Scapegoating common enemies

Comment on INFID Newsletter "UN Reform, the USA, and Our Position" by 
Ivan al Hadar


With great interest I noticed the latest special edition of the INFID 
newsletter. In his lead article titled "UN Reform, the USA, and Our 
Position" the director of this big international network of NGOs 
concerned with Indonesia (INFID stands for International NGO Forum on 
Indonesian Development) deals at some length with the need to reform the 
UN. In particular, he mentions the UN Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) as 
an outstanding example, claiming that "aside from the problem of 
international security, the UN is expected to play a bigger role in the 
advancement of HR. This is because, recently, the UN HR Commission that 
is based in Geneva, Swiss is increasingly losing its relevance. The 
countries accused of violating human rights are mutually protecting one 
another to avoid being reprimanded by the commission. At present, the UN 
HR Commission is composed of 53 countries that are selected based on 
their regional extent. Last year, the expert team formed by the UN 
General Secretary, Kofi Annan, reported that the integrity and authority 
of the commission declined, many of the countries are perpetrators and 
because of this, they tend to become mute against HR violations. These 
countries formed an alliance to avoid being reprimanded by the UN on HR 
violations." A rather correct evaluation of the deficiencies observed at 
the UNHRC.

The author then continues with accusations against unilateralism, double 
standards and human rights violations perpetrated by the United States 
in Guantanamo. Nothing wrong with that. One could mention even more 
examples of severe human rights violations perpetrated by the US, a.o. 
in Iraq (Abu Ghraib etc.).

But wouldn't people expect a leading NGO network critical on Indonesia 
primarily to deal with the human right situation and double standards in 
exactly that country, rather than putting the finger on the common enemy 
named "the ugly American"? The points being criticized by INFID's 
director can be read in hundreds and thousands of contributions all over 
the world, including mainstream US media. The special contribution being 
expected by an NGO network from Indonesia would be a critical approach 
towards Indonesia's own behaviour in these matters. If the author 
criticizes the performance of the UNHRC, shouldn't he at least mention 
that this year his own country, Indonesia, is chairing the Commission?

The gross violations of human rights perpetrated in East Timor in 1999 
by pro-Indonesian militias supervised and supported by the Indonesian 
military have been on the agenda of the UN Commission on Human Rights 
(UNCHR) more than once. In Article 16 of the Security Council Resolution 
1272 (1999) of October 25, 1999 1, which established the mandate of 
UNTAET (United Nations Transitional Administration for East Timor), the 
Security Council requested that the persons responsible for the 
atrocities should be brought to justice. Immediately after the blood 
bath in September 1999 the UNCHR held a special session - the fourth in 
the history of the Commission - and adopted a resolution requesting the 
Secretary General (SG) to establish an International Commission of 
Inquiry. This Commission recommended that the extensive violence merits 
the establishment of an international tribunal.

Repeatedly, the Government of Indonesia has committed itself, vis-à-vis 
the UNCHR, to bring those responsible to justice. In the meantime, in 
almost all the cases, which had been brought before the ad hoc Human 
Rights Court in Jakarta (involving a total of only 18 defendants), a 
final verdict has been issued. Of the six defendants who had been 
convicted, only the former Governor of East Timor, Abilio Soares, had to 
spend a few weeks in prison, before the Supreme Court overturned his 
sentence and he himself was acquitted. The 10- year prison term handed 
down to the militia leader Eurico Guterres has already been halved; his 
trial is the only one still continuing, whereby, pending appeal, 
Guterres remains free. Major General Adam Damiri, the highest-ranking 
Indonesian military officer among the defendants, was sentenced to three 
years in prison after his trial in the court of first instance; his 
conviction has also been overturned, with the court of last instance 
stipulating his acquittal. The fact that some of the accused were 
actually convicted is attributable to the courage and competence of a 
handful of judges who applied the law despite the obvious lack of 
strategy on part of the prosecution. Next to the low turnout of 
convictions, the judgments of the Jakarta Court do not reflect the 
actual nature of the crimes committed and the responsibility of the 
military. The crimes are portrayed as being part of spontaneously 
erupted violence between two rival groups of society in East Timor. The 
de facto control of the TNI over the militias was not addressed during 
the trials.

