(Kyodo) _ East Timor and Indonesia on Wednesday launched a truth
commission to investigate human rights abuses committed in 1999
when East Timorese people voted overwhelmingly for independence
from Indonesia.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his East Timorese
counterpart Xanana Gusmao signed the Joint Statement to Create the
Commission of Truth and Friendship at a ceremony in Jakarta.
"This is the time for us, Indonesia and East Timor, to try
searching for the truth, because all of the people of Indonesia,
our people, we would like to know the truth," East Timor Prime
Minister Mari Alkatiri told a press conference after the ceremony.
"We are looking forward to trying to get the truth, (because)
the truth will be the base of a real friendship," he added.
The commission, modeled on South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, will be tasked with establishing conclusive truth of
events with a view to further promoting reconciliation and friendship
and ensuring that tragic events of the past will not be repeated.
Unlike the one in South Africa, however, the commission will have
no decisive power. Under its maximum mandate of two years, the commission
can only make ecommendations to the parliaments of both sides and
cannot prosecute anyone.
However, when asked how the commission will guarantee that the
truth behind human rights abuses in East Timor in 1999 will be revealed,
Gusmao only said that both sides must trust each other.
"We need to put some trust in humankind, in society, in the
state, in the country, because without this, we will live in continuous
distrust," Gusmao said.
"The commission is committed to the truth...is open to seek
the truth," he added. "We have to make mechanisms by which
the commission can have the truth revealed."
The commission was established based on an agreement between Yudhoyono
and Gusmao in December. It will have 10 members, with five from
Indonesia and the other five from East Timor.
In the next few months, both governments will propose lists of
experts, human rights activists, lawyers, politicians, religious
leaders and scholars to be members of the commission, which will
convene on Aug. 10.
"We will have contact and if we all agree on both lists, we
will swear in those 10 people," Gusmao said.
The commission will have a secretariat on the resort island of
Bali with complimentary offices in Jakarta and Dili.
"It will take time to bring together all the processes into
one conclusive dossier. It will also take time to examine and to
establish the factual, conclusive truth we are searching for,"
Gusmao said.
"But we must accomplish it, for the sake of our children,
for their future, for the future of both of our nations," he
added.
The decision to set up the commission came after the U.N. Security
Council expressed concerns over Indonesia's failure to punish those
responsible for the 1999 massacre. Most of 18 military and civilian
officers, charged with human rights abuses in East Timor, were acquitted.
Last month, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan announced the establishment
of the independent Commission of Experts to review the prosecution.
The commission will assess the progress made by the judicial processes
in Dili and Jakarta and make recommendations to Annan with regard
to possible future actions over the 1999 anti-independence violence
in which dozens of people were killed and hundreds of thousands
fled, according to the United Nations.
The former Portuguese colony, annexed by Indonesia in the 1970s,
became independent in 2002.
End.