Last
modified:
Monday 24 July, 2006 2:38 PM
|
Address
to July 2006 Meeting of the United Nations Association of Autralia
Justice
or Appeasement – Human Rights in East Timor
On 31 October 2005, the Commission for Truth, Reception and Reconciliation,
more commonly known by its Portuguese acronym, CAVR, presented its final
report to the President of East Timor, Xanana Gusmão. In its report
the CAVR identified its mandate as: “to establish the truth about
the human rights violations which occurred in Timor-Leste throughout the
25-year mandate period.”
The report’s mandate period starts in 1974 and ends in 1999.
The CAVR found a wide range of material that constitutes “strong
evidence of human rights violations which occurred throughout the period”.
Some aspects of that evidence will be discussed further below. Even if
one concentrates entirely on the calendar year 1999, the human rights
violations referred to in the report are breathtakingly stark. It is unthinkable
that the major perpetrators will never be brought to justice.
The United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (“UNTAET”)
established the CAVR by Regulation 10 of 2001, with effect from 13 July
2001. At [48] of the Introduction to the report, the CAVR said:
“The Commission’s establishment was supported by political
leaders of all political persuasions, non-government organisations, the
Catholic Church and other religious institutions, the UN mission, UNHCR,
the UN High Commission for Human Rights, other international organisations
and donor countries. The level of support for the Commission was so broad
that reference to it was included in the National Constitution of RDTL
Article 162. By the time the Constitution was signed in May 2002, the
Commission was already operating.”
The CAVR’s report provides a detailed historical analysis of the
period leading up to the 1990s. In Part 3 of the report titled “The
History of Conflict”, at [470] the CAVR said:
“The East Timorese independence movement was transformed in the
1990s. The focus moved from the guerilla campaign to a diplomatic campaign,
with strong support from student groups in Timor-Leste and Indonesia and
growing international support. This shift was aided by three pivotal events:
the Santa Cruz Massacre, the capture of Xanana Gusmão and the award
of the Nobel Peace Prize to Bishop Belo and José Ramos-Horta.”
These pivotal events and the consequent increased interest of the international
community emboldened those in East Timor who sought independence to strive
to achieve that aim.
However, the CAVR reports that the Indonesian military, known by the acronym
“TNI”, developed a response which focused on combating the
independence movement through fear and thuggery with the establishment
of paramilitary forces. At [489] of Part 3 of the report, the CAVR said:
“From the mid-1990s, a new focus was brought to paramilitary and
intelligence operations in the territory. Armed groups which became known
as “Ninja” squads roamed the streets of Dili after dark, creating
a sense of terror among the population as people disappeared in these
covert operations. The riot police, Brimob, became a ubiquitous and violent
presence, especially in Dili where student demonstrations were most common.”
(citations omitted)
The report showed the following actions taken by the TNI to set up militia
groups as the frontline of the military campaign against independence.
By
August 1998, the TNI maintained a network of paramilitary groups linked
to elite special forces or “Kopassus units”, despite claiming
to have withdrawn these units. At [535] of Part 3 of the report says:
“Twelve teams were in place in 11 districts, most of them linked
to Kopassus units. These groups formed the basis of the militia that were
rapidly recruited in later months.”
·In
November 1998, a militia group (Ablai) aided the TNI in killing civilians
suspected of assisting Falintil after the civilians hid inside a church
in Alas, seeking refuge from fighting between the TNI and Falintil.
International journalists who travelled to Alas observed non-military
personnel in control; militia groups linked to traditional kings had long
existed in East Timor but the emerging militias in the late 1990s were
mostly linked directly to the TNI. Many were serving members of the TNI
who went in and out of uniform as they pleased; the TNI held public ceremonies
inaugurating militia groups; militia members publicly stated that the
TNI armed them and senior TNI officers made statements to that effect.
General Wiranto, Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces acknowledged the
TNI’s involvement in the militia;
·while
some militia members joined under duress, many others were motivated by
money paid to them by the TNI and the prestige in being associated with
the TNI; from late 1998 militia groups came to be mentioned in military
documents detailing the TNI’s supply of arms to the militia; a militia
defector, Tomas Goncalves, confirmed the involvement of the Kopassus intelligence
unit and key military officers [Suratman, Sudrajat and Damiri] in the
recruitment of militia members; and the TNI predominantly armed the militia
with crude home-made weapons to create the appearance of a spontaneous
popular movement engaged in a civil war with pro-independence groups.
This deception became apparent when the TNI made automatic weapons available
to some groups as well as logistical and security support.
From his prison cell in Cipinang Prison, Xanana Gusmão cautioned
against reacting to the militia so as not to play into the hands of the
TNI and make the international community think there was a civil war.
