ETAN Renews Call for Meaningful Justice for Victims of Indonesian Occupation

International Tribunal Needed in Wake of 
Commission of Truth and Friendship Report

Contact: John M. Miller, National Coordinator, +1/718-596-7668; +1/917-690-4391

July 14 - The new report of the Commission of 
Truth and Friendship (CTF) does little to advance 
accountability for the many crimes against 
humanity committed by Indonesia in Timor-Leste, 
the U.S.-based East Timor and Indonesia Action 
Network (ETAN) said today. The report, Per 
Memoriam Ad Spem (From Memory to Hope), is 
scheduled to be handed to the presidents of 
Indonesia and Timor-Leste in Bali on Tuesday.

“Impunity continues for Indonesian perpetrators 
of the countless crimes against humanity in 
Timor-Leste. The CTF report makes no progress 
toward achieving justice for the thousands of 
victims and their families,” said John M. Miller, National Coordinator of ETAN.

“The Commission was restricted to looking at 
1999, the final year of Indonesia’s illegal 
24-year occupation. Even within that limited 
period, the Commission was prohibited from naming 
individuals who committed crimes or recommending 
ways to bring them to justice,” added Miller.

“We are encouraged that the Commission 
acknowledged the institutional responsibility of 
the Indonesian state and its security forces, and 
that it refused to recommend amnesties or find 
credible the self-serving testimony by former 
Indonesian generals.” said Miller. “The advance 
copy we have seen is better than many had feared, 
but must not be the final word.”

"Establishing and admitting institutional 
responsibility is important, but the repressive 
policies in Timor-Leste in 1999 were directed and 
carried out by individuals," said Miller. "An 
international criminal tribunal would be the most 
effective means to bring those individuals to 
justice. It would send a clear message to those 
who might consider or conduct such crimes in the 
future. We urge the UN Security Council to create one," he added.

“The CTF report insists on a false 
even-handedness between violations by 
pro-Indonesia and pro-independence forces, and a 
dishonest equivalence between people struggling 
for their legal right to self-determination and 
those enforcing an illegal foreign military 
occupation. It is clearly a political document, 
resulting from compromises between Indonesian and 
Timor-Leste Commissioners, rather than a 
definitive, objective statement of events,” Miller said.

"The CTF report proposes some reforms in 
Indonesia. For years, the Indonesian government 
has promised to implement many of them. 
Unfortunately, this reform effort reform has been 
stalled by opposition from a still-powerful military," added Miller.

Several of the generals -- including Presidential 
candidate Wiranto who headed the Indonesian armed 
forces during 1999 and was indicted for crimes 
against humanity in Timor-Leste, have rejected 
the report's findings of institutional responsibility.

Miller urged that the two governments “quickly 
release the report to the public, so all can 
fully evaluate its merits and 
recommendations.  Friendship between government 
officials must not be allowed to pre-empt justice 
for perpetrators and reparations to their victims.”

"Indonesia, Timor-Leste, and the UN have produced 
several official reports on the atrocities of 
1999, some of which underlie the CTF report. 
Names have been named, indictments issued, and 
some trials held, albeit of low-level 
perpetrators (by the UN) or without serious 
intention (by Indonesia). Nine years after 
Indonesian soldiers and the militia proxies they 
commanded ravaged Timor-Leste, senior Indonesian 
officials in charge of those events enjoy 
promotions, active political careers or cozy 
retirement," said Miller. "Failure to bring these 
people to justice continues to undermine human 
rights and the rule of law in both countries."

”The CTF’s report is more credible than we 
expected, although its findings confirm much of 
what past reports had long ago concluded, 
especially that Indonesian military, police and 
government controlled the anti-independence 
militia, as well as directly engaging in the 
violence and destruction against the overwhelming 
majority of the Timor-Leste population who 
supported independence,” said Miller. “However, 
the report makes some highly problematical assertions."

“We cannot accept that the CTF’s conclusion that 
the atrocities of 1999 were caused by low-level 
Indonesian soldiers failing to follow 
recently-instituted policies to respect human 
rights. The campaign of violent intimidation was 
so well-planned and pervasive that there must 
have been orders for crimes against humanity 
passed down the chain of command. The events of 
1999 were a direct out-growth of the preceding 23 
years of Jakarta’s brutal military occupation,” said Miller.

