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Soldiers Smeared with Blood?
Tempo Magazine
February - March 2003
A number of TNI officers are accused of involvement in crimes against
humanity in Timor Leste. What were their `sins'?
BAUCAU, 150 kilometers east of East Timor capital Dili. Dozens of domestic
and foreign journalists gather in the jungle at the edge of town. On that
day, August 18, 1999, Forcas Armados de Libertacao Nacional de Timor Leste
(Falintil), the East Timor Freedom Army, assembled journalists for a press
conference to celebrate their 24th anniversary. The eyes of the world
turned
to that location.
Away from the eyes of journalists, on the same day, a special plane carrying
President B.J. Habibie's party landed at Dili's Komoro airport. Traveling
with the president were ABRI (Indonesian Armed Forces) commander Gen.
Wiranto, commander of the Udayana Area Military Command Maj. Gen. Rachmat
Damiri and several other officers. That afternoon, the group from Jakarta
met
with approximately 150 pro-autonomy (meaning pro-Jakarta) militias at
the
Dharma Wanita Building in Dili.
One member of the pro-Jakarta militia who was present at the meeting
gave an
important account of what happened. The Jakarta government via President
Habibie gave an order. He told all the militia leaders to "take a
stand" if
the pro-autonomy group lost in the August 30 referendum. "If we lose,
not one
stone may be left," says a source quoting the president. Meaning
what? "East
Timor must be razed to the ground," says the same source. Gen. Wiranto
stood
upright perfectly still listening to Habibie's statement.
As night approached, the president and his party returned to Jakarta.
The
order became a guide for the pro-Jakarta militia leaders. "Not one
stone may
be left in Dili, clearly that's an order," said chief of staff of
the
Integration Struggle Force, Hermenio da Costa, to TEMPO at the Dili Media
Center on August 25, 1999.
Did officials from Jakarta give their blessing to the mass killings that
took
place in East Timor in 1999? That is the conclusion of the Serious Crimes
Unit (SCU), a UN body that works to assist the Timor Leste Government
investigate crimes against humanity in East Timor. In the list of charges,
they conclude that the generals are responsible for 280 murders in 40
separate incidents that left thousands dead in 1999.
But the story of the presidential order did not come from the SCU charge
sheet. It came from statements made by militia members. The Commission
to
Investigate Human Rights Violations says that the case that the generals
were
involved has been strengthened by documents from Jhoni Lumintang, who
at the
time was the army deputy chief of staff. "The document has only one
paragraph, but the order is clear. Take preventative, coercive, and
repressive measures and withdraw troops," says Munir, a member of
the
Commission to Investigate Human Rights Violations.
A follow-up meeting took place at President Habibie's house in Patra
Kuningan, South Jakarta. In that meeting, says the same militia source,
the
president once again explained the "stand" to be taken if the
pro-autonomy
side lost.
It is not surprising to hear the deputy commander of the Life or Death
for
Indonesia Battalion Militia (Mahidi), Nemecio Lopes de Carvalho, say that
the
violence took place because of orders from the center (Jakarta). "If
we had
refused to carry them out, ABRI members would have finished us off. This
is
because in the militia, there were ABRI soldiers wearing militia clothing,"
says Nemecio.
The formation of the pro-Jakarta militias began in 1998. At the time,
the
Indonesian Army was cornered by the news and criticism as a result of
their
violent actions since the November 12, 1991, Santa Cruz incident. After
that,
the militias grew like mushrooms in the rainy season. Apart from Mahidi,
there was the Red and White Iron militia as well as several others.
