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The East Timor genocide refers to the "pacification campaigns" of state terrorism which were waged by the Indonesian New Order government during the Indonesian invasion and occupation of East Timor. The majority of sources consider the Indonesian killings in East Timor to constitute genocide,[4][5][6] while other scholars disagree on certain aspects of the definition.[7][8]

East Timor Genocide
Part of Indonesian occupation of East Timor
Cemetery in Santa Cruz visited in memory of the victims of the Indonesian Army's brutality
LocationEast Timor province, Indonesia
(East Timor under Indonesian occupation)
DateOccupation lasted from 1975 to 1999, though much of the killing occurred in the 1970s
TargetEast Timorese civilians
Attack type
Forced disappearance, Genocidal massacre, reprisal, scorched earth, enforced starvation, State terrorism, mass rape, internment, torture
Deathsapr. 80,000 - 200,000 per UN[1]
(estimate ranges from 60,000 to 308,000)
[2][3]
PerpetratorsGovernment of Indonesia
MotiveForced capitulation of the East Timorese people to Indonesian authority, Greater Indonesia, Christophobia, expansionism

Initial invasion

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From the start of the invasion in August 1975, the TNI forces engaged in the wholesale massacre of Timorese civilians.[9] At the start of the occupation, FRETILIN radio sent the following broadcast: "The Indonesian forces are killing indiscriminately. Women and children are being shot in the streets. We are all going to be killed ... This is an appeal for international help. Please do something to stop this invasion."[10] One Timorese refugee told later of "rape [and] cold-blooded assassinations of women and children and Chinese shop owners".[11] Dili's bishop at the time, Martinho da Costa Lopes, said later: "The soldiers who landed started killing everyone they could find. There were many dead bodies in the streets—all we could see were the soldiers killing, killing, killing."[12] In one incident, a group of fifty men, women, and children—including Australian freelance reporter Roger East—were lined up on a cliff outside of Dili and shot, their bodies falling into the sea.[13] Many such massacres took place in Dili, where onlookers were ordered to observe and count aloud as each person was executed.[14] It is estimated that at least 2,000 Timorese were massacred in the first two days of the invasion in Dili alone. In addition to FRETILIN supporters, Chinese migrants were also singled out for execution; five hundred were killed in the first day alone.[15]

The mass killings continued unabated as Indonesian forces advanced on the Fretilin-held mountain regions of East Timor. A Timorese guide for a senior Indonesian officer told former Australian consul to Portuguese Timor James Dunn that during the early months of the fighting TNI troops "killed most Timorese they encountered."[16] In February 1976 after capturing the village of Aileu - to the south of Dili - and driving out the remaining Fretilin forces, Indonesian troops machine gunned most of the town's population, allegedly shooting everyone over the age of three. The young children who were spared were taken back to Dili in trucks. At the time Aileu fell to Indonesian forces, the population was around 5,000; by the time Indonesian relief workers visited the village in September 1976 only 1,000 remained.[17] In June 1976, TNI troops badly battered by a Fretilin attack exacted retribution against a large refugee camp housing 5–6,000 Timorese at Lamaknan near the West Timor border. After setting several houses on fire, Indonesian soldiers massacred as many as 4,000 men, women and children.[18]

In March 1977 ex-Australian consul James Dunn published a report detailing charges that since December 1975 Indonesian forces had killed between 50,000 and 100,000 civilians in East Timor.[19] This is consistent with a statement made on 13 February 1976 by UDT leader Lopez da Cruz that 60,000 Timorese had been killed during the previous six months of civil war, suggesting a death toll of at least 55,000 in the first two months of the invasion. A delegation of Indonesian relief workers agreed with this statistic.[20] A late 1976 report by the Catholic Church also estimated the death toll at between 60,000 and 100,000.[21] These figures were also corroborated by those in the Indonesian government itself. In an interview on 5 April 1977 with the Sydney Morning Herald, Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik said the number of dead was "50,000 people or perhaps 80,000".[22]

