Associated Press

November 12, 1994

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) -- Twenty-nine student protesters scaled an 8-foot fence wrapped in barbed wire to enter the U.S. Embassy grounds Saturday on the third anniversary of a massacre in East Timor.

The protesters said they want President Clinton to pressure Indonesia on the East Timor issue during his upcoming visit for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit that begins Tuesday.

The incident angered Indonesia's government, which hoped the summit would allow the country to shake off its poor human rights image.

"It was obviously designed to embarrass us,"

said Foreign Minister Ali Alatas.

U.S. Secretary of State Warren Christopher, in town for ministerial meetings before the summit, said the issue of East Timor would be raised during bilateral talks with Indonesia.

Indonesia annexed East Timor in 1976 after a civil war that followed Portugal's withdrawal from its former colony.

The United Nations never recognized the annexation. The United States has, but protested that East Timor's people have not conducted "a valid act of self-determination."

Saturday is the third anniversary of the day that soldiers killed scores of unarmed civilians at Santa Cruz cemetery in Dili. A government inquiry said 50 people were killed, 91 were injured and 57 unaccounted for. Independent sources say more than 200 died.

At the U.S. embassy, the protesters sat cross-legged facing Indonesian riot police armed with batons and bamboo canes on the other side of the fence. They refused to budge, despite a government promise that they would not be arrested if they left voluntarily.

Embassy spokeswoman Pamela Smith said they would not be forced to leave.

Police arrested 36 protesters as they arrived in Jakarta by train, but others escaped the dragnet. Two people were arrested at the embassy.

The protesters said they specifically sought the release of former guerrilla leader Jose "Xanana" Gusmao. He was jailed for 20 years for his role in heading an armed rebellion for a separate East Timor state.

In East Timor, the anniversary of the massacre passed without incident.

Dissidents, mostly speaking on condition of anonymity, said they were afraid a protest might provoke a military crackdown.

said Bishop Carlos Belo, spiritual leader of East Timor's Roman Catholic majority.

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