At the time, some Australian commentators seemed to accept the TNI rhetoric
based on statements I recall them making on national television. Even
during a recent Sky News TV report on the late May troubles in Dili, an
anchorman, entering an area beyond his expertise, referred to the 1999
“civil war”.
On 27 January 1999 President Habibie announced the “popular consultation”
on special autonomy or independence. But in the weeks preceding the announcement
the militia group “Mahidi”, based in Cassa, Ainaro, caused
4,000 people to flee their violence and seek refuge in a partially constructed
cathedral in Suai. Nearby in the small town of Galitas, on 23 January
1999, members of Mahidi killed a pregnant woman and cut her baby from
her belly.
Further killings occurred in Mauboke, Liquiçá. With the
presence and involvement of the TNI and the Brimob riot police, 60 refugees
were slaughtered on 6 April 1999, whilst seeking shelter in the Liquiçá
Church. Senior TNI officers were observed at the Church immediately before
the massacre.
On 12 April 1999 militia killed 7 people in Cailaco, Bobonaro. On 17 April
1999 the Aitarak militia, lead by the notorious Eurico Guterres, rampaged
through Dili and killed 12 people at the home of Manuel Carrascalao. At
the time Irish Foreign Minister, David Andrews, was in a meeting with
Colonel Suratman, the TNI commander in Dili. Andrews observed Suratman
take a report on the killings and do nothing in response.
In respect of these atrocities, the CAVR said at [553] of Part 3 of the
report:
“In
each of these cases the killing shared the elements of direct military
support or involvement, militia perpetration, the targeting of independence
supporters and systematic body disposal by the military that made total
deaths difficult to ascertain. These patterns strongly suggest the involvement
of the TNI in conducting operations. This violence was designed to create
the illusion of a conflict between armed East Timorese. The Liquiçá
and Dili massacres were later explained by Colonel Suratman as having
been provoked by bullets fired by the pro-independence supporters. However
investigations showed that in no instance were the victims found to have
been armed.” (citations omitted)
On 5 May 1999, Deputy Chief of Staff of the TNI, Lieutenant General Lumintang
requested regional command in Bali to prepare evacuation plans for East
Timor, given the possibility of a majority pro-independence vote in the
ballot. The UN was not informed of these plans until immediately before
the ballot. No rational person with any respect for human life could have
envisaged the carnage, mass forced departures and wholesale destruction
that would be involved in carrying out the plans.
On 17 May 1999 the District Administrator in Dili established a broad
militia group named Pam Swakarsa. He nominated the governor, the provincial
military commander and the provincial police chief as key advisers and
Eurico Guterres as its “Operational Commander”. Of the 2,650
listed members of the officially sanctioned Pam Swakarsa, 1521 were members
of the Aitarak militia, the feared pro-Indonesia militia lead by Eurico
Guterres.
On 20 May 1999, Aitarak militia, with TNI involvement, killed two student
leaders in Hera, near Dili. About the same time two other students were
killed in Covalima by Laksaur militia.
In June 1999, Suratman appeared on the “Sunday” program and
said:
“I
want to give you this message. If the pro-independence side wins, it’s
not going to just be the government of Indonesia that has to deal with
what follows. The UN and Australia are also going to have to solve the
problem and well, if this does happen, then there’ll be no winners.
Everything is going to be destroyed. East Timor won’t exist as it
does now. It’ll be much worse than 23 years ago.”
On 29 June 1999 the Dadarus Merah Putih militia attacked the UNAMET office
in Maliana. On 4 July 1999 the Besih Merah Putih militia attacked a humanitarian
convoy between Liquiçá and Dili. On 7 July 1999, Ian Martin
of UNAMET flew to Jakarta to meet with General Wiranto and put directly
to him the UN’s evidence of the relationship between the TNI and
the militia.
In the face of intimidation and violence some 451,792 voters registered
with UNAMET to take part in the ballot, about 90% of those eligible to
vote.
In the period leading up to the ballot in late August 1999, only two incidents
of pro-independence violence occurred. On 12 July, independence supporters
killed a pro-integration supporter and on 29 August an Aitarak member
was killed in Becora, Dili.
Whilst being involved in the task force to implement the ballot, Major-General
Makarim ran the militia campaign. On 18 August 1999 a US congressional
delegation witnessed violence in Suai. Their report led to the removal
of Makarim as well as two TNI district commanders. Their removal was sold
by the TNI as it clamping down on rogue soldiers. Earlier on 13 August
1999 Colonel Suratman was replaced by Colonel Muis, another commander
with a Kopassus background.
On 30 August 1999, 98.6% of those registered to vote cast a ballot, with
the pro-independence position overwhelmingly favoured by 78.5% to 21.5%
against.
