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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
14 pages in length. The riots and civil unrest in Indonesia since the beginning of 1998 have been interpreted as demonstrating the impossibility of maintaining ethnic and religious harmony. The extent to which the primary factors of civil unrest in Indonesia are ethnic and religious are involved and widespread, with much of the disharmony dating
back to the annexation of East Timor. Additionally, the issue of freedom as it relates to ethnic and religious diversity appears to be caught in a perpetual holding pattern, inasmuch as Indonesians the quest for these freedoms will not come without much battle and bloodshed.
Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
14 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCindon.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
ethnic and religious harmony. The extent to which the primary factors of civil unrest in Indonesia are ethnic and religious are involved and widespread, with much of the disharmony
dating back to the annexation of East Timor. Additionally, the issue of freedom as it relates to ethnic and religious diversity appears to be caught in a perpetual holding
pattern, inasmuch as Indonesians the quest for these freedoms will not come without much battle and bloodshed. Said Benny Setiono, chairman of the Chinese Indonesian Association: "If the Chinese
want the same rights as the others, we have to fight for this - just like the Aceh people or the Timorese people" (Timberlake A12). I. EAST TIMOR AND
CONTEMPORARY HOSTILITIES Portugals retreat from East Timor left its people completely defenseless; after having colonized the small island for almost four hundred years,
Portugal paid no mind to the dire situation in which the East Timorese had been placed. Wide open to invasion, Indonesia took full advantage and tagged East Timor as
its own, declaring it a province in 1976. The ethnic and religious implications of such a move have long angered international human rights groups, whose contention is that the
killing and torturous activity that occurred during the invasion was accomplished for no other reason than to assert Indonesias military power. "Human rights groups wonder whether the military, concerned
that independence for East Timor could inspire independence movements elsewhere in the vast, ethnically diverse Indonesian archipelago, is trying to encourage turmoil" (Shenon 21A).
Statistics provided by various human rights groups implicate Indonesia for a staggering two hundred thousand East Timorese deaths since the annexation nearly a decade and a half ago.
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