Dili, Timor Leste
Press Release
regarding
A refutation for Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Jose Ramos
Horta:
Victims Wish for An International Tribunal
Indonesian medias reported that during the preliminary meeting of
the Commission for Truth and Friendship in Bali, August 4, 2005, the
Timorese foreign minister Dr. Jose Ramos Horta stated that the
victims of crimes against humanity in Timor Leste do not wish for an
international tribunal and do not press for compensation, what they
wish for is to know what actually happened.
If it is true that the foreign minister made such statement, we
believe that such statement is against the reality. During the
meeting with the Commission of Experts, formed by the UN Secretary
General to evaluate the crimes against humanity judicial process,
the families and representatives of victims from all across Timor
Leste had stated that they are demanding an international tribunal.
The said that the courts held in Indonesia cannot be trusted because
it was but a charade to protect the people responsible for those
crimes. On the other hand, the courts held in Timor Leste by the
Special Panel of Dili District Court cannot be depended on to
dispense justice because of lack of resources and cannot reach the
people responsible who live in Indonesia.
A few years before, during the farewell visit to Timor Leste in
2002 of the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights, Mary Robinson, the
families of victims and survivors met in various places stated their
demand that justice be served through an international tribunal.
Hence, at the end of her visit, Mary Robinson said, “In all the
places I visited, I have seen that the people of Timor Leste wish
for justice. I hope that the leaders of Timor Leste would hear this
wish and take the same position.”
We do not understand the foundation of the statement of our
foreign minister. We wish to ask, “Where did the foreign minister
conduct his consultation with the survivors and their family?”
It is true that there is no referendum to determine whether the
people wish for an international tribunal or not, but various voices
from various parties within the community assured us that an
international criminal court is the only hope for the victims to
achieve justice. The same opinion was also voiced during the many
sessions of Audiensia Publike, held by the Commission of Acceptance,
Truth and Reconcilliation. The same opinion was also voiced by the
Timor Leste Catholic Church. In April, the Bishop of Dili Dom
Ricardo and Bacau Bishop Dom Basilio do Nascimento sent a joint
statement to the UN Commission of Experts, to ask for the creation
of an international tribunal for crimes against humanity and other
war crimes in Timor Leste from 1975 to 1999.
The opinion that the victims and their families do now want an
international tribunal is only a new excuse from a number of
political leaders in Timor Leste, especially the Minister of Foreign
Affairs Dr. Jose Ramos Horta and President Kayrala Xanana Gusmao, to
support their own opinion that Timor Leste does not need an
international tribunal. Previously, the excuse was that Timor Leste
needs an economic development, while the cost of an international
tribunal is high and Timor Leste simply could not afford it. This is
a baseless excuse. Timor Leste is not the one who would form and
fund international criminal court because the crimes committed were
violations of international law, and as such, the one who is
reponsible to create it and fund it is the United Nations.
Another excuse thrown said that justice had already been gotten
by Timor Leste, that is the independence. This is also a baseless
excuse. Timor Leste was struggling for its independence from
Portugal when Indonesia invaded and subsequently occupied the
country and hence prevented the process – such invasion was
obviously a violation of international law. Since the people were
still commited to their struggle for their rightful independence,
the Indonesian military committed varrious cruelties to stop it –
which is also a violation of international law. So it is natural
that a tribunal should be held for both crimes, to hold the people
responsible for the invasion, the occupation, and other subsequent
serious crimes against humanity accountable. It is the only way to
ensure justice. Justice cannot be traded with economic development,
much less a sort of “compensation” for the victims.
To state that an international tribunal is not needed by the
people of Timor Leste is against the Timor Leste 2002 Constitution.
The Constitution created by the democratically elected
representatives is a reflection of the wish of all the people of
Timor Leste. Particularly, article 160 of the Constitution stated
that for serious crimes committed during 1975 – 1999 must be
resolved through a tribunal, national or international. Finding the
truth is needed, by finding the truth does not automatically
constitute justice. It is only a part that helps complete the
process to achieve justice.
It is ironic that Timor Leste, which for almost a quarter of a
century was victimized by the attitude of large countries with
“realpolitik” position that let the invasion, occupation, and
various human rights violations during the occupation, are now
voluntarilly follow the common “realpolitik”: the countries such as
the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and a number of
other countries do not wish for an international tribunal on Timor
Leste issues.
We hereby demand the leaders of Timor Leste (which during the
occupation struggle against unjust “realpolitik”) to go back to the
basic value of justice. Do not forget that it is due to the people
of Timor Leste who fought against unjust world “realpolitik” that we
now have our sovereign and independent state of the Democratic
Republic of Timor Leste.
Dili, August 7, 2005
Representatives of the families of victims
Edio Saldanha Borges
Maria Afonso de Jesus
East Timor National Alliance for International Tribunal
C/o.
Perkumpulan HAK
Rua: Governador C.M. Serpa Rosa T-091
Farol,
Dili, Timor Leste
Tel. + 670 390 3313323
Local Press Coverage From Daily Media Review
Saturday and Monday, 6-8 August 2005
Victims and Militia Demand Justice but Not Commission of Truth
and Friendship
Diario do Tempo and STL quote convicted militia member Marcelino
Soares (“Besih Merah Putih”) currently serving a 15 year sentence
and Liquica church attack victim Jóse Nunez as arguing that an
international tribunal would provide justice for the victims of 1999
violence by prosecuting actors behind the violence rather than only
the perpetrators.
Marcelino Soares is quoted as saying that the main actors behind
the 1999 human rights violations such as Eurico Guterres, João
Tavares and Abilio Jóse Ozorio Soares would not be brought to
justice by the CTF. He also made an appeal to the UN to provide real
justice rather than just arresting ordinary militia members like
himself and those others convicted and currently serving prison
sentences. He added that there should be reconciliation but that
justice should also be delivered.
Nunez lamented that as one of the victims of the Liquica church
attack, he disagrees with the establishment of the CTF due to the
lack of consultation by the government and due for the potential for
the CTF to only deny the existence of justice for him and the other
victims of the Liquica church attack.
STL also reports that the Timor-Leste National Alliance for
International Tribunal has released a statement rejecting the
statement of Foreign Minister, Jóse Ramos Horta which claimed that
the people of Timor-Leste do not support the establishment of an
international tribunal. The Alliance statement dismissed the
statement made by Minister Horta as not based on the actual reality
and against the Constitution. The statement concludes “We hereby
demand that the leaders of Timor-Leste go back to the basic value of
justice. Do not forget that it is due to the people of TIMor-Leste
who fought against unjust world “realpolitik” that we now have our
sovereign and independent state.” (DT, STL)
See also
Please note: the COE report has now
(July 27) been officially released by the UN.
Click here for full
report.
For more information see
http://www.etan.org/issues/h-rights.htm.
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