Agence France Presse

June 6, 2002 Thursday

Man cited in Timor church attack a soldier, district military chief says

JAKARTA, June 6

A former Indonesian district army chief admitted on Thursday that a man
alleged to have led a bloody attack on a church in East Timor in April 1999
was a soldier.

Lieutenant Colonel Asep Kuswandi, formerly head of the Liquica district
military command, told a human rights court that Tome Diego was a member of
the Liquica military.

Two survivors of the massacre in which 22 people died have testified that
Diego was among the leaders of the attack which occurred in the wake of
East Timor's vote for independence from Indonesia.

One witness, Amelio Baretto, said last week he saw and heard Diego, in
civilian clothes, lead the raid yelling: "Attack."

Kuswandi, who is himself awaiting trial in the rights court, said he did
not know whether Diego was among the attackers.

"I only ordered my men to go to the church when the incident broke out, to
pacify the two camps and save the people at the church," Kuswandi said.

"My men were in the church only to pacify the two camps," he added.

Kuswandi also said he did not know whether soldiers in plainclothes were
involved in the attack on the church as some witnesses have alleged.

He also denied that many of the attackers first gathered at the district
military headquarters in Liquica, just 50 meters away from the church,
before they launched the attack.

The officer was testifying in the trial of former East Timor police chief
Brigadier General Timbul Silaen, who is accused of crimes against humanity
by failing to halt the massacre of civilians.

Kuswandi described the church incident as "a clash and not an attack"
saying that the violence was started by a shot from inside the church compound.

He said some 3,000 people had massed outside the church where some 1,500
people had taken refuge and the vastly outnumbered police and military were
powerless to prevent the attack.

Silaen is one of seven people already on trial in separate cases. Eleven
others -- including security and civilian officials and an East Timorese
militia chief -- are also due to face the court over the campaign of
violence and destruction by pro-Jakarta militias in the then-Indonesian
province.

The militiamen, backed by some Indonesian soldiers, waged a campaign of
intimidation before East Timor's August 1999 vote to separate from
Indonesia and a violent scorched-earth revenge campaign afterwards.

The trials are being watched closely by the world for proof that Jakarta
will punish those behind the violence.

They are focusing on five incidents in which militias attacked independence
supporters seeking refuge in churches and homes in April and September
1999, killing more than 100.

International rights groups are sceptical that the long-delayed rights
court will deliver justice.


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