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Received from Joyo Indonesian News
The Jakarta Post
Monday, January 10, 2005
Opinion
What
of truth commission for East Timor?
Aboeprijadi Santoso, Amsterdam
Indonesia
has asked East Timor to initiate a joint-commission of truth and
reconciliation to resolve the issue of the violence during and after
the United Nations-organized vote in East Timor in 1999.
With
some 1,500 deaths, a capital destroyed, hundreds of thousands forcibly
deported and 17 of only 18 defendants acquitted (one more has an
appeal pending), the crimes against humanity allegedly committed
by the Army and its
proxies, have apparently been completed with total impunity. But
who, then, is responsible for the mayhem?
During
Dili's final observance of Indonesian Independence Day on Aug. 17,
1999, then governor Jose Abilio Osorio Soares proudly announced
before UN diplomats and community leaders that East Timor would
continue to celebrate the day
because he believed the country would remain part of Indonesia.
As he spoke, violence was sweeping the country, and in the hall,
this writer recalls, some civil servants whispered to each other
with a sense of disbelief. They were right: A few weeks later, the
majority (79 percent) of the people voted for independence.
Yet
the governor knew better. Abilio must have been aware of local anxieties
and the upcoming danger, for example, what the soldiers and militiamen
would do when defeat eventually came -- the "morning after
(the vote)" problem had by
then become an international concern. Pro-Jakarta militiamen said
the administration authorized them to set up check points along
the main roads and ports soon after the vote -- indicating that,
far from rogue elements fighting in a "civil war", the
violence had involved some planning.
When
Abilio was finally acquitted by the court, law experts warned that
the verdict could endanger Indonesia's position in the international
community, as the trials have been widely seen as a sham to avoid
an international tribunal.
Indeed,
Gen. Wiranto's adviser, Muladi, welcomed it as a step to avert international
criticism that only military men were freed from punishment, while
Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda regretted it, saying it would "erode
the credibility of the rights tribunal".
In
other words, rather than reflecting on the unjust treatment of the
victims, Jakarta was concerned about the image of the military and
the rights trials -- the two institutions most responsible for impunity,
whose credibility was thus at stake.
A
negative, possibly devastating, judgment could be the outcome if
the expert commission initiated by the UN secretary-general -- instead
of Jakarta's proposed truth commission -- is allowed to probe the
way Jakarta handled the case.
One
expert who witnessed and researched the case is Professor Geoffrey
Robinson of the University of California. The Canadian Indonesianist
was a political adviser of UN Mission in East timor (UNAMET), which
organized East Timor's
referendum. His report to the United Nations Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva, East Timor 1999, Crimes
against Humanity was for years suppressed, but is soon to be published.
"In
both 1965 (left-wing massacres) and 1999 (E. Timor)," Robinson
told Radio Netherlands recently, "the Army was directly involved
in organizing the killings. People talked of the 1999 case as if
it was just the work of some rogue
elements, but it's clear that the Army was involved in mobilizing
their own soldiers to take part in the crimes. The 1999 case was
in front of the international community, that's the big difference
...
It's
not easy, however, to explain how the massacres, rampage and rapes
were organized. Robinson said, "What I think happened was that
several Indonesian Military (TNI) officers and other officers in
Jakarta spelled out a general strategy to mobilize the militia groups
and to use terror and violence in order to intimidate people and
to punish them. And within that strategy, as you went down the command,
there were more specific ideas about what to do. So, yes, there
was planning at some level, a general strategy, but that doesn't
mean that a particular individual planned a particular massacre.
There is no smoking gun ... but the links between the formal Army
commands and the militia groups
are well documented.
"That
doesn't change the level of responsibility", Robinson insisted.
For "the line of responsibility is only partly informal and
some of the formal lines of command were still operating ... Probably
the Army's Special Forces (Kopassus) had a separate, parallel command,
controlling certain activities separately from the formal territorial
lines of command". This conclusion is parallel to UN investigator
James Dunn's report of Feb. 2001.
Mass
murderers like to ensure and measure their success. Hitler did it
at the special Wansee conference and the Khmer Rouge kept lists
of victims that went into meticulous detail. Not so in the Timor
case. But there were documents
of a contingency plan to transport people, which according to Dili's
Yayasan Hak suggests a preceding scorched-earth plan. This was the
directive from the Office of the Coordinating Minister for Political,
Legal and Security Affairs for
the Army and police district commanders in Dili.
All
these point to the use of Army infrastructure and other networks
to operate the militia groups. Examples abound -- like attacks on
churches in Liquisa and Suai and on Carrascalao's house.
The
planning apparently involved the TNI headquarters, Army Strategic
Reserves Command (Kostrad), Kopassus and the Armed Force's Strategic
Intelligence Agency (BAIS), but also key members of President BJ
Habibie's Cabinet. One
was the defense minister and TNI chief Gen. Wiranto, who let his
soldiers do what they did -- a very serious omission. But at a higher
level the coordinating minister Gen. ret. Feisal Tanjung played
a key role as he chaired a team, known by
its acronym TP4OKTT, which included ministers of home and foreign
affairs, of defense, justice and the BAIS chief. According to Robinson,
it is this group that formulated the general strategy.
The
Indonesia-East Timor Truth Commission is yet to spell out its aim
and modus operandi. However, being a truth commission, it will have
-- if any -- limited judicial power. To resolve the issue, a truly
credible court -- a hybrid or international tribunal -- should precede
such a commission, check the above findings, and let justice take
its course.
The writer is a journalist with Radio Netherlands,
Amsterdam.
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