Jakarta Closes Book on Timor
Atrocities
By Matthew Moore, Herald Correspondent, in Jakarta
Three Indonesian soldiers and a police officer have won their appeals
against
convictions for gross human rights abuses in East Timor, in a decision
that means all Indonesian security force personnel have now been
cleared of the
violence that resulted in the deaths of about 1600 people.
In the decision last month, made public yesterday, the notorious
former East
Timorese militia leader Eurico Guterres also had his 10-year jail
sentence
halved because the judges said the sentence was too severe.
The successful appeals by five of those originally convicted by
an Indonesian
human rights tribunal means the country's courts have upheld convictions
of
only two - both born in East Timor - of those charged over the bloodshed
surrounding East Timor's vote for independence in 1999.
East Timor's former governor Abilio Soares recently became the
only person to
be jailed in Indonesia for the crimes when he began serving a three-year
term.
This latest decision makes it more likely that Guterres, the other
person facing a sentence, could join Soares, although he remains
free while deciding on
another appeal.
The overturned convictions were those against Major-General Adam
Damiri
(three years), Lieutenant-Colonel Noer Muis, (five years) Lieutenant-Colonel
Sujarwo (five years) and the former Dili police commander Hulman
Goltom (three
years).
It is unlikely that prosecutors will appeal against this decision,
particularly in the case of Damiri, the most senior officer tried.
The general was indicted in July 2002 for crimes against humanity
specifically in relation to massacres in Liquica (April 6, 1999),
at Isaac Leandro's and Manuel Carrascalao's homes (April 17, 1999),
at the Dili diocese office (September 5, 1999), at the resident
of Bishop Carlos Belo and the Suai church (September 6, 1999).
At the conclusion of the case against Damiri last year the prosecutor
urged the court to acquit him because of lack of evidence.
Critics have accused Indonesia of failing to find and punish those
responsible for the bloodshed and destruction before and after East
Timor's independence vote.
Tiago Sarmento, the deputy director of the Dili-based Judicial
System Monitoring Program, called the decision "just one more
example of how the Jakarta process has failed the Timorese people".
He urged the United Nations to create a commission of experts to
"ensure this mockery of international criminal law does not
go unchecked".
Human rights bodies and several Western governments have already
labelled
Indonesia's prosecutions as a sham.
Indonesia was forced to set up its ad hoc tribunal under international
pressure, but prosecutors only charged 18 people, and from the outset
their cases were criticised as extremely weak.
The latest decision was read in open court late last month but
its details only emerged yesterday after the senior judge told a
newspaper the original convictions had been overturned because there
was no proof.
A UN- backed team in East Timor has also conducted a series of
prosecutions.
Several senior Indonesian officers have been indicted, including
the military
commander at the time, the former general and recent presidential
candidate
Wiranto.
-end-