Explosive Allegation: 'Witness’ To Timor Murders Steps Forward
by Sasha Uzunov
A man who claims he was an Australian soldier on the East Timor-Indonesia border and viewed through binoculars but was
powerless to stop the brutal murder of 3 United Nations aid workers in Atambua in 2000 has had an application for a
disability pension rejected by Australia’s Department of Veterans Affairs DVA).
The man, who wishes to remain anonymous for fear of retribution, is being represented by Mr Brian O'Neill, advocate and
pension officer with the Returned Services League, Australia’s veteran peak body.
Mr O’Neill contacted Sasha Uzunov, the Director/Producer of documentary film Timor Tour of Duty, to tell of the man’s
plight.
“He witnessed through his binoculars from the border, the mutilation and killing of the three UN workers on 6 September
2000 near Atambua in Indonesian West Timor,” Mr O’Neill said.
Three United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) employees Samson Aregahegn of Ethiopia, Carlos
Caceres-Collazo of Puerto Rico and Mr Pero Simundza of Croatia were killed when their office was attacked by militia in
Atambua, Indonesian West Timor.
In the official 6RAR tour of East Timor journal (2000) on page 34, the Officer Commanding of Bravo Company, 6RAR, Major
John McCaffery wrote:"..after the events of the 6th of September 00 in Atambua and the frustration and anger at the
inability to affect the situation as it unfolded..."
The man was an experienced soldier with Bravo Company, 6RAR, the Brisbane based infantry battalion. As a member of a
patrol he was following up a blood trail left behind by militia and a day later on 6 September 2000 ended up at Patrol
Base Sparrow, southwest of Balibo. PB Barrow is close to the Indonesian border and about 12 km from Atambua township and
used as an observation post by Australian soldiers.
“It was here that he saw smoke billowing from the area near Atambua and went up a hill to get a better sight. It was
here that he saw through binoculars many of the Militia moving around the UN building with machetes. He observed the
armed men entering and leaving the building and observed three people dragged out of the building. They were covered
with blood and had been hacked and beaten to death,” Mr O’Neill said.
“He was very frustrated with what he called the stupidity of the Rules of Engagement and that they could not do anything
about it. He briefed his chain of command by radio."
Under the Rules of Engagement, Australian soldiers were forbidden to encroach upon or fire into Indonesian territory
regardless of the situation. Indonesian Special Forces, known as Kopassus, and militia groups regularly crossed the
border in a secret war against Australian and New Zealand soldiers and international peacekeepers as payback for East
Timor’s independence from Indonesia.
The man’s claim for psychological trauma was rejected by DVA on the grounds that it was physically impossible for the
killings to have been viewed through army binoculars, which might have a standard magnification of x6 or x10 or x20,
from 10 or so kilometres away. DVA, for reasons unknown, never called the Bravo Company Commander, Major McCaffery, to
give evidence but relied upon a report compiled by Writeway, a private research company.
However, 6RAR's then Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Colonel Mick Moon revealed to Writeway: "On a good (and very clear)
day you can just see Atambua in the distance from a Patrol Base called Sparrow."
The Writeway report concluded: "It is most likely that the veteran...was at...Sparrow where the veteran may have been
able to see Atambua from a distance and see the smoke from fires in the UN compound. He would not have been able to make
out individual figures. This could hardly be classified as 'witnessing the killings.' "
"I don’t know all the facts to this story,” Uzunov said. “I’m hoping people with information will come forward to help
this man confirm his story. Anyone who can help should contact Mr O’Neill.”
Legendary infantry Battalion 6RAR took part in the famous Battle of Long Tan in 1966 during the Vietnam War, which
pitted over a hundred Australian soldiers against 2,000 or more Vietnamese Communist troops. In the last 20 years 6RAR
had been reduced because of massive defence budget cuts. In 1999 the unit was strengthened with army reservist.
Respected military journalist John Hunter Farrell and editor of Australian Defender magazine wrote:
"Emerging from Vietnam as the best known of the Royal Australian Regiment’s nine infantry battalions, 6RAR has lived a
volatile life, blasted by the winds of change that have swept the Royal Australian Infantry Corps since the withdrawal
from Vietnam. 6RAR hit the bottom of the barrel...when the Australian Regular Army’s most revered infantry battalion was
reduced to a skeleton staff of less than 200 heads."
The militia believed that 6RAR would be an easy target when it arrived in East Timor in early 2000. However, in 1998 the
far-sightedness of Lieutenant General Frank Hickling, the Chief of Australia's Army, ensured that all troops, both
regular and reserve, were combat ready and kept causalities to a minimum.
Nevertheless, 6RAR came under ferocious militia attack. In one infamous case, on 2 August 2000, 1 Platoon Alpha Company
was engaged in a shootout and with two militiamen being killed.
Hunter Farrell wrote: www.australiandefender.com.au/stories/etim/ad_halet.htm
"The bodies of the two dead Militia told a big story. Clothed completely with TNI [Indonesian Army] issue DPM uniforms
and wearing basic webbing, the KIA [killed in action] Militia were clean- and shorthaired. Underneath their DPM they
wore civilian clothes. They carried plenty of ammunition and grenades and had local fruit in their pockets Weird
talismans of silver coins and weird stringy bits of dark frayed organic material were worn in little crocheted bags
around their necks along with quantities of a red pharmaceutical drug in thin clear sealed sachets. While not clinically
tested it was suspected that the liquid was Ba – a new super speed which is sweeping Asia - which would go a long way in
explaining KIA Two’s 200 metre final. "
A former US Army officer and a southeast Asia specialist has confirmed that one of the militia killed was an Indonesian
Army intelligence officer who was "on leave and freelancing for the militia."
"I've seen the photos of the dead man in uniform," he said. "What I find surprising is that this was an incredible
intelligence find for the Aussies but none of the squad leaders (corporals) in the patrol received any medals or
recognition. If they had been Americans they would have been awarded Silver Star medals for gallantry."
Uzunov's film, Timor Tour of Duty, reveals the Indonesian military's secret war against Australia, New Zealand and
international peacekeepers in East Timor.
The film made its international debut in New York in late October 2009 and was the subject of controversy on Indonesian
websites and blogs with one pundit claiming that it "re-opened old wounds" between Indonesia and Australia over East
Timor."
Leading Australian academic Dr Damien Kingsbury has hailed the film:
"There is a prevailing view that Australia's military intervention in East Timor ten years ago was an untroubled affair
- it was a successful operation without casualties. The reality, however, was that while casualties were limited, there
were many tense moments, and exchanges of fire with Indonesian Special Forces, along the challenging and at times
confronting border areas patrolled by Australian soldiers.
"Sasha Uzunov's documentary 'Timor Tour of Duty” graphically captures some of these exchanges and the very real impact
that it had on the lives of the soldiers involved.
"Uzunov's experience as an Australian soldier in this area and in his own two tours and through his wider experience as
a war correspondent, makes 'Timor Tour of Duty' as close to what it was like, without actually being there, for
Australian soldiers in the troubled border region of East Timor between 1999 and 2003."
The film also received a commendation---a 2009 Platinum Reel Award from the Nevada Film Festival.
ENDS