Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07DILI223
2007-06-06 10:42:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Dili
Cable title:  

CNRT LEADER XANANA GUSMAO ON ELECTIONS

Tags:  PGOV ASEC KDEM PHUM TT 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO6894
PP RUEHLMC RUEHMR RUEHPA RUEHPB
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ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P R 061042Z JUN 07
FM AMEMBASSY DILI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3567
INFO RUCNARF/ASEAN REGIONAL FORUM COLLECTIVE
RUEHBR/AMEMBASSY BRASILIA 0568
RUEHLI/AMEMBASSY LISBON 0929
RUEHROV/AMEMBASSY VATICAN 0168
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 0713
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RHMFISS/DEPT OF JUSTICE WASHINGTON DC
RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC
RHHMUNA/HQ USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RUCNMCM/MCC COLLECTIVE
RUEHDT/AMEMBASSY DILI 2938
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 DILI 000223 

SIPDIS

SECSTATE FOR EAP/MTS
TOKYO FOR HANS KLEMM
USUN FOR RICHARD MCCURRY
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 6/6/2017
TAGS: PGOV ASEC KDEM PHUM TT
SUBJECT: CNRT LEADER XANANA GUSMAO ON ELECTIONS

REF: DILI 218

DILI 00000223 001.2 OF 003


CLASSIFIED BY: Henry M. Rector, Charge d'Affaires, U.S. Embassy,
Dili, East Timor, Department of State.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)




C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 DILI 000223

SIPDIS

SECSTATE FOR EAP/MTS
TOKYO FOR HANS KLEMM
USUN FOR RICHARD MCCURRY
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 6/6/2017
TAGS: PGOV ASEC KDEM PHUM TT
SUBJECT: CNRT LEADER XANANA GUSMAO ON ELECTIONS

REF: DILI 218

DILI 00000223 001.2 OF 003


CLASSIFIED BY: Henry M. Rector, Charge d'Affaires, U.S. Embassy,
Dili, East Timor, Department of State.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)





1. (U) Summary: In a June 5 meeting with Charge and Poloff, a
relaxed and confident Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao, former President
and currently leader of the National Council of Timorese
Reconstruction (CNRT),which hopes to oust the ruling Fretilin
Party in East Timor's parliamentary elections on June 30, shared
his views on the ongoing campaign season. Gusmao provided a
detailed readout of last weekend's campaign-related violence in
the eastern district of Viqueque, implicating Fretilin
supporters as the main culprits and citing their tactics and
public relations response an indicator of their weakness. He
provided an overview of priorities should CNRT lead the next
government, emphasizing a non-partisan approach in which
government positions would be filled based on competence rather
than party loyalty. He reported that CNRT has reached a
gentleman's agreement with the other two main opposition tickets
that none of them will enter into any coalition with Fretilin
and that they instead will work together to form a new
government. End summary.

Campaigning in the East
--------------


2. (C) Charge and Poloff met with former President of the
Republic and currently leader of the CNRT opposition party, Kay
Rala Xanana Gusmao, on June 5 in his newly appointed party
headquarters. The CNRT offices were buzzing with activity, with
various committee meetings taking place elsewhere in the
building and supporters and coordinators from the district
gathered in casual groups throughout the facility. Gusmao began
by recounting his version of last weekend's violence (reftel)
which left three dead in the eastern district of Viqueque. He
described CNRT's campaigning in the three eastern districts as
basically positive but accompanied by an escalating series of
incidents of harassment and attacks by Fretilin supporters.

While the first events in Lautem district involved only vocal
disruption, it devolved to rock throwing when they reached
Baucau.


3. (C) In Viqueque, campaigning initially went smoothly until
they reached the Uatulare area. (Note: Uatulare is historically
the most volatile area of Viqueque and was also the site of two
attacks on campaigners for Jose Ramos-Horta during the
presidential campaign. Investigations into these attacks
resulted in the suspension of the District Police Commander,
Gaspar Soares, for his involvement in them.) In Uatulare,
Gusmao reported that groups of youth began disturbing their
campaigning, at one point surrounding their vehicles and
prompting his armed security personal to fire warning shots.
When the shooting of Afonso Kudelai took place later in Viqueque
town, Gusmao was in a meeting with suspended District Police
Commander Soares, at the request of a local priest. Gusmao
linked Soares with the various attacks, noting in particular
that many of his people had observed Soares accompanying the
shooter from Uatalare to Viqueque. Throughout the earlier
incidents, Gusmao noted that Luis da Silva, the PNTL officer who
shot Kudelai, was present and helping to lead the harassment of
the campaigners. He described da Silva as a known Fretilin
stalwart, and unequivocally rejected the allegation, made in a
Fretilin press release, that Kudelai had been armed.


