Last month Prime Minister Paul Keating launched a “trade and cultural promotion” with Indonesia. Surrounded by businessmen and representatives of the arts, Keating made an extraordinary speech that was praised in the Australian press for its “maturity”.
A Moral Outrage
It was the public, not politicians, who forced the Australian government to end the betrayal of East Timor.
Australia ignores the plight of the East Timorese, but keeps a watchful eye on their oil and gas
The Australian prime minister, John Howard, recently described his government’s actions over East Timor last year as “wholly honourable and decent”.
Secret war against defenceless West Papua
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger describes how the terrible history of East Timor is repeating itself in nearby West Papua, another stolen resource-rich province of Indonesia, whose notorious army is again colluding with the West.
Only Australia remains true to the uber-sheriff in Washington
Ten years ago, I filmed secretly in East Timor, a small country in south-east Asia whose brutal occupation was largely unknown to the outside world.
Suharto, the model killer, and his friends in high places
In an article for the Guardian, John Pilger says the death of General Suharto, the former dictator of Indonesia, is an opportunity to review the role of this “model” for high crimes in the modern era – from Indonesia, to Chile, to Vietnam – and the powerful friends who ensured he would never suffer the fate of Saddam Hussein.
The Timor Conspiracy
The betrayal of the East Timorese by the international community. “We are showing this updated version because the people of East Timor are in the news at last, once again fighting for their lives, and because their murderers continue to receive arms from this British government, contrary to its boast about an ethical foreign policy.” […]