On ballot day, two East Timorese staff of UNAMET in Atsabe were killed
by militia. A UN civilian police witness observed TNI members at the scene.
Militia violence broke out in the days following the ballot, bringing
Suratman’s warning to the Sunday program to its grim reality.
At [621] to Part 3 of the report, the CAVR said:
“On 1 September militia arrived in Dili and conducted attacks on
pro-independence supporters close to the UNAMET compound in Balide. One
man was filmed by international media running for his life and being caught
and hacked to death by militia. Hundreds sought refuge in the school next
door to the UNAMET compound. In Ermera violence broke out, and UNAMET
evacuated its staff to Dili. On 2 September in Maliana, militia surrounded
the UNAMET office and went on a spree of shooting and house burning. Two
East Timorese UNAMET staff were killed.”
Between 1,200 and 1,500 East Timorese were killed by the militia and the
TNI in 1999. Nine hundred of these deaths occurred after the ballot, that
is, from early September until late October, when the International Forces
for East Timor (Interfet) arrived.
Four hundred people were murdered in mass killings and the rest individually.
Many were mutilated by militias wielding machetes. Those who survived
continue to suffer health difficulties. Independence leaders and their
families were particularly targeted. Torture, sexual violence and forced
deportation occurred.
In excess of half of the population, that is 550,000 people fled their
homes. 250,000 were transferred to West Timor either forcibly or by intimidation.
Those seeking refuge in churches were executed mercilessly, clergy and
nuns amongst them.
As the TNI departed with the arrival of Interfet, it destroyed 70% of
major infrastructure, houses and buildings, it razed entire villages and
towns and looted the possessions of the population. The militia joined
in the rampage, burning buildings with petrol supplied by the TNI often
delivered in fire engines with petrol in the water tanks. An exercise
of such logistical proportions could not have been carried out with out
TNI involvement.
The CAVR report makes a large number of recommendations concerning legal,
political and administrative reforms to prevent the repetition of human
rights violations and to respond to the needs of victims. These include
a recommendation that the Government of Indonesia formally apologise to
victims of human rights violations occurring in East Timor during the
occupation, and to pay reparations. The recommendations also call for
reparations from the permanent members of the Security Council, especially
the United States of America but also Britain and France, as well as from
companies in those countries who profited from the sale of arms to Indonesia
during the occupation.
Under the heading of Recommendation 7, “Justice and Truth”
the report notes that:
The
demand for justice and accountability remains a fundamental issue in the
lives of many East Timorese people and a potential obstacle to building
a democratic society based on respect for rule of law and authentic reconciliation
between individuals, families, communities and nations.
The report goes on to recommend the renewed mandates and increased resources
for the Serious Crimes Unit and the United Nations Special Panel for Serious
Crimes, formerly a division of the Dili District Court. It also called
for the investigation and the preparation of prosecutions for a specific
list of pre 1999 incidents. It was further recommended that Indonesia
transfer those indicted under these processes to East Timor for prosecution.
Should these measures fail, or should Indonesia continue to obstruct the
implementation of this justice, the report recommends the institution
of an International Tribunal, pursuant to Chapter VII of the UN Charter.
In previous papers I have detailed the response of the UN and the new
East Timorese Parliament in setting up and developing a Court system.
However, in the Special Panels for Serious Crimes and the District Courts,
no major TNI operative has been brought to justice.
Many of the recommendations arising out of the report have met with resistance
from the government of East Timor. In his speech on handing over the final
report of the CAVR to the National Parliament, President Gusmão
distanced himself and the East Timor government from the report. Whilst
applauding the grandiose idealism of the recommendations, Mr Gusmão
poured cold water on the claim that compensation is necessary for reconciliation,
focusing instead on the principles of tolerance and forgiveness as the
true basis for the coexistence of diverging opinions in society. He described
the recommendations for reparations as being of serious concern. He also
took issue with the CAVR finding that the absence of justice is a fundamental
obstacle in the process of building a democratic society. Mr Gusmão
considered retribution and deterrence to be less important in building
a democratic society than independent courts and the prevention of corruption.
The true risk to a state based on the rule of law, according to Mr Gusmão,
is “ill practised justice”. He also rejected the recommended
revival of the Special Panels for Serious Crimes on the basis that: “This
recommendation does not take into account the situation of political anarchy
and social chaos that could easily erupt if we decide to bring to court
every crime committed since 1975 or even 1974” Additionally, Mr
Gusmão expressed concern that by further highlighting past crimes,
the East Timorese would be portrayed as brutal, violent and blood thirsty
people.
