Independen: East Timor's Bitter
Enimies meet at last
The passage of time can have singular effects. How else to explain
the meeting planned in Bali this weekend between Xanana Gusmao,
the former East Timorese resistance leader, and General Wiranto,
whose Indonesian forces laid waste to his homeland in 1999?
That Mr Gusmao, East Timor's President since independence in 2002,
is willing to sit down in the same room as the former military commander
illustrates the lengths to which he is prepared to go to safeguard
the future of his tiny, war-scarred nation.
Indonesian troops aided by local militias killed at least 150,000
people in a vengeful rampage after East Timor voted for independence
from Jakarta. Tens of thousands of homes were burnt down and a quarter
of the population was forced to flee across the border into Indonesian
West Timor.
Nearly five years on, as the country struggles to lift itself out
of grinding poverty, pragmatism takes precedence over retribution.
General Wiranto may have been indicted for war crimes by a tribunal
in Dili, but he could be Indonesia's president within a few weeks,
and East Timor - so the theory goes - cannot afford to alienate
its largest neighbour.
Indeed, Mr Gusmao told The Independent on Sunday last week that
he accepted General Wiranto's assertion that he was no more responsible
for the bloodshed than the Pentagon was for the My Lai massacre
by US troops during the Vietnam War.
"I say 'just forget the past'," he said. "Will the
victims feel better if people are put on trial? They accepted the
sacrifice to liberate the country. The East Timorese committed crimes
also. We apologise, embrace each other and cry."
But the views of the former guerrilla fighter are not shared by
all of East Timor's leaders, nor by ordinary people for whom memories
of the 1999 violence - and the 24 years of brutal military occupation
that
preceded it - are still fresh.
The Foreign Minister, Jose Ramos-Horta, warned him that the Bali
meeting could send the wrong message to both countries ahead of
presidential elections in Indonesia in July, in which General Wiranto
is a leading candidate.
Mr Gusmao's stance has also infuriated staff at the Serious Crimes
Unit (SCU), the body set up by the country's former United Nations
administration to investigate crimes against humanity.
It was the SCU's tribunal that indicted General Wiranto last year,
accusing him of ultimate responsibility for the atrocities. But
when it issued an arrest warrant for him this month, the move was
denounced by
East Timor's Prosecutor General, Longuinhos Monteiro.
The Wiranto case demonstrates the obstacles facing the SCU. Of
373 people indicted by its prosecutors, 279 are living freely in
Indonesia, which refuses to extradite them. Of 52 defendants so
far convicted, only one, Beny Ludji, a former commander of the Aitarak
militia, is Indonesian.
The Dili government's attitude is another source of frustration.
One SCU lawyer said: "There is no outcry when we indict a farmer
who was brainwashed into joining the militia. But when we go after
those who instigated and organised the violence, it's a different
matter."
East Timor's Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation,
which is preparing a report on human rights violations, has staged
public hearings around the country as well as "reconciliation
meetings" between low-level militia members and their victims.
Kieran Dwyer, an adviser to the commission, said: "People
told us 'we can reconcile at this level, but justice must reach
those who organised the crimes'. How can people have faith in the
justice system if they've seen their families killed and nothing
happens?"