Truth
Known, East Timorese Need Justice
Accountability for Rights Crimes Remains an International Responsibility
Contact: John M. Miller, ETAN, 718-596-7668; 917-690-4391 (cell)
For Immediate Release
March 9 -- Today in Bali, the Presidents of Indonesia and Timor-Leste
(also known as East Timor) are expected to formally agree to form
a joint Commission of Truth and Friendship.
In response the East Timor Action Network issued the following
statement:
No matter what the two governments decide to do between themselves,
justice for Timor-Leste remains an international responsibility.
The international community must continue to pursue accountability
for crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide committed in
Timor-Leste between 1975 and 1999.
Timor-Leste's own prime minister. Mari Alkatiri, has said that
the reason for the Commission of Truth and Friendship (CTF) is not
'justice but to find the truth.' We believe that the truth of what
happened in 1999 is
well-established: Indonesian political and military officials, working
with militias they created, funded and directed, committed hundreds
of murders and other major crimes in a systematic campaign to terrorize
and destroy East Timor. Numerous official and unofficial investigations
- East Timorese, Indonesian, and international - have named names.
The organizers and perpetrators of the violence are well-known.
Indeed, some continue to have prominent roles in Indonesia's military
campaigns in Aceh and elsewhere.
The CTF purports to provide "definitive closure." The
question is closure for whom? The CTF can only help provide closure
to the Indonesian military's effort to avoid justice by enshrining
their impunity. Genuine justice is a prerequisite for closure.
The CTF will not identify perpetrators or assign individual responsibility.
The effort by the two governments will instead absolve individuals
of their moral and legal accountability, emphasizing institutional
roles. The CTF is
barred from recommending or initiating any prosecutions, no matter
what it finds.
Some members of the Timor-Leste government claim that credible
prosecution of senior Indonesian officials for crimes against humanity
could result in 'unrest,' but this ignores Timor-Leste's own road
to freedom. It took
intense (albeit belated) international pressure on Indonesia in
1999 to get Indonesia's security forces to respect the results of
the East Timorese people's overwhelming vote for independence. And
international pressure continues to be necessary to curtail brutal
repression in Aceh and West Papua.
While truth is an important element of relations between nations,
real accountability and justice are needed for the long-term strengthening
of human rights, security and democratic institutions for the people
of Timor-Leste and Indonesia. The United Nations Secretary-General
has recently appointed a Commission of Experts to explore options
for ensuring justice for the victims of violence in Timor-Leste.
We urge them to look at all possibilities, including an international
criminal tribunal, and to advise the CTF not to obstruct efforts
to achieve genuine justice and accountability. Timor-Leste's government
may feel pressured by and vulnerable to its much larger neighbor,
but that is no excuse to allow those who commit crimes against humanity
to avoid accountability. Rather, it is another indication of how
important it is for the international community, especially the
United Nations, to lead meaningful efforts toward justice.
Background
Timor-Leste's President Xanana Gusmao and Indonesia's President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono are expected to sign today the Terms of
Reference for a joint Commission on Truth and Friendship. The Commission
includes people from both countries, and will establish a "shared
historical record" of the
violations of human rights before and after East Timor's independence
ballot in 1999, recommend amnesty for those who "cooperate
fully,"and propose people-to-people reconciliation efforts.
Indonesian and East Timorese NGOs have both criticized the CTF.
At the end of last year, Indonesian human rights groups said that
the proposed CTF, "represents both countries' denial of previous
commitments made to the international community," which adversely
affects the victims. The Timor Leste National Alliance for International
Tribunal accused both governments as "maintaining impunity
and protecting the perpetrators."
The crimes committed in East Timor in 1999 and before occurred
in a territory never internationally recognized as Indonesian. In
1999, they were committed against a UN mission created by the Security
Council and
involved assaults on both East Timorese and international UN personnel.
East Timorese staff of the UN mission were murdered in the aftermath
of the ballot.
Indonesia invaded and occupied Timor-Leste from 1975 to 1999, and
the territory was never recognized as Indonesian by the international
community. Approximately 200,000 East Timorese lost their lives
as a result
of the Indonesian occupation. In 1999, Indonesia agreed for the
UN to hold a referendum on East Timor's political status. Approximately
1,400 people were murdered, including East Timorese and UN personnel.
After the referendum, in which 78.5% of Timor-Leste people voted
for independence, Indonesian soldiers and the militias they controlled
laid waste to the territory, displacing three-quarters of the population
and destroying more than 75% of the buildings and infrastructure.
After Indonesia violently exited East Timor, two processes were
established to prosecute serious crimes, including crimes against
humanity, during the final year of the occupation. The Indonesian
Ad-hoc Human Rights Court on East Timor is widely considered a sham,
acquitting all of the Indonesian officials brought to trial. The
UN-backed serious crimes process is scheduled to end next May, despite
the fact that some 50% of the murders in 1999 and numerous other
crimes have not been investigated and nearly 80% of those indicted,
including a number of high-ranking Indonesian officials, enjoy sanctuary
in Indonesia.
The UN Secretary-General appointed three-member Commission of Experts
to assess these two processes and propose next steps "so that
those responsible for serious violations... in East Timor in 1999
are held
accountable, justice is secured for the victims and people of Timor-Leste,
and reconciliation is promoted." The Commission will also consider
how "its analysis could be of assistance" to the bi-national
CTF.
The Security Council established the Serious Crimes Unit in Dili
to conduct investigations and prepare indictments to assist in bringing
to justice those responsible for crimes against humanity and other
serious crimes committed in East Timor in 1999. It also created
the hybrid Timorese-international Special Panel courts to try these
cases. The SCU filed its final indictments late last year.
No judicial process has yet been established to investigate and
prosecute those responsible for genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity during Indonesia's illegal invasion and occupation
of East Timor before
1999, when more than 99% of the deaths resulting from the Indonesian
military occupation took place.
At the end of February, East Timor's foreign minister, Jose Ramos-Horta
explained to the UN Security Council that "Excessive outside
pressure on elected civilian leaders to meet the expectations of
the international
community to have a credible prosecutorial and trial process --
that is, the jailing of senior military officers -- . could result
in unrest within the armed forces, thus undermining stability and
the entire democratic experiment in the largest Muslim country in
the world."
However, many Indonesian military officers who committed serious
crimes in East Timor have been promoted and are repeating the same
types of crimes in West Papua, Aceh and elsewhere in Indonesia.
ETAN advocates for democracy, justice and human rights for East
Timor and Indonesia. ETAN calls for an international tribunal to
prosecute crimes against humanity committed in East Timor from 1975
to 1999.
End.