Subject: Justice for East Timor statement
JUSTICE FOR EAST TIMOR
We are organisations with long-standing links with the peoples of
Indonesia and East Timor. We have followed events in East Timor for many
years and have sought to show support and solidarity for our East Timorese
friends in their constant search for justice and peace. This statement
arises out of our dismay at recent developments in Indonesia and East
Timor concerning the administration of justice for gross violations of
human rights committed in East Timor.
The primary purpose of the statement is to call upon the international
community to set up an international tribunal for East Timor to bring the
perpetrators of gross violations to justice. We firmly believe that timely
justice and the ending of impunity are essential for peace and
reconciliation in East Timor and for democracy and stability in Indonesia.
We are convinced that credible trials will not be possible in Indonesia
and that justice will not prevail unless international mechanisms are
established without further delay.
In making the statement, we take account of the following:
1. After the announcement by former President Habibie of Indonesia in
January 1999 that the East Timorese people would be allowed to decide
their future status, a wave of violence was unleashed by militia groups
trained and supported by the Indonesian army. Following the overwhelming
vote in favour of independence on 30 August 1999, at least 1,000 people
were killed, many more were injured, up to 75 per cent. of the population
was displaced, including around 250,000 forcibly evacuated to Indonesian
West Timor, and around 80 per cent. of the infrastructure was destroyed.
In view of the systematic and planned nature of the violence, many of the
crimes committed amounted to crimes against humanity.
2. Crimes against humanity are crimes of universal jurisdiction and the
international community has a special responsibility to ensure that the
perpetrators are brought to justice. It has an additional moral
responsibility in relation to the 1999 crimes since many of them were
committed when the UN was administering the 'popular consultation' or
after it had abandoned the territory despite promises that it would stay
after the vote.
3. Many other gross violations of human rights, including mass murder,
were committed in East Timor in the period following Indonesia's illegal
invasion in 1975. Around 200,000 people - approximately one-third of the
pre-invasion population - lost their lives. The international community
also has a responsibility to investigate the atrocities committed during
that period.
4. The report of the International Commission of Inquiry (ICI) on East
Timor presented to the UN Security Council on 31 January 2000 (S/2000/59)
cited evidence of "a pattern of serious violations of fundamental
human rights" in relation to the 1999 crimes and recommended the
establishment of an international tribunal for East Timor. It expressed
"the view that ultimately the Indonesian Army was responsible for the
intimidation, terror, killings, and other acts of violence…"
5. At the same time, the Indonesian Commission for Human Rights
Violations in East Timor (KPP-HAM) issued a report which confirmed
military involvement in and responsibility for crimes against humanity. It
named as suspects 32 military and civilian personnel, including Major
Generals Zacky Anwar MaKarim and Adam Damiri and militia leader Eurico
Guterres. It also stated that overall responsibility for the crimes
committed lay with armed forces commander in chief, General Wiranto.
6. In response to the ICI report, the UN Security Council stated on 18
February 2000 that the perpetrators should be brought to justice "as
soon as possible" and that Indonesia should "institute a swift,
comprehensive, effective and transparent legal process, in conformity with
international standards of justice and due process of law. An earlier
report by the three UN special rapporteurs on extrajudicial, summary or
arbitrary executions, torture and violence against women published in
December 1999 recommended the establishment of an international tribunal
if the Indonesian process was not completed in "a matter of
months".
7. There are overwhelming political and legal obstacles in the way of
meaningful trials in Indonesia. Many of those obstacles have been
introduced since Indonesia committed itself to bring the perpetrators to
justice before its own courts. It is evident that the Indonesian
authorities are neither willing nor able to administer meaningful justice
in relation to the East Timor crimes. The international community's
decision to allow Indonesia time to try the perpetrators has not worked
and the international community's inaction can no longer be justified.
