| Subject: BBC: E Timor rights court
installed
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1793000/1793733.stm
Thursday, 31 January, 2002, 12:32 GMT
E Timor rights court installed
More than 1,000 people are thought to have died Indonesia has
officially inaugurated the human rights court that will try military
officers and others for atrocities in East Timor following the territory's
independence vote in 1999.
Eleven judges, most of them university law professors, have been sworn
in and will join 12 career judges already appointed.
Indonesia has been under international pressure to proceed with the
trials of at least 18 army leaders and militiamen accused of widespread
killings by pro-Indonesian forces in East Timor.
No trial dates have been set.
A US-based legal group has expressed doubts over the trials, saying
only an international tribunal could deliver justice.
In a statement, an international group of lawyers and legal scholars
said: "Given the current political climate in Indonesia, convictions
of high-level military personnel seem unlikely."
International fears
There has already been criticism from some quarters at the decision by
the attorney-general's office not to prosecute the then-defence minister
and armed forces chief General Wiranto, despite suggestions by human
rights groups that he was morally responsible for the violence.
Earlier this month General Wiranto criticised the forthcoming trials
and said his soldiers had done nothing wrong.
Supreme Court Justice Bagir Manan swore in the new judges on Thursday,
telling reporters afterwards: "I can guarantee that the judicial
system will be independent because the judges have high moral
integrity."
But he acknowledged that if the tribunal was not satisfactory, the
cases could be brought before an international war crimes tribunal.
New country
East Timor voted for independence from Indonesia in August 1999,
sparking a bloody rampage by pro-Jakarta militias. The United Nations
estimates more than 1,000 people were killed but Indonesia has not yet
carried out any prosecutions.
In December, a United Nations tribunal in East Timor sentenced 10
members of pro-Indonesian militia to jail terms of up to 33 years for
human rights atrocities.
East Timor is under UN administration, but is due to become a fully
independent nation on 20 May, following presidential elections.
Indonesian Justice and Human Rights Minister Yusril Ihza Mahendra said
the first of the Jakarta trials would be "in not too long a
time".
He said the court had adopted international humanitarian laws on crimes
against humanity, torture and genocide.
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