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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Constâncio Pinto

Interviewed February 7, 2010

During that time, we were able to coordinate the protest. We had to organize a protest we had in 1991, which unfortunately took place at the cemetery. And followed by a massacre, which is horrible for me and for everyone else. We lost, at that time, more than 200 students, killed in cold blood.

But I think only that massacre that brought the attention of the international community. And that was because for the first time, a journalist who was there, there at the cemetery, filming the massacre, and was able to smuggle the tape abroad, the images aboard, and broadcasted it from U.K.

Then the international community became aware of the situation in Timor Leste, and became to understand that what the Indonesians had been telling them was not true. Yeah. And I think that was the beginning of the end of the Indonesian diplomacy. And, I should say also, the occupation.