The respected East Timorese human rights
organisation La’o Hamutuk is demanding that the Indonesian government finally
be held accountable for their bloody 24-year occupation of East Timor
This month, to mark the 22-year anniversary of the notorious
Santa Cruz massacre — when Indonesian soldiers murdered over 200 peaceful
student protesters in cold blood — La’o Hamutuk and a collective of Timorese
human rights organisations issued a joint declaration
demanding that all Indonesians involved in crimes during the occupation be
brought to justice. (Amnesty’s 2011 statement on the
20-year anniversary gives the clearest overview of events and numbers of those
who died at Santa Cruz.)
Celestino Gusmão and Mariano Ferreira, activists with La’o
Hamutuk, draw a direct correlation with current human rights abuses in West
Papua. They told New Matilda that people in Timor-Leste are still suffering
today because of the atrocities committed by the Indonesian military.
“We have clear examples of the consequences of impunity — in
West Papua and other places in Indonesia, almost every day, people are
murdered, tortured, raped or ‘disappeared’. In Timor, the Indonesian occupation
also murdered and ‘disappeared’ many people," says Gusmão.
"These bad memories are still alive in the survivors’
minds, while criminals are still free to move around. Without justice it is
even harder for us to forget or accept the horror that we lived through.”
The joint declaration condemns Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão
for publicly embracing the
infamous retired Indonesian Military Commander Wiranto in 2004 and developing
warm diplomatic relations with Indonesia:
“Military perpetrators do not fear criminal accountability …
In Timor-Leste, our leaders follow only what the big men want, not what the law
directs."
Indonesian atrocities during its occupation of East Timor
are well documented. The Timor-Leste Commission for Reception,
Truth and Reconciliation (CAVR) estimates that 102,800 people were
murdered or disappeared, with 84,200 dying from starvation or illness. Many
more were raped, tortured or displaced.
Apart from a handful of dedicated international activists,
the world largely turned a blind eye to Indonesia’s reign of terror until the
Santa Cruz massacre, which was covertly filmed by several Western journalists,
was exposed in 1991.
In addition to the joint declaration, La’o Hamutuk continue
to needle the Indonesians, recently publishing an open letter requesting they
release the whereabouts of the bodies of Timorese resistance fighters killed
during the occupation. La’o Hamutuk say this is essential to both wider reconciliation and the
healing of the families of those who were killed:
“During the resistance many of our soldiers were brutally
murdered or captured and tortured. The families of the missing soldiers and the
others that disappeared during the occupation want the bodies of their loved
ones returned so they can give them a proper burial."
Echoing calls in the joint declaration, the letter also
demands that the international community take its share of responsibility for
enabling human rights abuses by supporting the Indonesian occupation.
“We want the governments of the UK, US and Australia and the
international companies that benefited from the illegal Indonesian occupation
to take responsibility for their complicity. They have an obligation to help us
because they supported the occupation. We want them to support the
establishment of an international tribunal to investigate human rights abuses
by the Indonesian military. This will establish the truth and will have the
legal capacity to ensure Timorese people obtain fair reparations from the
perpetrators and from the major nations that benefited from Indonesian
occupation, as CAVR recommends.”
In many ways, East Timor today can be viewed as a success
story. Since independence in 2002, infrastructure has been developed, children
educated and real efforts made to deal with corruption. The Gusmão government
hopes that a sustainable financial future might be possible, if substantial oil
and gas reserves are used correctly.
However, according to La’o Hamutuk, the many wounds
inflicted by the Indonesians must be healed before the country can really move
on.
“The government is only thinking about developing the
economy, not dealing with the past,” says Ferreira. “But genuine accountability
will help to bring greater democracy and justice to the people of Timor-Leste.”
Dr Gordon Peake is the author of Beloved Land, which was
published in September and tells the many different stories of East Timor. He
says that reconciliation is a not a straightforward issue. “Timor’s situation
can’t be found in a peace-building handbook,” he told New Matilda.
He suggests that the East Timorese government is merely being
practical in its dealings with Indonesia, acting to secure the future of the
country.
“The government are being Class A pragmatists. Indonesia
could put Timor in its pocket, if it wanted to — Dili would close down if
Indonesia stopped supplying goods and products.”
Alongside these discussions of reconciliation, Peake
suggests that more attention needs to be paid to conflict-related mental health
in East Timor. A 2000 study in The Lancet
found that more than one fifth of East Timorese had witnessed the murder of a
relative or friend, he writes in Beloved Land. A University of Auckland study found that 5 per cent of people had
post-traumatic stress disorder, with 12 per cent exhibiting signs of psychosis.
“It’s amazing that the statistics are as low as they are,” he said.
It may not be easy to bring those involved in human rights
abuses to justice. Thirteen years on, many of those involved, both Indonesians
and Timorese, now live in relative peace and obscurity, while the families of
their victims continue to suffer. La’o Hamutuk insists that the past needs to
be dealt with before the future can be assured.
“Everyone
in Timor has been a victim of the illegal Indonesian occupation,” Ferreira
says. “Justice is needed to satisfy all the people that lost their beloved ones
and justice is the only credible way to deal with criminals and respect those
who died.” ‘newmatilda.com’ By Amy Ripley
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