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Subject: Pat Walsh: The Tasi Tolu Exhumations
The Tasi Tolu Exhumations
Pat Walsh, 22 March 2010
The case for a CAVR/CTF follow-up mechanism has been given new urgency
by the recent find of more remains of human rights victims on the
outskirts of Dili and the equally startling discovery that Timor-Leste has
no regulations to govern construction on sites of significance. As Dili is
in the grip of an unprecedented building boom, with some 1400 companies
registered in the construction sector, legislation and the establishment
of an oversight mechanism are urgently needed.
This month, 9 sets of human remains were exhumed at the Tasi Tolu site
of the future Pelican Paradise hotel west of Dili. The discovery follows
exhumations of 16 Santa Cruz victims last year. Initial forensic reports
confirm that the Tasi Tolu remains were the victims of extra-judicial
executions, possibly from the late 70s-early 80s. The bodies were trussed
hand and foot and buried in pits prepared by mechanical ditch-diggers.
Bullets were found at the scene, indicating that the victims were executed
at the site. The burial site is therefore also a crime site. This also
means that, like Tasi Tolu area itself, the site is a place of emotional
and historical significance in Timor’s costly struggle for independence.
The discovery has already yielded some positive lessons. The most
important of these has been the goodwill and respective contributions of
the key stakeholders. The company has cooperated with the exhumations, an
important precedent for other developers, although it is not known what,
if any, steps will be taken to commemorate the site. Prime Minister Gusmao
and his government have provided funding. Members of parliament and the
community have taken a close interest and visited the site. Forensic
experts have been engaged to ensure that the process is professionally
managed, a welcome advance on damaging efforts some years ago when
well-intentioned amateurs handled remains from 1999. Finally, it is said
that the location of the site is due to a tip-off some years ago by
Indonesian military sources. Each of these elements, not least –if true
– the information from Indonesian sources, has been critical to the
outcome and will be vital to future work of this kind which is only just
beginning.
The process, however, has also revealed some serious policy
shortcomings and the urgent need for regulations. Timor-Leste has no
building regulations to protect or preserve sites of historic, political
or cultural significance and to govern building on such sites. UNTAET
Regulation 2000/19 (Section 6) on Protected Places provided that the
Transitional Administrator, under a directive, may designate monuments,
buildings and other sites as property of cultural, artistic or historic
significance to the people of Timor-Leste, but this provision has not been
translated into contemporary legislation. Such legislation would be
clearly in the spirit of the Constitution which, although it does not
mention sites, devotes four Articles to the Valorisation of Resistance
(Section 11).
The CAVR Report Chega! contains some 14 recommendations that deal
directly or indirectly with memorialisation. The most relevant can be
found at 3.2.1-3.3.1; 3.7.7 and 12.12. In summary, these call for families
to be assisted to locate and re-bury relatives and for significant sites
to be registered and memorialised in some way. CAVR took a broad view of
memorialisation. In this sense, the concept should be comprehensive enough
to cover both sites of human rights violations like the ex-Balide Comarca
and Hotel Flamboyan in Baucau (development of its notorious back section
is on hold) as well as sites that are historically significant in other
respects such the site of the new Palacio Presidencial and Hotel Turismo
(currently undergoing renovation).
To this point, however, these timely recommendations have not been
acted on. No register of sites or authority exist which companies should
consult prior to development or if a discovery is made. The Parliament’s
Committee A is currently preparing legislation to establish a CAVR/CTF
follow-up mechanism whose terms of reference will most likely include a
national memorialisation program. It is to be hoped that this important
initiative is speedily enacted and that the Gusmao government uses this
legislative and institutional framework to respond to the important issues
raised by the Tasi Tolu case.
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