A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 28, 2016
The Rape Of East Timor: “Sounds Like Fun”
East
Timor won its independence in 1999 with the blood and courage of its
ordinary people. The tiny, fragile democracy was immediately subjected
to a relentless campaign of bullying by the Australian government which
sought to manoeuvre it out of its legal ownership of the sea bed’s oil
and gas revenue.
( February 26, 2016, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Secret
documents found in the Australian National Archives provide a glimpse
of how one of the greatest crimes of the 20th century was executed and
covered up. They also help us understand how and for whom the world is
run.
The documents refer to East Timor, now known as Timor-Leste, and were
written by diplomats in the Australian embassy in Jakarta. The date was
November 1976, less than a year after the Indonesian dictator General
Suharto seized the then Portuguese colony on the island of Timor.
The terror that followed has few parallels; not even Pol Pot succeeded
in killing, proportionally, as many Cambodians as Suharto and his fellow
generals killed in East Timor. Out of a population of almost a million,
up to a third were extinguished.
This was the second holocaust for which Suharto was responsible. A
decade earlier, in 1965, Suharto wrested power in Indonesia in a
bloodbath that took more than a million lives. The CIA reported: “In
terms of numbers killed, the massacres rank as one of the worst mass
murders of the 20th century.”
This was greeted in the Western press as “a gleam of light in Asia”
(Time). The BBC’s correspondent in South East Asia, Roland Challis,
later described the cover-up of the massacres as a triumph of media
complicity and silence; the “official line” was that Suharto had “saved”
Indonesia from a communist takeover.
“Of course my British sources knew what the American plan was,” he told
me. “There were bodies being washed up on the lawns of the British
consulate in Surabaya, and British warships escorted a ship full of
Indonesian troops, so that they could take part in this terrible
holocaust. It was only much later that we learned that the American
embassy was supplying [Suharto with] names and ticking them off as they
were killed. There was a deal, you see. In establishing the Suharto
regime, the involvement of the [US-dominated] International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank were part of it. That was the deal.”
I have interviewed many of the survivors of 1965, including the
acclaimed Indonesian novelist Pramoedya Ananta Toer, who bore witness to
an epic of suffering “forgotten” in the West because Suharto was “our
man”. A second holocaust in resource-rich East Timor, an undefended
colony, was almost inevitable.