Subject: United Nations wraps up police training despite human rights
concerns
also Aust to be "consulted over UN police moves in Timor "
Asia Sentinel
Jesse Wright
17 June 2008
United Nations wraps up police training despite human rights concerns
The United Nations, called in two years ago in the wake of a breakdown of
East Timor’s security forces that led to dozens of deaths, appears set to end
its training of local police, many of whom are still unfit to be in uniform,
leading to fears that carnage will begin again in a country ill-prepared for it.
“I would say there's still some real concern about police regarding their
respect for human rights,” said Louis Gentile, the UN High Commission for
Human Rights representative in East Timor.
The UN’s certification process is scheduled to end its two-year run in
December. It was established in 2006 following the breakdown in security forces
here that, in addition to the deaths, made more than 100,000 homeless as
hundreds of army and police deserted their posts and began attacking their
former comrades. This inflamed civilian tensions and made the remaining forces
paranoid of each other as heavy weaponry was misused to terrorize civilians and
security personnel alike.
By August 2006 order had been restored by UNPol, the unwieldy acronym for the
UN’s police forces, as well as international security forces, but local
security forcesespecially policeremained in tatters. Moral was low and the
breakdown of the institution six months earlier prompted Timor to ask the
<http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=543&Itemid=159>UN
mission here to help “reform, restructure and rebuild” local police.
According to UNPol's plan, all police who wished to remain on the force were
meant to submit to a screening process followed by months of training and
mentoring with their UNPol counterparts. By February of this year, police had
spent 15 months with UNPol.
However, during those first 15 months with UNPol police, the human rights
abuses never stopped. A UN human rights document from 2007 reports: “Since
August 2006 the UN has recorded several cases of cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment or punishment of persons during their arrest, in detention or during
interrogation. In some cases, victims needed medical treatment.”
In one case the report states the police beat a suspect so badly he was
knocked unconscious and then left in his cell for an hour until UN human rights
officers insisted the man be taken to a hospital for treatment. Despite the
documented abuses, police officers were not tried in court and were not
dismissed. Their UN training continued.
Then, on the morning of February 11, President Jose Ramos-Horta and Prime
Minister Xanana Gusmão were attacked by armed rebels, narrowly escaping. The
government called a state of siege in response and police and army forces were
given a joint command to catch the rebels responsible for the attacks. To do
this, hundreds of police officers were takenon a rotating basisfrom UNPol
training for weeks at a time.
Outside of UNPol's watch, police within the joint command terrorized and
abused civilians beyond anything seen yet. According to government records, from
June 2005 to August 2007 there were 70 reported cases of human rights abuses by
the police. From mid-February to mid-May of this year Gentile said his office
got 37 reports of human <http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=508&Itemid=31>rights
violations by the joint commandthe majority of which he says were committed by
the police who had been trained by UNPol.
“A lot of people we've spoken to have said not everything was reported
because people have been afraid something would happen to them if they do report
it,” Gentile said. “People are still intimidated to come forward and we
estimate the number of human rights abuses reported to us and other
organizations will be higher.”
Part of the problem is the government's refusal to sack incompetent police.
The joint command, outside of UNPol's control, staffed senior posts with
police unfit to serve under UNPol criteria. The government made no effort to
oust the problem officers.
According to acting UNPol commissioner Juan Carlos Arevalo, at least three
senior police officers are stationed at joint command headquarters with whom
UNMIT refused to work because of the officers' gross negligence and
unprofessional behavior.
According to the UN, one senior officer in the joint command may have been
involved in an incident in which the police fired six shots into a crowded
market in 2006. Two other senior police officers were recommended for expulsion
by the head of the UN mission in a personal letter to the president in 2007.
They have since been promoted and one of the men is in charge of investigating
complaints of human rights abuses within the joint command.
“We have been complaining frequently, not only in this case but in other
cases,” Arevalo said. “But we have gotten no response from the government.”
