| Subject: Sex slave exhibition exposes
darkness in East Timor
Japan Times
Saturday, Dec. 23, 2006
Sex slave exhibition exposes darkness in East Timor
By STEPHANIE COOP Special to the Japan Times
Ines de Jesus was a young girl during World War II when she was forced
to become a sex slave, or "comfort woman," for Japanese troops
in the then Portuguese colony of East Timor.
By day, de Jesus carried out various kinds of menial labor, and each
night was raped by between four to eight Japanese soldiers at a so-called
comfort station in Oat village in the western province of Bobonaro.
While horrific, de Jesus' experience with sexual abuse under military
occupation is by no means unusual among East Timorese women, as a special
exhibition at the Women's Active Museum on War and Peace in Tokyo's
Shinjuku Ward makes clear.
The exhibition combines testimony from survivors and witnesses with
photos and other documentary evidence to provide a compelling picture of
the various forms of gender-based violence inflicted on women during two
particularly black periods in East Timor's history: the 1942-1945 takeover
by Japanese troops, and the 24-year occupation by Indonesian forces that
ended in 1999, after a U.N.-sponsored referendum on independence.
Systematic investigation of the atrocities committed during these
periods was impossible under Indonesian rule, but since 1999 scholars,
human rights groups and a U.N.-sponsored East Timorese truth commission
have attempted to uncover the facts.
The exhibition is based partly on the results of a joint project
conducted by Japanese and East Timorese human rights groups into the
Japanese military's sex-slave system in East Timor. It includes a map
showing the locations of the 21 comfort stations the project team has
identified to date.
Kiyoko Furusawa, an associate professor of development and gender
studies at Tokyo Woman's Christian University and one of the organizers of
the project and exhibition, said that after the Japanese landed in East
Timor in February 1942 to oust a contingent of Australian troops that had
entered the neutral territory the previous December, it ordered "liurai"
(traditional kings) and village heads to supply women to serve the troops.
Some of those who refused to comply were executed.
"Women enslaved in comfort stations were forced to serve many
soldiers every night, while others were treated as the personal property
of particular officers," she said. "Some women were specifically
targeted for enslavement because their husbands were suspected of aiding
the Australian troops.
"As well as being physically and psychologically traumatized by
the sexual abuse, the women were also made to work at tasks such as
building roads, cutting wood, growing and preparing food, and doing
laundry during the day, so they were constantly exhausted. They were also
forced to dance and were taught Japanese songs to entertain
soldiers," Furusawa said.
Comfort women received no payment for their work and little or no food,
she added. Family members either brought food to the comfort stations or
the women were sent home to obtain it.
There was little likelihood of women trying to escape at such times,
she explained. "There were around 12,000 Japanese troops in a country
with a population of only about 463,000, so the whole island was like an
open prison. There was nowhere for the women to go, and at any rate, they
were terrified about reprisals against their families if they did try to
escape."
Gender-based violence was also rampant during the Indonesian
occupation, with the East Timorese truth commission finding that East
Timorese women were subjected to widespread rape, sexual slavery and
various forms of sexual torture -- 93.3 percent of which was perpetrated
by Indonesian soldiers or Indonesian-backed militias.
Sexual abuse occurred almost as a matter of course when women were
detained by Indonesian authorities.
In her testimony displayed at the exhibition, Fatima Guterres, who
participated actively in resistance activities before being captured by
Indonesian troops, states that all the women in the prison where she was
subsequently incarcerated were raped.
"When the soldiers there interrogated us, they didn't ask us
anything about our political activities. All they were interested in was
sex, sex, sex," Guterres said.
"We were always 'questioned' at night. After one session finished
we would be told to go back to our cell and sleep, but then another
soldier would appear and tell us to report to another officer's room. We
knew what would happen . . . every night it was the same thing, over and
over," she said.
Despite the gravity of the human-rights abuses documented in the
exhibition, justice has yet to be achieved for the survivors.
Japan's system of sexual slavery was largely ignored in the war crimes
trials conducted by the Allies after World War II, and a special court
established by Indonesia to punish the atrocities committed by its troops
and militias in 1999 failed to get a single rape indictment.
U.N. prosecutors indicted some members of the Indonesian military and
its militias for complicity in sexual violence as a crime against
humanity, but Indonesia has refused to extradite the suspects to stand
trial in East Timor.
Citizen groups concerned about the lack of accountability for the
wartime sex-slave atrocities convened a people's tribunal in Tokyo in 2000
that found the late Emperor Hirohito and high-ranking Japanese military
officers guilty of crimes against humanity. The verdict was later censored
from an NHK documentary on the trial amid allegations by a major daily
newspaper that two heavyweight Liberal Democratic Party politicians --
Shoichi Nakagawa and Shinzo Abe -- paid a less than comfortable visit to
the public broadcaster before it was aired.
Furusawa said that while the tribunal helped restore some dignity to
victims by publicly acknowledging that the acts they were subjected to
constituted violations of international law, only an official apology and
compensation from the Japanese government will satisfy the survivors'
demands for justice.
The government should also press the Indonesian government to prosecute
those who harmed East Timorese women during its occupation, she added.
"Many survivors and witnesses have already passed away, so it's
imperative that the government act quickly. We hope the exhibition will
help raise awareness about this issue and lead to justice for all the
victims."
"East Timorese Women Speak Out: Sexual Violence Under Japanese and
Indonesian Occupation" runs until May 27 at the Women's Active Museum
on War and Peace, AVACO Bldg., 2F, Nishi-Waseda 2-3-18, Shinjuku Ward,
Tokyo 169-0051. For further information, call (03) 3202-4633 or visit
www.wam-peace.org
The Japan Times
see also Support World War
II "Comfort Women"
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