May 8, 2004
For immediate release:
East Timor: Reject Pardon for Most Serious
Crimes
(Jakarta, May 8, 2004)-East Timor's Parliament should exclude serious
human rights crimes from a general amnesty law now under consideration,
Human Rights Watch said today. The law could undermine the work
of Timorese and international bodies investigating and prosecuting
the grave abuses that took place in East Timor during the country's
1999 referendum on independence from Indonesia.
The law passed a first hearing on May 5. It will face an item-by-item
debate and a vote in Parliament that will begin May 10 and possibly
last several sessions. The original vote count was 24 in favor and
18 against, with 14 abstentions.
The law's preamble recommends clemency on the occasion of May 20,
which marks the second anniversary of East Timor's independence
after a quarter-century of Indonesian rule. The law's preamble states
that, in a spirit of national reconciliation, it intends to forgive
even those who have committed "serious crimes," a term
covering gross human rights
violations such as genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity,
murder, sexual offenses and torture. The law also applies to ordinary
crimes such as highway, tax and customs offences.
When the people of East Timor voted for independence in the U.N.-administered
referendum in August 1999, the Indonesian Armed Forces and Indonesian-backed
Timorese militias embarked on a campaign of murder,
arson and forced expulsion. An estimated 1,400 East Timorese civilians
were killed in the months before-and days immediately after-the
vote. . Approximately 500,000 people were forced from their homes
or fled to seek refuge.
"It is bitterly ironic to mark East Timor's second anniversary
of nationhood by undermining justice for the most serious crimes
that accompanied the country's independence," said Charmain
Mohamed, East Timor researcher for Human Rights Watch. "Reconciliation
has a place, but there can't be reconciliation without judicial
accountability for violations of
basic international human rights."
The U.N.-created Special Panels for Serious Crimes, which is comprised
of international and East Timorese judges, its prosecutorial arm,
the Serious Crimes Unit, and the East Timorese Commission for Reception,
Truth and Reconciliation have all been pursuing some of those responsible
for the abuses that occurred in East Timor.
The pertinent sections of the proposed law would significantly
reduce sentences for the most serious crimes, such as crimes against
humanity and widespread or systematic murder or rape. The law also
explicitly extends a pardon to those who may have committed serious
human rights violations, but have not yet been prosecuted.
"The Timorese leaders should not pardon crimes in advance
of trial and conviction," Mohamed said. "Pardoning serious
violators, especially before they've even faced a trial, contradicts
the principle that time served should be proportionate to the gravity
of the crime."
Those currently under indictment by the Serious Crimes Unit, which
has been prosecuting serious crimes that occurred in East Timor
during the 1999 violence, include four Indonesian generals, three
colonels and Indonesia's former governor of East Timor. The charges
include crimes against humanity based on murder, arson, destruction
of property and forced relocation. The accused include former Indonesian
Minister of Defense and Armed Forces Commander General Wiranto,
now a presidential candidate in Indonesia.
Since trials began in 2001 at the Special Panels for Serious Crimes,
49 defendants have been convicted, and one was acquitted. As of
April 2004, 12 trials with a total of 30 defendants have started
or are scheduled to commence in the coming months.