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JAKARTA (JP): Foreign minister Alwi Shihab said on Tuesday Indonesia would not
allow its generals to be tried overseas.

Responding to concerns from legislators that top military officers may be
subject to international humiliation and trial abroad, Alwi said the
government was doing its utmost to see that it would not happen.

"We will try not to deliver the generals to an international tribunal," he
said during a hearing with the House's Commission I on defense and foreign affairs.

The government would lobby various parties to ensure that an international
tribunal is not convened. He pointed to a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright as one example.

Alwi said he also did not wish to see Indonesia's generals hounded like
criminals abroad.

"We don't want generals unable to travel overseas and be arrested like
Pinochet," he said, referring to the former Chilean ruler who was arrested in
England during a visit.

Indonesia has rejected the idea of an international tribunal on East Timor and
contended it can properly investigate and try those responsible for violence
in its former province by itself.

Jakarta has set up its own inquiry headed by lawyer Albert Hasibuan. In its
midterm report the inquiry said Indonesian Military officials knew of the
abuses going on.

The Indonesian and United Nations's inquiry team, headed by Costa Rican Sonia
Picado, met on Monday to compare notes and both agreed on the involvement of
certain military officials in the violence.

Separately, Indonesian Defense Minister Juwono Sudarsono said on Tuesday he
would not interfere with a judicial process on human rights violations in East
Timor as long as fairness and impartiality could be guaranteed.

He said international accusations of rights violations must be first proven
through a legal process.

"There has to be a clear process of evidence -- not just based on reported
media developments, including news from foreign countries, which has tremendous
influence on public opinion," he said.

Juwono underlined it was the Indonesian team which "should be accepted to lead
the agency in the inquiry rather than the reverse".

"That is linked to our economic interests because I believe that the degree of
credibility in the findings... will be sufficiently adequate to enable the UN
Security Council and secretary-general to decide on what level of punishment
would be adequate to address to Indonesia," Juwono said, adding that he had
met Picado on Monday. (jun/mds)

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Didistribusikan tgl. 8 Dec 1999 jam 10:18:54 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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