| Subject: ANZAC ceremonies in Dili
Also: The Age: A Timor War Debt Is Finally Repaid
Sydney Morning Herald April 26, 2000
Falintil guerillas join troops' Dili service
By MARK DODD, Herald Correspondent in Dili
As the bugler played the haunting notes of the Last Post, cockerels
crowed, waves broke on the nearby beach and the pink light of dawn
glimmered through a spectacular backdrop of storm clouds at the Anzac Day
dawn service in Dili.
More than 1,000 United Nations peacekeepers from the Australian and New
Zealand contingents attended the service, with additional participants
from Fiji, Singapore, Pakistan and the United States.
Of added significance was a small uniformed delegation from East
Timor's Falintil guerilla force, led by senior commander Falur Rate Laek.
The service was held at Komoro airfield on Dili's outskirts.
A sermon acknowledged the role played by Anzac troops in helping
restore peace and stability to East Timor, following last year's
independence vote and subsequent violence.
After wreaths were laid by the Australian and New Zealand commanders,
troops adjourned for breakfast at the nearby Australian airfield canteen.
For some it was a chance to remember old times.
Paddy Kenneally, an 84-year-old World War II East Timor commando
veteran, recalled how 15 Australian soldiers were massacred by Japanese
soldiers close to the site of yesterday's ceremony.
"The Japs murdered 15 Australians not far from here," he
said. "They [Australians] didn't know the Japs had landed and mistook
them for Javanese."
The Japanese "took them up a gully then shot and bayonetted
them".
Commander Falur said Falintil's 24-year guerilla campaign against the
Indonesian military had been inspired by the tactics of the Australian
commandos operating on East Timor during the war.
"We used Australian tactics as guerillas to run our own
struggle," he said. "According to our grandfathers, they told us
a story of when the Australians landed here, how they used special
tactics. We copied them."
The Age [Melbourne] Sunday 23 April 2000
A Timor war debt is finally repaid
By GARRIE HUTCHINSON DILI, EAST TIMOR
Corporal Richard Hadke keeps a keen eye during a patrol in the Tonabibi
district in East Timor. Picture: CAPT JOHN TOOHEY
"Money could not repay the East Timorese for their loyalty in
saving the lives of Australian soldiers," said Jose "Xanana"
Gusmao to Peter Cosgrove at the handover of responsibility for Timor from
the Australian-led InterFET force to the UN administration, UNTAET.
"We went to Timor and brought nothing but misery on those poor
people. That is all they ever got out of helping us - misery," said
the late Paddy Keneally of the 2/2nd Independent Company, which with the
2/4th, fought a guerrilla campaign against the Japanese in 1942.
Mr Gusmao went on to say: "General, you have now paid the debt and
the East Timorese people honor you for that. We thank you personally and
we thank all InterFET from our hearts."
In 1942, Timorese boys attached themselves to individual Australian
soldiers, using their sturdy Timorese ponies or their own backs, to carry
packs and equipment, freeing up the Australians to fight.
During March and April 1942, the 2/2nd were successful in ambushing and
harassing Japanese forces, especially around Dili.
Colonel Bernard Callinan, later commander of the 2/2nd, wrote after the
war that the stories the Timorese spread raised the Australians to the
level of demi-gods.
It was amazing to them that Australians never seemed to be killed,
while they could kill many Japanese. One Timor theory was that only silver
bullets in the head could kill them.
The 2/2nd, trained as commandos, rapidly became skilled and feared
guerrillas and depended for their success on moving freely among the
people, who supported them with information and food.
It was only when the Japanese reinforced their garrison later with
about 12,000 more troops that the Australians were forced to retire,
evacuating the 2/2nd and 2/4th in December 1942 and January 1943. The
Japanese oppression of the people of Timor until the war ended was as
awful in Timor as it was elsewhere in South-East Asia. The population
declined by about 40,000 over the period, a loss of 10per cent.
Timor was a colony of the supposedly neutral Portugal, then under the
control of fascist dictator Salazar, and it has been argued that Australia
actually invaded Timor in 1942, bringing the Japanese invasion and the
subsequent suffering.
This is, supposedly, the debt we owe.
But it is, I think, a cloud-cuckoo-land argument.
