logo

Angry mobs rampage in ETimor over new PM

Wednesday, 8 August 2007


DILI, Aug 7 (AFP): Mobs ran amok in East Timor's capital Dili and other towns Tuesday to protest the naming of independence hero Xanana Gusmao as prime minister, as the former ruling party vowed to fight the move in court.
Youths hurled rocks, set up road blockades and torched buildings in the capital and two other towns, the UN mission here said, with police and international peacekeepers rushing to keep outbreaks of violence under control.
The incidents came a day after President Jose Ramos-Horta named Gusmao to lead a coalition government -- without the ex-ruling Fretilin party -- which broke a deadlock following inconclusive polls in June.
The decision angered supporters of Gusmao's long-time arch rival, ex-prime minister Mari Alkatiri, who said Tuesday his party members would sit in opposition in parliament, even though he called the new government "illegal".
In one skirmish, some 100 youths from a mainly pro-Fretilin refugee camp near Dili's international airport pelted cars and a patrol of about 30 police who were sent to contain them after they burned tyres on the streets.
Police sirens echoed around the seaside capital later Tuesday, but the streets appeared calmer.
In eastern Baucau, a Fretilin stronghold, hundreds of people paraded through town, torched two cars, and set the offices of a local aid organisation and a sports hall on fire, local journalist Mario Pinto told the news agency.
Pro-Fretilin mobs in the eastern town of Viqueque set fire to five houses belonging to local politicians from opposing parties that formed an alliance with Gusmao, Pinto said.
Fretilin won just 21 seats in East Timor's 65-seat parliament in the June elections, well short of the absolute majority required to govern.
Gusmao heads the National Congress for the Reconstruction of East Timor (CNRT), the second-largest vote winner. The party has since entered a coalition with three smaller parties, which together hold 37 seats.
Fretilin said in a statement that it would contest the decision to form a government run by Gusmao through the courts, but Alkatiri said lawmakers would in the meantime sit in opposition.