On Anniversary
of East Timor Church Massacre
UN Must Take Responsibility for Justice
Contact: John M. Miller, 718-596-7668; 917-690-4391 (cell)
For Immediate Release
April 6 - On the sixth anniversary of the massacres at the Catholic
Church in Liquica, East Timor, the East Timor Action Network (ETAN)
urged the international community to heed East Timorese cries for
justice.
"The international community must keep its commitment to the
victims of this and other horrific crimes committed in East Timor,"
said John M. Miller, spokesperson for ETAN. "We must continue
to pursue accountability for crimes against humanity, war crimes
and genocide committed during Indonesia's illegal occupation of
East Timor between 1975 and 1999."
The anniversary comes as the UN Commission of Experts (COE) is
visiting now independent East Timor to evaluate existing judicial
processes and propose next steps to hold accountable those responsible
for serious crimes in East Timor in 1999. The Commission is to evaluate
temporary courts set up in both Indonesia and East Timor to try
serious crimes committed in East Timor 1999, neither of which has
been able to hold any higher-level perpetrators accountable. The
government of Indonesia is refusing to allow the COE to enter Indonesia.
"We urge the COE to listen carefully to the victims and explore
all possibilities, including an international criminal tribunal.
In February 2000, UN Secretary-General stood in the Liquica church
yard and called for
'justice to prevail over impunity.' The COE must find ways to fulfill
that pledge," Miller said.
"The UN must not tolerate a double standard of justice, where
only low-level East Timorese militia members are convicted and their
Indonesian masters escape with impunity, going on to organize similar
crimes in Aceh,
West Papua and elsewhere," he added.
Several Indonesian officers accused of failing to prevent the Liquica
massacre were tried in Jakarta but acquitted. Only one East Timorese
has been convicted in East Timor's Special Panels court for his
involvement in the massacre; many other Indonesians and East Timorese
indicted for this massacre and other crimes remain free in Indonesia.
"Indonesia and East Timor recently established a Commission
of Truth and Friendship, which is intended to preempt the work of
the Commission of Experts and block any effective steps toward accountability
and justice. The truth of what happened in 1999 is well-established:
Indonesian officials - working with militia they created, funded
and directed - committed heinous crimes, including more than a thousand
murders, in a
systematic campaign to terrorize and destroy East Timor. The organizers
and perpetrators of the violence are well-known," said Miller.
Background
On April 6, 1999, hundreds of East Timorese and Indonesian militia,
soldiers and police attacked several thousand refugees sheltering
in the Catholic church in Liquica, after slaughtering several civilians
nearby the
day before. According to an unpublished report commissioned by the
United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights,
the attack left up to 60 people dead, although the precise death
toll is still unknown. The refugees had sought shelter in the churchyard
from earlier militia attacks.
According to the report, "The systematic disposal of corpses...
[t]ogether with the substantial evidence of TNI [Indonesian military]
and Police involvement in the massacre itself, the presence of key
officials at the scene of the crime, and the responsibility of those
officials for creating and coordinating the BMP [militia],... makes
it a virtual certainty that the Liquica church massacre was planned
by high-ranking TNI and civilian authorities."
All of the security officials tried in Indonesia's Ad Hoc Human
Rights Court for their involvement in the massacre and other crimes
were acquitted either at trial or on appeal, including police chief
Timbul Silaen,
regional military commander General Adam Damiri and East Timor military
commander Tono Suratman.
In November 2001, the UN-funded Serious Crimes Unit indicted nine
Indonesian officers and 12 local militia for the massacre. All are
believed to be in Indonesia, and INTERPOL has issued arrest warrants
for them. The
massacre is also cited in a wide ranging indictment issued in 2003
accusing General Wiranto, former Indonesian defence minister, and
other senior officials of crimes against humanity throughout East
Timor in 1999. The SCU in Dili convicted and jailed one militia
member, who had been indicted separately of three murders, including
one during the massacre.
Last month, the governments of Indonesia and East Timor agreed
to establish a Commission of Truth and Friendship (CTF). The Commission
will include people from both countries and is to establish a "shared
historical record" of the violations of human rights before
and after East Timor's independence ballot in 1999, recommend amnesty
for those who "cooperate fully," and propose people-to-people
reconciliation efforts.
Indonesian and East Timorese NGOs and international human rights
groups have strongly criticized the CTF, fearing that it will institutionalize
impunity and is not capable of identifying perpetrators. The NGOs
charged
that the two governments have "disregarded demands for justice
made by victims of serious human rights violations that occurred
in East Timor in 1999" and called the CTF's terms of reference
"appalling."
Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975 and brutally occupied the
territory until October 1999. The international community never
recognized Indonesia's claim, and approximately 200,000 East Timorese
were killed as a
result of the Indonesian occupation.
In 1999, Indonesia agreed to a UN-administered referendum on East
Timor's political status. After the referendum, in which East Timorese
people voted overwhelmingly for independence, Indonesian security
forces and the militia they controlled laid waste to the territory,
displacing three-quarters of the population, murdering approximately
1400 civilians, and destroying more than 75% of the buildings and
infrastructure.
The Security Council established the Serious Crimes Unit in Dili
to conduct investigations and prepare indictments to assist in bringing
to justice those responsible for crimes against humanity and other
serious crimes committed in East Timor in 1999. It also created
hybrid Timorese-international Special Panel courts to try these
cases. The SCU filed its final indictments late last year. Approximately
76% of the nearly 400 people indicted by the SCU are living free
in Indonesia, which has refused to honor its promise to cooperate
with the Serious Crimes process.
No judicial process has yet been established to investigate and
prosecute those responsible for genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity prior to 1999, when more than 99% of the deaths
resulting from the
Indonesian military occupation took place.
ETAN advocates for democracy, justice and human rights for East
Timor and Indonesia.
End.