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Subject: AFP: Amnesty International Calls For E.Timor To Punish War
Criminals
Amnesty Calls For E.Timor To Punish War Criminals
June 29 (AFP) -- People who committed war crimes in East Timor during
Indonesia's 1975-1999 occupation are going unpunished because of a
loophole in the country's penal code, Amnesty International said Tuesday.
East Timorese President Jose Ramos-Horta has rejected pressure from the
United Nations and rights groups such as London-based Amnesty to prosecute
war crimes suspects, saying such trials are not in the country's
interests.
But Amnesty again called on Dili to stop giving amnesties to war
criminals and agree to the establishment of an international tribunal to
provide justice to the victims.
"Survivors of decades of human rights violations in Timor-Leste
are demanding justice and reparations, but the authorities' routine use of
amnesties, pardons and similar measures has created a culture of
impunity," Amnesty researcher Isabelle Arradon said in a statement.
Arradon helped research an Amnesty report released Tuesday about the
culture of impunity in East Timor, or Timor-Leste as it is formally known,
entitled "Timor-Leste: Justice in the Shadow".
"The authorities in Timor-Leste are compromising on justice to
seek peace -- but trading away justice for such serious crimes only
undermines the rule of law, and cannot resolve the trauma of the
past," Arradon said.
Amnesty says the legal loophole is the absence of a ban on amnesties,
while the penal code also lacks provisions on co-operation with the
International Criminal Court.
Indonesia ended its brutal 34-year military occupation of East Timor in
1999 after granting the former Portuguese colony a referendum on
independence which resulted in an overwhelming vote to split from Jakarta.
More than 100,000 East Timorese were killed or starved to death during
the occupation, and the weeks surrounding the referendum were marred by
crimes against humanity committed by Indonesian forces and their militia
proxies.
East Timor and Indonesia formed a truth and reconciliation commission
which lay the blame for such crimes squarely at the feet of the Indonesian
military, but few of the perpetrators have faced justice.
Ramos-Horta says justice must be weighed against the fledgling
democracy's economic and political destiny as the tiny eastern neighbour
of Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country.
The president pardoned and freed militia leader Joni Marques in 2008
after his 33-year sentence for crimes against humanity was substantially
reduced.
And last year Dili sent another militia leader, Maternus Bere, to
Indonesia before he faced trial over alleged massacres of civilians in
1999.
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