Indonesia,
East Timor Plan Panel on 1999 Rampage
Dec 21, 2004 - By Irwin Arieff
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Indonesia
and East Timor announced plans on Tuesday to create a joint commission
in hopes of putting behind them a 1999 rampage in which Indonesian
gangs killed about 1,000 East Timorese.
In setting up a Commission on
Truth and Friendship, the two countries hope to head off a parallel
initiative by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who is weighing
his own expert commission to review whether justice was done after
the 1999 violence, their foreign ministers said after talks with
Annan.
The violence, carried out by
gangs supported by elements in the Indonesian army, was triggered
by a referendum in which East Timor voted to break free from Jakarta
after 24 years of brutal military rule.
Mainly Catholic East Timor finally
became independent in May 2002 after 2-1/2 years of U.N. administration,
closing the book on centuries of Portuguese colonial rule and its
later occupation by Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim
nation.
Indonesia set up a special human
rights court in 2000 to try military and police officers charged
in connection with the rampage. But while the court convicted six
of the 18 put on trial, five convictions were later overturned and
an appeal of the sixth is still pending.
The idea for the joint commission
stemmed from a dinner meeting in Bali on Dec. 14 between Indonesian
President Suslio Bambang Yudhoyono and his East Timorese counterpart
Xanana Gusmao, a former guerrilla leader who fought Indonesian rule.
The commission "is meant
as an alternative to the idea of establishing the commission of
experts" being considered by Annan, said Indonesian Foreign
Minister Hassan Wirajuda.
"This is an initiative
which we believe is highly positive and will shed truth on the events
of the past," East Timor's foreign minister, Jose Ramos-Horta,
told reporters.
The commission's work "would
finally close this chapter. We would hope and intend that this initiative
would resolve once and for all the . events of 1999," Ramos-Horta
said.
The two ministers said Annan
reserved judgment on whether he would go ahead with his own review.
But the New York-based International Federation for East Timor said
he should do so.
East Timor and Indonesia "are
not equal partners, with a common interest in justice. A binational
commission will just be another mechanism for Indonesia to bully
its smaller, weaker neighbor," the group said in a letter to
Annan.
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