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Australian Financial
Review
Tuesday, May 11, 2004
Wiranto
Faces UN Warrant
Andrew Burrell
Manila -- A United
Nations-backed tribunal yesterday issued an arrest warrant for Indonesia's
former military chief Wiranto, in a move that could become a wildcard
issue in next month's presidential election campaign.
Mr Wiranto, who
is running for president, could be arrested for war crimes if he
travels outside Indonesia, which would prove an embarrassment should
he win the top job at the July 5 election.
However, he cannot
be arrested if he remains in Indonesia, as Jakarta has refused to
extradite him over allegations he was ultimately responsible for
the murder, deportation and persecution that took place in East
Timor in 1999.
Mr Wiranto's
aides could not be reached for comment last night, but he has long
denied any wrongdoing and claimed the accusations of human rights
abuses were drummed up by the international media.
It is unclear
how the warrant will affect Mr Wiranto's high-profile campaign as
the presidential candidate of the Golkar party, which last week
was declared the winner of the April 5 parliamentary election.
However, his
current lowly ranking in opinion polls would probably improve if
the warrant inspired sympathy among nationalist voters who may view
the tribunal's decision as foreign interference in Indonesia's legal
system.
Conversely, the
allegations could be used against him during the campaign by his
political opponents, as well as foreign and local human rights groups.
This may benefit
the presidential frontrunner, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, another
former general who has a cleaner reputation than Mr Wiranto.
UN prosecutors
in Dili allege that as military chief, Mr Wiranto held ultimate
command responsibility for the military-backed militia violence
that left 1500 people dead during East Timor's separation from Indonesia.
Last month, prosecutors
set out their case against Mr Wiranto for the first time, publishing
a thorough account of the evidence as part of their push for an
Interpol arrest warrant.
"The evidence
proves that the accused, as the highest military and police official
in Indonesia, exercised effective control over the militias who
perpetrated many of the crimes," the UN document said.
The UN's deputy
general prosecutor in Dili, Nicholas Koumjian, said yesterday the
warrant was an important step in attempts to bring to justice those
responsible for the violence in East Timor.
"It sends
a message that the victims have not been forgotten and that the
international community will not tolerate impunity for those responsible
for crimes against humanity, whoever they are."
Mr Wiranto is
one of more than 83 people indicted by the UN-funded tribunal. Fifty
have been convicted - mostly East Timorese militiamen used as auxiliaries
by the Indonesian troops during the rampage.
A spokesman for
the Indonesian government, Marty Natalegawa, said last night Jakarta
would not extradite Mr Wiranto because the warrant had not been
issued by an official UN tribunal.
"From Indonesia's
perspective it is purely an East Timor internal affair - it is not
a UN arrest warrant and we are not bound to it," he said "We
will not surrender an Indonesian citizen to another country, based
on a legal process we do not acknowledge."
The warrant was
issued as Mr Wiranto confirmed yesterday he would contest the election
with an Islamic figure, Solahuddin Wahid, as his vice-presidential
running mate.
It is a noteworthy
choice because Mr Wahid, a brother of former president Abdurrahman
Wahid, is the deputy chairman of Indonesia's national human rights
commission.
The other main
contenders in the presidential race include President Megawati Soekarnoputri
and parliamentary speaker Amien Rais.
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