The Indonesian government presented its annexation of East Timor as a matter of anticolonial unity. A 1977 booklet from the Indonesian Department of Foreign Affairs, entitled Decolonization in East Timor, paid tribute to the "sacred right of self-determination"[23] and recognised APODETI as the true representatives of the East Timorese majority. It claimed that FRETILIN's popularity was the result of a "policy of threats, blackmail and terror".[24] Later, Indonesian Foreign Minister Ali Alatas reiterated this position in his 2006 memoir The Pebble in the Shoe: The Diplomatic Struggle for East Timor.[25] The island's original division into east and west, Indonesia argued after the invasion, was "the result of colonial oppression" enforced by the Portuguese and Dutch imperial powers. Thus, according to the Indonesian government, its annexation of the 27th province was merely another step in the unification of the archipelago which had begun in the 1940s.[26]

Resettlement and enforced starvation

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Monument with the National emblem of Indonesia in Viqueque (2016)

As a result of the destruction of food crops, many civilians were forced to leave the hills and surrender to the TNI. Often, when surviving villagers came down to lower-lying regions to surrender, the military would execute them. Those who were not killed outright by TNI troops were sent to receiving centers which were prepared in advance. These camps were located in close proximity to local military bases where Indonesian forces "screened" the population in order to single out members of the resistance, often with the aid of Timorese collaborators. In these transit camps, the surrendered civilians were registered and interrogated. Those who were suspected of being members of the resistance were detained and killed.[27]

These centers were often constructed of thatch huts with no toilets. Additionally, the Indonesian military barred the Red Cross from distributing humanitarian aid and no medical care was provided to the detainees. As a result, many of the Timorese - weakened by starvation and surviving on small rations given by their captors - died of malnutrition, cholera, diarrhea and tuberculosis. By late 1979, between 300,000 and 370,000 Timorese had passed through these camps.[28] After a period of three months, the detainees were resettled in "strategic hamlets" where they were imprisoned and subjected to enforced starvation.[29] Those in the camps were prevented from traveling and cultivating farmland and were subjected to a curfew.[30] The UN truth commission report confirmed the Indonesian military's use of enforced starvation as a weapon to exterminate the East Timorese civilian population, and that large numbers of people were "positively denied access to food and its sources". The report cited testimony from individuals who were denied food, and detailed destruction of crops and livestock by Indonesian soldiers.[31] It concluded that this policy of deliberate starvation resulted in the deaths of 84,200 to 183,000 Timorese.[32] One church worker reported five hundred East Timorese dying of starvation every month in one district.[33]

World Vision Indonesia visited East Timor in October 1978 and claimed that 70,000 East Timorese were at risk of starvation.[34] An envoy from the International Committee of the Red Cross reported in 1979 that 80 percent of one camp's population was malnourished, in a situation that was "as bad as Biafra".[35] The ICRC warned that "tens of thousands" were at risk of starvation.[36] Indonesia announced that it was working through the government-run Indonesian Red Cross Society to alleviate the crisis, but the NGO Action for World Development charged that organisation with selling donated aid supplies.[33]

Indonesian pacification operations

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Operasi Keamanan: 1981–82

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In 1981, the Indonesian military launched Operasi Keamanan (Operation Security), which some have named the "fence of legs" program. During this operation, Indonesian forces conscripted 50,000 to 80,000 Timorese men and boys to march through the mountains ahead of advancing TNI troops as human shields to foreclose a FRETILIN counterattack. The objective was to sweep the guerillas into the central part of the region where they could be eradicated. Many of those conscripted into the "fence of legs" died of starvation, exhaustion or were shot by Indonesian forces for allowing guerillas to slip through. As the "fence" converged on villages, Indonesian forces massacred an unknown number of civilians. At least 400 villagers were massacred in Lacluta by Battalion 744 of the Indonesian Army in September 1981. An eyewitness who testified before the Australian Senate stated that soldiers deliberately killed small children by smashing their heads against a rock.[37] The operation failed to crush the resistance, and popular resentment toward the occupation grew stronger than ever.[38] As FRETILIN troops in the mountains continued their sporadic attacks, Indonesian forces carried out numerous operations to destroy them over the next ten years. In the cities and villages, meanwhile, a non-violent resistance movement began to take shape.[39]

'Operation Clean-Sweep': 1983

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The failure of successive Indonesian counterinsurgency campaigns led the commander of the Dili-based Sub regional Military Resort Command, Colonel Purwanto to initiate peace talks with FRETILIN commander Xanana Gusmão in a FRETILIN-controlled area in March 1983. When Xanana sought to invoke Portugal and the UN in the negotiations, ABRI Commander Benny Moerdani broke the ceasefire by announcing a new counterinsurgency offensive called "Operational Clean-Sweep" in August 1983, declaring, "This time no fooling around. This time we are going to hit them without mercy."[40]