According to the SCU, the militias were the tip of the spear in the ensuing
violence. In the April 6, 1999 attack on the Liquica Church-according
to SCU
documents-the militias were supported by the commander of the Udayana
Military Area Command, Maj. Gen. Adam Damiri. Adam sent an order by telegram
to the commander of the Wiradharma Military District, Col. Suhartono
Suratman, that the Indonesian Military and police give support to the
pro-Jakarta militias attacking the church. Adam Damiri was also involved
in
the attack on the Dili home of Manuel Carrascalao on April 17, 1998. He
is
also seen as doing nothing to prevent the violence of September 5-6, 1999,
in
the dioceses of Dili and Suai shortly after the result of the independence
referendum was published.
Tono Suratman denies being involved in the incidents at Liquica and Dili.
He
says that at the time of the attack on Liquica Church, he was in Manatuto.
"I
received a report from the deputy commander by radio that violence was
raging. The violence was triggered by shooting that came from inside the
church," says Tono in his book, For my Country: A Portrait of the
Struggle in
East Timor.
Tono also knows nothing about the violence at Manuel Viegas Carrascalao's
home. At the time, he says he was receiving an envoy from the European
Union
at the home of the commander of the Area Military Command. "I received
a
report from the District Military Command by radio about the violence,"
he
continues. Tono also denies all of the charges he is facing at the ad
hoc
human rights court. "We tried to calm down the masses and control
the
situation to stop the violence continuing." In court, through his
attorney
Col. Setiawan, Adam Damiri denied all of the prosecution's charges.
What were General Wiranto's "sins"? He is accused of bringing
into being the
idea of working together with the pro-Jakarta militias. The defense and
security minister is accused of channeling funds via Governor Abilio Osório
Soares to buy weapons and to pay for their operational costs," SCU
prosecutor
Stuart Alford told journalists.
Alford admits there is no direct evidence of Wiranto's involvement in
the
setting up of the militias. "We don't have evidence that indicates
he talked
about or gave direct orders to form the militias. But he had authority
over
all TNI personnel who were in East Timor in 1999," said Alford.
In fact, Wiranto has repeatedly told the press, the international community
and the Timor Leste leadership that the militia groups involved in crimes
were under the command of TNI. "But Wiranto allowed them to commit
crimes
without being punished," said Alford.
The basis of the charges against Wiranto is the precedent of responsibility
of command set in other countries. As in the case of the war crimes trial
of
the former leader of Serbia, Slobodan Milosevic, in The Hague, Holland,
he is
considered guilty if he allowed his subordinates to commit crimes. The
same
thing happened in the mass killings in Rwanda. So, "All the military
officers
who committed crimes against humanity in East Timor were the responsibility
of Wiranto as TNI commander," said Alford.
But Wiranto denies all charges. "I am confident enough to swear
that I never
thought about, wanted, planned, let alone ordered crimes such as murder,
torture, kidnapping and expulsions. I did things to try and stop them,"
he
said at a press conference at the Crown Hotel, Jakarta last Thursday.
Wiranto made no denials about the funds. He admitted receiving Rp10 billion
from the State Logistics Agency (Bulog) on May 31 and September 5, 1999.
But
he denied that the money was used to pay militias. "The money was
used to
support general security, including safeguarding the 1999 General Election
and not specially for East Timor," he told the trial of the Bulog
case.
What about the involvement of President Habibie? The SCU has not gone
that
far. Former foreign minister Ali Alatas, who was actively involved in
the
decision over East Timor, doubts the president took such a rash move as
strengthening civilian militias. "I think that could only have been
done by
individuals within TNI," he says.
Similar doubts were expressed by Dewi Fortuna Anwar, Habibie's former
spokeswoman. "There was no plan for scorched earth action in East
Timor. I
see [the killings] as more of a failure on the ground rather than something
controlled from the center," she said. Habibie, who is now living
in Germany,
could not be reached for confirmation.
Admitted or not, the mass disturbances in 1999 happened. It is this tragedy
that the UN body in Timor Leste will correct-something the Indonesian
Government is fighting tooth and nail to prevent.
Ahmad Taufik, Abdul Manan, Alexander Axiss and Titi Irawati (Dili),
Jeffriantho (Kupang)
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