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 East Timor
Indonesia's Human Rights Abuses Focus International Attention on East
Timor's Bid for Independence
Indonesia's invasion and its brutal occupation
of East Timor—small, remote, and desperately poor—largely escaped
international attention. East Timor's resistance movement was violently
suppressed by Indonesian military forces, and more than 200,000 Timorese
were reported to have died from famine, disease, and fighting since the
annexation. Indonesia's human rights abuses finally began receiving
international notice in the 1990s, and in 1996 two East Timorese
activists, Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo and José Ramos-Horta,
received the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to gain freedom
peacefully.
After Indonesia's hard-line president Suharto
left office in 1998, his successor, B. J. Habibie, unexpectedly announced
his willingness to hold a referendum on East Timorese independence,
reversing 25 years of Indonesian intransigence. As the referendum on
self-rule drew closer, fighting between separatist guerrillas and
pro-Indonesian paramilitary forces in East Timor intensified. The
UN-sponsored referendum had to be rescheduled twice because of violence.
On Aug. 30, 1999, 78.5% of the population voted to secede from Indonesia.
But in the days following the referendum, pro-Indonesian militias and
Indonesian soldiers retaliated by razing towns, slaughtering civilians,
and forcing a third of the population out of the province. After enormous
international pressure, Indonesia finally agreed to allow UN forces into
East Timor on Sept. 12. Led by Australia, an international peacekeeping
force began restoring order to the ravaged region.
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