The breakdown of the ceasefire agreement was followed by a renewed wave of massacres, summary executions and "disappearances" at the hands of Indonesian forces. In August 1983, 200 people were burned alive in the village of Creras, with 500 others killed at a nearby river.[37] Between August and December 1983, Amnesty International documented the arrests and "disappearances" of over 600 people in the capital city alone. Relatives were told by Indonesian forces that the "disappeared" were sent to Bali.[41]

Those suspected of opposing integration were often arrested and tortured.[42] In 1983 Amnesty International published an Indonesian manual it had received from East Timor instructing military personnel on how to inflict physical and mental anguish, and cautioning troops to "Avoid taking photographs showing torture (of someone being given electric shocks, stripped naked and so on)".[43] In his 1997 memoir East Timor's Unfinished Struggle: Inside the Timorese Resistance, Constâncio Pinto describes being tortured by Indonesian soldiers: "With each question, I would get two or three punches in the face. When someone punches you so much and so hard, it feels as if your face is broken. People hit me on my back and on my sides with their hands and then kicked me.... [In another location] they psychologically tortured me; they didn't hit me, but they made strong threats to kill me. They even put a gun on the table."[44] In Michele Turner's book Telling East Timor: Personal Testimonies 1942–1992, a woman named Fátima describes watching torture take place in a Dili prison: "They make people sit on a chair with the front of the chair on their own toes. It is mad, yes. The soldiers urinate in the food then mix it up for the person to eat. They use electric shock and they use an electric machine...."[45]

Violence against women

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Indonesian military abuses against women in East Timor were numerous and well-documented.[46] In addition to suffering arbitrary detainment, torture, and extrajudicial execution, women faced rape and sexual abuse—sometimes for the crime of being related to an independence activist. The scope of the problem is difficult to ascertain, owing to the intense military control imposed during the occupation, compounded by the shame felt by victims. In a 1995 report on violence against women in Indonesia and East Timor, Amnesty International USA wrote: "Women are reluctant to pass on information to non-governmental organizations about rape and sexual abuse, let alone to report violations to the military or police authorities."[47]

Other forms of violence against women took the form of harassment, intimidation, and forced marriage. The Amnesty report cites the case of a woman forced to live with a commander in Baucau, then harassed daily by troops after her release.[47] Such "marriages" took place regularly during the occupation.[48] Women were also encouraged to accept sterilisation procedures, and some were pressured to take the contraceptive Depo Provera, sometimes without full knowledge of its effects.[49]

In 1999 researcher Rebecca Winters released the book Buibere: Voice of East Timorese Women, which chronicles many personal stories of violence and abuse dating to the earliest days of the occupation. One woman tells of being interrogated while stripped half-naked, tortured, molested, and threatened with death.[50] Another describes being chained at the hands and feet, raped repeatedly, and interrogated for weeks.[51] A woman who had prepared food for FRETILIN guerrillas was arrested, burned with cigarettes, tortured with electricity, and forced to walk naked past a row of soldiers into a tank filled with urine and feces.[52]

Santa Cruz massacre

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During a memorial mass on 12 November 1991 for a pro-independence youth shot by Indonesian troops, demonstrators among the 2,500-strong crowd unfurled the Fretlin flag and banners with pro-independence slogans, and chanted boisterously but peacefully.[53] Following a brief confrontation between Indonesian troops and protesters,[54] 200 Indonesian soldiers opened fire on the crowd killing at least 250 Timorese.[55]

The testimonies of foreigners at the cemetery were quickly reported to international news organisations, and video footage of the massacre was widely broadcast internationally[56] causing outrage.[57] In response to the massacre, activists around the world organised in solidarity with the East Timorese, and a new urgency was brought to calls for self-determination.[58] TAPOL, a British organisation formed in 1973 to advocate for democracy in Indonesia, increased its work around East Timor. In the United States, the East Timor Action Network (now the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network) was founded and soon had chapters in ten cities around the country.[59] Other solidarity groups appeared in Portugal, Australia, Japan, Germany, Ireland, The Netherlands, Malaysia and Brazil. Coverage of the massacre was a vivid example of how growth of new media in Indonesia was making it increasingly difficult for the "New Order" to control information flow in and out of Indonesia, and that in the post-Cold War 1990s, the government was coming under increasing international scrutiny.[60] A number of pro-democracy student groups and their magazines began to openly and critically discuss not just East Timor, but also the "New Order" and the broader history and future of Indonesia.[58][60][61]

