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INDONESIA: United Nations Recommends further Prosecutions over East Timor A United Nations commission says Indonesia should be given six months to re-try those accused of destroying East Timor or they should face an international war crimes court. Listen: http://www.abc.net.au/ra/asiapac/programs/m1077539.asx MARTIN: Not one person is in jail, following Indonesia's attempt to punish those responsible for the 1999 ruin of East Timor. After the former Portuguese territory voted overwhelmingly for independence, Indonesia's military and its militias laid waste to East Timor, killing, looting and burning as they went. There was always going to be problems bringing those responsible to justice. East Timor has no extradition treaty with Indonesia, so UN-sponsored trials in Dili had to try Indonesian soldiers in absentia. Rejecting the option of an international tribunal, the UN put the onus on Jakarta to judge those guilty of war crimes. But only 18 came to trial in the newly established human rights court, and just two were convicted. One of those convictions has been overturned, and the other is also expected to be reversed. So the UN Security Council set up a Commission of Experts five months ago to assess the legal process, and find out why no-one's been punished. The commission has just reported, and one of the few outside the UN to be briefed on its contents is Jill Joliffe, veteran freelance writer on East Timorese issues. JOLIFFE: The Commission
of Experts described the conduct of the trials which they examined closely
as having prosecutors who weren't committed to justice, saying that the
court had been hostile to defence witnesses, but MARTIN: Tell us the main recommendations of the commission's report? JOLIIFFE: It's recommendations were that because the legal process was so deeply flawed, that the trial should be held again altogether. Now this is a rather unusual recommendation, because normally a person who was put on trial again would be subject to what's known as double jeopardy. But it said they were so flawed that the complaint of double jeopardy could not be used as a legal defence. It has called on the
parallel institution in East Timor, the serious crimes unit which attempted
to prosecute some of the senior Indonesian officials to give its documentation
to a new prosecution, in particular documentation MARTIN: The United Nations isn't necessarily going to welcome a recommendation to look at a war crimes tribunal, a very expensive and in the current international political climate, not a very welcome recommendation? JOLIFFE: That's right.
I think that they will go very hard on the rerunning of the trials in
Jakarta. There is a personal connection between Kofi Annan and the Indonesian
President, Yuduyono who in previous positions both MARTIN: So there is some kind of personal connection and you think Kofi Annan may try to somehow exploit this? JOLIFFE: Yeah, I think that they're going to pressure the Indonesians very hard for this retrial in order to avoid the international court. MARTIN: Yet the refusal
to give this commission of experts visas was under the administration
of Susilo Bambang Yudoyono, so how likely is it really that Jakarta is
going to accept this kind of recommendation or indeed bow JOLIFFE: I think that
the past history suggest its highly unlikely and of course they will have
many friends at the UN who'll be lobbying hard to make sure that this
doesn't get through. But this commission of experts was http://www.abc.net.au/ra/asiapac/programs/s1399402.htm Green Left Weekly, June 29, 2005. UN report: East Timor trials a sham Three legal experts appointed by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in February to investigate Jakarta's trials of those responsible for atrocities during East Timor's 1999 independence referendum has described the trials, in which all but two accused were acquitted, as "manifestly inadequate" and the prosecutors as "not committed to justice". Thier report recommends that if Jakarta cannot prepare "credible" trials within another six months, the UN should set up an international war crimes court for East Timor. In 2000,
the UN ignored an International Commission of Inquiry into East Timor
report that recommended an international tribunal try the Indonesian generals
who oversaw the 1999 massacres, in favour of allowing END |
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Copy Right: JSMP-DIli,
June 2004
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