The Prosecution failed to indict some of the most prominent suspects 
such as General Wiranto, former Minister of Defence and 
Commander-in-Chief of the Indonesian Armed Forces (Tentara Nasional 
Indonesia), and Joao Tavares, the former Commander-in-Chief of the militias.

In an Aide Memoire presented to the German delegation at the UNCHR, 
Watch Indonesia! concluded in January 2005: "This culture of impunity, 
of which this case is a powerful illustration, is not only a serious 
violation of human rights. By acquiescing to such blatant disregard for 
decisions of the Security Council and recommendations of the UNCHR, the 
credibility of the UN itself is also at stake."

The director of INFID mentions the UN Secretary General's efforts to 
form a Commission of Experts to evaluate the UNHCHR. However, another 
Commission of Experts formed by the Secretary Genaral, i.e. an expert 
commission to "Review the Prosecution of Serious Violations of Human 
Rights in Timor-Leste (the then East Timor) in 1999" remains unmentioned 
by the author.

In a joint letter Watch Inonesia! and a couple of other international 
organisations wrote: "Based on the experts' report and on our own 
experience, it is impossible not to conclude that the main factor behind 
the limited progress in bringing to justice those most responsible for 
the atrocities committed in East Timor in 1999 is the intransigence of 
the Indonesian authorities in the face of their international legal 
obligations. The United Nations decided in 2000 not to establish an 
international tribunal to try the crimes committed because it hoped that 
Indonesia would comply with its obligation to punish those responsible. 
That hope was betrayed and in fact Indonesia's lack of cooperation 
undermined the ability of the Serious Crimes Unit to secure the custody 
of more than 75% of the persons it indicted, including those most 
responsible for orchestrating the international crimes that took place 
in 1999. The sham trials conducted in Jakarta before the ad hoc Court of 
Human Rights have not resulted in a single perpetrator serving a sentence."

I'm very puzzled to read a lot of well-based America-bashing, but not a 
single word on Indonesia in our director's contribution.

Alex Flor
Watch Indonesia!
Board Member of INFID


Please visit http://home.snafu.de/watchin for more information.

-----

http://www.infid.org/news_letter_c.php?id=21&newslet=September%202005%20Special%20Edition
(currently down when tested, AF)

UN Reform, the USA, and Our Position

Ivan Hadar*)

AFTER World War II, the initiators for the establishment of the UN 
agreed to "Free humanity from being a hostage of war wherein within a 
short period of time has twice brought great misery to humanity." Such 
is the first sentence of the UN Charter that was agreed in the 
conference in San Francisco on June 1945, a logical consequence after 
the great destruction on life, property, and culture as a consequence of 
the war. The irony here is that, six weeks after the said UN agreement 
was signed, the US dropped an atom bomb in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Now, there is a broad agreement that the UN should be reformed. UN 
General Secretary, Kofi Annan, proposed a comprehensive reformation 
package that concerns 3 main pillars, namely; freedom from want, freedom 
from fear, and freedom to live with dignity. This proposed comprehensive 
reformation is closely related to the structure and mechanism of the UN 
that are no longer in accordance with the reality of global politics at 
present. The problems that beset the UN, apart from being many, they are 
also complex, for example, what is the attitude of the UN on the 
unilateralism challenge of the US, and the conglomeration of different 
special and extra organizations of the UN that is getting bigger and a 
problem itself? Including the effectiveness of the UN in mobilizing - 
and, if necessary "forcing" - the majority of its members to prioritize 
the security of peace, strengthen HR, reduce poverty, and protect global 
environment.

The UN Security Council that is only composed of 5 member countries has 
clearly denied the constellation of world power in the 21st century. 
More than this, the new SC should immediately proposed a policy to 
oppose the unilateralism of any country while allow the use of power of 
UN troops in genocide cases. Aside from the problem of international 
security, the UN is expected to play a bigger role in the advancement of 
HR. This is because, recently, the UN HR Commission that is based in 
Geneva, Swiss is increasingly losing its relevance. The countries 
accused of violating human rights are mutually protecting one another to 
avoid being reprimanded by the commission.

At present, the UN HR Commission is composed of 53 countries that are 
selected based on their regional extent. Last year, the expert team 
formed by the UN General Secretary, Kofi Annan, reported that the 
integrity and authority of the commission declined, many of the 
countries are perpetrators and because of this, they tend to become mute 
against HR violations. These countries formed an alliance to avoid being 
reprimanded by the UN on HR violations.

