and impartiality of the United Nations, which must once again take a leading role.”

A meeting of foreign ministers from the Community of Portuguese-Speaking Countries on Sunday decided to send a mission to East Timor to assess the situation. Portuguese Foreign Minister Diogo Freitas declared: “East Timor is not a failed state. We have to defend the necessity of sending a United Nations force in which all member nations participate actively.” Last week the European Commission, which has backed Portugal’s ambitions in East Timor, signed an agreement with the Alkatiri government to provide 18 million euros in aid with a focus on “institutional capacity building,” as well as poverty alleviation.

Yesterday US ambassador John Bolton stepped into the diplomatic arena to back Canberra’s bid for control. Opposing “a UN presence forever” in East Timor, he argued it was necessary “to support the Australians and New Zealanders who are there”. Of course, if the Solomon Island intervention is any guide, the Howard government intends to stay in East Timor not just for months, but years.

This diplomatic arm-wrestling reflects sharpening inter-imperialist antagonisms, not just over East Timor, but internationally. At stake is control over significant oil and gas reserves in the Timor Sea as well as East Timor’s strategic position in South East Asia, astride key naval routes. The Howard government exploited factional conflict in the East Timor’s government and security forces to begin dispatching 1,300 Australian troops to the island on May 24. The last concern of any of the competing powers is the plight of the poverty-stricken East Timorese, many of whom have fled to refugee camps.

Campaign against Alkatiri
The divisions in the UN are paralleled in the factional struggle in East Timor itself, where Australian allies—President Xanana Gusmao and Foreign Minister Jose Ramos Horta—are engaged in a barely veiled campaign to oust Alkatiri. Under the country’s constitution, the president does not have the power to sack the prime minister without a vote of no confidence in parliament, where Alkatiri’s Fretilin party has the overwhelming majority. As a result, the Australian media has been seeking to dredge up the basis for criminal charges against Alkatiri, which would force him to step aside.

The latest shot in the campaign was fired last night on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s “Four Corners” program. In a shameless piece of propaganda, ABC reporter Liz Jackson sought to demonstrate that Alkatiri, in league with former interior minister Rogerio Lobato, had supplied weapons to former Fretilin fighters to form a hit squad against his political opponents. Openly contemptuous of Alkatiri and his denial of any wrongdoing, Jackson presented, unchallenged, a patchwork of comments and documents, all fed to her by the prime minister’s political enemies and torn out of context.

It should be recalled that the alleged misdeeds took place amid incipient factional fighting, in which 600 rebel soldiers, joined by sections of the police force, were threatening to wage civil war if Alkatiri did not immediately step down. Even if completely true, all the “evidence” demonstrates is that Alkatiri and Lobato, like the rebels, were arming their supporters. The ABC program’s partisan approach verged on the farcical as Jackson pressed Alkatiri on the illegality on “arming civilians,” while ignoring the fact that those she painted as “the heroes of the anti-Alkatiri struggle” were, in strict legal terms, guilty of mutiny and treason.

In its efforts to present Horta as the popular prime minister in waiting, “Four Corners” perhaps revealed more than was intended. Horta has tried to present himself as above political infighting—the man to bring all the factions together. But the ABC’s coverage of his meeting with rebel leaders in Gleno, immediately prior to an opposition rally in Dili on June 6, showed Horta openly factionalising with anti-Alkatiri forces. Asked about this activity, Horta declared unabashed: “Everywhere I have been to—Baucau and everywhere—and I have had tremendous sympathy, support, warmth from the people by the thousands, by the hundreds. And I feel overwhelmed, maybe because they are desperately looking for leadership, looking for people they can trust.”

Neither Horta nor his Australian backers want to test this “tremendous support” at elections due next year. “The problem is, obviously, can the country afford the next six months, the next nine months of this continued pressure on the prime minister to resign?” Horta asked. “Can we afford this increasing loss of credibility of the government and the poor image of the country? Or should the prime minister say, ‘Well, I step aside in the interests of my own party. It seems that I am a liability to my own party, if not the country’.” The threat of criminal charges is obviously designed to compel Alkatiri to make that decision.

According to the Melbourne-based Age newspaper on Monday, President Gusmao is considering using his constitutional powers to launch a judicial inquiry into the allegations unearthed by the ABC and other Australian media. Horta was considering a visit to the alleged leader of the Fretilin hit squad, Vincente “Railos” do Concecao, to gather evidence and report back to Gusmao. “The president is not indifferent, quite the contrary. He is attentive to these allegations, and... he’s garnering whatever information is available, and he will take action in due course if he has to,” Horta explained.

These sordid political machinations highlight the absurdity of the so-called independence proclaimed in 2002 as a step forward for the East Timorese people. In the era of globalised production, the tiny half island was never going to be independent of the global and regional powers, or the institutions of international finance capital such as the World Bank and IMF. Far from enjoying peace and prosperity, East Timor has become another arena for imperialist rivalries, in which each local clique seeks to secure its political position by obtaining the backing of one or other of the competing powers. Far from ending conflict in East Timor, the Australian intervention is laying the basis for a future civil war as Canberra seeks to install its own clients.

http://wsws.org/articles/2006/jun2006/etim-j20.shtml

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The truth about East Timor
by WSWS.org Wednesday June 21, 2006 at 05:53 PM

The truth about East Timor: Why Australia’s intervention should be opposed

The WSWS and Socialist Equality Party unequivocally oppose the Howard government’s military intervention into East Timor and demand the immediate withdrawal of all Australian troops and police from the tiny island state.

