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  • EAST TIMOR: International forces hunt for rebel chief Major Alfredo Reinado after mass jailbreak

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EAST TIMOR: International forces hunt for rebel chief Major Alfredo Reinado after mass jailbreak

International police and troops in East Timor were searching on Saturday (September 2) for rebel leader Major Alfredo Reinado after a mass jailbreak raised serious concern about fragile security in the fledgling nation. Reinado, one of the figureheads of a revolt that plunged the former Portuguese colony into chaos in May, was among more than 50 prisoners who walked out of the Becora jail near the capital Dili on Wednesday. The rebel leader said on a video tape obtained by Reuters Television that he did not want to stage a new revolt. "I had to escape from the prison not because I am running away from the trial, but I just have to be out of prison. I just don't believe the justice system. Me and my subordinates must comply with the legal system but the legal system does not work properly, I could see more clearly how justice has to be implemented. I am ready to take my responsibility once the justice work is done properly and independently," he said. Reinado appealed for calm and urged his supporters not turn to violence. International police and troops have heightened security in Dili as well as launching a joint search for the escapees. "Both AFP and UN police elements including the Portuguese GNR and the Malaysian RMP have established a joint arrangement to deal with the consequences of the incident as well as to conduct the necessary inquiries with the cooperation of international security forces. The priorities established included the safety and security of the population and the safe return of inmates to jail. Therefore, the UN, AFP and international military forces in Timor Leste mounted a widespread search for the fifty-seven prisoners who escaped from prison," said UN Police Chief in East Timor Antonio Lopez. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer will fly to Dili on Sunday for meetings with Indonesian counterpart Hassan Wirajuda, as well as East Timor Prime Minister Jose Ramos-Horta and President Xanana Gusmao. "It's obviously a matter of deep regret that this has happened," Downer told reporters in Sydney. "It is going to be an important visit and in the light of the escape of these 56 prisoners, which is of very great concern to us, an opportunity for us to reinforce our support to the East Timorese," he said. Brigadier Mick Slater, the head of Australian troops in East Timor, said the prisoners walked out the jail's front gate during visiting hours. Joao Domingos, head of Becora jail's administration, said grass cutters were used to intimidate guards during the breakout, in which he said all of Alfredo's men being held had escaped. He said he was not aware whether guards helped in the escape. Another 148 prisoners remain in confinement. The United Nations agreed last week on a new mission to East Timor, comprising some 1,600 police, despite a dispute over whether Australian-led international troops already there should remain independent or be part of a U.N. force. Downer said the implementation of the new U.N. mission would be discussed at the trilateral talks, to be held on Monday. Slater said it was likely the escapees were now armed, although Dili remained quiet and calm after his troops quickly sealed off the city. Dili suffered a series of protests that evolved into widespread violence in May after 600 members of East Timor's 1,400-strong army were sacked. In late May, former military police commander Reinado led his followers into the mountains behind Dili and refused to give up weapons until then Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri resigned. An estimated 100,000 people were displaced and at least 20 killed in the violence, which led to deployment of a 2,500-strong international peacekeeping force. The revolt stemmed from divisions between troops from the east and those from the west of the country, which was ruled by Jakarta from 1976 until an independence referendum in 1999.

ITN Source | September 2, 2006Watch more videos from ITN Source

Tags:. .incident. .appealed. .administration. .refused. .aware