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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!psuvax1!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: CANADA AIDS INDONESIAN ARMY
- Message-ID: <1992Aug21.082306.8986@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: Fri, 21 Aug 1992 08:23:06 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 70
-
- The ACTivist July/August 92
-
- The ACTivist is published monthly (one issue during July and August)
- by the ACT for Disarmament Coalition, 736 Bathurst St., Toronto,
- Ontario, Canada, M5S 2R4, phone 416-531-6154, fax 416-531-5850,
- e-mail web:act.
-
- Reprint freely, but please credit us (and send us a copy!)
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 121.1 **/
- ** Written 11:13 pm Aug 11, 1992 by web:act in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- CANADA AIDS INDONESIAN ARMY
-
- By Maggie Helwig
- The ACTivist
-
- According to reports from a British freelance journalist, Canada
- may be directly involved in assisting the Indonesian war against the
- East Timorese people, by providing information on guerrilla
- encampments to the Indonesian government.
-
- Max Stahl, the Yorkshire TV cameraman who filmed the Santa Cruz
- massacre last November 12, had spent several months in East Timor
- during the fall. In late September, he told The ACTivist, he met
- employees of an unidentified Canadian company in the eastern part
- of the island. They were engaged in taking extremely high-resolution
- photographs of the territory from fixed-wing airplanes, as part of
- a mapping project funded by the Canadian International Development
- Agency (CIDA). They were mapping this particular area
- under the direction of the Indonesian government.
-
- At that time, the FALINTIL guerrillas, the armed wing of the
- Timorese independence movement, were operating mostly in
- the mountains in this eastern area. Stahl believes that the
- Indonesian government had requested the Canadians to take their
- 'mapping project' specifically to this area so that they could obtain
- information about guerrilla positions with technology otherwise
- unavailable to them (the Canadians described their ultra-high
- resolution camera as one of only two or three of that quality in
- the world). He believes that the Canadian government has either
- refused to examine the implications of their project, or is aware of
- the use to which it is being put but prefers to maintain a friendly
- relationship with Indonesia.
-
- CIDA has claimed, when approached in the past, that they do not
- fund any projects in East Timor.
-
- Though FALINTIL is a small and poorly armed band of guerrillas,
- the Indonesian army continues to wage a bloody
- counter-insurgency campaign aimed at wiping them out
- completely -- as well as using the guerrilla movement as an
- excuse to brutally repress the unarmed independence activists
- based in the larger cities and towns of East Timor.
-
- This is not the only case in which Canadian aid is being used to
- further the ambitions of the Indonesian government and military.
- Another CIDA-funded project involves building a road to Aceh, in
- the western part of Indonesia, where a Muslim separatist movement
- is being savagely attacked. The road would facilitate the transport
- of troops and weapons to this remote area. And CIDA is helping to
- fund a birth control program being inflicted on the women of East
- Timor against their will (see The ACTivist, April 92).
-
- Canadian activists are continuing to investigate Stahl's report,
- hoping to identify the company involved and obtain further
- information on the 'mapping project' and other CIDA projects
- in Indonesia.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-
-