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E. Timor PM Agrees to International Investigation into Violence
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=1282312:3919ACA Mari Alkatiri
refuses to step aside, saying he was democratically elected East Timor
Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri has agreed to an international
investigation into the violence that has gripped his tiny country
since last month. He says, however, he will not step down as rebel
soldiers demand.







Mari AlkatiriWith pressure mounting for his resignation, East Timor's
embattled Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri has refused to step aside,
saying he was democratically elected.

After a meeting Wednesday with rebel soldiers holed up in the hills
near Dili, the United Nation's representative in East Timor, Sukehiro
Hasegawa, says Alkatiri has agreed to a transparent investigation.

"He's agreeable to the investigation to be carried out with the
participation of the international investigators and the prosecutors,"
he said.

East Timor was plunged into violence after Alkatiri fired 600 of the
army's 1,400 soldiers after they deserted over alleged discrimination
and poor working conditions.

The move led to a wave of violence that has gripped the capital Dili,
with armed gangs from the east and west of the country roaming the
streets, fighting, looting, and setting buildings on fire.

People from the west of the country are seen as having supported
Indonesia during its 24-year rule of East Timor, while those from the
east are seen as having fought for independence.

Many blame Alkatiri's handling of the crisis for the country's current
turmoil.

The violence brought a peacekeeping force of 2,500 troops from
Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Portugal to Dili at the
government's request. Their presence has brought some relief to the
streets during the past week.

The U.N. secretary-general's special envoy to East Timor, Ian Martin,
left Dili Wednesday, saying he will recommend that the Security
Council approve a U.N. mandated police force for the country.

"Just about everybody I've talked to believes that there will now be a
larger role for the U.N. than in the immediate past and certainly than
was envisaged in the Security Council discussions before the crisis
emerged," he said. "I think also that there is a consensus that
policing is crucial but also that is a role that the United Nations
would be asked to take on."

After East Timor was devastated by pro-Indonesian militias before and
after the territory voted for independence.  The United Nations later
stepped in and helped run the territory. In 2002, it was declared
fully independent, and the U.N. sharply reduced its operations there.

Around 2,000 protesters demanded Alkatiri resign on Tuesday and new
elections be held.

East Timor is not scheduled to hold elections until May 2007.