Dili – Elements of the Indonesian military are providing direct support for armed pro-Jakarta militiamen infiltrating into East Timor, a senior US diplomat said Tuesday. Robert Gelbard, the US ambassador to Indonesia, said he didn't concur with UN peacekeepers who say that while the Indonesian military, or TNI, was turning a blind eye to militia activity, there is no evidence of active logistical or other support.
"There is TNI involvement. We were told all the militias had been disarmed, suddenly and magically they seem to have come up with arms," Gelbard said. "But I do believe this is not TNI policy. These are probably individuals who have maintained their long- standing ties to the militias and maybe some remnants of some specialized units," he added.
The cross-border incursions and militia activity in refugee camps in Indonesian-held West Timor have been blamed for keeping the more than 100,000 refugees in the camps six months after international peacekeepers took control of East Timor and forced the militiamen to flee.
The UN's Deputy High Commissioner for Refugees, Soren Jessen Petersen, blamed the slow rate of refugee repatriation on a propaganda campaign mounted by the militia umbrella group, Untas. "That is the major obstacle in the way of return. People are being kept in the situation where they do not have enough access to objective information, they are constantly being pumped with misinformation and at the same time suffering clear intimidation and harassment," Petersen said.