8. In August 2000, the Indonesian supreme legislative assembly provided
defendants with an absolute defence to charges relating to the East Timor
crimes by enacting a Constitutional amendment which introduced the
principle of non-retroactivity into Indonesian law. Suspects would also
appear to have a defence based on the Attorney General's failure to bring
the cases to trial before a deadline set out in Indonesia's Law on Human
Rights Courts. That Law is in itself flawed and falls short of
international standards, particularly those relating to judicial
independence and impartiality. It is widely acknowledged by those in the
best position to know that very few current judges can be regarded as
independent and untainted by judicial corruption. Procedural and
institutional safeguards for the rights of defendants fall far short of
accepted human rights standards and there is no adequate witness
protection programme for traumatised victims and witnesses. 9. In November
2000, the Indonesian Attorney General, Marzuki Darusman, stated that 22
suspects implicated in crimes against humanity in East Timor would be
tried in January. That has not happened. The suspects included Eurico
Guterres and Major-General Adam Damiri, but significantly did not include
other high-ranking officers, such as Major-General Zacky Anwar and General
Wiranto, who were identified by Indonesia's KPP-HAM report as being
responsible for the violence.
10. In April 2001, President Wahid issued a Presidential decree
establishing a human rights court for East Timor, but limited its
jurisdiction to crimes committed after the August 1999 vote. This means
that many crimes committed before the vote including two of the worst
atrocities - at Liquica Church on 6 April 1999 when more than 50 were
killed and at the house of independence leader Manuel Carrascalao in Dili
on 17 April 1999 when at least 12 were killed - will go unpunished in
Indonesia. Much of the evidence of the systematic nature of the violence
will remain suppressed. Moreover, the Indonesian army’s organisation of
militia forces in preparation for the 'popular consultation', which began
in the early part of 1999, will not fall within the court’s remit.
11. The Presidential decree was issued within days of Indonesia
agreeing to a statement at the UN Commission on Human Rights which
committed it to ensure accountability for crimes committed in East Timor
during the whole of 1999.
12. Indonesia's inability and unwillingness to administer credible
justice in relation to gross violations of human rights was demonstrated
by the outcome in May 2001 of proceedings against those accused of
involvement in the killing of three employees of the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees in Atambua, West Timor in September 2000. The six accused
were not charged with murder or manslaughter, but with lesser offences. As
a result, their sentences ranged from only 10 to 20 months imprisonment.
13. Despite the signing of a memorandum of understanding on legal
co-operation by the Indonesian Government and UNTAET in April 2000, the
Indonesian authorities have refused to co-operate. On several occasions,
UNTAET investigators have been refused access to witnesses they have
travelled to Jakarta to interview. Indonesia's unwillingness to take
action against military suspects is evident from its failure to suspend
them from duty. Some of the suspects have instead been promoted, including
Adam Damiri, who is now responsible for controversial troop deployments to
Aceh. Militia suspects, notably Eurico Guterres, are regarded by many in
Indonesia as national heroes. Guterres was convicted of a weapons offence
in April 2001, but received a sentence of just six months imprisonment. He
was released after serving just 23 days under house arrest.
14. The judicial system in East Timor has also failed to deliver
justice to date. Investigations by the Serious Crimes Investigation Unit (SCIU)
of UNTAET have been unacceptably slow. The SCIU initially concentrated on
a select few cases and major atrocities, such as that committed at the
Suai church compound on 6 September 1999 when dozens were murdered, have
not been properly investigated. There are persistent reports that the
SCIU's work is severely hampered by problems relating to a lack of
resources, management conflicts, poor communications, the lack of clear
policy guidelines, and a reluctance to expose the systematic nature of the
1999 violence. There are also allegations of political interference in the
judicial process.
15. The absence of credible justice in East and West Timor is seriously
undermining attempts to repatriate those among the 100,000 or so refugees
remaining in West Timor who wish to return home. The failure to prosecute
those responsible for serious crimes helps to fuel an environment in which
intimidation is widespread, humanitarian assistance is severely hampered
and refugees are unable to make free and informed decisions about where
they wish to live.
