April 7, 2004 Wednesday Final Edition
News; Pg. A16
Evidence damns Indonesians: UN refuses to publish Timor
report. Quest for
justice against leaders in Jakarta might fall victim to U.S. war
on terrorism
JILL JOLLIFFE
DILI
A human rights expert has called for new charges to be laid against
senior Indonesian leaders, based on war crimes evidence salvaged
from smouldering barracks during their army's 1999 retreat from
East Timor.
The call was made in a report by Canadian Geoffrey Robinson, an
assistant history professor at the University of California. It
is the most damning and rigorous assessment to date of the violence
accompanying the UN referendum in which East Timorese voted overwhelmingly
to end over two decades of Indonesian occupation.
About 1,500 people were murdered, most of the country's infrastructure
was torched, and a quarter of a million citizens were deported during
Indonesia's scorched-earth withdrawal from the territory. Much of
the violence was committed by Timorese militia groups, who Indonesian
commanders claimed were outside their control.
The report was contracted in 2002 by the Geneva-based UN Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, but the UN has refused
to release it publicly since completion in July 2003.
Robinson called for charges against 75 Indonesian officers and
politicians, including figures not previously implicated. These
include three members of the 1999 cabinet and the present minister
for National Security in the Megawati government, retired general
A.M. Hendropryono.
The author said evidence he examined also supported charges laid
by the UN-backed Serious Crimes Unit (SCU) in Dili against former
defence chief Wiranto, who is running for presidential office in
July. The SCU is seeking an arrest warrant against the retired general.
The author said his conclusions did not rest on "a smoking
gun," but rather
on "careful examination and analysis of the now substantial
documentary and
testimonial record." This included the "secret internal
reports, memoranda
and orders originating with Indonesian military, police and civilian
authorities" retrieved from Indonesian barracks.
He had free access to internal UN documents, and also drew on the
Indonesian material, held in the Dili archive of Yayasan Hak, a
human rights organization.
Yayasan Hak spokesperson Jose Luis Oliveira said he and other activists
had salvaged the documents from abandoned Indonesian barracks. "They
fled without burning all their documents," he said, "and
we recovered them after a search of the Korem and Kodim (regional
and district military command) buildings."
They included payroll documents and military cables, which Robinson
used to demolish the idea Indonesian army "rogue elements"
were responsible for organizing the violence. He instead described
a perfectly articulated chain of command, "conceived, created,
and authorized by Indonesian authorities."
"Support for the militias was not provided simply by a handful
of 'rogue elements' in the TNI [Indonesian army]," he wrote,
"but constituted official policy, and had the backing of some
of the highest ranking and most powerful officials in the country."
He traces the command chain to the office of President P.J. Habibie,
but said his guilt was conditioned by his lack of authority over
the army.
Hendropryono is accused of using his role as transmigration minister
in 1998-99 to bankroll militia activities, and playing a close organizational
role in the violence. Two other 1999 cabinet members are accused
on similar grounds. They are Lt.-Gen. (retired) Feisal Tanjung,
then co-ordinating minister for Political and Security Affairs,
and former Information minister Mohamad Yunus Yosfiah. In 2000,
Yosfiah was accused by UN investigators of involvement in the deaths
of five Australian-based journalists in Timor in 1975, although
no charges were laid.
All three men are veterans of Indonesia's military campaigns in
East Timor, and the Canadian scholar said there was a pattern of
involvement by veterans in the 1999 atrocities. Wiranto also served
in Timor as a young officer, in the 1980s.
Others accused in the assessment include Maj.-Gen. Sjafrie Sjamsuddin,
Maj.-Gen. Kiki Syahnakri, Maj.-Gen. Zacky Anwar Makarim, Maj.-Gen.
Adam Damiri and Brig.-Gen. Mahidin Simbolon.
The report was restricted to UN circles until last week, when the
original document was given to the UN-backed Reception, Reconciliation
and Truth Commission in Dili after arriving by diplomatic pouch
from Geneva. It bore a nonconfidential classification, won by champions
of its release after long discussion, but "due discretion"
was urged in its distribution. This path guaranteed continuing secrecy.
Reconciliation chairperson Aniceto Guterres said it would be treated
confidentially, like all its submissions,
and released only after the commission finishes work in October.
He refused an interview request, saying he might "accidentally
reveal details."
The leaking of its contents is embarrassing to the UN, given its
role in East Timor is seen as almost finished. Personnel will be
cut drastically in May, with expectation war crimes prosecutions
might also be concluded soon (the SCU's mandate is likely to be
extended by a year).
The author chides the UN for its failure to bring justice to East
Timor, saying that in terms of a 1999 Security Council resolution
pledging to bring perpetrators to justice, it has a "solemn
duty" to set up an international tribunal, given the failure
of the present system.
The resolution set up a two-tiered system of prosecutions. In Jakarta,
the Ad Hoc Tribunal, which concluded its work last year, allowed
Jakarta to try its own culprits. Of the small group indicted, most
were either acquitted or given light sentences. Some are now directing
military operations anew, against insurgents in Aceh and West Papua.
In Dili, the SCU issued its own indictments, prepared by UN investigators,
against East Timorese militiamen and Indonesian soldiers alike.
However, the Indonesian government has refused to extradite any
of its accused, with the result only Timorese have been jailed,
while their former commanders walk free.
Decisions over the future of prosecutions will be made in coming
weeks, as the current UN mission draws to a close, but analysts
are acutely aware East Timor's quest for justice may fall victim
to the war against terrorism.
In the present atmosphere of realpolitik, satisfying Indonesia,
the world's largest Islamic country, has priority over the grievances
of citizens of one of the world's tiniest and poorest nations.