“The CTF report attempts to artificially balance 
the massive crimes by Indonesian forces with 
accusations of a small number of human rights 
violations (mainly illegal detention) by 
pro-independence supporters. Most observers at 
the time praised the pro-independence side for 
its restraint in the face of intense provocation. 
It is disingenuous to assign responsibility to 
the current government of Timor-Leste for a few 
actions contrary to resistance movement policy."

BACKGROUND

Indonesia invaded neighboring Timor-Leste in 
December 1975 in an unprovoked act of military 
aggression. The ensuing 24-year occupation, which 
killed more than 100,000 Timorese civilians, was 
never recognized by the United Nations. When the 
East Timorese were finally allowed to express 
their views through a UN-conducted referendum in 
1999, nearly 80% voted for independence. Both 
before and after the referendum, Indonesian 
military and police forces, aided by Timorese 
militia they created and directed, created an 
atmosphere of terror in Timor-Leste, finally 
laying waste to the entire country. In the 
occupation’s final year, Indonesian forces and 
their militia proxies murdered more than 1,400 
people, forcibly displaced hundreds of thousands, 
and burned or destroyed 75% of Timor-Leste’s buildings and infrastructure.

In late 2004, the presidents of Indonesia and 
Timor-Leste proposed a bi-national Commission of 
Truth and Friendship to try to dissuade UN 
Secretary-General Kofi Annan from appointing the 
Commission of Experts (COE). Nevertheless, the UN 
established the COE, whose June 2005 report 
documented the inadequacy of efforts to achieve 
justice for crimes against humanity committed in 
1999. The COE reiterated other official and 
unofficial reports by recommending that an 
international criminal tribunal be created within 
six months if Indonesia fails “to ensure that 
accountability is secured for those responsible 
for grave human rights violations and human suffering on a massive scale….”

The CTF was mandated to establish "the shared 
historical record of the reported human rights 
violations that took place in the period leading 
up to and immediately following the popular 
consultation in Timor-Leste in August 1999" to 
bring "definitive closure of the issues of the 
past." However, its mandate prohibited the 
commission from recommending prosecution of 
individuals or any judicial processes. (The 
commission says it did not recommend any 
amnesties because no alleged perpetrators told 
the complete truth or cooperated fully with the 
commission. It also stated that its “conclusions 
do not represent the end of a process of closure 
and reconciliation, but rather a beginning.”)

The UN considered that the commission’s mandate 
to grant amnesties violated international norms 
against impunity and declined to cooperate with 
it. In addition, the Timor-Leste Catholic Church 
and other civil society organizations in both 
countries objected to the CTF, expecting it to 
undermine and delay efforts at justice and accountability.

The CTF took testimony from many powerful people 
in private sessions, and Timor-Leste victims who 
testified in public were harassed. Indonesia 
refused to allow the CTF to access security 
forces' files. Although only about 1% of the 
murders and massacres during Indonesia’s illegal 
occupation occurred in 1999, the commission could only look at that year.

This past June, an international coalition of 
more than 90 human rights and other organizations 
wrote the United Nations Secretary-General that 
the CTF report "must not stand as the last word." 
The groups urged Ban Ki-Moon "to work to 
establish a meaningful legal process to try those 
responsible for crimes against humanity, war 
crimes and other serious crimes committed by 
Indonesian forces during the occupation of Timor-Leste."

In early 2000, the Indonesian government’s 
Commission of Inquiry into Human Rights Abuses in 
East Timor (KPP HAM), working with fewer 
resources and less time than the CTF, recommended 
a number of individuals for investigation and 
prosecution.  Beginning soon after Indonesia’s 
withdrawal, experts working on behalf of the UN 
Human Rights Commission, the UN High Commissioner 
for Human Rights and the UN Secretary-General 
have produced several highly credible reports on 
the events of 1999. Timor-Leste's independent 
Commission for Reception, Truth and 
Reconciliation (CAVR) produced a 2,500 page 
comprehensive report on the context and details 
of human rights violations from 1974 to 1999. 
Although a UN-supported Serious Crimes Process 
indicted nearly 400 people for 1999 crimes in 
Timor-Leste, more than 70% of them, including 
General Wiranto and other high-ranking Indonesian 
military officials, enjoy sanctuary in Indonesia.

ETAN advocates for democracy, justice and human 
rights for Timor-Leste (East Timor) and 
Indonesia. For additional background, see <http://www.etan.org>www.etan.org.

http://www.etan.org/news/2008/07ctf.htm

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John M. Miller         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
East Timor and Indonesia Action Network

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