4. (C) Gusmao emphasized his view that the weekend incidents do
not reflect lack of support for him in the East. He said that
Fretilin likes to think of the eastern districts as their
"fortress" but that "they forget that I spent five years there
during the struggle". (Gusmao began his work to rebuild the
resistance in the furthest East district of Lautem in the late
1970s.) He noted that even some members of the population that
were shouting abuse and calling him a "traitor" as he passed
through, they were often simultaneously waving and smiling at
him in recognition. He also emphasized that those involved in
the harassment and attacks did not represent the whole

DILI 00000223 002.2 OF 003


population, but were rather "youths directed by PNTL and
Fretilin party cadres", including Fretilin-affiliated police,
district administrators, and members of parliament, a charge he
repeated several times for emphasis in the course of the
conversation. He did not tar all the police with one brush,
noting that there were Fretilin members in the police who
carried out their jobs impartially. Gusmao recounted an appeal
he had made to then acting-Prime Minister Estanislau da Silva
during the presidential campaign that Fretilin must instruct its
members within the police to behave well; otherwise, it would
reflect badly on the party.


5. (C) Prior to our meeting with Gusmao, Embassy sources within
CNRT had relayed their fear that the shooting of Kudelai was
connected to a larger plot to target Gusmao himself. When asked
whether he thought the shooting was planned, Gusmao said he had
been warned while in Uatalare that something would happen in
Viqueque, possibly a shooting. He relayed that he believed
there may have been an attempt to target himself, former Foreign
Minister Jose Luis Guterres, and other dissident Fretilin
Mudansa members who are supporting the CNRT. As a result of
these early warnings, his close protection personnel took
additional precautions while in Viqueque town.


6. (C) Xanana Gusmao said he believed that last weekend's events
were to a great extent the result of the political volatility
specific to Viqueque district, where Fretilin's presidential
candidate received two-thirds of the vote and many locals regard
opposition to Fretilin as a form of national betrayal. However,
he noted that dynamics there have some connection with the
overall picture in the three eastern districts and alluded to
his ongoing communication with former clandestine networks in
the region, saying "we are watching." He was relatively
sanguine regarding the potential for campaign-related violence
in the rest of the country, but expressed concern about specific
hotspots, saying that he expected problems in Same, where he
said that the Fretilin District Administrator is known to have
weapons, as well as Ermera and Covalima districts. He said that
the situation in Dili was less likely to be problematic and
could be relatively easily contained by the United Nations and
the Australian International Stabilization Force (ISF).


7. (C) Gusmao acknowledged that tension between Fretilin members
and members of its dissident wing, Fretilin Mudansa, were also a
factor in some of the unrest manifested in the East, but
emphasized the right of Mudansa members to support who they
chose. Fretilin has been publicly berating CNRT for its
alliance with Mudansa, blaming Mudansa's CNRT supporters as the
instigators of the eastern problems and excoriating the group's
continued use of Fretilin symbols despite its opposition to the
current party. Gusmao dismissed this as rhetoric produced by
Fretilin's anger at losing support among its own members.

Post-election planning
--------------


8. (C) Gusmao exuded confidence in CNRT's electoral prospects,
emphasizing that everywhere he traveled in the country people
want change. He said that CNRT has recently reached a
gentleman's agreement with the two other most prominent
opposition groups, the Democratic Party (PD) and the coalition
of the Social Democratic Party (PSD) and the Timorese Social
Democrat Association (ASDT). According to the agreement, none
of these parties will accept any invitation by Fretilin to form
a government. Instead, they will work together to form the
combined majority needed to form a government. Gusmao
emphasized that even if CNRT gains an absolute majority, it
would still work with other parties to form the government, and
believes that both PD and PSD/ASDT will do the same. (Note:
some form of alliance among these three is widely considered the
most likely governance outcome. However, tensions between
opposition parties, and in particular resentment on the part of
the established parties toward Gusmao for encroaching on their
opposition territory, may complicate this process.)

A Government Of Technocrats?
--------------


9. (C) Gusmao said that he wanted to form a government of

DILI 00000223 003.2 OF 003


ministers chosen on the basis of expertise and qualifications,
not political affiliation. Several times in the discussion he
used the term "technocrat" to describe the kind of minister he
was seeking. He charged that the Fretilin government of former
Prime Minister had made too many decisions based of political
and party considerations, and as a result had accomplished
little. East Timor, he said, now needs a new culture of
professionalism in governance, instead of all decisions being
made by a ruling clique. For this reason, a CNRT government
would also implement decentralization. He criticized the
Fretilin government for poor planning. Former PM Alkatiri, he
said, never had serious priorities or a master plan in
governance, and when asked about this would only reply that "the
plan was in the budget." A CNRT-led government, Gusmao said,
would devise a five-year plan for government, and hoped to
create institutions and government processes that would be
de-linked from partisan politics.


10. (C) Comment: Xanana Gusmao did not seem in the least rattled
by his experiences last weekend. During the discussion, he was
relaxed and ebullient, exuding confidence. He also was
restrained in assigning blame for the Viqueque incident. While
he made it clear that he believed that Fretilin in cooperation
with sympathetic elements in the PNTL bore responsibility, he
did not belabor the matter or attack the PNTL's leadership. He
appears to regard provocations by Fretilin supporters as par for
the course and as an indication of his own position of strength
and Fretilin's perception of its own vulnerability. He also gave
the impression of being in his element, with the conflictual
environment and rumors of plots to assassinate him possibly
being reminiscent of his Falintil leader days and therefore
placing him in a relative comfort zone. End comment.
RECTOR