|
Subject: Wiranto, indicted for crimes against humanity, will take part
in human rights d
*/Article in SINDO, 3 June 2009 In response to a report that the
National Human Rights Commission, Komnas HAM has decided to hold a debate
with the presidential candidates on the question of human rights, Jusuf
Kalla and his team mate Wiranto expressed a willingness to take part.
A member of the Kalla-Wiranto team's campaigning group said they were
not worried about questions being raised regarding Wiranto's involvement
in human rights violations. This would be an opportunity to give a
clarification about Wiranto's role.
Well, for the benefit of our readers, here below is a clarification
about Wiranto's indictment for crimes against humanity.
As with Prabowo, Wiranto, already indicted for crimes against humanity
by the UN is nevertheless able to contest in Indonesia's presidential
election as the running mate of Jusuf Kalla.
The following is the report regarding the UN's decision to indict
Wiranto for crimes against humanity in East Timor in 1999
/* February 25, 2003 * *
The United Nations today indicted Indonesia's former armed forces
commander, General Wiranto, for crimes against humanity during East
Timor's bloody 1999 vote for independence. Gen Wiranto, regarded as the
man principally responsible for the bloodletting that swept the former
Indonesian territory during the UN-sponsored referendum, was indicted
alongside six other senior generals and the ex-governor of East Timor,
Abilio Soares.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, it seems doubtful that Indonesia will hand over any of those
indicted to the court in Dili, East Timor's capital. Jakarta has so far
refused to honour UN arrest warrants, and today said it would "simply
ignore" the latest UN request.
"He [Gen Wiranto] is a free man ... Why take action?" said
Indonesia's foreign minister, Hassan Wirayuda. "Who gave [the UN] the
mandate to indict Indonesians, under what basis, what authority?"
The UN said in a statement: "The accused have all been charged
with crimes against humanity for murder, deportation and
persecution." The alleged crimes "were all undertaken as part of
a widespread or systematic attack directed against the civilian population
of East Timor and specifically targeted those who were believed to be
supporters of independence for East Timor".
The mandate for the Dili court covers all crimes committed in 1999 in
East Timor, irrespective of whether the suspects are East Timorese or
Indonesian. So far it has indicted 178 people, but 106 of those -
including 12 Indonesian soldiers - remain free in Indonesia. Thus far
Indonesia has not sent any of its nationals to East Timor to face trials
in such cases.
Prosecutors in Dili have sent the warrants for the latest eight
indictments to the attorney general's office and will forward them to the
international law enforcement agency, Interpol. Under East Timorese law,
the charges carry a maximum penalty of 25 years' imprisonment.
"I accept that we can't at the moment effect those arrest
warrants," said Stuart Alford, a prosecutor with the serious crimes
unit in Dili. "But that doesn't mean we are the only people who can
play their part in this. It's now up to other people outside the
prosecutor's office in East Timor to decide what direction this
investigation and prosecution will take."
Human rights groups, which have long called for Gen Wiranto to be held
accountable for the events of August 1999, praised the indictment but said
they will only be satisfied when the UN establishes an international
tribunal for East Timor, similar to that used to prosecute war crimes
suspects in Rwanda and Yugoslavia.
"This is more of a political victory than a legal victory,"
said Agung Yudhawiranata, a court observer for the Institute for Policy
Research and Advocacy, an Indonesian human rights group. "We know
Wiranto will not be handed over to the Dili court but hopefully it will
send a shock to the Indonesian government, which has failed to indict
Wiranto and put pressure on the international community to set up an
international tribunal."
Lawyers for the men, all of whom are believed to be in Indonesia, said
they had yet to receive the indictment and declined to comment. The
indictment charges Gen Wiranto, six generals who were responsible for
security in East Timor and ex-governor Soares with funding, training and
arming the pro-Indonesia militias that joined the Indonesian military in
killing more than 1,000 people and forcing 250,000 Timorese to flee their
homes before and after the referendum.
The six generals are Major General Zacky Anwar Makarim, Major General
Kiki Syahnakri, Major General Adam Rachmat Damiri, Colonel Suhartono
Suratman, Colonel Mohammad Noer Muis and Lieutenant Colonel Yayat Sudrajat.
Back to June Menu
May
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu
|