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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Timorese Church Under Suspicion
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.090551.2487@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 09:05:51 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 49
-
- /** reg.easttimor: 347.0 **/
- ** Topic: Timorese Church Under Suspicion **
- ** Written 6:39 pm Nov 14, 1992 by gn:tapol in cdp:reg.easttimor **
- Subject: Timorese Church Under Suspicion
-
- /* Written 2:56 pm Nov 13, 1992 by igc:apakabar in gn:reg.indonesia */
- /* ---------- "Timorese Church Under Suspicion" ---------- */
-
- According to a November 13 Reuter story by Moses Manoharan datelined
- Dili, the Roman Catholic Church in East Timor is trying to avoid clashing
- with Indonesia's military amid deep government suspicion of the church's
- role in unrest in the territory.
- The church is the most powerful institution in the territory after
- the Indonesian army, which invaded in 1975.
- "We want the church to be neutral but it is not," Tito Baptista, a
- senior aide to the East Timor governor, told Reuters.
- He acknowledged the danger of not recognizing church influence in
- territory, which Indonesia annexed the year after it invaded in a move
- still not internationally recognized. Anti-Jakarta sentiment remains
- strong in the area.
- Priests had agreed not to say a special mass for the dead on the
- anniversary of the November 12, 1991 Dili massacre. "We are not for
- confrontation," said one.
- Some mourners say they understand their position.
- "We would have liked a memorial service, but we understand that we
- have to be careful," said one woman at a Dili church.
- Observers say the church appears to be trying to appease the
- government.
- One of Dili's most prominent priests, Father Ricardo, has been sent
- to Rome. It was from his church last November that the mourning
- procession set off for the Dili cemetery where it met army fire.
- The government considered the church a gathering point for
- anti-Indonesian youths, but now few young people are seen near the
- building.
- Ximenes Belo, the territory's first East Timorese bishop, has kept a
- discreet profile and his house looks deserted.
- "We know he (Belo) has been controversial but the church has given
- us our identity," said one East Timorese in the government.
- Military and government officials admit that youths especially have
- turned to the church as a way of maintaining their identity against an
- onslaught of Indonesian culture.
- Military spokesman Nurhadi Purwosaputro said: "It is good for us to
- work together then we can find a path to a solution."
- But local military commander Theo Syafei was firmer. "We have told
- the bishop 'You are here to practice religion. Don't interfere in
- politics'," he said.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.easttimor **
-
-