The sentiments expressed by President Gusmão reflect a concern
about the volatility and instability of the situation in post conflict
East Timor, a concern which is clearly justified by recent events. He
also expressed concern that the CAVR report could be used to manipulate
his people’s state of mind. These concerns seem to be driven in
part by the pragmatic recognition of East Timor’s economic and military
vulnerability to Indonesia, in part to placate internal and external volatility
and in part by a genuine desire to leave the violent past behind. As such,
Mr Gusmão has advocated a philosophy of “forgive and forget”,
promoting a role for the current government as managing the present and
adapting for the future.
One can readily understand the reluctance of the political leaders of
East Timor to offend their powerful neighbour and appreciate the fear
of destabilising a volatile situation by revisiting past atrocities. However,
the international community has a responsibility in this matter. Whatever
President Gusmão’s motivations for discouraging further investigations
of human rights abuses, the international community should not sit by
and allow the pain inflicted on the people of East Timor to fester indefinitely.
Retribution and deterrence are important elements of justice. It is now
clear that large parts of the East Timorese population want and deserve
justice and accountability. Failure to deliver on this will provide fertile
grounds for mistrust between social groups, and towards state institutions,
to flourish. Failure to punish perpetrators of past human rights abuses
will fail to deter future violence and will perpetuate future abuse. This
is true for the people of East Timor as well as members of the TNI and
militia groups throughout Indonesia.
Although Mr Gusmão talks of the goal of liberty being too important
to consider individual sacrifice, crimes were committed during the Indonesian
occupation of East Timor that are too serious to ignore. Unlike the East
Timorese, the international community at large is not directly dependent
on Indonesia for trade and security. If the international community pursues
those behind the violence in Rwanda, Kosovo, Cambodia, Bosnia, Sierra
Leone and Iraq, why not East Timor?
If Saddam Hussein can be brought to justice, why not the Indonesian military
officers who have been indicted by the UN Special Panels for Serious Crimes?
It shames us all in the wider international community to be selective
in who we appease whilst we simultaneously leave the powerless with no
redress for genocide and war crimes. At the same time, one must respect
the views taken by those in East Timor who have to live with the direct
consequences of any decision to establish a war crimes tribunal.
POST SCRIPT
Recently, East Timor has again been gripped by instability and violence.
It appears that there is no one single source of these troubles, but rather
unrest is being generated from a number of different parts of society.
The most public of these has been the petition delivered by former East
Timor Armed Forces (F-FDTL) members on 11 January 2006. The petition,
now known as the “591 petition”, reflecting the 591 signatories,
alleged discrimination within the F-FDTL against soldiers born in the
western districts of East Timor. The petitioners left their barracks in
February to march to Dili in support of their protest and were dismissed
en masse from the F-FDTL in March.
In response to the allegations in the petition the government set up a
commission of enquiry, on 27 April. Unfortunately, on 28 April, the very
next day after the announcement of the Commission, the petitioners held
further protests and, when joined by other anti-government groups, these
protests turned violent. Reports about the composition of these groups
are varied, however it seems clear the petitioners’ protests have
acted as a lightning rod for other dissidents, many of whom are motivated
by poverty and the massive unemployment, especially amongst the youth.
There are also reports of random acts of violence committed by organised
martial arts gangs, some with links to Indonesia, the East Timor police
and the F-FDTL. The ensuing violence in Dili has killed at least 37 people,
sparked a wave of arson and looting and displaced most of the capital’s
population.
These events have had a devastating effect on the new nation, desperately
trying to find its feet. They are a product of a number of complex factors
including economic and governmental ones. Nevertheless, as Amnesty International
has noted in a recent report on these issues:
“a lack of rule of law and the presence of a culture of impunity
for past violations are, without doubt, contributing causes. Without accountability
for past crimes there can be no reconciliation, which could in turn result
in further instability. This is the cycle in which Timor-Leste has been
trapped since its independence.”
The application of genuine punishment of past perpetrators of violence
would be one way to break this cycle. There is a saying amongst the East
Timorese that, in relation to the many past human rights abuses, “there
has been no justice, just tears”. The establishment of a human rights
tribunal for East Timor will not solve the country’s serious economic
and governance problems. However, showing the people of East Timor that
justice will reach and punish people for past crimes, irrespective of
position, nationality or rank, will go some way to building faith in the
current system and may discourage would be perpetrators in the future.
At the request of Mr Ramos Horta, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation,
the UN has now established an Independent Special Inquiry Commission to
review a number of specific incidents including the violence of 28 April
and other related events or issues which contributed to the crisis. The
UN Inquiry team has promised to produce a report by the first week of
October 2006. When that process concludes, why stop there? The victims
of 1999 and their families also deserve justice, not “just tears”.
END
|