The deployment has nothing to do with restoring peace and stability. Like the recent intervention into the Solomon Islands, it is an act of neo-colonial aggression to further Australian economic and strategic interests in the region. The Howard government wants to force regime change in East Timor, replacing the government of Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri with an administration more amenable to Australia’s requirements.

One of the key factors is control of oil and gas resources. As far as Howard and Downer are concerned, Alkatiri’s cardinal sins are that he refused to immediately buckle to Canberra’s demands over the huge oil and gas deposits in the Timor Sea, and that he has been seeking economic and political support from Australia’s rivals in Europe and Asia, especially from Portugal, the former colonial power.

The Australian media and the entire political establishment, including Labor, the Greens, Democrats and the various middle class protest groups, have all fallen in behind this criminal act.

The SEP public meetings will discuss the real driving forces behind the eruption of militarism and neo-colonialism, not only in the Balkans and the Middle East, but in the Pacific region as well, and the dangers it poses for ordinary working people everywhere, including Australia. It will review the political dead-end of the perspective of “independence” for East Timor, and advance an alternative socialist perspective.

We invite all readers of the WSWS to attend the meetings and participate in this vital discussion.

Tuesday July 11, 7 p.m.
Carslaw Lecture Theatre 173
Ground floor, Carslaw Building
University of Sydney (Adjacent to City Rd, Eastern Ave entrance to the university)

Tuesday July 18, 7 p.m.
YWCA, First floor
489 Elizabeth St
Melbourne (near Victoria Market)

Tickets: $4 & $2 concession

For further information contact the Socialist Equality Party:
E-mail: sep@sep.org.au
Telephone: 02 9790 3511
Fax: 02 9790 3501
Mail: PO Box 367, Bankstown, NSW 1885

http://wsws.org/articles/2006/jun2006/etim-j21.shtml

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"Mozambique Clique" implodes
by ET veteran Wednesday June 21, 2006 at 07:10 PM

Seems like the Mozambique clique has imploded and Fretilin instead of resolving things politically went for the armed purge which of course got some folks off side especially when they were left with weapons after being drummed out of the military. The Falintil will continue despite and after departure of Alkatiri or Horta even without Gusmao the original direct democractic decision making village system is what must be returned to for the mass of the people to have their say not Parliamentary and UN/World Bank/IMF scams which serve the Corporations alone.

The SEP have inherited the Gerry Healey (rape the women cadres for decade until exposed and the inevitable WRP split and squabble over resources eg. the only Daily Trot paper in the world) empire...like the reconstructed SWP now DSP or the former Militant now Socialist party or the former Socialist party of Oz now Communist party of Oz they do not change their hierarchical way of doing things and ideological one size fits all view of the world alas.
Does the WRP/now SEP still have the Leadership cult based in Woolongong and exhibit the death mask of trotsky (iconic idolatry for the "left" what next the ice-pick from Mexico too and the shroud he was in at the time ? ) - bizarre as those Argentine Posado line Trots who reckon flying saucers ie UFO's come from the future and as Socialism is inevitable must be socialists...
Should the Timorese who have already suffered enough 200,000 killed now have to endure the midwives of State Capitalism ie leninism now as well ?

Hell the masses at least in Dili just wanted some larger better armed gangs like the Australian etc troops to disarm the smaller lesser armed gangs who are terrorising them...as they felt unable to do so themselves for all sorts of reasons - how about ill-health, malnutrition, desolation and depression from poverty...?

The powerless can rarely choose between wholesale or retail terror and may opt for the lesser of two still evil choices because that is the grim bloody reality of poverty you do what you have too to survive.

Who cares about Politicians like Alkatiri or Horta except other politicians seeking to replace them like the SEP clique who are electorallly even more marginal than the Socialist Alliance or Socialist Party eg Steve Jolly in Australian Parliamentary and Council elections.

While their analysis by assorted writers in the papers and websites is sometimes interesting it does not mean that anyone should join any of the COMPETING Socialist Sects and tithe themselves for the Party of their choice.

ROBOTROT
In fact I would recommend that any Party cadres reading this depart and although "nonaligned" can still like most workers go to the big events like June 28th stop work etc where and when the large numbers stop any sect dominating the proceeedings ...eg as the Socialist Alliance hacks did at the World refugee rally last Sunday ! Shame on them all you only alienate good people who will never again join in on a small demo and get the EVANGELICAL join us or be damned/buy the paper build the Party clones treatment again probably.

RECENT EXAMPLE
The horrid 1960s/70s Melbourne Maoists eclipsed and fell apart after death of Mao over Albania etc line BUT they made a lot of people pissed off eg at 3CR almost all non worshippers of Marxism Leninism departed from community radio due to their antics...luckily the Authoritarians have gone and the radio station continues in DIVERSITY.

It is long overdue for the breakup and decline of the Trots too as historical materialism makes the masses more autonomous and libertarian yet still "class conscious" enough to want to overthrow the boss class as the proles have always tried to do ...
BUT with the dead weight of the Party hacks be they ALP, CPA or more recent franchisees like DSP, SPA etc they fight the boss with one hand tied behind their backs divided by politics from unty with other worker sin struggle. The sects and their sectarianism can only be outmanouvred by massive events where they are marginalised so if you are keen to "unfuck the world" and for the millions not the millionaires etc then organise locally and industrially in your own direct action groups and suport others in the showdown with the Liberal National party Coalition crooks but don't turn your back on Kim Beastley and Bill sell-out Shorten or Brian-rat on the BLF- Boyd or their woould be replacement failed mandarins in the sects either.

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pr's rubbish
by Gees Wednesday June 21, 2006 at 09:11 PM

pr you'd cut your head off despite your own face! Whose side are you on?

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