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Related: Malaysia sends advance military team to Timor Leste
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| Australian soldiers stand guard at the
airport after they arrive in Dili on May 25, 2006. (Xinhua/AFP
photo) | CANBERRA, May 25 (Xinhua) -- Australian Prime
Minister John Howard said on Thursday that the full deployment of 1,300
Australian troops will be in Timor-Leste quickly as a result of escalating
violence there.
He said the full deployment will be carried on
despite a lack of officially signed-off rules of engagement with the Timor-Leste
leaders who are nowhere to be found.
Waiting for signatures could lead to significant
further bloodshed, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio quoted Howard
as saying.
The Australian government has the signature of the
nation's leaders on an agreement for Australian troops to secure the
international airport in capital Dili, which has now been completed, but not to
bring in the remainder of the 1,300 troops on standby.
Howard said 150 Australian commandos have secured the
airport in Dili and the guided missile frigate HMAS Adelaide has also arrived,
pulling into Dili's harbor early this evening.
"The situation is obviously fluid, I have little
doubt that once all of our forces are there, there will be a significant return
of stability and normality although there has been a loss of life and there's
obviously great tension in Dili," Howard said.
Howard said it would be part of the Australian
troops' mission to locate Timor-Leste's leaders.
Defense Minister Brendan Nelson told Australian
Broadcasting Corporation TV that communications are very poor in Dili because of
the chaotic nature of the conflict.
"We've found it difficult to communicate effectively
and we've not been able to communicate with Prime Minister Alkatiri," he said.
Nelson said it is possible President Xanana Gusmao is
in the hills outside the capital.
He also said that "There have been deaths in Dili
today." Enditem |