JSMP Report: Torture and Transitional
Justice In Timor Leste
Now available on line:
http://www.jsmp.minihub.org/Reports/jsmpreports/Torture%20&%20Transitional%20Justice%20in%20TL.pdf
Executive Summary
This report provides a snapshot of how the serious violation of
torture is addressed within transitional justice mechanisms in Timor
Leste; specifically, how torture is defined, investigated and indicted
by the Serious Crimes Unit (SCU) and how the Special Panels for
Serious Crimes (SPSC) respond to the torture cases that come before
them. It draws on documentation released by the Serious Crimes Unit
and the Special Panels for
Serious Crimes. It also presents data gathered through interviews
with staff of those organizations as well as with survivors of torture,
victims' families, CAVR staff and workers of non-governmental organizations
in Timor
Leste.
The report finds that, although torture was extensively used during
the Indonesian occupation, the serious crimes process in Timor Leste
has failed to effectively investigate and prosecute this crime against
humanity. The SCU has narrowed its mandate to such an extent that
torture charges are secondary to counts of murder and rape. Further,
all 26 of those who have faced torture charges in court have been
Timorese. In processing low-level militia members who do not bear
the greatest responsibility for serious crimes, the transitional
justice system has failed to bring Indonesian commanding officers
to trial.
The report demonstrates that there has been inconsistency regarding
the response to torture in the serious crimes process. Within the
SCU, there has not been a systematic approach to building cases
and definitions have rested on the discretion and politics of individual
prosecutors. In the court room, judges have also taken a confused
approach to the definition of torture. With torture proven in just
four out of nine cases, the report
examines the issues of prosecutorial preparations and the reliability
of witness testimony to show how prosecutors have struggled to convict
torture. There is also concern that the SCU has, on occasion, lowered
the threshold of torture within indictments. Some alleged activities
have not actually constituted the level of seriousness warranted
for a torture charge. In some cases, 'serious crime' charges taken
by the SCU overlap with 'non-serious crime' charges that have progressed
through the Community Reconciliation Process of the Commission for
Reception, Truth and Reconciliation (CAVR).
The report argues that attempts to ensure human rights standards
across state institutions must be prioritized. The number of allegations
of maltreatment has risen during 2004-2005 and it is evident that
political leaders could do more to send clear signals that human
rights should be protected. Finally, it notes that the current judicial
approach to torture goes against the human rights standards that
are established through various human rights instruments and bodies.
By law, torture survivors should receive acknowledgement, justice
and reparation for the harms inflicted upon them. The attempts made
by the serious crimes process in Dili has failed to effectively
pursue these ends. Torture survivors have, in response, called for
an international tribunal to meet their needs.
End