The Christian Science Monitor
Wednesday, October 10, 2001
A long wait for justice in East Timor
By Simon Montlake, Special to The Christian Science Monitor
JAKARTA, INDONESIA
Pressure to try human rights cases against the Indonesian military ebbs
amid counterterror push.
More than two years after Indonesia's bloody revenge on East Timor for
a pro-independence vote, hopes of justice for thousands of victims are
fading fast.
Even before Sept. 11, international pressure on Indonesia to punish its
military for their role in East Timor had ebbed. Now, with a war on global
terrorism bringing potential US allies across Asia in from the cold,
Indonesia's commanders may never be held accountable.
One sign of that thaw is the US government's decision last month to
resume low-level military ties with Indonesia, which had been suspended
over the East Timor violence.
The resumption of ties came as Indonesian President Megawati
Sukarnoputri met with President Bush to voice support for the US-led
counterterror campaign. US officials have urged Indonesia to clamp down on
Islamic extremist groups in the island nation.
Given the push to cement links with moderate Islamic nations, opponents
in Congress may find it hard to refuse further military cooperation with
the world's most populous Muslim country, despite its tarnished record.
Human rights activists say that would be a setback for Indonesia's
fledgling democracy as it struggles to reverse decades of unchecked
military impunity.
The international focus on East Timor, which has been under UN rule
since September 1999, was seen as a way of bringing Indonesia's military
under civilian control and imposing the rule of law.
"We need to establish institutions that create precedents,"
says H.S. Dillon, a member of the national human rights commission.
"But once you lose the initial momentum, it's difficult."
Last week Indonesia pledged to establish by December a long-delayed
human rights court on East Timor to hear cases against 23 suspects,
including some Army officers, who are accused of abuses. This follows a UN
Security Council decision last year to resist calls for an international
war-crimes tribunal on East Timor and instead let Indonesia conduct its
own trials.
In 1999, hundreds of people were killed and about 250,000 others forced
to flee during a rampage by Indonesian troops and militia proxies that
only ended when foreign peacekeepers intervened. The Indonesian court,
whose judges will be trained by UN experts in human rights law, is to
investigate acts of violence from April to September that year.
Among those is the murder of Christian Science Monitor contributor
Sander Thoenes, who was allegedly killed by an Indonesian Army unit in
September 1999.
Witnesses say Mr. Thoenes, a Dutch national, was shot dead by
Indonesian soldiers under the command of then-Maj. Jacob Sarosa, according
to a Dutch police investigation. The same battalion is accused of killing
several East Timorese in a rampage.
Last year, Sarosa, now a colonel, was named by an investigating team of
the human rights commission as among those implicated in the violence.
But, despite a slew of witness statements and material evidence
gathered by foreign investigators, prosecutors in Jakarta say it will be
tough to make the Thoenes case stick because of conflicting autopsy
results from Indonesian and Australian authorities. Contrary to local
media reports, however, they deny that the case has been dropped.
"We don't have all the witnesses," says a spokesman for the
Attorney General. "But the case is still in process."
Members of the Indonesian team, who submitted their report to the
Attorney General to help build trial cases, say prosecutors have tried to
bury this and other cases that involve ranking military officers.
"We can prove that troops from Indonesia were involved in the [Thoenes]
killing," says Munir, a commission member. "It's not just
militia...that were involved in the [East Timor] killings."
Diplomats say strong pressure from the Dutch government, has kept the
spotlight on the Thoenes case. But they warn that military interference
will limit the court's general scope for punishing commanders, rather than
civilian militia and low-ranking soldiers who had no command role.
Another concern is the framing of human rights legislation used to
create the tribunal. It includes a clause on retroactivity that could
undermine convictions, if judges accept the argument that defendants can't
be tried for acts that occurred before the new laws.
"It's a legal loophole," says Harold Crouch, national head of
the International Crisis Group, a global think tank. "They'll find
some technical reason for not finding [military defendants] guilty."
The military remains a powerful force in Indonesia, even after the fall
of strongman President Suharto - a former general - and the introduction
of wide-ranging democratic reforms. A block of seats in the supreme
legislature is allocated to the military and police, and the defense
ministry has only nominal control over security operations and budgets.
After his election in October 1999, President Abdurrahman Wahid tried
to weaken the grip of senior generals by promoting reformists to top
posts, only to meet with resistance from within the army.
This interference was also linked to a spate of violent civil
disturbances in parts of Indonesia, including the Maluku islands, which
critics say were instigated by the military in a show of defiance aimed at
undermining civilian rule.
By contrast, Ms. Sukarnoputri, who replaced Mr. Wahid in July with
backing from the military and a cross-party coalition, is a nationalist
who initially opposed giving East Timor the right to secede. She has since
recognized the country's eventual independence. Indonesia occupied East
Timor for 24 years.
Activists say Megawati shares the military's reluctance to expose its
actions in East Timor, and knows that she has little to gain domestically
from upsetting her alliance.
"I think [the new government] wants to put it behind them and
hopes the international community will forget about it," says Mr.
Dillon.
Indeed, a mark of Ms. Megawati's ambivalence towards East Timor is the
presence of militiaman Eurico Guterres in her party's youth wing. Mr.
Guterres is accused of direct involvement in several massacres in East
Timor in 1999 and is among those named by the human rights commission.
Diplomats insist they won't ease pressure on Indonesia to try the East
Timor suspects, even though the world's gaze has shifted. But they admit
that the UN is highly unlikely to insist on holding its own war-crimes
tribunal, even if Indonesia fails to secure any serious convictions.
For a new democracy struggling to enforce the rule of law, even a
limited tribunal would give extra leverage to reformers who want to end
the military's political grip. However, much depends on the political
calculations of Ms. Megawati and her advisors.
"We're pushing for a credible tribunal, although we're not
convinced it will succeed," says a Western diplomat."Any trial
here can only be successful when you have a clear commitment from the
top."