Sharp condemnation of the military came not just from the international community, but from within parts of the Indonesian elite. The massacre ended the governments 1989 opening of the territory and a new period of repression began.[62] Warouw was removed from his position and his more accommodating approach to Timorese resistance rebuked by his superiors. Suspected Fretilin sympathisers were arrested, human rights abuses rose, and the ban on foreign journalists was reimposed. Hatred intensified amongst Timorese of the Indonesian military presence.[63] Major General Prabowo's, Kopassus Group 3 trained militias gangs dressed in black hoods to crush the remaining resistance.[62]

Number of deaths

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Precise estimates of the death toll are difficult to determine. The 2005 report of the UN's Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor (CAVR) reports an estimated minimum number of conflict-related deaths of 102,800 (+/- 12,000). Of these, the report says that approximately 18,600 (+/-1,000) were either killed or disappeared, and that approximately 84,000 (+/-11,000) died from hunger or illness in excess of what would have been expected due to peacetime mortality. These figures represent a minimum conservative estimate that CAVR says is its scientifically based principal finding. The report did not provide an upper bound, however, CAVR speculated that the total number of deaths due to conflict-related hunger and illness could have been as high as 183,000.[64] The truth commission held Indonesian forces responsible for about 70% of the violent killings.[65]

Researcher Ben Kiernan says that "a toll of 150,000 is likely close to the truth," although one can throw out an estimate of 200,000 or higher.[66] The Center for Defense Information also estimated a total close to 150,000.[67] A 1974 Catholic church estimate of the population of East Timor was 688,711 people; in 1982 the church reported only 425,000. This led to an estimate of 200,000 people killed during the occupation, which was widely reported around the world.[68] Other sources such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch also support an estimate of over 200,000 killed.[69]

According to specialist Gabriel Defert on the basis of statistical data available from the Portuguese and Indonesian authorities, and from the Catholic Church, between December 1975 and December 1981, approximately 308,000 Timorese lost their lives; this constituted about 44% of the pre-invasion population.[3] Similarly Indonesian Professor George Aditjondro, formerly of Salatiga University in Java, concluded from his study of Indonesian Army data that in fact 300,000 Timorese had been killed in the early years of the occupation.[70]

Robert Cribb of the Australian National University argues that the toll was significantly exaggerated. He argues that the 1980 census that counted 555,350 Timorese, although "the most reliable source of all," was probably a minimum rather than a maximum estimate for the total population. "It is worth recalling that hundreds of thousands of East Timorese disappeared during the violence of September 1999, only to reappear later," he writes. The 1980 census becomes more improbable in the face of the 1987 census that counted 657,411 Timorese—this would require a growth rate of 2.5% per year, nearly identical to the very high growth rate in East Timor from 1970 to 1975, and a highly unlikely one given the conditions of the brutal occupation, including Indonesian efforts to discourage reproduction. Noting the relative lack of personal accounts of atrocities or of traumatised Indonesian soldiers, he further adds that East Timor "does not appear—on the basis of news reports and academic accounts—to be a society traumatized by mass death...the circumstance leading up to the Dili massacre of 1991...indicate a society which retained its vigor and indignation in a way which would probably not have been possible if it had been treated as Cambodia was treated under Pol Pot." Even Indonesian military strategy was based on winning the "hearts and minds" of the population, a fact that does not support charges of mass killing.[2]

Kiernan, starting from a base population of 700,000 Timorese in 1975 (based on the 1974 Catholic Church census) calculated an expected 1980 population of 735,000 Timorese (assuming a growth rate of only 1% per year as a result of the occupation). Accepting the 1980 count that Cribb regards as at least 10% (55,000) too low, Kiernan concluded that as many as 180,000 may have died in the war.[71] Cribb argued that the 3% growth rate suggested by the 1974 census was too high, citing the fact that the church had previously postulated a growth rate of 1.8%, which would have produced a figure in line with the Portuguese population estimate of 635,000 for 1974.