In the light of the above, we call upon the international community to:
· Press the UN Security Council to take immediate steps to set up an
international tribunal to bring to justice Indonesian military officers
and others responsible for gross violations of human rights in East Timor
whenever they were committed.
· Ensure that UNTAET makes the necessary structural and management
changes to the SCIU and that it allocates sufficient resources and
personnel to the Unit so that it is able to conduct credible
investigations and prosecutions which take into account the systematic and
planned nature of the violence.
· Press the UN to provide greater professional and financial support
to inexperienced East Timor judges, prosecutors and defenders.
· Make a commitment to support and provide resources for serious
crimes investigations in East Timor after the current UNTAET mandate
expires.
This statement is endorsed by the following organisations:
CAFOD, UK
Catholic Institute for International Relations, UK
TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign
BACK DOOR Newsletter on Timor Loro Sa'e
CAFIET (Canadian Action for Indonesia & East Timor)
Initiatives for International Dialogue
Asia-Pacific Coalition for East Timor
Australia-East Timor Association
Australians for a Free East Timor
Watch Indonesia!
International Platform of Jurists for East Timor (IPJET)
Swedish East Timor Committee
Evangelischer Entwicklungsdienst (EED), Germany
Free East Timor ! Japan Coalition
East Timor Ireland Solidarity Campaign (ETISC)
Caritas Australia
Caritas Aotearoa/New Zealand
East Timor Action Network/U.S
Campaign for an Independent East Timor (CIET) Northern Territory Australia
People Against Racism In Aboriginal Homelands
Initiative für die Menschenrechte aller BürgerInnen der ASEAN-Staaten,
Germany
Com. para os Direitos do Povo Maubere (Portugal)
Society for Threatened Peoples International
Canadian Auto Workers (CAW-Canada)
KWIA: Flemish Support Group for Indigenous Peoples
Swedish Justice & Peace Commission
Swedish Fellowship of Reconciliation
Acat-France
Solidamor, Indonesia
Agir Pour Timor, France
La'o Hamutuk, East Timor
Norwegian Council for East Timor and Indonesia (NOCETI)
Päpstliches Missionswerk der Kinder Aachen
Missio Aachen, Germany
Naga Peoples Movement for Human Rights (NPMHR)
Diakonisches Werk of the Protestant Church of Germany
Agni, Sweden
Caritas Norway
Byron Friends of East Timor (BFET)
Caritas Sweden
Christian Social Democrats (Broderskapsrörelsen), Sweden
The Association for Christian Humanism and Social Responsibility (Förbundet
för Kristen Humanism
och Samhällssyn), Sweden
Justice & Peace Netherlands
Trocaire, Ireland
International Federation for East Timor (IFET) whose members (with the
exception of those included in the list above) are:
East Timor International Support Center (Australia)
East Timor Relief Association (Australia)
Brisbane East Timor Office (Australia)
Campaign for an Independent East Timor (South Australia)
Australia-East Timor Association
Friends of East Timor, Western Australia
Hobart East Timor Committee (Australia)
East Timor Alert Network (Canada)
Pacific Concerns Resource Centre (Fiji)
East Timor Group of Committee of 100 (Finland)
Association Solidarité Timor-Oriental (France)
Gesellschaft fur Bedrohte Volker (Germany)
East Timor Roundtable (Hong Kong)
Forum Solidaritas Untuk Rakyat Timor Lorosae (FORTILOS, Indonesia)
Indian Society for Human Rights
East Timor Information Network (Malaysia)
Paz é Justica para Timor Leste (Portugal)
A Paz é Possivel em Timor Leste (Portugal)
Movimento Christão para a Paz (Portugal)
East Timor Scotland Support Group
Instituto de Estudios Políticos para América Latina y Africa (Spain)
International Secretariat, Parliamentarians for East Timor
13 June 2001
Paul Barber TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign, 25 Plovers Way,
Alton Hampshire GU34 2JJ Tel/Fax: 01420 80153
Email: plovers@gn.apc.org
Internet: www.gn.apc.org/tapol
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