UN uncertain, the killing of the Balibo five
UN uncertain, the killing of the Balibo five
6
February 2001
* Pacific Media Watch Online:
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UN Uncertain About Pursuing Indon Minister Over Balico Five
* See PMW item 3189
By Catharine Munro, South-East Asia Correspondent
JAKARTA, Feb 4 AAP - It is still unclear if
the United Nations
will ever pursue a former Indonesian
government minister for the
alleged murder of five
Australian-based journalists in East Timor
in 1975, a UN
prosecutor said today.
And it was unlikely Indonesia would
cooperate in detaining
former Minister for Information
Mohamad Yunus, formerly known as
Yunus Yosfiah, even if
warrants for his arrest were issued.
The UN Transitional
Authority in East Timor (UNTAET) is
investigating the
killings of the so-called Balibo five during
Indonesia's
occupation of the former Portuguese colony in 1975.
Killed
by Indonesian soldiers were Greg Shackleton, Tony
Stewart
and Gary Cunningham of Channel 7, and Brian
Peters and Malcolm
Rennie of Channel 9. Mr Peters and Mr
Rennie were British citizens
and Mr Cunningham was a New
Zealander.
Serious crimes prosecutor Oyvind Olsen said
investigators were
still working out whether the murders
would be seen as war crimes
under international law or as
crimes under either Indonesian law or
the law of
Portugal.
If the murders were seen as war crimes, they
would come under
UNTAET's jurisdiction.
However, it was
too late to prosecute if they were seen as
crimes under
Indonesian or Portuguese law, because of deadlines
under
both countries' statues of limitations.
Contrary to
weekend reports that investigators had
sought
international arrest warrants, Mr Olsen said the
investigation had
not yet been completed.
"The
remaining investigation has to be done before any
action
can be taken," Mr Olsen said.
"It's not clear whether they will be issued."
It was doubtful that
Indonesia would help UNTAET pursue Yunus if
international
arrest warrants were issued, according to Harold
Crouch,
Indonesia project director for the International
Crisis
Group (ICG).
"I think it would be almost totally unlikely," Crouch said.
"I would say they don't believe
that the international court
should try an Indonesian
officer."
Yunus, who delivered Indonesia much of its
current press
freedoms as Minister for Information under
President Habibie, is a
retired officer and now lives in
the West Javan city of Bandung.
Indonesia has already
shown its unwillingness to help UNTAET
prosecute serving
Indonesian military (TNI) officers.
When UN prosecutors
attempted in December to question TNI
members, with the
permission of the Indonesian Attorney General,
the head
of the TNI Admiral Widodo refused to allow his men to
be
interviewed.
His position won strong support among
many politicians in
Jakarta.
During the UNTAET
delegation's visit to Jakarta at the time,
their car was
attacked by a mob inside the grounds of
the
Parliament.
In a highly critical report on
Indonesia's record of prosecuting
human rights
violations, the ICG said Indonesia's failure to
allow
UNTAET prosecutors to question Indonesian witnesses
and suspects
had damaged international
confidence.
"While it is expected that Indonesia will not
hand over military
personnel to UNTAET's prosecutors,
failure to prosecute in
Indonesia would seriously impair
international confidence in the
Indonesian government's
commitment to pursue cases through the
Indonesian
judicial system," the ICG report said.
"That confidence
has already been damaged by Indonesia's failure
to allow
UNTAET prosecutors to question Indonesian witnesses
and
suspects in the way that UNTAET...had facilitated the
questioning
of East Timorese witnesses in
July."
Indonesia and UNTAET have signed a memorandum of
understanding
to cooperate in their separate
investigations of human rights
violations in East Timor
during its vote for independence in 1999.
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