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ICTJ: Timorese Parliament
Should Release Truth Commission
NEW YORK, November 28, 2005Today, President Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão presented the Timorese parliament and Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri with the final report of the Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in Timor-Leste (CAVR in its Portuguese acronym). The report details the systematic human rights violations committed during the 24-year Indonesian occupation of Timor and the failure to achieve justice for these crimes. The International Center
for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) supports the right of the Timorese people
and the international community to know the full truth about past abuses,
and calls on the Timorese parliament to publicly President Gusmão is required by law to submit the CAVR final report to the UN Secretary-General. Upon receipt, the Secretary-General should refer the report to the Security Council, General Assembly, the Special Committee on Decolonization, and the UN Commission on Human Rights. The Commission delivered
its final report to the president on October 31, marking the end of more
than three years of intensive work. The CAVR was established to investigate
human rights violations committed in East Timor between April 1974 and
October 1999, and to facilitate community reintegration and accountability
for those who committed less serious offenses. The ICTJ applauds the Commission
and the Timorese people for After decades marked by suppression of the truth and impunity for human rights abuse, the immediate dissemination of the final report's findings and recommendations is essential. The Commission's legal mandate to research and report the facts, contribute to victims' dignity, and recommend measures to prevent future abuses cannot be discharged without publicizing the final report. The CAVR final report
is a comprehensive and detailed record of the suffering of the Timorese
people in their struggle for freedom, based on rigorous analysis and extensive
information collected from a wide range of The report is said to contain exhaustive evidence of massive, widespread, and systematic human rights violations carried out against the Timorese population by Indonesian forces and accuses Indonesian government officials and high-level military commanders of deliberately violating international humanitarian law. The report also recommends measures to ensure that justice is done and reparations are made to Timorese victims and their families. The Commission's final report will serve as a stark reminder that Indonesian perpetrators continue to enjoy impunity for the brutal violations they committed and to highlight the international community's moral and legal obligations to bring these perpetrators to justice. "The people of
Timor-Leste must not be denied their right to know the full truth about
this period of their country's history," said ICTJ Senior Associate
Eduardo Gonzalez, head of the Center's Timor-Leste and Indonesia The ICTJ in Indonesia and Timor-Leste The ICTJ has been working in Indonesia and Timor-Leste since the organization's inception in 2001, consulting with the UN, governments, civil society groups, and academics on a variety of transitional justice initiatives. In June 2005, the Center released a report on the serious crimes process in Timor-Leste entitled "Justice Abandoned?" The report concluded that the quest for justice in Timor- Leste had begun with good intentions, but was not backed up by the strategic planning and effective political support necessary to counter the damaging effects of Indonesian lack of cooperation. Released in August 2003, "Intended to Fail," the ICTJ's analysis of the trials before the Ad Hoc Human Rights Court in Jakarta, suggests that Indonesia never intended to fulfill its promise of holding perpetrators accountable for the violence surrounding the East Timorese vote for independence in 1999. Senior Associate Eduardo Gonzalez worked with local and international NGOs to request that the UN develop an appropriate response to this failure. The ICTJ has also monitored
parliamentary efforts to establish a truth commission and coordinated
with local partners to ensure that the proposed body respects victims'
rights and promotes accountability. In January 2005, The ICTJ has actively
supported efforts in Timor-Leste to address the human rights violations
and impunity left by 24 years of Indonesian occupation by assisting the
work of the Commission for Reception, Truth and The Center urged the
UN Secretary-General to convene an international Commission of Experts
to examine the situation of impunity for the crimes committed in 1999
and to devise workable, efficient, and fair strategies to In January 2004, the
Center released "The Struggle for Truth and Justice," a report
that maps nearly 200 transitional justice initiatives undertaken by Indonesian
civil society organizations. The Center publishes a monthly All four reports are available on the ICTJ web site at <http://www.ictj.org>www.ictj.org. About the ICTJ The International Center
for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) assists countries pursuing accountability
for past mass atrocity or human rights abuse. The Center works in societies
emerging from repressive rule or armed conflict, In order to promote
justice, peace, and reconciliation, government officials and nongovernmental
advocates are likely to consider a variety of transitional justice approaches
including both judicial and nonjudicial responses to human rights crimes.
The ICTJ assists in the development of integrated, comprehensive, and
localized approaches to transitional justice comprising five key elements:
prosecuting perpetrators, documenting and The Center is committed
to building local capacity and generally strengthening the emerging field
of transitional justice, and works closely with organizations and experts
around the world to do so. The ICTJ works in the field through local languages
and provides comparative information, legal and policy analysis, documentation,
and strategic research to justice and truth-seeking institutions, nongovernmental
organizations, governments and others. END |
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Copy Right: JSMP-DIli,
June 2004
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