John Aglionby in Jakarta
Thursday December 23, 2004
The Guardian
Indonesia and East Timor have agreed
to set up a truth and friendship commission to address the issues
of 1,500 murders and thousands of other human rights violations
committed during the 1999 independence referendum in East Timor.
Jakarta hopes the commission will encourage
the UN to abandon its plan for a panel of experts to assess what
the two countries have done to prosecute those involved in the atrocities.
Only 20 people in Indonesia have been prosecuted and not one member
of the military, the police or the then civilian administration
has had a conviction upheld for his or her individual role in the
carnage.
This is in spite of the murders, destruction
and the forced relocation of 275,000 people throughout the months
of 1999 during which Indonesia still controlled the former Portuguese
colony it invaded in 1975.
East Timor has indicted almost 400 people.
More than 90 have been tried, while most of the rest, including
many serving and retired generals, are living comfortably in Indonesia,
which has no intention of handing them over for prosecution.
Hassan Wirajuda, Indonesia's foreign
minister, and his East Timorese counterpart, Jose Ramos-Horta, announced
the commission after meeting Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general,
in New York.
Mr Ramos-Horta described the initiative
as "historic" and said it would "shed truth on the
events of the past".
The commission's framework and mechanisms
are expected to take several weeks to finalise.
Mr Wirajuda did not conceal Jakarta's
motive for pushing for the commission. "[It] is meant as an
alternative to the idea of establishing the commission of experts,"
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Mr Annan has yet to confirm whether he
will still appoint the experts but UN sources believe he will not
be deterred.
"It is an interesting concept but
the UN has direct responsibilities and obligations to the East Timorese
people, the victims of the violence," a UN official told the
Guardian.
Human rights activists and several countries,
including the US, are lobbying for the commission of experts. John
Danforth, the US ambassador to the UN, last month urged Mr Annan
to appoint the panel and earlier this week the International Federation
for East Timor - which has 34 member groups from 23 countries -
wrote to Mr Annan with a similar plea.
Activists in East Timor said there was
little support for the government's approach.