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Indonesia
To Reject UN Probe Over 1999 E Timor Violence
JAKARTA,
Dec. 24 (AP)--Indonesia said Friday it rejects U.N. plans for a
commission that would study Jakarta's efforts to punish those responsible
for human rights abuses in East Timor in 1999 - and could recommend
that an
international tribunal is needed instead.
The
U.N. has yet to formally announce the commission.
But
a joint statement from the governments of Indonesia and East Timor
said "it has been learned that the U.N. Secretary-General will
announce in due course the establishment of a U.N. Commission of
Experts."
The
body would have the power to recommend that an international tribunal
be formed to try Indonesian military officers accused in the violence.
Human rights groups have said Jakarta's efforts so far to prosecute
those responsible
have been a sham.
Indonesian
foreign ministry spokesman Marty Natalegawa declined to say whether
Jakarta planned to cooperate with the commission. Without access
to judges and court documents in Jakarta, the body would unlikely
be able to produce a
meaningful report.
East
Timor voted for independence from 24 years of Indonesian rule in
a U.N.-sponsored ballot in 1999. After the results were announced,
the Indonesian military and its proxy militias unleashed a wave
of violence that killed
more than 1,000 people and displaced 300,000 others.
Jakarta
promised to punish those responsible. Courts in Jakarta charged
18 people - most from its police and military - with human rights
crimes, but 12 were acquitted and four had their sentences overturned
on appeal. Two other
appeals are pending.
Earlier
this week, East Timor and Indonesia's foreign ministers announced
the formation of their own joint Commission on Truth and Friendship
to investigate the 1999 violence.
Both
governments have said that body should be regarded as an "alternative"
to the planned U.N. Commission of Experts.
Natalegawa
said with there was no need for more than one mechanism to deal
with the violence, and that the COE was "redundant."
"It
has long been our position to reject the COE and any requirements
that might arise from it," he said. "There is no need
for a parallel body to the truth and friendship commission."
East
Timor hasn't backed calls by rights groups to establish an international
tribunal. It has said that maintaining good ties with its giant
neighbor and former occupying power is more important than pushing
for justice.
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