Although Cribb maintained that the Portuguese census was almost certainly an underestimate,[71] he believed it to be more likely correct than the church census, due to the fact that any church attempt to extrapolate the size of the total population "must be seen in light of its incomplete access to society" (less than half of Timorese were Catholic). Assuming a growth rate in line with the other nations of South East Asia, then, would yield a more accurate figure of 680,000 for 1975, and an expected 1980 population of slightly over 775,000 (without accounting for the decline in the birth rate resulting from the Indonesian occupation).[71] The deficit remaining would be almost exactly 200,000. According to Cribb, Indonesian policies restricted the birth rate by up to 50% or more, thus around 45,000 of these were not born rather than killed; another 55,000 were "missing" as a result of the Timorese evading the Indonesian authorities who conducted the 1980 census.[2] A variety of factors—the exodus of tens of thousands from their homes to escape FRETILIN in 1974–75; the deaths of thousands in the civil war; the deaths of combatants during the occupation; killings by FRETILIN; and natural disasters—diminish further still the civilian toll attributable to Indonesian forces during this time.[2] Considering all this data, Cribb argues for a much lower toll of 100,000 or less, with an absolute minimum of 60,000, and a mere tenth of the civilian population dying unnaturally, for the years 1975–1980.[2]

Kiernan responded, however, by asserting that the influx of migrant workers during the occupation and the increase in the population growth rate typical of a mortality crisis justifies accepting the 1980 census as valid despite the 1987 estimate, and that the 1974 church census—though a "possible maximum"—cannot be discounted because the church's lack of access to society might well have resulted in an undercount.[71] He concluded that at least 116,000 combatants and civilians were killed by all sides or died "unnatural" deaths from 1975 to 1980 (if true, this would yield the result that about 15% of the civilian population of East Timor was killed from 1975 to 1980).[71] F. Hiorth separately estimated that 13% (95,000 out of an expected 730,000 when accounting for the reduction in birth rates) of the civilian population died during this period.[2] Kiernan believes that the deficit was most probably around 145,000 when accounting for the reduction in birth rates, or 20% of East Timor's population.[71] The mid-value of the UN report is 146,000 deaths; R.J. Rummel, an analyst of political killings, estimates 150,000.[72]

Accurate numbers of Indonesian casualties are well-documented. The complete names of around 2,300 Indonesian soldiers and pro-Indonesian militias who died in action as well as from illness and accidents during the entire occupation is engraved into the Seroja Monument, located in TNI Headquarters in Cilangkap, East Jakarta.[73]

Genocide classification

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Many observers have called the Indonesian military action in East Timor an example of genocide.[74] Oxford held an academic consensus calling the event genocide and Yale University teaches it as part of their "Genocide Studies" program.[4][75] In a study of the word's legal meaning and applicability to the occupation of East Timor, legal scholar Ben Saul concludes that because no group recognized under international law was targeted by the Indonesian authorities, a charge of genocide cannot be applied. However, he also notes: "The conflict in East Timor most accurately qualifies as genocide against a 'political group', or alternatively as 'cultural genocide', yet neither of these concepts are explicitly recognised in international law."[76] A similar argument was made by David Bisson, who argues that the conflict would have been classified as a genocide if the East Timorese had been able to form their own nation state prior to the invasion, yet because the Indonesian invasion deliberately pre-empted this from occurring, it paradoxically created a loophole that technically excludes the Indonesian military's actions from the charge of genocide.[77] The occupation has been compared to the killings of the Khmer Rouge, the Yugoslav wars, and the Rwandan genocide.[78]

Depictions in fiction

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  • Balibo (2009)
  • Amok (novel) (Barry Eisler, 2022)

