http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailheadlines.asp?fileid=20070503.A06&irec=5 

 FRANZ MAGNIS SUSENO JP/P.J. Leo 

 

Timor Leste, Indonesia and moral complexities 


Franz Magnis-Suseno SJ, Jakarta

On Tuesday, Aboeprijadi Santoso exposed the moral hypocrisy surrounding the 
ongoing hearings of the Joint Indonesia-Timor Leste Commission for Truth and 
Friendship (CTF). The facts he alluded to are above dispute. And his moral 
outrage seems only too appropriate. The writer concludes that "real friendship 
should not be based on lies to cover the truth and perpetuate the impunity".

But is it really that easy? When Indonesia and Timor Leste jointly established 
the CTF they certainly did it not merely for the sake of truth and friendship, 
but because of serious political considerations. And rightly so. Because, as 
the German philosopher Bernhard Sutor points out, the ethical quality of a 
political decision is not measured by pure moral principles, but by the 
improvement that realistically can be hoped to be achieved by it. 

Both Indonesia's and Timor Leste's leaders recognized that the most important 
task they faced was not retribution for the terrible crimes committed by 
Indonesia from 1975 to 1999, but the establishment of normal, enduring, 
positive relations between the two countries. 

East-Timorese leaders obviously realized what some morally outraged foreigners 
overlooked: That the cessation of Timor Leste was a traumatic event not only 
for Timor Leste, but also for Indonesia. For 24 years Indonesians had fought in 
East Timor "for the sake of the nation". The families of many thousand of 
fallen soldiers consoled themselves with the idea that they died for a noble 
cause. President B.J. Habibie's courageous, but completely unexpected offer of 
a referendum on independence for the East-Timorese took Indonesians, and of 
course the military, completely by surprise. 

The result of the referendum shamed Indonesia severely. Additional shaming by 
exposing the crimes of Indonesia's military openly before the eyes of the world 
would have alienated it from Timor Leste for a long time and could have even 
resulted in a violent backlash (I remember a Balinese taxi driver telling me 
enthusiastically in September 1999 that he was ready to go to war against 
Australia). 

On afterthought one wonders why the military did not use their East Timorese 
militias to sabotage the referendum, which would have been easy enough. Did 
they really believe that the East-Timorese would not vote for independence? 
Were they actually prepared to obey their president, although grudgingly and 
vengefully? 

In fact, the execution of the referendum was not significantly obstructed. 
There were, in 1999, two waves of special violence, first in April and then the 
mayhem following the (premature) publication of the results of the referendum. 
Both seem to have been more the expression of fury and resentment (the 
dangerous mental state Indonesians call keki or dendam) than acts of 
insubordination. 

I remember an East Timorese militia chief, I believe it was Enrico Guterres, 
saying on television about a week before the referendum, that, should a 
majority vote for independence, he would make sure that nothing of what was 
built during Indonesia's reign would remain standing. And this they did. The 
murderous devastation of large parts of Timor Leste was indeed an expression of 
the deep resentment felt by the Indonesian military. 

But there is a point that has been completely ignored by the international 
community that is chastising Indonesia for dragging its feet on bringing the 
perpetrators of the post-referendum havoc to justice. Namely that since the 
Indonesian pull-out in 1999 there has been not a single serious instance of 
Indonesia or its military trying to make trouble for their eastern neighbor. 

It would have been so easy. Remember how in 1975 Indonesia used a bloody, 
vicious civil war among the East Timorese -- tens of thousand East Timorese had 
fled into Indonesian territory -- for intervention? Less than eight years after 
becoming free from Indonesia there are, at this very moment, more than 20,000 
East-Timorese living in refugee camps -- who, again, had to flee from their own 
brethren. 

The acceptance of Timor Leste's independence after 1999, and the fact that 
Indonesia, including "black" Indonesian military, did not try to use Timor 
Leste's growing internal troubles to avenge themselves and to destabilize the 
country is a remarkable feat of responsibility. 

The leaders of Timor Leste recognized this fact as of highest political 
importance for their country. They understood that the only thing absolutely 
not to do was make Indonesia, or Indonesia's military, or some of its most 
important members, lose face again. 

Therefore they agreed to setting up the CTF in the present form. Lamenting the 
limited scope of the commission in the name of justice while overlooking the 
extremely delicate situation Indonesia and Timor Leste find themselves for me 
smacks of all too easy self-righteousness. Time is not yet right to open up all 
the abysses of inhumanity left behind by the Indonesian occupation of Timor 
Leste. 

Coming to terms with the full truth of one's own history always needs time. 
Indonesia has not yet been able to face the full truth regarding of the 
happenings in 1965 and 1966, in 1998 (the Jakarta riots with the same number of 
deaths during three days as in Timor Leste in September 1999) and many other 
occasions. But this is in no way a privilege of Indonesia. 

The Japanese still have not been able to acknowledge the terrible crimes they 
committed between 1930 and 1945 in East and Southeast Asia. The Chinese are 
silent on the abnormal degree of inhumanity under Mao-Zedong. In Cambodia the 
Khmer Rouge will probably never be brought to justice for their genocide on 
their own people. 

Even in France, the people and government are still reluctant, more than 60 
years after the fact, to acknowledge that many French willingly surrendered 
French Jews to the Germans. And Czechs and Poles -- who, indeed, suffered 
terribly under Nazi Germany -- are still not willing to acknowledge that, after 
the World War II, they committed atrocities during the expulsion of many 
millions of Germans. 

Thus, the CTF may fall short of the demands of some moralists, but under 
prevailing conditions it is probably the maximum that could be achieved. By 
helping Indonesians to accept Timor Leste's existence it does both countries a 
real service. 

The author, a Jesuit priest, is a professor at the Driyarkara School of 
Philosophy in Jakarta


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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