Twenty Year Santa Cruz Commemoration at Dili University
By Charles Scheiner, ETAN and La’o Hamutuk
11 November 2011 (translated from Tetum)
Tonight, I’m honored to be with so many young Timorese people who believe in justice and independence. Twenty years ago, brave people just like you peacefully demonstrated against the Indonesian occupation of your country. Nobody paid them, or ordered them, or told them it would be safe or easy.
The Santa Cruz protesters inspired people around the world, including me. I was in New York, and I heard about the massacre on community radio. Although I already knew about Indonesia’s illegal occupation here, and about the criminal support my Government was giving to it, I hadn’t done much to stop it.
Washington had provided most of the weapons and training for the Indonesian military from 1975 until 1991, but pressure from American citizens cut it off. By 1998, the United States Government had abandoned Suharto and was supporting self-determination – helping to open a door for the people of Timor-Leste to finally end Indonesia’s occupation. |
A month after the Santa Cruz massacre, I and some other friends
organized a peaceful protest at the Indonesian Mission to the
UN. We didn’t risk being shot or tortured, but we knew we had to
speak out in solidarity with the heroes of Santa Cruz who risked
and lost their lives in the struggle for self-determination. It
was much easier for us than it was for your parents – but it was
also hard, because so many other Americans didn’t know or care
that our Government was complicit with Indonesia in committing
crimes against humanity in Timor-Leste.
Our demonstration grew into a movement – the East Timor Action
Network (ETAN) – that had more than 15,000 members and 25
chapters all across the United States by 1999. Through public
education, lobbying, demonstrations, outreach,
coalition-building and every other kind of nonviolent action we
could think of, we turned U.S. policy around. Washington had
provided most of the weapons and training for the Indonesian
military from 1975 until 1991, but pressure from American
citizens cut it off. By 1998, the United States Government had
abandoned Suharto and was supporting self-determination –
helping to open a door for the people of Timor-Leste to finally
end Indonesia’s occupation.
It’s 12 years later now, 20 years after the Santa Cruz massacre
and the founding of the East Timor Action Network. RDTL has
been independent for nine years. You have your own government,
your own leaders, your own political debates, your own
successes… and your own mistakes. I feel privileged to live here
during this period, traveling that journey with you. Building a
peaceful, democratic nation, with economic and social justice
for its entire population, may be even harder than throwing out
the Indonesian army and police.
We are still far from some of our goals. In particular, the
foreigners responsible for crimes against humanity and war
crimes committed against the Timorese people have not been held
accountable.
These were international crimes – the Indonesian invasion of
Portuguese Timor (RDTL after 28 November 1975, but Indonesian
aggression started before that) violated international law, as
dud the thousands of massacres, tortures, rapes, killings and
other crimes that were part of the occupation. When people are
ordered or paid by one government to commit crimes against
people in another country, those are international crimes. When
other governments, including my own, give political, military,
diplomatic or financial support to these crimes, they also
become criminals.
As a U.S. citizen (I am not yet a Timorese citizen, but hope to
become one), I have to apologize to the people of Timor-Leste
because I and my fellow Americans took so long to stop our
Government from supporting crimes against you, while tens of
thousands of Timorese people were killed. As a human being, I
join the Timorese people – including survivors and victims’
families – in calling for an end to impunity for crimes against
humanity.
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A hero of my country – ex-slave Frederick Douglass – once said
that “Power never concedes anything without a demand.” If we
want justice, we have to demand it – it will not come by itself.
As you know, there was progress a few years ago. Between 1999
and 2005, Commissions of Inquiry established by the United
Nations, Indonesia and Timor-Leste recognized the international
nature of the huge crimes committed here and called for the
prosecution of those who perpetrated them. During UNTAET, the UN
Serious Crimes Unit indicted nearly 400 people for crimes
committed during 1999, bringing 87 to trial and convicting 84.
But everyone brought to trial was Timorese, and none of them are
still in prison. None of the people who murdered Santa Cruz
protesters twenty years ago were Timorese.
Although the UN, other Governments, and some Timorese politicians prioritize diplomatic relations with formerly hostile nearby Governments over justice, and although some say economic development is more important than accountability, there is no need to choose. |
A larger problem is the 300 people indicted by the SCU who have
never been arrested because Indonesia is sheltering them. And
even more fundamental, no action has been taken against those
who directed and executed the 99% of occupation-related crimes
committed during its first 23 years. Those perpetrators were
carrying out criminal policies of the Suharto dictatorship, and
most of them were soldiers following orders from Jakarta,
shooting guns made in the United States, flying bombers from
Britain or the U.S., getting political support from Australia or
Malaysia or France.
The United Nations says there must never be impunity for Crimes
Against Humanity. In 2002, nations from all over the world
established the International Criminal Court to try such crimes
when national processes are unwilling or unable to – but
unfortunately it has no power to judge crimes committed before
the court was set up. In 2005, this global consensus was
reflected by a UN Commission of Experts, who concluded that an
international tribunal should be created if judicial processes
in Indonesia and Timor-Leste fail to achieve justice for crimes
committed during Indonesia’s occupation of Timor-Leste. But
today, the UN runs away – they and the other responsible
governments and agencies say that Timor-Leste’s Government has
the responsibility but not the will to end impunity.
For some of us – Timorese and foreigners – the struggle is not
over. We draw courage from people like Argentinian justice
activist Patricia Isasa, who visited here last month. She
campaigned for 33 years before her torturers and kidnappers were
finally sent to prison.
Here, our justice campaign is only 12 years old. Although the
UN, other Governments, and some Timorese politicians prioritize
diplomatic relations with formerly hostile nearby Governments
over justice, and although some say economic development is more
important than accountability, there is no need to choose.
Relations between democratic states can go well even while
criminals are brought to justice. People’s economic lives –
including victims of past crimes -- can improve at the same time
that masterminds of those crimes are brought to court. There is
no need to choose among economic, social and criminal justice.
We, citizens of countries from around the world who support
Timor-Leste’s people, will continue to demand that our
governments and the United Nations keep their promises that
impunity can never be accepted.
Today, ETAN issued a press
release calling
“for the U.S. and other governments and the United Nations to
commit to justice for the victims and their families. The 1991
massacre was a major turning point in Timor-Leste’s struggle for
liberation. When we saw and heard about the Indonesian military
shooting down hundreds of peaceful, unarmed student protesters,
we knew we had to do something to stop the killing. The Santa
Cruz massacre inspired many around the world to work for justice
for the East Timorese people.”
Earlier this week former General Taur Matan Ruak said “Justisa
sei iha” (there will be justice). President Jose Ramos-Horta
hopes that a courageous, young Indonesian prosecutor may bring
high-level criminals to court five or ten years from now.
But it will never happen if we don’t continue to demand it.
People in Timor-Leste, together with our friends in Indonesia,
the United States and around the world, should see today’s
anniversary as an opportunity – and a challenge – to renew our
commitment to struggle for justice. Since neither the Indonesian
nor Timor-Leste governments are yet ready to end impunity, it is
up to us.
Obrigado. A luta continua!