| Subject: AGE: Jakarta's Timor trials 'a
sham'
Jakarta's Timor trials 'a sham'
By Jill Jolliffe Darwin June 19, 2005
Indonesia should retry accused war criminals acquitted by a special
court in Jakarta because the process was a sham, according to United
Nations experts on East Timor.
A 160-page report to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is due for debate
in the Security Council next week. The Sunday Age had exclusive access to
the document, which says the trials were "manifestly inadequate"
with "scant respect for relevant international standards".
It says prosecutors were "not committed to justice", and that
the court had been hostile to defence witnesses but lenient on the
accused.
The three experts, Justice Prafullachandra Bhagwati of India, Professor
Yozo Yokota of Japan and Shaista Shameem of Fiji, visited Indonesia and
East Timor earlier this year.
They were appointed by Mr Annan in February to investigate why a 1999
Security Council resolution calling for the trial of those accused of
atrocities in Timor during its independence referendum had not been
implemented.
Indonesian military and police officers tried in Jakarta for murders,
arson attacks and deportation of 250,000 East Timorese still walk free. By
contrast, Timorese militiamen tried by a parallel UN court in Dili are
serving jail terms of up to 28 years.
Those enjoying impunity include former defence minister and
presidential candidate Wiranto, a case noted by the experts.
The report recommends that Indonesia be given six months to prepare
credible trials. If it does not comply, the experts argue, the UN should
invoke its charter to set up an international war crimes court for East
Timor.
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