Mr. Speaker, in late October last year the Minister of Foreign Affairs met with Timorese leader and Nobel prize winner José Ramos-Horta.
Mr. Ramos-Horta was in Canada to urge the Government of Canada to support the people of East Timor, in particular to support their right to self-determination and to an internationally supervised referendum on their future. On that day I asked the Minister of Foreign Affairs what the position of the Government of Canada was with respect to support for East Timor's right to self-determination.
Unfortunately the Minister of Foreign Affairs did not come out in support of the right to self-determination. In fact, there have been 10 votes at the United Nations since the brutal invasion by Indonesia of East Timor and the annexation in 1975 and on not one of those votes has Canada supported the people of East Timor and their fundamental right to self-determination.
Earlier today in this House we spoke about the genocide in Armenia from 1915 to 1923. There has been genocide in East Timor as well. Since 1975 over 200,000 people, over one-third of the population, have lost their lives in the brutal repression and genocide that followed the occupation.
The East Timorese people have carried out a valiant fight for independence. We know that in 1991 hundreds of innocent marchers were massacred at a demonstration in Dili. The documentation of human rights abuses by Amnesty International, the East Timor Human Rights Centre and the UN human rights commission is extensive.
Just in the last few months Yayasan Hak, a very reliable East Timorese NGO, has monitored complaints filed by victims of extrajudicial executions, detentions, torture and forced disappearances. Over 7,000 refugees have been forced to leave their homes just in the last few months as a result of the terror and intimidation taking place there.
For too long the Canadian government has turned a blind eye to these abuses and instead placed the focus on establishing a cosy trade relationship with Suharto. We saw that in spades at the APEC leaders summit in Vancouver in 1997.
The fall of General Suharto last May provided some hope but clearly it is essential that the international community provide support for the people of East Timor at this time. I ask the Government of Canada today, I call on the Government of Canada to join in the growing call for a United Nations monitored peacekeeping force to oversee a referendum for self-determination. I call on our government to provide support for a transitional administration to help the territory toward independence.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs spoke just last week at the security council about the importance of his human security agenda and the importance of protecting civilians in armed conflict. What better place to apply those principles than in East Timor.
I call as well on the United Nations to dispatch a monitoring force to East Timor as soon as possible to oversee the disarming and disbanding of the paramilitaries, paramilitaries that are being actively armed and supported by the Indonesian army. We want to see a reduction in occupying troops. We want to see the protection of the population against further human rights abuses.
I urge the secretary of state, who I see in the House today, to call for a permanent United Nations office in East Timor to support and co-ordinate these very important activities. The time has come for Canada to play a positive role and to send a delegation to monitor the elections in East Timor and Indonesia. The people of East Timor have suffered long enough. Canada has been silent long enough. The time for justice is now.