| Subject: CSM: Indonesia Reluctant To
Prosecute Killers of Western Journalist
The Christian Science Monitor Monday, April 29, 2002
Reluctant to prosecute
Dutch officials presented a tight case against the killers of a Western
journalist, but Indonesia won't prosecute.
By Dan Murphy | Special to the Christian Science Monitor
JAKARTA, INDONESIA -" They have a motive, a witness to the
killing, and a mound of supporting evidence. Yet Indonesian prosecutors
remain reluctant to bring the alleged murderers of Dutch journalist Sander
Thoenes to trial.
The failure to prosecute is at the center of a growing dispute between
Indonesia and Western governments - particularly the European Union - over
the credibility of the trials Jakarta is holding for atrocities committed
in East Timor in 1999.
United Nations and Dutch investigators say Mr. Thoenes, a former
Monitor contributor, was murdered by Indonesian Army Battalion 745. He was
one of 12 civilians killed by the battalion in three days in September
1999, as it withdrew in anger from East Timor.
"This is probably the best documented atrocity in East Timor, and
the one that most clearly demonstrates a pattern of abuse by the
Indonesian military," says a European Union diplomat.
He and other EU officials say they fear it isn't being pursued
precisely because it makes such a good case against senior officers. In
recent weeks, the military has mounted a strong rearguard action against
taking any of the blame for what happened in East Timor.
An ad hoc tribunal
Indonesia convened an ad hoc human-rights tribunal for 18 soldiers,
civilian administrators, and militia members in Jakarta last month.
Western diplomats say the cases before the court don't draw the lines
between command authority and action that the Thoenes murder - and the
overall conduct of the battalion - does.
The military officers being tried are charged with failure to stop
violence, rather than responsibility for planning or encouraging it. The
military says those accused of direct acts of violence - militia members
and civilian officials - were beyond its control.
"That's why the case of Sander Thoenes is linked to the
credibility of the whole tribunal,'' says the European diplomat.
Maj. Gen. Adam Damiri, the senior officer responsible for East Timor at
that time, said this month that "fraud" by the UN in the ballot
process led to "riots" by outraged supporters of Indonesia.
Former armed forces chief General Wiranto also blamed UN bias for the
violence, saying that the military struggled to "restore peace."
"It was as if they were saying: 'We're closing ranks, there will
be no accountability,' '' says another Western diplomat who is closely
following the trials. "We're not asking that everyone be held
accountable,'' he says. "We're asking that anyone be held
accountable."
The dispute could loom large as Indonesia seeks to normalize military
relations with Western governments. The Bush administration is currently
pushing for renewed contacts with Indonesia's military, which were cut off
by Congress after the East Timor rampage.
The administration thinks renewed military ties with Indonesia, the
world's largest Muslim country, might make it a more wholehearted
supporter of the war on terror. Last week, Peter Brookes, the US deputy
assistant secretary of Defense for Asian and Pacific affairs, held
high-level meetings with the Indonesian military, the highest-level
contact in three years.
But US officials say Congress appears to be digging in over the issue,
and is unlikely to allow more ties until satisfied that justice has been
done for the crimes in East Timor.
Indonesian prosecutors say there is no pressure being brought to bear
by the military over the Thoenes case. Instead, it isn't being prosecuted
because "we have a difference of perceptions'' with the foreign
investigators, says Barman Zahir, spokesman for the attorney general.
He says Indonesian investigators have found little evidence pointing to
the battalion and have doubts about the credibility of the UN and Dutch
investigations. Mr. Zahir says his office is leaning toward closing the
case without a prosecution, though a final decision has not yet been made.
A report by Dutch police investigator Gerardus Thiry, seen by the
Monitor and confirmed by UN investigators, says Thoenes was shot in the
back by Battalion 745 Second Lt. Camilo dos Santos as the reporter lay on
his side, after he had fallen off a motorbike and been dragged a short
distance from the road.
Mr. Thiry cites an eyewitness to the murder, Domingus Amaral, who
observed the killing from behind a tree and picked out Lieutenant dos
Santos from a line-up of photographs of Indonesian soldiers. Dos Santos
told The Associated Press in early April that he had nothing to do with
the Thoenes killing.
Thiry's report describes a premeditated plan by the battalion, formed
by dos Santos and his commanding officer, Maj. Yacob Sarosa, to kill
civilians and destroy livestock and homes.
The Dutch report
Later, the report describes the involvement of Brig. Gen. Noer Muis,
who was the senior commander for the military in East Timor, in a
cover-up. According to a former member of the battalion, General Muis
briefed soldiers at the end of Sept. 21 to "keep silent about today
for the rest of your lives."
Indonesia has been given Thiry's report, as well as funding from the
Dutch government to duplicate his work, and an Indonesian team traveled to
East Timor in March to interview witnesses.
But Zahir says Indonesian investigators found a number of reasons to
doubt Mr. Amaral's credibility. Among them: his reluctance to disclose his
precise home address, and his desire to be interviewed in his native
language, Tetum, rather than in Indonesian.
