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Home » Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere) » Peacekeepers Safeguard Timorese Election

Peacekeepers Safeguard Timorese Election

450157897_2639cc3a95_m.jpg
Australian and New Zealand troops deployed to East Timor, a tiny, impov­er­ished coun­try adja­cent to Indonesia, patrolled around the clock to ensure peace and quiet for Mondays pres­i­den­tial elec­tion.
Around 1,100 Australian and 150 New Zealand sol­diers work along­side 1,500 U.N. police from more than 20 coun­tries and native secu­rity forces to sup­press gangs, quell polit­i­cal vio­lence and hunt down a rebel army led by for­mer police offi­cer Major Alfredo Reinado.


East Timor, pop­u­la­tion 1 mil­lion, broke away from Indonesia in 1999 fol­low­ing a bru­tal 20-​​year occu­pa­tion and for­mally declared inde­pen­dence in 2002. Australian troops entered the ter­ri­tory in 1999 to help sup­press pro-​​Indonesian mili­tias, and again last year when maraud­ing gangs and rebelling secu­rity forces threat­ened to col­lapse the cur­rent gov­ern­ment under President Xanana Gusmao.
The cap­i­tal city of Dili has been mostly peace­ful in recent weeks, with just a few out­breaks of vio­lence. Gangs in the pay of the major polit­i­cal par­ties bat­tled in the streets on Thursday, the last day of cam­paign­ing, but only a hand­ful of injuries were reported. Australian army Corporal Steven Clacy, 24, attrib­uted the rel­a­tive calm to the stepped-​​up peace­keeper pres­ence. Its been quiet the last few weeks because weve been flex­ing. Clacy said he sleeps only three hours at a time due to his inten­sive patrolling sched­ule.
The boost to Australian and New Zealand oper­a­tions included more vehi­cle patrols, foot patrols and sur­veil­lance flights by heli­copters, accord­ing to Australian army Brigadier Mal Rerden, com­man­der of the peace­keep­ing force. He added that his troops retained a response capa­bil­ity to deal with any unex­pected crises. This type of response can include deploy­ment of a quick-​​reaction force, the deploy­ment of armored vehi­cles as well as air sup­port.
Australian armored vehi­cles armed with heavy machine guns idled in down­town Dili on Thursday morn­ing and, later in the day, a quick-​​reaction force in trucks speeded to a nearby neigh­bor­hood to help U.N. cops deal with clashes between young sup­port­ers of pres­i­den­tial fron­trun­ners Jose Ramos-​​Horta, the cur­rent prime min­is­ter, and Francisco Guterres, whose party is headed by for­mer prime min­is­ter Mari Alkatiri, ousted after last years riots. Authorities fired tear gas to dis­perse the com­bat­ants; sev­eral motor­cy­cles were set on fire.
Dili was quiet for Mondays elec­tions. Timorese gath­ered in the shade at down­town polling sta­tions, sip­ping soft drinks bought from street ped­dlers. Voters emerg­ing from the polls wiped their ink-​​stained fin­gers on their pants. Its a good start to the nation-​​building, Japanese ambas­sador Hideaki Asahi said while a tour­ing one polling place near the site of Thursdays vio­lence.
Stability in Timor is crit­i­cal to Australian plans for the region. In February Canberra signed agree­ments with Dili estab­lish­ing a frame­work for joint oil explo­ration in the Sea of Timor. Royalties from Timorese oil are worth an esti­mated $20 bil­lion to Canberra over sev­eral years; Dilis share is some­what smaller.
See my Timor posts at War Is Boring … and check out my Timor Flickr stream.
–David Axe

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April 12th, 2007 | Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere) | 245012 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2007/04/12/peacekeepers-safeguard-timorese-election/Peacekeepers+Safeguard+Timorese+Election2007-04-12+22%3A31%3A07murdoc You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Dr. Curiosity says:
    April 14, 2007 at 12:27 am

    [Disclaimer: I’m not a polit­i­cal sci­ence major, and I am a New Zealander.]
    One of the things that I find inter­est­ing about South Pacific pol­i­tics is that Australia and New Zealand, being the two major Western-​​style pow­ers in the region, get to play a kind of diplo­matic “good cop, bad cop” game. I don’t know how much col­lu­sion there is in that or whether it’s just the way the cards fall, but it seems to work okay most of the time.
    Australia is more (polit­i­cally) aligned towards the American way of doing things, but New Zealand has a rep­u­ta­tion for an inde­pen­dent streak that makes it use­ful to have on the ground in a sit­u­a­tion that requires medi­a­tion. Of course, the main rea­son NZ can do this so effec­tively is that Australia is there to be the dom­i­nant economic/​military force.
    New Zealand also seems to have a rep­u­ta­tion for being gen­er­ally friendly with folks on the ground. Right up until the point where peo­ple try to screw them over, at which point they can be remark­ably… unrea­son­able, if they need to.

    Reply
  2. kjhjg says:
    June 11, 2008 at 10:26 am

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