| Subject: CSM: Conviction in East Timor
Falls Short of Calls for Justice
The Christian Science Monitor [US] Tuesday, January 30, 2001
Conviction in East Timor falls short of calls for justice
The first case connected to violence after the 1999 vote shows the
challenges for international courts.
By Dan Murphy Special to The Christian Science Monitor
DILI, EAST TIMOR
Almost trembling as he awaits a decision, Joao Fernandes, barely
literate and desperately poor, looked nothing like the cold-blooded killer
described in the indictment against him.
Last Thursday, Mr. Fernandes became the first person to be brought to
justice for the violent rampage by the Indonesian military and its militia
proxies after East Timor's vote for independence in 1999.
His 12-year sentence - as opposed to the 25-year maximum - came in
exchange for a guilty plea and a promise to provide evidence against his
commanding officers. He admitted to killing one man, whose wife and
daughter witnessed the act, and to participating in one of the worst
massacres of the post-referendum violence.
But no one in East Timor, thirsty for justice after a 24-year
occupation, is satisfied with the result. "We reject this
verdict," said Catalina Pereira, the victim's daughter, outside the
courthouse. "So many men were slaughtered, and this is it?"
The dissatisfaction of Ms. Pereira and thousands of other East Timorese
illustrates how the effort to build a credible international justice
system is faltering across the globe. A combination of weak political
will, high costs, and poor coordination are hampering justice efforts from
East Timor to the former Yugoslavia.
UN member states have historically been reluctant to build human rights
components into the first stages of peacekeeping missions. When an
Australian-led force arrived in East Timor in September 1999, it did not
bring forensic investigators or orders to seek out and arrest perpetrators
of the crimes that had been committed during the month.
The arriving peacekeepers' first priority was to avoid casualties. In
some cases they even escorted Indonesian soldiers and militia leaders to
the border with Indonesian West Timor - where they are now beyond the
reach of the prosecution.
"This is a mistake that can't be corrected," says Aniceto
Gutteres, director of the East Timor Human Rights Foundation.
Indeed Battalion 745, the Indonesian Army unit that UN investigators
believe murdered former Monitor contributor Sander Thoenes and at least 20
other people in the two weeks before it pulled out of the territory,
continued the killings even after Australian troops had landed in Dili.
It's a familiar pattern: A reluctance to expose peacekeepers to danger
allowed criminals to escape in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda.
International tribunals on the crimes in those countries have since handed
down indictments, but many of the worst offenders are at large, either in
friendly countries or in hiding.
Fernandes is in custody because he came home after, he says, his wife
was raped by a fellow militia member. All of the men he has promised to
testify against are in Indonesia, unlikely to make the same mistake and
return. Leaders of the more than two dozen militia groups, with one
exception, are likewise in Indonesia.
"Joao killed and he admitted it," says Olga Barreto, his
court-appointed lawyer. "But he's just a small fry. He didn't have a
plan to destroy East Timor. The ones who had a plan to destroy this
country were the Indonesian military."
Dozens of survivors of the massacre Fernandes participated in have
provided evidence.
On Sept. 8 1999, Fernandes and other Red and White Militia members were
assembled by their commander and handed machetes. They stopped at the
Indonesian Army command post in Maliana, near the border with Indonesian
West Timor, to apply warpaint to their faces. Then they went to the
Maliana police station, where residents of surrounding villages had been
gathered "for their own protection."
As local police and soldiers watched, the militia killed every man they
could find. At least 40 were hacked to death, many in front of their wives
and children. Commander Natalino Monteiro and his followers slipped across
the border.
Frustrated prosecutors say they're hopeful Indonesia will cooperate,
either with prosecutions of its own or extraditions. But Indonesia's
rights prosecutions "are totally stalled," said Joe Saunders,
deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, in a statement on the
verdict.
Indonesia's nationalist political climate ensures there will be no
extradition. Western diplomats say the chance the UN will ever call for an
international tribunal is almost zero.
The East Timor prosecutions are occurring in an unusual legal limbo.
The United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor has governed
the territory since the referendum and will hold power at least until East
Timorese elections, scheduled for August.
UNTAET is conducting the prosecutions itself, using a legal code
patched up with bits of Indonesian and international law. UNTAET's
prosecution is seen as crucial to the reconstruction effort. The UN
believes convictions will help East Timor put its traumatic past behind
it.
But prosecutors have been at work for more than a year and still
haven't proven the systematic, willful destruction witnessed by thousands
in 1999. UN strategy to this point has treated most cases as common
crimes, rather than crimes against humanity. "There has been no
evidence - either in Jakarta or Dili - of a systematic strategy to
prosecute the top militia commanders or the Indonesian officers behind
them," said Human Rights Watch's Mr. Saunders.
In Fernandes's case, prosecutors felt they couldn't yet make a case for
the more muscular charge of a crime against humanity. "There's tons
of evidence. But we haven't gone out and gotten it yet," says one
prosecutor. "This man participated in one of the worst massacres and
all they come up with is one count of murder," fumes Mr. Gutteres.
"The evidence is everywhere. Perhaps they're not up to the job."
Chief Prosecutor Mohammad Othman says his team is slowly building up to
cases that will implicate senior militia leaders and Indonesian Army
officers in gross crimes against humanity, but that gathering evidence
will take time.
The clock is running out. UN funding for East Timor is starting to dry
up and UNTAET's mandate is scheduled to expire at the end of the year. The
East Timorese government that will inherit the process will have only a
handful of trained judges and prosecutors, and little extra money for the
expensive business of justice.
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