Gusmao Regrets Jailing of former East Timor
Governor
DILI: East Timor President Xanana Gusmao said on Monday he was
disappointed with the jailing of the territory's former governor
for crimes against
humanity during its bloody 1999 breakaway from Indonesia.
Abilio Soares, East Timor's last governor under Indonesian rule,
on Saturday
began serving a three-year jail term imposed by an Indonesian human
rights
court.
He is the first of six people who were convicted by the court to
start
serving a prison sentence.
"What can I say? I'm very disappointed. You all remember the
letter I wrote
to the panel of judges in the ad hoc tribunal (asking for leniency
for
Soares)," Gusmao told reporters.
Gusmao also spoke of a May 1999 agreement signed in New York between
Indonesia and Portugal, which stated that the Indonesian security
forces were
responsible for security during the August 1999 referendum on independence.
In 2002 Gusmao wrote to judges at the Indonesian human rights court
asking
them to show leniency to Soares. Gusmao said Soares had tried to
promote peace and his self-imposed exile must be considered punishment
in itself.
The human rights court acquitted 11 security force members and
one civilian
over the Indonesian army-backed militia violence against East Timorese
independence supporters, which killed at least 1,400 people.
Three army officers, a former Dili police chief and a militia leader
remain
free pending appeals against their convictions and prison terms.
Soares, an
ethnic East Timorese, says he has been made a scapegoat for the
police and
military.
Human rights defenders have described the Indonesian rights court
as largely
a sham designed to fend off calls for an international tribunal
into the
violence.
The Supreme Court recently rejected an appeal by Soares but his
lawyer said
he is seeking a judicial review of the case.
-end-