The majority of the reports received by Gentile's office involve beatings,
threats, illegal searches and illegal detentions. He emphasized that the human
rights abuses reported have not included severe torture, although a few cases
were “borderline.” The most notorious of those cases was the civilian
teacher who was beaten about the head and chest with a pipe for about 30 minutes
during an investigation. Toward the end, as the middle-aged man lay in a pool of
his own blood, he begged simply to be shot. The joint command got no information
from himhe said they didn't even ask him any questions before the beating
beganbut his injuries were so severe he had to be treated at the national
hospital.
If the government is worried about the abuse, it has said nothing publicly.
Both the president and the prime minister have said numerous times they
considered the joint command to be a success and they are looking to
institutionalize the force under a new name.
Even certification and UNPol training does not guarantee a respect for human
rights. Gentile said the officers were given human rights training which lasted
from one to three dayswhich he admits is insufficient.
“I've heard police say outright 'We didn't do anything badwe just slapped
the man, or we just kicked him a few times,'” said Gentile. “Some of them
don't even understand that it's wrong.”
But as the <http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=715&Itemid=31>UN
mandate here ends in February 2009, the mission is eager to get the police out
the door. Last week the UNPol graduated the last of its police training program.
Only a few months of training remain before UNPol's mandate ends entirely.
Arevalo said he expects the last officer will be certified by UNPol by
December. Currently UNPol has given final certification to 601 officers since
September 2006, so over the next six months it must finalize some 2,516
moredespite the concerns.
In Timor, one of the poorest countries in Asia, where 21 per cent of those
born won't make it to 40 and most families live on a dollar a day, there are
plenty of other, less controversial problems to worry about.
Ramos-Horta said last month he is eager for Timor to repair its image and
join the regional Association of Southeast Asia Nations (ASEAN) bloc. He
promised that within four years the country's internal problems will be under
control because, “they wouldn't want a basket case, an unstable new member.”
If East Timor can maintain its internal stability, the tiny nation stands to
gain tremendously.
Two months ago the country hosted its first donor conference since 2006 and
aid agencies from around the world promised to give hundreds of millions in aid
for future projects. From 1999 to 2006 the country was given some US$3 billion
in aid and grants.
However, civil unrest has derailed progress before. During the 2006 crisis
donors evacuated and non-government organizations were shuttered for monthsand
in some cases their work stopped for a year.
But Gentile remains hopeful, even though he admits real progress will take
more time.
“I think we have to believe the PNTL will continue to improve and that good
people will continue to rise to positions of power,” he said.
“The police want to be professional and they want to be a force respected
by people here and by people outside the country.”
http://asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1265&Itemid=31
--
Aust to be "consulted over UN police moves in Timor"
CANBERRA, June 17 AAP - Australia will be consulted about any drawdown of the
United Nations police mission in East Timor, Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon
says.
The matter was discussed during a meeting between Mr Fitzgibbon and the head
of the United Nations Integrated Mission in East Timor, Atul Khare.
Dr Khare has met senior government ministers during two days in Canberra, as
well as members of the Australian Federal Police.
Recent media reports have suggested the UN might be getting ready to hand
over policing to the East Timorese, despite indications they may not be fully
ready to handle the responsibility.
Around 50 AFP are part of the 1,700-strong UN police operation.
"I am pleased that Dr Khare and I share the view that any future
drawdown of the UN Police mission in East Timor needs to be based on the
achievement of performance benchmarks by the East Timorese police," Mr
Fitzgibbon said in a statement.
"When these benchmarks are met any drawdown would be managed modestly,
cautiously and in consultation with Australia."
In the May budget, Australia announced it would be sending another 80 police
to help train Timorese forces.
Dr Khare told the ABC's international service, the Australia Network, there
was no immediate plans to draw down troops.
"What we are thinking about is a resumption of policing responsibilities
by the national forces," he said.
"I do believe there should be a plan that should be based upon very
specific clear criteria ... based upon that in a cautious, phased manner,
district by district policing responsibilities could be resumed by the national
police."
Dr Khare said a resumption of activity by the national police did not
necessarily mean UN forces would leave.
"Such a plan of resumption of policing responsibility by the national
police should not lull us into withdrawing the UN police, the UN police must
remain in ... different capacities," he said.
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