Officials dispute eye witness account
Zahir also says that Amaral was too far away to see clearly what he
claims to have seen, and that Thoenes may have died from a knife wound,
rather than a gun shot. Australian coroner Gregory Cavanagh, who conducted
the autopsy on Thoenes, says he died from a high-velocity bullet.
"I would say that [Amaral] is a very credible witness,'' says Jim
Bell, the lead investigator on the case for the UN's mission in East
Timor. Bell says the details of Thoenes' death - the type of gun, and the
angle of the bullet - were carefully kept from the public, yet Amaral was
able to reconstruct Thoenes' final moments perfectly.
"There was no way he could have known this if he hadn't witnessed
the killing," Mr. Bell says.
Thoenes murder: Witness identifies Indonesian officer
DILI, EAST TIMOR - Second Lt. Camilo dos Santos, a handsome officer who
wore his beret at a rakish tilt, was the Battalion 745 commander's
right-hand man.
That Indonesian battalion went on a three-day killing spree after East
Timor overwhelmingly chose independence in its 1999 referendum. The unit
drove to the border of Indonesian West Timor in late September, allegedly
killing 12 people along the way, including Sander Thoenes, a Financial
Times reporter and a regular Monitor contributor.
Lieutenant dos Santos was the name Jim Bell heard almost from the
moment he arrived in East Timor. An Australian cop, Mr. Bell came in
October 1999 to conduct a United Nations investigation of the murder of
Mr. Thoenes.
Former members of the battalion told Bell about the lieutenant's
ruthless reputation. They said he'd led a loyalty ceremony for members of
the battalion that involved drinking local palm wine, mixed with the blood
of a dog and a few drops of the blood of Commander Major Yacob Sarosa and
dos Santos. Second Sgt. Hermenegildo dos Santos (no relation to Camilo dos
Santos) told Bell, and the Monitor in 1999, that the lieutenant had
briefed the unit before they left on Sept. 20, 1999. "If you find
anything," he told them, "just shoot it."
As the convoy of roughly 100 soldiers rolled south on Sept. 21, dos
Santos led by example. He rode up front with the two-man motorcycle teams
that shot at almost everything that moved.
At about five that afternoon, Domingos Amaral says he was relaxing by
the side of the road in Dili's Becora neighborhood. The seller of grilled
meat recalls being glad the worst of the day's heat was over. Then he
heard the whine of motors up the road and bursts of automatic gunfire. He
dove into the brush and peered out from behind a tree. After a few
moments, a group of soldiers from the battalion - he could make out the
745 insignia on their sleeves - came into view about 30 yards away,
dragging the limp body of a white man who was later identified as Thoenes.
They laid him on his side, and then one of them "with an
emotional, angry look on his face" fired his rifle into the back of
Thoenes. Mr. Amaral held his breath. "If they had heard, they would
have surely killed me,'' he says.
Another farmer, Alexandre Estevao, told the Monitor in January 2000
that he also saw a body dragged off the road, but he was too far away to
identify it or the soldiers.
UN investigators had known that Amaral was a witness for some time, but
Indonesia had refused to provide pictures of dos Santos or other members
of the battalion, so they hadn't been able to positively identify who
Amaral had seen.
But one day late last year, Bell was sitting in his office watching a
local news broadcast about refugees returning from the West Timor camps,
and a soldier's name-tag caught his eye: C. dos Santos. He quickly had
still pictures made from the videotape and presented them, along with
pictures of other Indonesian soldiers, to Amaral, who immediately pointed
to the lieutenant's photo. "I remember the face very clear,'' says
Amaral.
Dos Santos told The Associated Press in early April that he had nothing
to do with the Thoenes killing. The Monitor has made several unanswered
requests to his commanding officers for interviews over the past two
weeks.
Dos Santos now serves in West Timor's Battalion 743, where he's been
involved in the process of screening East Timorese refugees who would like
to return home. In early April, East Timor's President Xanana Gusmao
visited one of the border camps to reassure refugees that it was now safe
to return. He met dos Santos and as they spoke, the lieutenant broke down
into tears. Mr. Gusmao gave him a hug, urged him to come home, and
"face up to whatever he had done."
Journalists on the job: The story behind the story
WITNESS CREDIBILITY: Reporter Dan Murphy says the key issue at stake in
the dispute between UN investigators and Indonesia over the murder of
former Monitor contributor Sander Thoenes is the credibility of an
eyewitness to the murder, Domingus Amaral. Indonesian investigators say
the illiterate Amaral isn't a credible witness (see story). Dan found the
street vendor at home in a half-destroyed Dili building. He was not only
clear and specific about what he saw, but aware of what was at stake.
"We only spoke for a few minutes, because he wanted to keep his
comments to me as straightforward and simple as possible. He said he
wanted to save most of what he has to say for the judge."
Back to May
menu
April
World Leaders Contact List
Human Rights Violations in East Timor
Main Postings Menu
Note: For those who would like to fax "the
powers that be" - CallCenter is a Native 32-bit Voice Telephony software
application integrated with fax and data communications... and it's free of charge!
Download from http://www.v3inc.com/ |