(This
paper was developed as part of the Transitional Justice Fellowship
Programme, co-hosted by the International Center for Transitional
Justice and the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation. Fausto
Belo Ximenes is a graduate of the 2004 Programme)
The Unique Contribution Of The Community-Based
Econciliation Process In East Timor
Prepared by
Fausto Belo Ximenes
28 May 2004
The Commission for
Reception, Truth and Reconciliation (CAVR) was stablished to accommodate
the desire for reconciliation both amongst the leadership and the
people of East Timor, and it endeavours to ascertain the truth regarding
the past human rights violations. CAVR is currently expected to submit
its final report to the President of the Republic of East Timor some
time in October this year. It is therefore timely to analyse its operation,
including the contribution it has made towards the process of justice
and reconciliation in the new East Timor.
Although this Paper does not provide an overall analysis regarding
the mandates of CAVR, it aims to provide a mini-analysis and evaluation
of the particular contribution CAVR has made through its well-known
mandate of ‘Community-based Reconciliation Process’
(CRP). Based heavily on the regulation that stipulates the establishment
of CAVR, this Paper seeks to analyse the contradictions that have
emerged in the interpretation of the Community-based Reconciliation
Process as a non-punitive measure that is proposed to confer impunity
to the perpetrators of past human rights violations.
As discussed in the Paper, the Community-based Reconciliation Process
facilitated by CAVR does not confer impunity nor does it provide
the chance for deponents to escape from their responsibility. Furthermore,
the full disclosure and public apology it requires from the deponents
does not mean that the deponents will be free from prosecution,
as has occurred in other Truth and Reconciliation Commissions.
In the Community-based Reconciliation Process facilitated by CAVR,
a deponent is further required to carry out ‘community reconciliation
acts’ recommended by the CRP Panel after his/her statement
is reviewed by the Office of the General Prosecutor. Only in cases
where the Office of the General Prosecutor does not find the commission
of serious crimes and where it chooses not to exercise its jurisdiction
over the concerned statements, can deponents participate in the
Community-based Reconciliation Process. Failure to meet these conditions
would result in prosecution or the imposition of a fine or a certain
period of imprisonment.
In looking at the above-mentioned procedures, it is fair to argue
that the process was not only a Community-based Reconciliation Process,
but it was indeed a Community-based Justice and Reconciliation Process
- a process that is just according to the community, different to
the formal justice process as applied by the court of law. It was
indeed a Community-based Justice and Reconciliation Process due
to the fact that the deponents who wished to participate in the
Community-based Reconciliation Process had to pass through strict
procedures, which included the deponents’ obligation to carry
out community works as recommended by the CRP Panel for a certain
period of time in order to compensate for their past acts.
Therefore, a careful analysis of the procedures of the Community-based
Reconciliation Process and its relationship with the formal justice
system is of paramount importance in order to avoid the misconception
regarding the Community-based Reconciliation Process facilitated
by CAVR. Although it is acknowledged that the Community-based Reconciliation
Process should not be considered as an alternative to the formal
justice system, it is crucial to note that the Community-based Reconciliation
Process has made an invaluable contribution not only to the reconciliation
process in East Timor, but also to the formal justice system due
to its ability to fill the void created by the formal justice system
as result of its limited capacity. The Community-based Reconciliation
Process has assisted the formal justice system by relieving the
courts’ burden and further giving a chance to the formal justice
system to improve and strengthen itself in order to be able to fully
assume its mandates when the CAVR completed its tasks.
Furthermore, through the mandate of the Community-based Reconciliation
Process, CAVR has assisted in encouraging the repatriation of refugees
due to its broad public information programme that reaches not only
the thirteen districts of East Timor, but also the Indonesian province
of West Timor where most of East Timorese refugees are currently
settled. This public information programme clarifies the current
situation in East Timor and outlines the procedures for participation
in the Community-based Reconciliation Process. This is particularly
important due to the information scarcity in the refugees camps
in West Timor and the constant intimidation which the refugees suffer
in the hands of the militia group members in order to prevent their
repatriation.
This
paper therefore concludes that the Community-based Reconciliation
Process facilitated by the CAVR should not be subjected to the generalised
and uniform interpretation of other Truth and Reconciliation Commissions,
such that it exempts the perpetrators of human rights violations
from their accountability. Rather, it should be understood that
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions vary greatly both in their
forms and mandates, and thus they deserve deeper analysis of their
specific mandates. In East Timor’s case, the Community-based
Reconciliation Process is the process that makes CAVR ‘unique’
as compared to other Truth and Reconciliation Commissions -from
the procedures which it applies to its relationship with the formal
justice system. It is therefore highly recommended that further
comprehensive studies on this specific mandate should be made in
order to establish the future possibility of a continuous application
of this particular mandate.
Click
on the following link for the full Paper: English[pdf]
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