The Jakarta Post
Thursday, April 14, 2005
Timor Leste: Time for Action
Eduardo Gonzalez, New York
Six years ago, a militia group descended on Liquica, a sleepy coastal
town on the strategic road that links Dili, the capital of Timor
Leste, with the western Indonesian part of Timor island. The militia
was seeking to quash the pro-independence movement there ahead of
a popular vote scheduled for August 1999 that would decide the future
of Timor Leste. Fleeing the violence, residents took shelter in
the local Catholic church where they were attacked by 2,000 militia
members and Indonesian soldiers. Fifty-nine unarmed civilians were
killed.
Horrendous as it was, the Liquiga massacre was not an extraordinary
occurrence during the nearly 25-year Indonesian occupation of East
Timor. A truth commission established by the UN in 2001 is still
trying to determine the total number of victims, but estimates range
from 100,000 to 200,000 people dead as a direct or indirect result
of Indonesian rule. During the popular vote alone, approximately
1,400 civilians were killed, hundreds of women were raped and 200,000
people were forcibly displaced.
The international community condemned these violations and two
commissions of inquiry -- one led by the UN and the other by Indonesia
-- arrived at the same conclusions: the atrocities committed in
East Timor in 1999 constituted crimes against humanity and war crimes,
and the international community was responsible for prosecuting
and punishing the perpetrators.
To date, not a single Indonesian has served a day in jail for crimes
committed in East Timor. After 1999, the UN gave Indonesia an opportunity
to try the perpetrators, but the ensuing trials were deeply flawed.
Of about 100 alleged perpetrators named by the Indonesian commission
of inquiry, only 16 were sent to trial by incompetent and politically
motivated prosecutors. The trials -- including of those accused
of the Liquiga massacre -- ended in acquittals or lenient sentences
that were overturned upon review. The head of the Indonesian Army
at the time, Gen. (ret) Wiranto, has never been prosecuted.
The Indonesian authorities also failed to transfer suspects or
evidence to UN-supervised prosecutions in Timor Leste. Although
scores of perpetrators were convicted in these trials, they were
largely low-level militia members. Indonesian military leaders bearing
the greatest responsibility remain at large, and some of them continue
their repressive activities in Aceh and West Papua.
UN prosecutions in Timor Leste are scheduled to end in May and
there are no adequately trained Timorese judges to continue the
pursuit of justice. To the dismay of victims, the Timor Leste government
has prioritized good relations with Indonesia over achieving accountability
for atrocious crimes.
Recently, the Indonesian and Timor Leste governments announced
the formation of a bilateral Truth and Friendship Commission to
address what their leaders refer to as "residual issues"
and "allegations". But whereas other commissions have
served justice by exposing wrongdoers, recommending prosecutions
and
reparations for victims, and issuing official apologies, this one
cannot offer reparations and will grant amnesty to perpetrators
of crimes against humanity. Victims' groups and human rights advocates
were never consulted about this inquiry and have rejected it as
little more than a whitewash to paper over impunity and further
diplomatic relations at their expense.
In a last-ditch effort to address this failure of justice, the
UN secretary-general has established a commission of experts that
will assess the judicial processes conducted in Jakarta and Dili
over the last six years and make
recommendations on how to overcome impunity.
The international community must do everything in its power to
support this commission in its efforts to provide a complete account
of the atrocities committed in 1999 and the subsequent failures
of justice. The cycle of
impunity must finally be broken. Justice for the East Timorese victims
is not a "residual" issue to be dealt with by the leaders
of the two countries alone, but a touchstone for the credibility
of the UN and the international community, and for the strength
of democracy in the region.
The writer is a senior associate and head of the Indonesia and
Timor-Leste programs at the International Center for Transitional
Justice. He was also on the staff of the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, which completed its work in 2003