East
Timor to Exonerate War Suspects
Human rights
activists have accused East Timor of putting diplomacy before justice
after the fledgling nation agreed to drop charges against accused
war criminals under a deal signed with Indonesia.
The United Nations,
which oversaw East Timor's violent break away from Indonesian rule
six years ago, has also criticised the accord.
East Timor's President Xanana Gusmao and his Indonesian counterpart
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono agreed to form a joint Commission of Truth
and Friendship.
It is to examine
the wave of Indonesian army-backed militia bloodshed that followed
East Timor's 1999 vote for independence from Jakarta.
The agreement,
which followed three months of negotiation, was signed by both men
during a ceremony at the Istana Negara state palace in Jakarta.
The 10-member
commission will have a truth-telling function with the aim of establishing
a "shared historical record" of human rights crimes before
and after the independence ballot.
While more than
1,000 people probably died in the months before and after the 1999
vote, the panel will have no power to prosecute offenders.
Instead, the
five Indonesian and five East Timorese members will only be able
to recommend amnesty for those who "cooperate fully in revealing
the truth" during a two-year process due to start in August.
"The prosecutorial
system of justice can certainly achieve one objective, which is
to punish the perpetrators, but it might not necessarily lead to
the truth and promote reconciliation," the document preamble
said.
Gusmao, a former
guerrilla leader who was held as a political prisoner under now
deposed Indonesian dictator Suharto, has called for reconciliation.
The deal reflected
his public determination to seek closer diplomatic relations and
avoid a bout of finger-pointing with his giant neighbour.
Privately his
government is said to support international efforts.
The Catholic
Church, an influential power in East Timor, has warned the deal
has little public support.
UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan last month called for a separate review into why a 1999
Security Council resolution to try those accused of war crimes failed.
Yudhoyono said
relations between the two countries were developing positively since
East Timor's independence.
"We really
want this friendship to last eternally," he said.
Gusmao pledged
the commission would not pursue former Indonesian armed forces chief
and indicted war criminal, General Wiranto.
UN prosecutors
allege Wiranto had command responsibility for "murder, deportation
and persecution" committed during the 1999 violence.
"We will
not be looking for suspects," Gusmao said.
"We are
not judges who have the right to pass sentence. In the spirit of
friendship between the two countries, we will seek the truth."
An ad hoc human
rights court set up by Jakarta has acquitted all but one official
implicated in the violence with Indonesia refusing to act on arrest
warrants against more than 300 others who sought sanctuary in Indonesia.
The human rights
group East Timor Action Network said it was now up to the international
community to pursue justice.
"The Commission
of Truth and Friendship purports to provide definitive closure.
The question is closure for whom?," ETAN said in a statement.
"The Commission
of Truth and Friendship can only help provide closure to the Indonesian
military's effort to avoid justice by enshrining their impunity."
ETAN urged the
UN to look at setting up an international criminal tribunal.
"Timor-Leste's
government may feel pressured by and vulnerable to its much larger
neighbour, but that is no excuse to allow those who commit crimes
against humanity to avoid accountability," it said.
End