The
Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Saturday, April 17, 2004
Abilio
Plans To Take Timor Abuses To ICJ
Former
East Timor governor Abilio Soares has threatened to bring human
rights abuses in the territory in 1999 to the International Court
of Justice (ICG) if forced to serve a three-year jail term.
Abilio
said he has been made a scapegoat to protect certain individuals
responsible for security in the former Indonesian province.
"The
guilty verdict issued by the Supreme Court shocked me as I was hoping
to find justice here in Indonesia. If I am forced to serve the jail
term, I will bring the case to the International Court of Justice,"
he said here on Friday.
Abilio,
accompanied by lawyer O.C. Kaligis, said he would take those legal
steps still available to him to avoid jail.
"Once
I receive a copy of the verdict, I will do anything to avoid the
punishment," he said.
According
to the law, once a defendant's sentence has been upheld by the Supreme
Court, he or she can apply for presidential clemency or request
a judicial review.
The
Supreme Court upheld the three-year jail term given to Abilio by
an ad hoc rights tribunal. The former governor was convicted of
failing to prevent violence in East Timor ahead of, during and after
the territory's independence referendum in 1999.
Abilio
is one of 17 civilians, police officers and military soldiers brought
to trial for the violence in East Timor in 1999, when dozens of
independence supporters were killed and almost 80 percent of the
territory's infrastructure was destroyed.
Earlier,
the Supreme Court cleared one former police officer and two military
soldiers of human rights abuses. Other defendants were either acquitted
or given light sentences, though those defendants found guilty remain
free pending
appeal.
Abilio
said he should not be held responsible for the breakdown of peace
and security in East Timor because he was no longer in charge when
the violence occurred.
"I
do not understand why I should be held responsible for the violence
in the province since I no longer had any power as governor after
the signing of the May tripartite agreement," said Abilio,
referring to an agreement that stipulated that all administrative
matters fell under the supervision of the UN Mission in East Timor.
"If
the court blames me for failing to maintain security during, before
and after the ballot, it should be understood that the same agreement
stipulates that the police, backed by the military, were responsible
for security in the territory," said Abilio, while joking that
he planned to flee Jakarta as soon as possible.
-End- |