| Subject: KPP
HAM team to question Feisal over East Timor debacle
Jakarta Post January 04, 2000
KPP HAM team to question Feisal over East
Timor debacle
JAKARTA (JP): The government-sanctioned
Commission of Inquiry into Human Rights Violations (KPP HAM) in East Timor
will question former coordinating minister for political affairs and
security Feisal Tanjung next week about violence in the territory after
the Aug. 30 self-determination ballot.
Munir, a member of KPP HAM, said on
Monday that the inquiry would try to obtain information from Feisal as the
latter was the founder of the Indonesian Task Force for the Implementation
of the Popular Consultation in East Timor.
"We have yet to set a date, but it
is sure that he will be questioned after the Idul Fitri holiday,"
Munir, who is also coordinator of the Commission for Missing Persons and
Victims of Violence, told The Jakarta Post.
The inquiry would also try to obtain
information from Feisal about the "Garnadi Paper", a document
urging systematic destruction in East Timor which was allegedly signed by
Feisal's former assistant, Maj. Gen. (ret.) Garnadi, Munir said.
The inquiry will also question Dili
Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo concerning the outbreak of violence
perpetrated by prointegration militias in the territory in September, he
said.
"It is still being studied whether
to fly Belo to Jakarta, or for us to go to East Timor," Munir said.
Belo, a 1996 Nobel peace laureate, was
driven from his residence and church in Dili during the violence and fled
to Australia.
Munir said the decision to summon Feisal
and Belo was taken during the commission's plenary meeting on Monday
afternoon.
KPP HAM in a midterm report said that
based on a preliminary investigation and witnesses accounts, the
Indonesian Military (TNI) was directly or indirectly involved in the East
Timor violence.
Former TNI chief Gen. Wiranto and six
Army and police generals were questioned last month by KPP HAM, with all
of them contending the violence was an emotional outburst which was
neither premeditated nor controllable.
The generals also denied the alleged
strong links between TNI and the prointegration militia groups.
KPP HAM secretary Asmara Nababan said on
Sunday that the generals were shifting the blame for the East Timor mayhem
to low-ranking officers.
The inquiry was established in September
by then president B.J. Habibie after the government rejected calls for an
international inquiry that would look into the possibility of setting up
war crime tribunals for Indonesian officers.
Munir said that the inquiry planned to
question former military intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Zacky Anwar Makarim
on Tuesday, while former head of the Restoration Operation Command in East
Timor Maj. Gen. Kiki Syahnakri, former East Timor military commander Col.
M. Noer Muis and former foreign minister Ali Alatas would be questioned on
Wednesday. (byg)
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