M. Taufiqurrahman, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
The Attorney General's Office is looking into the possibility of
building new cases against the military officers widely believed
to have been responsible for the atrocities that occurred before
and after the East Timor referendum in 1999.
Attorney General Abdul Rahman Saleh said on Tuesday that there
was still a chance that prosecutors could build new cases and name
new suspects for crimes against humanity in the former Indonesian
province.
"I will study the cases first. However, there is a possibility
that the cases will be reopened, and we will look at the relevant
procedural law," he told reporters here.
Abdul Rahman was responding to a demand from two human rights groups,
the Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras)
and Imparsial, which called on his office to find new suspects for
the
human rights abuses in East Timor.
Kontras and Imparsial said in a joint statement that the acquittal
of former East Timor governor Abilio Soares of human rights violations
coincidentally opened up a new legal avenue for bringing those responsible
for the bloodshed to justice.
"None of military officers were found guilty after all legal
recourses had been exhausted and now the Supreme Court has acquitted
Abilio. This means that no institution has been held accountable
for the mayhem. This is
not possible. Therefore, the prosecutors have to look for new suspects,"
Rachland Nashidik of Imparsial told a press briefing here.
Rachland said that they could name former military chief Gen. (ret)
Wiranto as the prime suspect in a new case. "Wiranto was the
person named as being responsible for the human rights abuses in
East Timor by the National
Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM)'s special investigation
team before his name was removed from the list by then Attorney
General Marzuki Darusman," he said.
He said the Komnas HAM finding and the testimony given by Soares
during the human rights trials to the effect that the military was
responsible for the violence in East Timor could serve as new grounds
for prosecuting
Wiranto.
Wiranto was the military chief and minister of defense during the
mayhem in which 1,000 East Timorese civilians are believed to have
been killed before and after the August 1999 UN-sponsored referendum.
Most of the violence was committed by militia groups linked to
the Indonesian Military (TNI).Wiranto was in East Timor prior to
the referendum, and said he was there for the purpose of "doing
everything in my power to prevent an outbreak of violence".
In recent days, Wiranto has held meetings with the President, and
Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs
Widodo A.S., but declined to disclose what was discussed during
the meetings.Rachland said Abdul Rahman must break the cycle of
impunity by initiating proceedings against Wiranto, even if that
would cause problems with the President.
"The new Attorney General must prove that he is better than
his predecessor in dealing with human rights violations," he
said.