Subject: Many E.Timorese Indon Policemen Desert To
Independence
Date: Sat, 25 Sep 1999 10:50:10 -0400The Independent [London] Wednesday, September 22,
1999 [no byline due to glitch in Independent's online edition]
INDONESIAN POLICEMEN SWITCH TO INDEPENDENCE
AT LEAST 100 members of the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) in East Timor have deserted
and joined the pro-independence Falintil guerrilla movement, in a further indication of
discord within TNI ranks
Yesterday, men in police uniforms were openly walking around the village of Dare where
tens of thousands of refugees live under the discreet protection of Falintil after fleeing
the military-backed campaign of violence which followed last month's vote for
independence. "I am a policeman of Indonesia but I want independence for East
Timor," said Agustinho Gomes da Silva, a former East Timorese sergeant in the
Indonesian police. "I left the police to co-operate with Falintil for the security of
our nation."
Next to him stood several other uniformed men, including one in the dress of Brimob,
the Indonesian special riot police. According to Sergeant Gomes da Costa, there are 100
deserters in the Dare area alone, including members of both the police and military, and
25 of them have brought guns with them. "Many of my friends also try to come here but
the situation is very difficult," he said. "Ninety per cent of East Timorese in
the armed forces want independence."
Large numbers of police and soldiers stationed in the territory are ethnic Timorese.
Almost none of them hold high rank, and there has long been tension between them and their
Indonesian commanders. TNI generals have claimed that the recent violence in the territory
has been perpetrated largely by local recruits, in what is seen as an attempt to portray
East Timor as a fractious territory incapable of independent self rule.
But the deserters in Dare suggest the opposite - that many East Timorese are risking
their lives to desert the force responsible for the persecution and displacement of their
people.
Sergeant da Costa said: "I want to be a policeman in a new independent
nation."
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