http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25931566-601,00.html

Balibo probe stalls over exhumation
Caroline Overington | August 15, 2009 

Article from:  The Australian 
A FEDERAL police probe into the death of five newsmen in Balibo in 1975 has 
stalled due to a dispute between the families over whether the remains of the 
bodies, which are buried in a single grave, should be exhumed and examined for 
forensic evidence.

The dispute means it is unlikely that Indonesian military officers, including 
one who later became an MP, will face a potentially explosive and 
diplomatically damaging war crimes trial, as recommended by a Sydney coroner in 
2007. 

Coroner Dorelle Pinch found that the five reporters, working for the Seven and 
Nine networks, were killed in order to cover up Indonesia's impending invasion 
of East Timor. She said the Balibo Five were unarmed, had surrendered, and were 
dressed in civilian clothes when they were shot and bayoneted, and their bodies 
set alight. 

The coroner referred the matter last year to Attorney-General Robert 
McClelland, who in January passed the file to the federal police. They now say 
they are unable to collect the forensic evidence because the families are 
divided over whether the single grave should be exhumed. 

Anne Stewart, sister of Tony Stewart, the Channel Seven sound recordist 
formerly of North Caulfield, and her mother, June, are reluctant to have the 
grave exhumed. 

Ms Stewart told The Weekend Australian yesterday that the Department of Foreign 
Affairs had reduced her "big beautiful brother to a pile of gruesome DNA". 

"They wrote us a letter, telling us what would need to happen if the bodies 
were to be exhumed," she said. 

"They said Indonesia would have to agree, and there might be issues, because 
what if all five aren't in there. 

"They said there would have to be some bone that DNA could be extracted from. 
It was all pretty gruesome. 

"We had a meeting with the other families about it, and there are different 
views, with some saying they want the bodies, but the problem is, nobody is 
helping to bring us together. 

"If it was up to me, I'd rather have courses in democracy than a (war crimes) 
trial." 

John Milkins Cunningham, the biological son of camerman Gary Cunningham, 
believes the Rudd government is using the dispute between the families to 
defend itself from criticism that it has not confronted Indonesia over the 
bloody 1975 invasion of East Timor. 

He said the strategy appeared to be one of "divide and conquer the families" to 
stall the official probe. The Attorney-General's office said the decision to 
formally investigate the matter was "taken by the AFP entirely independent of 
government". 

"The investigation of war crimes is complex, particularly in circumstances 
where there has been a considerable lapse of time and surviving witnesses are 
located overseas," an office spokesman said. 

"Ultimately, decisions in relation to the commencement of any prosecution are 
for the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, again acting 
independently of government." 

When the coroner said in 2007 that the evidence suggested that Captain Yunus 
Yosfiah, now 65, and a former Indonesian parliamentarian and minister, could 
face charges, Kevin Rudd, then the opposition leader, said: "I believe this has 
to be taken through to its logical conclusion. I also believe those responsible 
should be held to account. You can't just sweep this to one side." 

Mr Milkins Cunningham said the invasion of Timor and the death of the Balibo 
Five was a "stain on the Whitlam government's copybook that Rudd had an 
opportunity to erase". 

Australia's leading historian on East Timor, Clinton Fernandes, consulting 
historian on the new film Balibo, said there was unlikely to be anything of 
forensic value in the box of cindered remains. "It was a shoebox, with the 
bones reduced to ash," Dr Fernandes said. "They don't need that box to bring 
the matter forward. There are plenty of witnesses, who testified at the 
coronial inquest, who would be prepared to testify again." 

The role played by the Whitlam government when Indonesia invaded East Timor has 
been the subject of new attention since the release of Balibo. Indonesia 
dismissed the film as fiction.

Kirim email ke