| Subject: WP: Indonesia Attempts to Avert
Tribunal to Probe E. Timor Atrocities
The Washington Post
Saturday, July 16, 2005
Indonesia Attempts to Avert Tribunal to Probe East Timor
Jakarta Wants Truth Commission On 1999 Abuses
By Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Foreign Service
JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Indonesian government officials said they expect
to avert calls for an international war crimes tribunal on Indonesian
military atrocities in East Timor, promoting instead a truth commission to
probe abuses committed in the province after it voted for independence in
1999.
A U.N. panel has urged a war crimes tribunal if Indonesia does not take
steps to hold credible trials of those charged with responsibility for the
massacre of at least 1,400 civilians who were killed by militiamen under
the direction of members of the Indonesian security forces.
"There's a sense that we've obtained from various quarters in the
Security Council that the notion of an international tribunal is not
really practical," said Marty Natalegawa, spokesman for Indonesia's
Foreign Ministry. "Certainly Indonesia is not convinced, and we get a
sense that the rest of the Security Council will need to be convinced
about the recommendations."
On Tuesday, a coalition of 12 international human rights groups sent a
letter to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, calling on the Security
Council to endorse the panel's recommendations and set up a system to
monitor compliance.
The coalition, which includes Human Rights Watch, the Coalition for
International Justice, and the International Center for Transitional
Justice, called for "decisive action from the international
community." It criticized the proposed truth commission's lack of a
criminal justice component and a proposal to give amnesty to those who
committed crimes against humanity.
The U.S. government, however, has made clear that it would be willing
to support such a commission if "it is a credible process."
"We think that it should clearly name names so that the record is
clear," said Pierre-Richard Prosper, the U.S. ambassador at large for
war-crimes issues, who visited East Timor and Jakarta, the Indonesian
capital, last month.
Foreign Ministry officials said a truth commission would set a
precedent in which two countries would establish a panel to work out their
unique differences. East Timor established its independence from Indonesia
in 2002.
"There are those who do not agree with us, but what is important
is our relationship, our shared destiny," said Indonesian Foreign
Minister Hassan Wirayuda during a meeting last week with an East Timorese
delegation led by Foreign Minister Jose Ramos-Horta.
"Where else have two nations who have shared a turbulent past been
bold enough to face the future in such a way?" said Ramos-Horta,
co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1996 during the long-running East
Timor conflict.
The tribunal would be in a third country and would be established if
Indonesia did not meet the panel's recommendation in a six-month time
frame.
U.S. officials have said they do not believe that an international war
crimes tribunal is feasible now, for reasons that include cost, the
difficulty of extraditing suspects to a third country and the lack of
economic and other benefits to either East Timor or Indonesia.
Other Security Council members have been hesitant to call for a
tribunal for many of the same reasons, U.S. officials said. In its
149-page report to the secretary general, the U.N. Commission of Experts
urged the Indonesian government first to retry police and military
officials who were acquitted in earlier human rights trials here that the
panel called "manifestly inadequate."
The panel also urged that Gen. Wiranto, the retired commander-in-chief
of the Indonesian armed forces, be investigated. And it recommended that
Indonesia strengthen its judicial and prosecutorial capacity with the
guidance of experts on international criminal and humanitarian law.
The Security Council has not officially released the confidential
report, which was leaked to the news media last month. The council had
said it wants to give Indonesia and East Timor a chance to first add their
comments.
"We reject the recommendation . . . of an international tribunal
because it will not solve anything," Wirayuda said.
The East Timorese government's reluctance, meanwhile, undercuts any
move to establish a war crimes tribunal, analysts said.
But some East Timorese said that is the only way to achieve justice.
"What the East Timorese are hoping for now, ordinary people
including myself, is an international tribunal," said Fernando Lasama
de Araujo, head of the Democratic Party, the second-largest political
party in the East Timor parliament, and a former student leader who was
jailed by the Indonesian military for almost seven years.
Araujo said East Timorese officials have "the wrong vision,"
because "they think that reconciliation can bring justice for the
East Timorese. They are focused more on political interest rather than
justice for the victims in this country."
Trials conducted in Jakarta in 2003 resulted in 12 acquittals and six
convictions, five of which were overturned on appeal. Only the conviction
of an East Timorese militia commander was upheld, but his sentence was
halved to five years and he remains free pending appeal.
The United States has said the trials were "seriously flawed and
lacked credibility." At the same time, the U.S. government views
Indonesia as a crucial ally in its campaign against terrorism, and the
Bush administration has been seeking to gradually lift restrictions on
military aid.
The U.S. Congress is debating aid to Indonesia for fiscal year 2006.
The legislation likely will still carry some restrictions, though fewer
than this year, congressional aides said.
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