JAKARTA: Wiranto Says Sorry
for First Time Over Timor Leste Violence
By Amy Chew in Jakarta
INDONESIAN presidential candidate and former armed forces chief
General Wiranto publicly apologised for the first time for the violence
in Timor Leste, then called East Timor, that killed more than 1,000
people in 1999. Wiranto was the armed forces chief when Timor Leste
voted to break away from Jakarta rule under a United Nations referendum,
triggering a rampage by pro-Jakarta militias who killed, looted
and burnt the tiny territory.
Wiranto has never been charged by Jakarta's on-going ad hoc trials
for rights abuses and has always maintained he never "ordered
or planned" the killings. Human rights campaigners, however,
assert he should be held responsible as he was the commander at
that time.
"I have been examined by the ad hoc trials and they concluded
I cannot be categorised as being guilty or a suspect in that case,"
Wiranto told the New Straits Times in an interview at the end of
a campaigning trip in Central Java.
"But despite that, morally, I have asked for forgiveness from
all parties over what has happened in Timor Leste. As a human being,
I feel very sad over what happened there. I also lost a child whom
I love while I was on duty in Timor Leste." In 2002, the Serious
Crime Unit (SCU), a unit within Timor Leste's attorney-general's
office, indicted Wiranto for crimes against humanity and issued
a warrant for his arrest. In early May this year, however, Timor
Leste's A-G's office cancelled the arrest warrant and dropped all
charges against him.
The annulment of the charges is expected to help smooth Wiranto's
road to the July 5 presidential elections. He is one of the major
candidates along with incumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri
and former Security Minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. In an effort
to burnish his international standing and to forge reconciliation,
Wiranto met Timor Leste's leader Xanana Gusmao at the end of May
under the full glare of the international Press in Bali. The two
men hugged and smiled for the cameras, but revealed little of the
meeting.
In the latest edition of Indonesia's leading news magazine, Tempo,
Gusmao said: "I assure you, the cancellation of the arrest
warrant for Wiranto by Attorney-General Monteiro is not the result
of pressure from Indonesia. This is our principle." Asked whether
he was not worried of being branded a traitor, Gusmao said: "We
have to be realistic. We still eat Supermi from Indonesia. Other
things like aqua (mineral water), clothes and sandals are also from
Indonesia. In an era of globalisation, we need support from all
parties, especially from our close neighbour." Gusmao also
said it was untrue that the people of Timor Leste disliked Wiranto.
"I don't believe that at all. Timor Leste's problem in the
past is not of Wiranto as an individual. It was a problem of the
country," he reportedly said. " When Wiranto is elected
as the president of Indonesia, I will send my congratulations as
quickly as possible." Wiranto described his elationship
with Gusmao as one of friendship and commitment to rebuilding both
countries together. "If I am elected president, and I understand
East Timor's problems, I want both our countries to forge co-operation
to improve the welfare of the people in our respective countries."
end