The Rape of
East Timor: "Sounds Like Fun"
By John Pilger
Watch John
Pilger's film Death of a Nation - The Timor
Conspiracy
February 25,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
Secret
documents found in the Australian National Archives
provide a glimpse of how one of the greatest crimes
of the 20th century was executed and covered up.
They also help us understand how and for whom the
world is run.
The documents
refer to East Timor, now known as Timor-Leste, and
were written by diplomats in the Australian embassy
in Jakarta. The date was November 1976, less than a
year after the Indonesian dictator General Suharto
seized the then Portuguese colony on the island of
Timor.
The terror
that followed has few parallels; not even Pol Pot
succeeded in killing, proportionally, as many
Cambodians as Suharto and his fellow generals killed
in East Timor. Out of a population of almost a
million, up to a third were extinguished.
This was the
second holocaust for which Suharto was responsible.
A decade earlier, in 1965, Suharto wrested power in
Indonesia in a bloodbath that took more than a
million lives. The CIA reported: “In terms of
numbers killed, the massacres rank as one of the
worst mass murders of the 20th century.”
This was
greeted in the Western press as “a gleam of light in
Asia” (Time).The
BBC’s correspondent in South East Asia, Roland
Challis, later described the cover-up of the
massacres as a triumph of media complicity and
silence; the “official line” was that Suharto had
“saved” Indonesia from a communist takeover.
“Of course my
British sources knew what the American plan was,” he
told me. “There were bodies being washed up on the
lawns of the British consulate in Surabaya, and
British warships escorted a ship full of Indonesian
troops, so that they could take part in this
terrible holocaust. It was only much later that we
learned that the American embassy was supplying
[Suharto with] names and ticking them off as they
were killed. There was a deal, you see. In
establishing the Suharto regime, the involvement of
the [US-dominated] International Monetary Fund and
the World Bank were part of it. That was the deal.”
I have
interviewed many of the survivors of 1965, including
the acclaimed Indonesian novelist Pramoedya Ananta
Toer, who bore witness to an epic of suffering
“forgotten” in the West because Suharto was “our
man”. A second holocaust in resource-rich East
Timor, an undefended colony, was almost inevitable.
In 1994, I
filmed clandestinely in occupied East Timor; I found
a land of crosses and unforgettable grief. In my
film, Death
of a Nation, there is a sequence shot on board
an Australian aircraft flying over the Timor Sea. A
party is in progress. Two men in suits are toasting
each other in champagne. “This is a uniquely
historical moment,” babbles one of them, “that is
truly, uniquely historical.”
This is
Australia’s foreign minister, Gareth Evans. The
other man is Ali Alatas, the principal mouthpiece of
Suharto. It is 1989 and they are making a symbolic
flight to celebrate a piratical deal they called a
“treaty”. This allowed Australia, the Suharto
dictatorship and the international oil companies to
divide the spoils of East Timor’s oil and gas
resources.
Thanks to
Evans, Australia’s then prime minister, Paul Keating
— who regarded Suharto as a father figure — and a
gang that ran Australia’s foreign policy
establishment, Australia distinguished itself as the
only western country formally to recognise Suharto’s
genocidal conquest. The prize, said Evans, was
“zillions” of dollars.
Members of
this gang reappeared the other day in documents
found in the National Archives by two researchers
from Monash University in Melbourne, Sara Niner and
Kim McGrath. In their own handwriting, senior
officials of the Department of Foreign Affairs mock
reports of the rape, torture and execution of East
Timorese by Indonesian troops. In scribbled
annotations on a memorandum that refers to
atrocities in a concentration camp, one diplomat
wrote: “sounds like fun”. Another wrote: “sounds
like the population are in raptures.”
Referring to a
report by the Indonesian resistance, Fretilin, that
describes Indonesia as an “impotent” invader,
another diplomat sneered: “If ‘the enemy was
impotent’, as stated, how come they are daily raping
the captured population? Or is the former a result
of the latter?”
The documents,
says Sarah Niner, are “vivid evidence of the lack of
empathy and concern for human rights abuses in East
Timor” in the Department of Foreign Affairs. “The
archives reveal that this culture of cover-up is
closely tied to the DFA’s need to recognise
Indonesian sovereignty over East Timor so as to
commence negotiations over the petroleum in the East
Timor Sea.”
This was a
conspiracy to steal East Timor’s oil and gas. In
leaked diplomatic cables in August 1975, the
Australian Ambassador to Jakarta, Richard Woolcott,
wrote to Canberra: “It would seem to me that the
Department [of Minerals and Energy] might well have
an interest in closing the present gap in the agreed
sea border and this could be much more readily
negotiated with Indonesia … than with Portugal or
independent Portuguese Timor.” Woolcott revealed
that he had been briefed on Indonesia’s secret plans
for an invasion. He cabled Canberra that the
government should “assist public understanding in
Australia” to counter “criticism of Indonesia”.