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Precise estimates of the death toll are difficult to determine. The 2005 report of the UN's Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor (CAVR) reports an estimated minimum number of conflict-related deaths of 102,800 (+/− 12,000). Of these, the report says that approximately 18,600 (+/− 1,000) were either killed or disappeared, and that approximately 84,000 (+/− 11,000) died from hunger or illness in excess of what would have been expected due to peacetime mortality. These figures represent a minimum conservative estimate that CAVR says is its scientifically-based principal finding. The report did not provide an upper bound, however, CAVR speculated that the total number of deaths due to conflict-related hunger and illness could have been as high as 183,000. The truth commission held Indonesian forces responsible for about 70% of the violent killings.
    * This estimates comes from taking the minimum killed violently applying the 70% violent death responsibility given to Indonesian military combined with the minimum starved.
    "Conflict-related Deaths in Timor Leste, 1954–1999. The Findings of the CAVR Report" (PDF)."The CAVR Report". Archived from the original on 13 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Cribb, Robert (2001). "How Many Deaths?: Problems in the statistics of massacre in Indonesia (1965-1966) and East Timor (1975-1980)". In Wessel, Ingrid; Wimhöfer, Georgia (eds.). Violence in Indonesia. Hamburg: Abera-Verl. Meyer. pp. 82–98. ISBN 978-3-934376-16-8. Archived from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b Pilger, John (1998). Hidden Agendas. Random House. p. 284. ISBN 9781407086415.
  4. ^ a b Payaslian, Simon. "20th Century Genocides". Oxford bibliographies. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 16 May 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  5. ^ Sidell, Scott (1981). "The United States and genocide in East Timor". Journal of Contemporary Asia. 11 (1): 44–61. doi:10.1080/00472338185390041.
  6. ^ "War, Genocide, and Resistance in East Timor, 1975-99: Comparative Reflections on Cambodia". Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  7. ^ Saul, Ben (2001). "Was the Conflict in the East Timor 'Genocide' and Why Does it Matter?" (PDF). Melbourne Journal of International Law. 2 (2): 477–. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 October 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  8. ^ Lisson, David. "Defining National Group in the Genocide Convention: A Case Study of Timor-Leste." Stan. L. Rev. 60 (2007): 1459.
  9. ^ Hill 1978, p. 210.
  10. ^ Quoted in Budiardjo & Liong 1984, p. 15
  11. ^ Quoted in Ramos-Horta 1987, p. 108
  12. ^ Quoted in Taylor 1991, p. 68
  13. ^ Ramos-Horta 1987, pp. 101–102.
  14. ^ Taylor 1991, p. 68.
  15. ^ Taylor 1991, p. 69; Dunn 1996, p. 253
  16. ^ Dunn 1996, pp. 293, 303.
  17. ^ Taylor 1991, pp. 80–81.
  18. ^ Dunn 1996, p. 303.
  19. ^ "A Quarter Century of U.S. Support for Occupation in East Timor". nsarchive2.gwu.edu. Archived from the original on 9 February 2021. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  20. ^ Taylor 1991, p. 71.
  21. ^ Dunn 1996, p. 310 Notes on Timor
  22. ^ Quoted in Turner 1992, p. 207
  23. ^ Indonesia (1977), p. 16.
  24. ^ Indonesia (1977), p. 21.
  25. ^ Alatas, pp. 18–19.
  26. ^ Indonesia (1977), p. 19.
  27. ^ CAVR, ch. 7.3, pp. 41–44.
  28. ^ Mayersen, Deborah; Pohlman, Annie (2013). Genocide and Mass Atrocities in Asia: Legacies and Prevention. Routledge. p. 56.
  29. ^ CAVR, ch. 7, p. 50; Taylor, pp. 88–89; Dunn 1996, pp. 290–291
  30. ^ Taylor 1991, pp. 92–98.
  31. ^ CAVR, ch. 7.3, pp 146–147.
  32. ^ CAVR, ch. 7.3, p. 146.
  33. ^ a b Kohen & Taylor 1979, pp. 54–56
  34. ^ CAVR, ch. 7.3, p. 72.
  35. ^ Quoted in Taylor 1991, p. 97
  36. ^ Taylor 1991, p. 203.
  37. ^ a b Taylor, pp. 101–102; Nevins 2005, p. 30; Budiardjo & Liong 1984, pp. 127–128; Amnesty (1985), p. 23; Dunn 1996, p. 299
  38. ^ Budiardjo & Liong 1984, pp. 41–43; Dunn 1996, p. 301
