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EAST TIMOR

P.h.o.t.o.s . t.h.i.s . p.a.g.e

East Timor
East Timor


The west of East Timor

Heading west from Dili, the coastal road takes you to the town of Liquiça, the scene of a massacre on 6 April 1999, when between 25 and 50 people were killed by the infamous Besa Merah Putih (Red and White Iron) militia in the Catholic Church, while Indonesian troops just stood by. The town was also the site of a Japanese concentration camp in the Second World War, where a large number of Portuguese were kept. Further west, 49 km from Dili, is the small town of Maubara, with the massive walls of a 17th Century Portuguese fort lining the road. Brass cannons still point out to sea.

Close to the Indonesian border is the town of Maliana, also the scene of great suffering after East Timor's pro-independence vote in 1999. It is the capital of the district of Bobonaro and its Kemak people still practice traditional weaving called "tais" on backstrap looms. Further west is Balibo, dominated by a large Portuguese fort on the hill overlooking the village. There is a memorial with the names of the people killed by Indonesian militia on 7 September 1999, after it became clear they had voted for independence. It overlooks the square with its Indonesian "Integrasi" monument, an ugly concrete tower topped by a statue of a Timorese peasant happily breaking the bonds of Portuguese colonialism and clutching an Indonesian flag. On the other side of the square is what is now called the "Australian Flag House":

When the Portuguese administration had decided to withdraw to Atauro island following the UDT party's grab for power on 11 August 1975, a brief civil war broke out between the UDT and the much stronger FRELIMO forces. There were rumours that Indonesia, fearing an unstable leftist regime in the former Portuguese colony, would invade the territory and five television journalists working for Australian TV based themselves in a house in Balibo. The Indonesian army crossed the border at dawn on 16 October 1975 and attacked the village. In a futile attempt to save their lives, the journalists had painted an Australian flag on the wall of their house. However, when the Indonesians advanced, they tried to hide in another house beyond the square, from where they were dragged and shot, allegedly by commanding General Yunus Yosfiah himself. There has been a cover up by the Australian government who, at the time, knew of the impending invasion and actually encouraged it while failing to warn the journalists of the danger they were facing. In late 2003 the "Australian Flag House" had been renovated with Australian financial help, the very much faded painted flag on the wall protected by a sheet of perspex. It is now a community centre with an exhibition and photos of those terrible events in 1975.


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Maubara road
Maubara road
Maubara fort
Maubara fort
Portuguese cannon
Portuguese cannon
Shop in Maubara
Shop in Maubara
Maliana
Maliana
Farm in Maliana
Farm in Maliana
Balibo
Balibo
Indonesian monument
Indonesian monument
Memorial, Balibo
Memorial, Balibo
Balibo fort
Balibo fort
Portuguese fort
Portuguese fort
Balibo market
Balibo market
...Oecussi......Dili......Maubisse...
 
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