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Subject: Age: How An Alleged War Criminal Escaped Justice
From theage.com.au/opinion/politics/how-an-alleged-war-criminal-in-east-timor-escaped-justice-20091105-hyn1.html
How an alleged war criminal in East Timor escaped justice
By LINDSAY MURDOCH, The Age (Melbourne) November 5, 2009
Maternus Bere, a Timorese-born Indonesian citizen accused of crimes
against humanity, was ushered secretly across the border from East Timor
into Indonesia last weekend, ending weeks of behind-the-scenes intrigue in
Dili.
The story of how Indonesia came to threaten diplomatic ties with its
tiny half-island neighbour to save Bere is not known outside the circle of
East Timor's political elite.
It began 10 years ago, in Father Hilario Madeira's church in the East
Timorese town of Suai.
I was fortunate to meet Father Hilario back then, when I was covering
the United Nations vote that led to East Timor's independence.
Father Hilario had invited people who feared for their lives amid a
wave of pro-Indonesian militia violence to take shelter in his church,
where it was thought the sanctity of a place of worship would protect
them.
But scores of pro-Indonesian militia stormed the church on September 6
1999, rushing first towards Father Hilario's private quarters, hacking,
stabbing and shooting many people in their path.
One witness told how a grenade was thrown into Father Hilario's room,
after which the room was racked by automatic gunfire.
Father Hilario and two other priests were among the first of more than
200 people to die in the worst of many massacres in East Timor in the days
immediately after Timorese voted to breakaway from Indonesia.
Maternus Bere led that militia attack, according to charges laid
against him by the UN's Serious Crimes Unit in 2003.
For a decade he lived in Indonesian West Timor, out of the reach of
East Timor's judicial system, where he became a provincial government
administrator.
But in August this year he crossed the border and returned to Suai to
attend his father's funeral, even venturing back into Father Hilario's
former church to pray.
Not surprisingly, he was recognised and set-upon by angry locals.
Police intervened to save him and sent him to a jail in Dili to face
the UN charges.
Xanana Gusmao, East Timor's prime minister, revealed how Bere came to
be set free during a vote of no-confidence against his government in
parliament.
In the days before the 10th anniversary of the vote for independence,
the Indonesian Government privately pressured East Timor's President Jose
Ramos Horta to release Bere, who had been the commander of one of the most
brutal militia in East Timor in 1999.
The issue came to a head as dignitaries, including Australia's
Governor-General Quentin Bryce, were gathering for the anniversary
ceremony on the steps of East Timor's new presidential palace on Dili's
waterfront on August 30.
East Timor's Foreign Minister Zacarias da Costa was at Dili airport to
greet Indonesia's Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda, who had flown in for
the ceremony.
But da Costa telephoned Gusmao to tell him that Wirayuda would only
attend the ceremony if there was a resolution to the Bere case.
In parliament, Gusmao quoted Wirayuda as saying that "our refusal
to co-operate in such a sensitive matter for Indonesia might force the
Indonesian state to review their diplomatic policy towards Timor-Leste
(East Timor)."
Gusmao called a hasty meeting in the palace's waiting room.
A senior judge told him he could not release Bere under East Timor's
laws.
When Gusmao, a former guerrilla fighter, insisted that a way be found
to resolve the stand-off, the judge told him "prime minister, the
time of the guerrilla (war) is over."
Eventually, the judge suggested a compromise: Gusmao could transfer a
prisoner from one place to another.
"Being thankful for the idea and knowing that otherwise we could
not move on with this case, I ordered the Minister for Justice to have
Maternus Bere transferred from Becora prison to the Indonesian
Embassy," Gusmao told parliament.
But Gusmao was still not confident his order would be carried out, such
was the opposition to the move at the highest levels of government.
He told the minister: "If you do not do it, I will go there and
get him (Bere) myself."
Wirayuda arrived at the ceremony 45 minutes after it had begun,
apparently satisfied that Bere was then safely inside the Indonesian
Embassy.
Wirayuda was just in time to hear Ramos Horta declare that Timorese
must "bury the past" and not pursue the killers of hundreds of
Timorese, most of whom live in Indonesia.
There would be no international tribunal to prosecute those accused of
crimes in East Timor, Mr Ramos Horta declared on that sweltering hot
morning.
When news of Bere's release leaked the next day, UN officials in Dili,
Western diplomats, politicians and non-government organisations expressed
outrage.
The Catholic church also condemned Bere's release, with influential
bishop, Basilio do Nascimento, declaring: "We have to forgive but
before we forgive there must be justice."
I often think of Father Hilario - a wonderful and kind man - and the
barbarity that engulfed his place of worship.
Lindsay Murdoch is a senior writer based in Darwin for The Age and
Sydney Morning Herald. He frequently travels overseas on assignment.
--
Regent: announcement for Maternus` repatriation depends on Timor Leste
Thursday, November 5, 2009 10:24 WIB
Kupang (ANTARA News) - Regent of Belu, East Nusa Tenggara province,
Joachim Lopez, said he has yet to announce the repatriation of the
secretary of the subdistrict of Kobalima Timur Maternus Bere to Indonesia
to the public because an official statement is still awaited from the
Timor Leste government.
"This is an agreement and ethics between states, so that we have
to be patient for the right time to make the announcement," he said
here on Wednesday.
The Timor Leste was actually make the announcement on Tuesday (Nov 13),
and "we cannot make the announcement in the absence of a signal from
Timor Leste sent by way of the Indonesian embassy in Dili," he said.
He said it is fully understandable that the public, especially the
citizens in East Timor in Atambua, Belu regency, had been demanding an
announcement to the public on Maternus Bere`s repatriation.
Lopez, now Belu regent for the second term, said Maternus Bere is
actually already in Atambua city, and therefore there is no longer any
need to make a fuss about his being repatriated, he said.
Four days ago since Maternus Bere had been repatriated from Dili on
Friday (Oct 30), he was still kept in hiding. But until Wednesday (Nov 4),
the former militiaman was still barred from appearing to the public.
But reliable sources said Maternus Bere had been held at the Belu
military headquarters before being sent to a hospital of his declining
physical condition. A leader of the Belu Community Association from East
Timor Francisco Soares Pareira said he felt relieved by Maternus Bere`s
repatriation.
Maternus Bere`s repatriation, Soares Pareira said, it is an effort of
the Indonesian government by way of the Indonesian embassy in Dili and
also the goodwill of the Timor Leste administration under President Jose
Ramos Horta and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao.(*)
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