Received from Joyo Indonesia News
Associated Press
December 10, 2004
Former E Timor Police Chief Charged With
Rights Abuses
DILI, East Timor (AP)--East Timor indicted a former police chief
on Friday for failing to prevent his officers from taking part in
the wave of killings that followed the country's break from Indonesian
rule in 1999. The indictment brings to 378 the number of Indonesian
police and military and militia members charged over the violence
that left 1,500 Timorese dead and the half-island in ruins.
Prosecutors charged Hulman Gultom, an Indonesian citizen who was
district police chief in the capital, Dili, from June 1998 until
September 1999, with crimes against humanity.
The indictment alleges he failed to prevent his officers from taking
part in a string of incidents that left 15 dead, including an attack
on church diocese office in Dili and the residence of Roman Catholic
Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo.
Gultom has fled East Timor and is now believed to be in Indonesia
, prosecutors said.
Some 280 other indicted suspects are also believed to be in Indonesia
- including failed Indonesian presidential candidate Gen. Wiranto,
who was the country's military chief in 1999.
Indonesia is under no obligation to hand over the suspects and
has said it won't respond to earlier indictments. East Timor hasn't
aggressively pushed to have the defendants turned over, saying good
relations with its large neighbor is more important.
Courts in Jakarta were set up to prosecute senior Indonesian officers
accused for the violence, but rights groups have widely criticized
the trials as failures. All 16 police and military officers charged
have been acquitted, while two ethnic East Timorese civilians were
found guilty.
East Timor became independent in May 2002.
------------------------------------
Office of the Deputy General Prosecutor
for Serious Crimes Timor Leste
10 December 2004
SERIOUS CRIMES UNIT INFORMATION RELEASE
FORMER DISTRICT POLICE CHIEF INDICTED
On 10 December 2004 the Serious Crimes Unit filed an indictment
charging Lieutenant Colonel Hulman Gultom, the former Dili District
Police Chief [KAPOLRES] with the Crimes Against Humanity charges
of Murder, Deportation or Forcible Transfer of the Population and
Persecution. The accused is at large and believed to be in Indonesia.
Hulman Gultom was the District Police Chief of Dili between June
1998 and September 1999. The indictment alleges that during this
period he exercised command and control over all police officers
[POLRI] stationed in the district and that he failed to prevent
or to punish those responsible for the violence that happened before
and after the popular consultation.
Hulman Gultom is charged with superior criminal responsibility
for the murder of 15 people as well as superior and individual criminal
responsibility for the deportation or forcible transfer of the population
from Dili District between 5 and 9 September 1999. Gultom is also
charged with superior and individual criminal responsibility for
persecutory acts against independence supporters in Dili district.
The 5 May 1999 agreement between Indonesia, the UN and Portugal
provided in part: "The police [would] be solely responsible
for the maintenance of law and order." Despite this obligation,
the indictment describes a number of incidents in which the Dili
police under Gultom's command failed to take any necessary or reasonable
measures to prevent violence. It is alleged that Hulman Gultom participated
in the Aitarak militia inauguration ceremony held outside the Governor's
office in Dili that led up to the attack on the Carrascalão
house on 17 April 1999. Other crimes described in the indictment
include the attack on the Dili Diocese and on Bishop Belo's residence
in September 1999. It is further alleged that for a number of the
crimes, POLRI officers were either the direct perpetrators or facilitated
crimes committed by militia forces.
To date, the Serious Crimes Unit has filed 91 indictments charging
378 individuals with some accused charged in multiple indictments.
Cases have been completed through trial for 76 accused persons,
with 74 convicted of one or more charges.
========END======