The Japanese wanted Timor as a base from which to strike northern
Australia, and to deny it to Australia as a base to attack them.
Unhappily, the Japanese in World War II needed no excuse to pillage and
oppress indigenous people.
The Indonesian occupation and the bloody organisation of the
militia/TNI terror might well have a toll similar to the 40,000 deaths by
Japanese hands. Certainly the destruction of Dili and towns such as
Liquica, and the expulsion of the population was gruesome, and sufficient
reason for the international communityto be under an obligation to do
something; the debt of decency.
The handover was two months ago, and on the eve of Anzac Day, thousands
of Australian and New Zealand troops are still in Timor, helping stabilise
security on the border with Indonesian West Timor, and creating as normal
environment as possible for the people of Bobinaro District.
The 5/7 Royal Australian Regiment is a mechanised unit based in the old
Portuguese fort at Balibo with forward patrol bases, checkpoints and
observation posts closer to the border. 5/7RAR is being rotated out of
Timor after six months' duty by 6 RAR, a complex tactical and logistical
operation that was in full swing when I spent a night at the Tonabibi
patrol base, 24 kilometres west of Balibo.
A tremendous amount of civil military liaison is run out of Balibo -
reroofing schools, helping food programs, processing refugees at Batugade
and coordinating support for the family reunion visits, where 2000 to
10,000 Tamaraus from both sides of the border meet to swap information.
This process of reassurance is crucial in the overall security plan.
At Tonabibi, surrounded by member of 8 Platoon C Company, and others, I
learnt a lot about the conditions Australians weathered in 1942, and what
it has been like for today's Australian soldiers repaying the legacy of
debt.
These modest young soldiers have encountered drug-influenced Indonesian
soldiers in tense situations that might have been turned bloody, except
for the professionalism of the Australians and a residual common sense of
the Indonesians.
Several times weapons were pointed, but not used - a soldier's sign of
respect for the moment. Even the militia could recognise a no-win
situation when confronted with one.
5/7 RAR fired only three rounds in earnest during its Timor tour, which
demonstrates just how well soldiers did their job.
Since the beginning of January, C Company has been at Tonabibi manning
checkpoints, camped in an abandoned building opposite a small village.
Because of the change-over with 6RAR, the kitchen has been packed up,
which means noodles rations and more noodles rations. When I visited, it
was fairly quiet. We swapped yarns near the gas ring, watched the sun sink
behind the armored personnel carriers and followed the moon's rise.
At 10pm, a few guys put their boots on, pick up their weapons, and
clamber into the carrier. They are aboard for a very public two-hour
moonlight patrol, just to let people know the Australians are still about.
Another patrol rumbles off at 4am, and later that morning a two-day
patrol heads for the hills.
Apart from shaving, the contemporary diggers were just like the legend
of the 2/2nd in Timor. The 2/2nd, however, were renowned for their
piratical and flourishing beards, and 8 Platoon soldiers are clean shaven,
and short-haired, as befits the hot and humid climate.
Otherwise, they are the grandsons of the 2nd AIF - literally, in one
instance.
An 8 Platoon soldier's grandfather was a member of the ill-fated 2/40th
captured and imprisoned by the Japanese on West Timor in 1942.
Many come from families with a military tradition. They have, it seems,
the same ready humor, camaraderie, mutual dependence and the traditional
concerns over beer (none), cigarettes, and getting a brew.
There is nothing gung-ho in their style. They are relaxed with
officers, disciplined, and completely professional. Lance-Corporal Mark
Wicks has been writing modest reports regularly for his hometown paper in
Bendigo, and receiving huge quantities of toys and books in return.
He had an Easter distribution for the local children, who almost
swamped him in their eagerness, and were extremely vocal in their thanks.
That's how it is in repaying the debt.
I went back to Dili in a convoy of army trucks, and was cheered all the
way up Timor's magnificent version of the Great Ocean Road.
In every village and hamlet locals, particularly the children, waved
and cheered the soldiers.
It was like a 124-kilometre parade by a World Cup-winning team. They
travelled through devastated towns and villages, past congregations
singing in open churches, skirted freshly sown rice fields and under fish
hanging from the trees.
That's East Timor on the eve of Anzac Day. A debt repaid.
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