In 1993, I
interviewed C. Philip Liechty, a former senior CIA
operations officer in the Jakarta embassy during the
invasion of East Timor. He told me: “Suharto was
given the green light [by the US] to do what he did.
We supplied them with everything they needed [from]
M16 rifles [to] US military logistical support …
maybe 200,000 people, almost all of them
non-combatants died. When the atrocities began to
appear in the CIA reporting, the way they dealt with
these was to cover them up as long as possible; and
when they couldn’t be covered up any longer, they
were reported in a watered-down, very generalised
way, so that even our own sourcing was sabotaged.”
I asked
Liechty what would have happened had someone spoken
out. “Your career would end,” he replied. He said
his interview with me was one way of making amends
for “how badly I feel”.
The gang in
the Australian embassy in Jakarta appear to suffer
no such anguish. One of the scribblers on the
documents, Cavan Hogue, told the Sydney
Morning Herald: ”It does look like my
handwriting. If I made a comment like that, being
the cynical bugger that I am, it would certainly
have been in the spirit of irony and sarcasm. It’s
about the [Fretilin] press release, not the
Timorese.” Hogue said there were “atrocities on all
sides”.
As one who
reported and filmed the evidence of genocide, I find
this last remark especially profane. The Fretilin
“propaganda” he derides was accurate. The subsequent
report of the United Nations on East Timor describes
thousands of cases of summary execution and violence
against women by Suharto’s Kopassus special forces,
many of whom were trained in Australia. “Rape,
sexual slavery and sexual violence were tools used
as part of the campaign designed to inflict a deep
experience of terror, powerlessness and hopelessness
upon pro-independence supporters,” says the UN.
Cavan Hogue,
the joker and “cynical bugger”, was promoted to
senior ambassador and eventually retired on a
generous pension. Richard Woolcott was made head of
the Department of Foreign Affairs in Canberra and,
in retirement, has lectured widely as a “respected
diplomatic intellectual”.
Journalists
watered at the Australian embassy in Jakarta,
notably those employed by Rupert Murdoch, who
controls almost 70 per cent of Australia’s capital
city press. Murdoch’s correspondent in Indonesia
was Patrick Walters, who reported that Jakarta’s
“economic achievements” in East Timor were
“impressive”, as was Jakarta’s “generous”
development of the blood-soaked territory. As for
the East Timorese resistance, it was “leaderless”
and beaten. In any case, “no one was now arrested
without proper legal procedures”.
In December
1993, one of Murdoch’s veteran retainers, Paul
Kelly, then editor-in-chief of The
Australian, was appointed by Foreign Minister
Evans to the Australia-Indonesia Institute, a body
funded by the Australian government to promote the
“common interests” of Canberra and the Suharto
dictatorship. Kelly led a group of Australian
newspaper editors to Jakarta for an audience with
the mass murderer. There is a photograph of one of
them bowing.
East Timor won
its independence in 1999 with the blood and courage
of its ordinary people. The tiny, fragile democracy
was immediately subjected to a relentless campaign
of bullying by the Australian government which
sought to manoeuvre it out of its legal ownership of
the sea bed’s oil and gas revenue. To get its way,
Australia refused to recognise the jurisdiction of
the International Court of Justice and the Law of
the Sea and unilaterally changed the maritime
boundary in its own favour.
In 2006, a
deal was finally signed, Mafia-style, largely on
Australia’s terms. Soon afterwards, Prime Minister
Mari Alkitiri, a nationalist who had stood up to
Canberra, was effectively deposed in what he called
an “attempted coup” by “outsiders”. The Australian
military, which had “peace-keeping” troops in East
Timor, had trained his opponents.
In the 17
years since East Timor won its independence, the
Australian government has taken nearly $5 billion in
oil and gas revenue — money that belongs to its
impoverished neighbour.
Australia has
been called America’s “deputy sheriff” in the South
Pacific. One man with the badge is Gareth Evans, the
foreign minister filmed lifting his champagne glass
to toast the theft of East Timor’s natural
resources. Today, Evans is a lectern-trotting zealot
promoting a brand of war-mongering known as “RTP”,
or “Responsibility to Protect”. As co-chair of a
New York-based “Global Centre”, he runs a US-backed
lobby group that urges the “international community”
to attack countries where “the Security Council
rejects a proposal or fails to deal with it in a
reasonable time”. The man for the job, as the East
Timorese might say.
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