The
Jakarta Post19 April 2004, Wahyoe Boediwardhana,
Denpasar, Bali
Wiranto
Rights Trial Unlikely
East
Timor Attorney General Longinus Montero said on Sunday the trial
of former Indonesian Military chief Gen (ret) Wiranto for his alleged
role in crimes against humanity and war crimes in the former Indonesian
province might not materialize due to lack of evidence.
Although
prosecutors have submitted additional evidence to support Wiranto's
indictment, Montero acknowledged it would not provide the Dili District
Court a breakthrough to try Wiranto.
"As
a prosecutor, I hope the court will accept the indictment. However,
if the court refuses it I already have an answer for the public,"
he said on the sidelines of a visit here.
If
the court rejects the indictment, East Timor state prosecutors would
no longer continue to level charges at Wiranto with regard to gross
human rights violations that occurred before and after a UN-sanctioned
ballot that resulted in a unanimous vote for independence in 1999.
Montero
said previously that prosecutors had, in February 2003 and January
2004, tried to take Wiranto to court for similar crimes. The judges
threw both indictments out, claiming that the prosecutors had failed
to present sufficient evidence to support the serious accusations.
Prosecutors
resubmitted the indictment for the third time in February this year.
Despite
his pessimism, Montero claimed he had done his best. He said the
latest indictment against Wiranto was supported by accounts from
some 1,500 eyewitnesses and data from numerous important documents.
Wiranto's
case is among 1,041 rights abuse cases currently being investigated
by the East Timor Attorney General's Office. They are all
related to a wave of violence that erupted in 1999.
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