  39. ^ Dunn 1996, pp. 303–304.
  40. ^ Sinar Harapan, 17 August 1983, quoted in Taylor 1991, p. 142
  41. ^ East Timor, Violations of Human Rights: Extrajudicial Executions, "Disappearances", Torture and Political Imprisonment, 1975–1984, p. 40
  42. ^ Amnesty (1985), pp. 53–59; Turner 1992, p. 125; Kohen & Taylor 1979, p. 90; Budiardjo & Liong 1984, pp. 131–135
  43. ^ Amnesty (1985), pp. 53–54.
  44. ^ Pinto, pp. 142–148.
  45. ^ Turner 1992, p. 143.
  46. ^ Amnesty (1995); Winters; Budiardjo & Liong 1984, p. 132; Jardine 1999, pp. 33–34; Aditjondro (1998).
  47. ^ a b Amnesty (1995), p. 14.
  48. ^ Aditjondro (1998), pp. 256–260.
  49. ^ Taylor 1991, pp. 158–160.
  50. ^ Winters, pp. 11–12.
  51. ^ Winters, pp. 24–26.
  52. ^ Winters, pp. 85–90.
  53. ^ Schwarz 1994, p. 212.
  54. ^ Two soldiers were stabbed under disputed circumstances.(Schwarz (1994), p. 212; Pinto and Jardine, p. 191.) Soldiers said the attacks were unprovoked. Stahl claims stabbed Officer Lantara had attacked a girl carrying the flag of East Timor, and FRETILIN activist Constâncio Pinto reports eyewitness accounts of beatings from Indonesian soldiers and police. Kubiak, W. David. "20 Years of Terror: Indonesia in Timor – An Angry Education with Max Stahl" Archived 2014-06-04 at the Wayback Machine. Kyoto Journal. 28. Reprinted at The Forum of Democratic Leaders in the Asia-Pacific Archived 2017-12-13 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 14 February 2008.
  55. ^ Carey, p. 51; Jardine 1999, p. 16. The Portuguese solidarity group A Paz é Possível em Timor Leste compiled a careful survey Archived 2018-08-14 at the Wayback Machine of the massacre's victims, listing 271 killed, 278 wounded, and 270 "disappeared".
  56. ^ Schwarz 1994, pp. 212–213.
  57. ^ Jardine 1999, pp. 16–17; Carey, pp. 52–53.
  58. ^ a b Jardine 1999, pp. 67–69
  59. ^ "About ETAN". East Timor Action Network. Archived from the original on 23 July 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2008.
  60. ^ a b Vickers (2005), pp. 200–201
  61. ^ CIIR, pp. 62–63; Dunn 1996, p. 311
  62. ^ a b Friend (2003), p. 433.
  63. ^ Schwarz 1994, pp. 216, 218, 219.
  64. ^ "Conflict-related Deaths in Timor Leste, 1954–1999. The Findings of the CAVR Report Chega!" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 January 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  65. ^ "Chega! The CAVR Report". Archived from the original on 13 May 2012.
  66. ^ Kiernan, p. 594.
  67. ^ "Welcome to nginx!". Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
  68. ^ Dunn 1996, pp. 283–285; Budiardjo & Liong 1984, pp. 49–51
  69. ^ Asia Watch, Human Rights in Indonesia and East Timor, Human Rights Watch, New York, 1989, p. 253.
  70. ^ CIIR Report, International Law and the Question of East Timor, Catholic Institute of International Relations/IPJET, London, 1995.
  71. ^ a b c d e f "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2009. Retrieved 18 February 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  72. ^ "Archive copy". Archived from the original on 11 October 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  73. ^ "Selayang Pandang Monumen Seroja" [Seroja Monument at a Glance] (in Indonesian). Pelita.or.id. Archived from the original on 24 November 2016.
  74. ^ Jardine 1999;[page needed] Taylor 1991, p. ix; Nevins cites a wide variety of sources discussing the question of genocide in East Timor, in Nevins 2005, pp. 217–218.
  75. ^ "Genocide Studies Program: East Timor". Yale University. Archived from the original on 23 March 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  76. ^ Saul, Ben (2001). "Was the Conflict in East Timor 'Genocide' and Why Does It Matter?". Melbourne Journal of International Law. 2 (2). Archived from the original on 9 February 2021. Retrieved 17 February 2008.
  77. ^ Lisson, David (2007). "Defining National Group in the Genocide Convention: A Case Study of Timor-Leste". Stanford Law Review. 60: 1459.
  78. ^ Budiardjo & Liong 1984, p. 49; CIIR, p. 117.

Bibliography

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