| Subject: AT: Justice at a crossroads in
East Timor
Asia Times
Southeast Asia Feb 24, 2005
Justice at a crossroads in East Timor By Jill Jolliffe
DILI - Justice is at the crossroads in East Timor, with the United
Nations formally moving to check the impunity of those accused of war
crimes committed during Indonesia's bloody withdrawal from the island in
1999 and Timorese and Indonesian leaders proposing that all such charges
be dropped.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan announced in New York on Friday that he
was appointing a commission of experts to review Timor war crimes
prosecutions and assess why a 1999 Security Council resolution to try
those accused of war crimes has failed. He named the three experts as
Justice Prafullachandra Bhagwati of India, Professor Yozo Yokota of Japan
and Shaista Shameem of Fiji.
It seemed symptomatic of the world's slide into apathy over Timor
atrocities that the official UN statement said the experts would
"recommend possible future action over the 1999 anti-independence
violence in which dozens of people were killed and hundreds of thousands
fled".
Dili records show that UN lawyers have investigated more than 1,400
homicides, not "dozens", since they arrived in 2000, and have
indicted various Indonesians and Timorese over the deportation of around
quarter of a million people, who did not "flee", but were forced
from their homeland at gunpoint.
Hours before the UN leader's statement, a new director of the Serious
Crimes Unit (SCU) in Dili - set up under the 1999 Security Council
resolution - was sworn in to office by Timorese President Xanana Gusmao,
with the task of terminating the unit's work.
Former Canadian minister Carl DeFaria has the job of handing over
hundreds of case files to the East Timorese government and ending SCU
business by May 20, when the current UN mission ends. He succeeded
Nicholas Koumjian, who left recently to work in Kosovo.
Under three preceding directors, the SCU has convicted only 74 of 317
people indicted for the violence that racked East Timor after an
overwhelming independence vote in August 1999. Most were Timorese
militiamen, who are seen as taking the rap for their commanders. Jakarta
refuses to act on arrest warrants issued for around 300 people at large in
Indonesia. Former defense minister and presidential candidate General
Wiranto is among the senior officers enjoying apparent immunity from
prosecution.
Under the same UN resolution, Indonesia was to try its own citizens,
but all except one of 18 perpetrators judged by a special ad hoc court
were acquitted.
However, as DeFaria pointed out to Asia Times Online, the dedicated
work of the unit's investigators and jurists is there for possible future
use. "Obviously, we would like to have all of the people who have
been indicted brought to justice," he said. "It will be up to
the Timorese government. I'm sure if they decide to pursue it they will
have a lot of support from the international community."
President Gusmao chose his words carefully at DeFaria's investiture. He
has been under fire by domestic critics, including the Catholic Church,
for his December deal with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
to set up a Truth and Friendship Commission, which would have a public
truth-telling function but would drop charges against accused war
criminals.
He praised the SCU's work as representing "more than just punitive
justice; it endeavors to be a form of justice that reports historical
truth for the victims". He referred guardedly to prosecutions,
stressing instead "the establishment of truth and reparation to the
victims" - values he is championing in the Indonesian accord.
President Gusmao and Foreign Minister Jose Ramos Horta began work to
establish the Truth and Friendship Commission late last year, supported by
Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri. The decision to form the joint commission
came after the UN Security Council expressed concern over Indonesia's
failure to punish those responsible for the violence.
Ramos Horta traveled to New York with his Indonesian counterpart Hassan
Wirayuda in December to discuss the commission with Annan, who fell short
of endorsing it. The United States was also cool to the proposal, while
conceding that it could complement the work of the commission of experts.
In November, US Ambassador to the United Nations John Danforth had
urged the Security Council to demand responsibility for the Timor
bloodshed. "There must be accountability for the human-rights
violations committed in East Timor," he asserted. "The
international community has a responsibility to address the issue."
An Agence France-Presse report said both Wirayuda and Ramos Horta
indicated during their visit that they hoped to avoid the new UN inquiry,
with the Indonesian minister, saying the Truth and Friendship Commission
was "meant as an alternative to the idea of establishing a commission
of experts".
The Truth and Friendship Commission was formalized in Bali later in
December between presidents Yudhoyono and Gusmao.
As the deal was being cobbled together by politicians, East Timor's
powerful Catholic Church weighed in on the argument. The Bishop of Dili,
Dom Alberto Ricardo da Silva, criticized the culture of impunity, saying
victims deserved justice.
"If there was a crime, there has to be justice," he said,
"It's always been the position of the Church."
Bishop da Silva, who replaced Nobel peace laureate Carlos Ximenes Belo
last year, after his retirement from ill health, said his view represented
"all" of the deeply Catholic East Timorese. "They say
they're not satisfied ... they come to me constantly saying they want
justice," he stated.
The 61-year-old cleric said he had difficulty understanding what
Timorese politicians meant by reconciliation: "When a person steals,
and they're not tried, where are we?" de Silva asked. "If you
reconcile, does justice remain to be done, or is it not going to be
done?"
Both President Gusmao and Ramos Horta have since explained their
proposal to church leaders, including Bishop da Silva, and consulted party
leaders.
Criticism has also come from Timorese human-rights workers. Like the
bishop, lawyer Aderito de Jesus Soares is puzzled. "It's demoralizing
seeing Xanana, Mari Alkatiri and Ramos Horta asking them to forget,"
he said. "I agree with concern over border stability, but hugging all
these generals doesn't make any sense to me."
He feels deceived: "Justice and human rights are the values we
fought for during 24 years, and suddenly we see them betray all those
principles."
Annan has written to the presidents of both nations asking for their
cooperation with the commission of experts, and further suggested that its
work "could complement that of the Truth and Friendship
Commission".
Observers in Dili believe that it will be difficult for the UN to
revive prosecutions with so little enthusiasm being expressed by Timorese
leaders. Judging by the UN's factual errors in describing Timor's history,
it doesn't care much either.
Jill Jolliffe, a frequent contributor to Asia Times Online, has
recently returned from Dili.
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