Many parties are demanding that in the future, the regimes that have 
structurally committed human rights violations should no longer occupy a 
seat in the commission. In the future, according to the Head of Staff of 
the UN General Secretariat, Mark Malloch Brown, this commission should 
only be composed of member countries that respect human rights; only the 
people who favour and originated from countries that respect human 
rights should have the opportunity to occupy a seat in this commission.

This is based on the analysis of various international HR institutions. 
One of the problems of the commission is that many of its member 
countries are not acting according to the objectives of the commission; 
they are actually undermining all serious initiatives to advance human 
rights according to Kenneth Roth, Director, Human Rights Watch. 
Actually, with its majority vote, the commission can decide to specially 
observe the country that is strongly suspected of committing gross and 
largescale human rights violations. This happened to Afghanistan, 
Burundi, Belarus, Cambodia, Cuba, Haiti, Liberia, North Korea, Myanmar, 
Somalia, Sudan, and Uzbekistan. If gross human rights violations 
occurred, the commission will reprimand the concerned country. Some 
countries are not happy if they are openly reprimanded while most of the 
countries that are reprimanded feel that they don't have to react.

Several HR organizations are also pushing for an action against the US 
because of its bad behaviour towards those who are accused of committing 
acts of terror in the prison of Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. According to 
Kenneth Roth, "It is true that America is not the worst human rights 
violator, but it is clear that it she is the most influential. The 
systematic torturing of the prisoners in Guantánamo is a bad example and 
it undermines the norms that they actually want to maintain. Other 
countries will certainly point out that the UN HR Commission is 
following a double standard is America is not reprimanded".

Come mid-September, around 170 head of states are planning to attend the 
World Millennium Summit +5. They will discuss the result of the 
ambitious agreements and promises they made five years ago. However, it 
is possible that the main obstacle to the reformation of the UN that is 
one of the factors for the attainment of the agreement on the Millennium 
Development Goals (MDGs) is the US. The proposal of the US on the 
reformation package of the UN that was submitted during the last minute 
threatens the agreements on the MDGs that were already agreed by the 
head of states of the world five years ago. This rejection is very 
strong in connection to the target that was determined to rich 
countries, which is, to contribute at least 0.7 percent of their GDP to 
developing countries, at the latest, on 2015. In 2004, the US only 
donated 0.16 percent of her GNP to international assistance. Aside from 
this, the US also proposed the elimination of the point concerning the 
call to all the citizens of the world to immediately act to solve global 
warming. It is clear that the document on the proposed changes submitted 
by the US is merely based on the interest of the US.

About five decades ago, a romance book written by Lederer and Burdick 
entitled "The Ugly American" was published. This book that immediately 
became a bestseller attempted to explain to the citizens of the United 
States of America the bad image of their country. This is because, they 
say that, everywhere, the US is spreading the American way of life and 
the domination of her economy without considering that other countries 
have values that are different and they also want a way of life that is 
also different. In one of the campaigns for the election of the 
President of the US, the said romance was raised by one of the 
presidential candidates, he said that, "If we do not want to be 
considered as "ugly Americans" again, we should stop telling the world: 
"We did this and you should also do this." Apparently, that candidate 
called George W. Bush is already enlightened. However, after being 
elected as President, all these were forgotten. All the countries in the 
world should not only follow the US model; their struggle should also be 
the same with the US; those who do not agree with the attitude of the US 
towards her war against terrorists are automatically considered as 
opponents. As a whole, the attitude of the UN towards the "challenge of 
the US" is the most important factor in terms of the credibility of this 
institution of countries.

Going back to our beloved country, what is our contribution to the 
reformation of the UN? Apparently, although Indonesia is a big country 
in terms of population and land area, our role is hardly visible. More 
seldom than not, Indonesia is even trapped in a dilemma. When we were 
supported by the "block" of China so that we can be a non-permanent 
member of the UN SC for example, Indonesia was anxious that she will be 
"against" the US. The statement of the government is often normative or 
defensive. The issue of the reformation of the UN SC has obscured the 
other important issues related to the reformation of the UN. 
Unfortunately, the attitude of Indonesia government to the three main 
pillars of the reformation of the UN that requires the attainment of the 
MDGs on the time is not yet clear.

*) Executive Director, INFID (International NGO Forum on Indonesian 
Development)

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