The Judicial System Monitoring Programme (JSMP) was set up in early 2001 in Dili, East Timor. Through court monitoring, the provision of legal analysis and thematic reports on the development of the judicial system, and outreach activities, JSMP aims to contribute to the ongoing evaluation and building of the justice system in East Timor. For more information, please email us at info@jsmp.minihub.org O Programa de Monitoramento do Sistema Judicial (JSMP) foi constituído no início de 2001 em Dili, Timor Leste. Através da monitorização do trabalho dos tribunais e da elaboração de análises legais e de relatórios temáticos sobre o desenvolvimento do sistema judicial, o JSMP espera poder contribuir para a avaliação contínua e para a construção do sistema de justiça em Timor Leste. Para informação adicional, email: info@jsmp.minihub.org Program Pemantauan Sistem Yudisial (JSMP) dibentuk pada awal tahun 2001 di Dili, Timor Leste. JSMP bertujuan untuk memberikan kontribusi terhadap kelangsungan pembangunan dan evaluasi sistem peradilan di Timor Leste melalui pemantauan pengadilan, penyediaan analisis hukum dan laporan-laporan tematis terhadap perkembangan system yudisial. Untuk informasi lebih lanjut, email: info@jsmp.minihub.org
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Last modified:
Thursday 10 March, 2005 4:56 PM

 

Associated Press
Wednesday March 9, 2005

Former foes Indonesia, East Timor set up joint human rights body

Indonesia and its former province East Timor on Wednesday set up a joint panel to investigate crimes by Indonesian forces during East Timor's violent break from Jakarta in 1999. Activists accused Indonesia of circumventing any U.N. probe into the violence.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his East Timorese counterpart Xanana Gusmao signed the agreement setting up the Commission of Truth and Friendship (CTF) during a ceremony at Jakarta's presidential palace.

The body will consist of lawyers and human rights figures from both nations. It will issue a report describing the cause of the bloodshed, but will not recommend legal action against those responsible. It is due to start work on Aug. 10, but there was no date slated for it to end.

"Today Indonesia and East Timor embark on an agreement toward building a better future and to ensure the tragedy of the past is not repeated," Gusmao said.

Vengeful Indonesian forces and their militia proxies killed nearly 2,000 people in the aftermath off a U.N.-organized plebiscite in 1999 that ended Indonesia's 24-year occupation of the half-island nation. About half of East Timor's 700,000 people were forced to flee their homes during the bloodshed, which only ended with the arrival of peacekeeping troops.

In response to international pressure, Indonesian courts charged 18 people, most of them police and military officers, for their role in human rights crimes in Timor, but 12 of them were subsequently acquitted. Four others had their sentences overturned on appeal, and the remaining two have appealed their cases, which are pending.

East Timor says it wants to focus on cooperation with Jakarta, and is no longer interested in pursuing war crimes cases that might "destabilize" its massive neighbor, where the military retains significant political clout.

Wednesday's establishment of the commission comes on the heels of an announcement by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan that he was appointing a separate commission of experts to review Jakarta's prosecutions for war crimes and explain why a 1999 Security Council resolution to try those responsible for the bloodshed failed.

It is unclear whether Indonesia will cooperate with the U.N. body, which consists of legal experts from India, Japan and Fiji.

In answer to a question on the U.N. body, Yudhoyono _ himself a former general who once served in East Timor _ said he believed the "CTF is the best and most visible framework to solve the problems between East Timor and Indonesia."

Human rights groups want the United Nations to oversee an international tribunal for East Timor like those in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. They said the latest move was a blatant attempt to absolve Indonesia's generals of responsibility for crimes in East Timor.

"The truth of what happened is well-established: Indonesian political and military officials ... committed hundreds of murders and other major crimes in a systematic campaign to terrorize and destroy East Timor," said John Miller of the New York-based East Timor Action Network.

In Dili, Jose Luis Oliviera, chairman of the Foundation of Human Right and Justice said the new commission would hamper efforts to achieve justice.

"I think this is a bad development," he said. "This commission will divert the search for justice by absolving the perpetrators of their crimes."

End.
Copy Right: JSMP-DIli, June 2004