For Immediate Release
International Timor Federation Urges UN Secretary General to Create Commission of Experts to Support Justice for East
Timor
December 21 - The International Federation for East Timor (IFET) urged the Secretary-General to establish a Commission
of Experts to investigate whether the perpetrators of serious crimes committed in East Timor have been brought justice.
IFET wrote to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, "to encourage you immediately to appoint a Commission of Experts to continue
the international community's unfulfilled task of ensuring justice for crimes against humanity committed in Timor-Leste
during the Indonesian occupation."
The Secretary-General is scheduled to meet the Foreign Ministers of Timor-Leste and Indonesia this afternoon to discuss
a plan by the two countries to form a joint Commission on Truth and Friendship.
"Names have been named; truth has been reported. What remains is to bring the perpetrators to justice," IFET argues in
its letter.
IFET calls on the Secretary-General "to allow a Commission of Experts to evaluate the current situation and efforts
toward justice up to this point, and to recommend future measures which may be implementable as political situations
evolve, perhaps including an international tribunal. The United Nations must not abandon its responsibility for justice
to the governments of Timor-Leste and Indonesia."
Since, "Timor-Leste and Indonesia are not equal partners, with a common interest in justice. A bi-national commission
will be just another mechanism for Indonesia to bully its smaller, weaker neighbor," IFET writes.
The Presidents of Indonesia and Timor-Leste agreed to form a Commission on Truth and Friendship at a summit in Bali last
week. The truth commission has been described as an alternative to UN initiatives, including a Commission of Experts.
"A proposal to establish the Commission of Experts has been on the Secretary-General's desk for months. We don't
understand what is taking so long," said Charles Scheiner, of the International Secretariat of IFET.
The full text of the letter is available at www.etan.org/ifet/.
IFET was formed in 1991 to support East Timor's human and political rights at the United Nations. It has 34 member
groups from 23 countries.
Background
After Indonesia violently exited East Timor in 1999 following 24 years of brutal military occupation, two processes were
established to prosecute serious crimes, including crimes against humanity, committed in East Timor during the final
year of the occupation. The Indonesian Ad-hoc Human Rights Court on East Timor is widely considered a sham, acquitting
all of the Indonesian officials brought to trial. The UN-backed serious crimes process in East Timor is scheduled to end
next May, although nearly 80% of those indicted, including a number of high-ranking Indonesian officials, remain in
Indonesia, out of reach of the courts in Dili, East Timor.
Once appointed by the Secretary-General, the Commission of Experts would examine these two processes and propose next
steps.
Indonesia set up an ad hoc human rights court in early 2000 to deflect calls for an international tribunal for crimes
committed as part of the Indonesian military's 1999 campaign of terror in East Timor. The widely-criticized court issued
its final verdict on August 5, 2003. While six of the 18 people tried were convicted, all but one of those convictions
were overturned on appeal. A ruling on the appeal of the last defendant, East Timorese militia leader Eurico Guterres,
has yet to be issued.
In 1999, prior to and after East Timor's overwhelming vote for independence, the Indonesian military and its militia
proxies killed more than 1400 people, displaced three-quarters of the population and destroyed more than 75% of East
Timor's infrastructure.
The Security Council mandated the establishment of the Serious Crimes Unit in Dili to conduct investigations and prepare
indictments to assist in bringing to justice those responsible for crimes against humanity and other serious crimes
committed in East Timor in 1999. It also created the Special Panel courts to hear serious crimes cases. The SCU filed
its final indictments this month, although half of the 1999 murders and numerous other crimes have not been
investigated.
No judicial process has yet been established to investigate and prosecute those responsible for genocide, war crimes and
crimes against humanity during Indonesia's illegal invasion and occupation of East Timor prior to 1999, when the
Indonesian military was responsible for the deaths of more than 200,000 people, one-third of the population.
Last September, a broadly-representative conference of East Timorese civil society organized by the Judicial System
Monitoring Programme agreed that accountability for these crimes is an unfulfilled obligation and an international
responsibility.
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John M. Miller Internet: fbp@igc.org
Media & Outreach Coordinator
East Timor Action Network: 12 Years for Self-Determination & Justice
48 Duffield St., Brooklyn, NY 11201 USA
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