Timor Leste on Aug. 30 celebrates the anniversary
of a historic referendum that resulted in a landslide vote for separation from
Indonesia 16 years ago. The euphoria of independence was, however, short-lived
following the announcement of the UN-administered ballot results on Sept. 4,
1999 as violence, which had marked the run-up to the plebiscite,
escalated.Thousands of East Timorese fled their homes or were displaced to the
hinterlands and to West Timor.
Between 1,400
and 2,000 people were killed or disappeared in a series of atrocities.
East Timor’s independence could not be
separated from rivalry between then Indonesian president BJ Habibie, who took
over from long-time ruler Soeharto, and his inner circle, the military and
civilian political elite. When then foreign minister Ali Alatas presented the
grant of special status to the province of East Timor with wide-ranging
autonomy in 1998, the Cabinet approved without much debate.When Habibie told
his Cabinet ministers early in 1999 that Indonesia should move straight to a
choice between autonomy and independence for East Timor, there were no voices
of open dissent, not even from the military members of the Cabinet. Gen.
Wiranto, the defense minister and Armed Forces commander, did not object to the
proposed second options per se, according to Alatas writing in 2006.
Why did Habibie’s policy go unchallenged?
Whatever the answer, the military and other
opportunist political elites would possibly take advantage of Habibie’s risky
action.“Some of Habibie’s stronger Islamic ministers were happy ‘to be rid of
600,000 Catholics’, as one put it,” Richard Woolcott, the Australian ambassador
to Indonesia from 1975 to 1978, wrote in 2003. He wrote that Wiranto would not
oppose Habibie in the belief that the latter’s policy would fail, as would his
attempt to be elected the president.
“This would keep Wiranto’s own political
ambitions alive,” Woolcott concluded.At the general session of the People’s
Consultative Assembly (MPR) in October 1999, President Habibie delivered an
accountability speech, which was rejected because, in part, of the breaking
away of East Timor from the Unitary State of Indonesia.In addition, the UN
Serious Crimes Unit in 2003 charged, among others, Maj. Gen. Zacky Anwar
Makarim (Jakarta), Maj. Gen. Adam Damiri (Denpasar) and Col. Tono Suratman
(Dili) with crimes against humanity for their alleged roles in the violence
surrounding East Timor’s 1999 independence referendum.
While the local media blamed the supervising
United Nations and Australia for pressuring Habibie for a resolution, criticism
was mounted by a few Indonesian ministers, politicians, intellectuals and
military officers of Habibie’s decision, although they were originally silent
on East Timor’s independence option.It remained a mystery why Wiranto did not
overcome the widespread violence and unrest in East Timor. Perhaps he was aware
all of these were orchestrated and designed by his rivals within the Army.
Shortly after Habibie was replaced by president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid,
pressure shifted to the new leader to suspend Wiranto from his Cabinet, pending
an inquiry into human rights violence in East Timor.
Then UN secretary-general Kofi Annan repeatedly
urged Indonesia to prosecute those found guilty of violence and warned that the
United Nations would try to set up an international war crimes tribunal if
Indonesia did not take the necessary steps. It was hard for Gus Dur to oust the
general, but international pressure was mounting too. This “zero-sum game” and
its aftermath finally came to an end after those figures were no longer in
power.Today, a new chapter of hope has started. Gen. (ret) Luhut Binsar
Pandjaitan, a powerful and new Coordinating Political, Legal and Security
Affairs Minister under President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, has announced that the
government’s team is still discussing the solution mechanism, as well as
determining the priority cases that it will aim to resolve by the end of
Jokowi’s five-year term.
The discussion involves seven gross human
rights violations, including the atrocities in East Timor. Both Timor Leste and
Indonesia formed the Commission of Truth and Friendship (CTF) 10 years ago, for
which its mandate included establishing the truth about human rights violations
that occurred prior to and immediately after the Aug. 30, 1999 popular
consultation. The report was endorsed by then president Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, making it the first recognition of the Indonesian government’s
complicity in human rights violations in East Timor. However, according to
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2014 published by the US
Department of State, recommendations from the commission regarding a national
reparations program have not materialized yet.
The writer, Kristio Wahyono a guest lecturer in
Yogyakarta, is former Commission of Truth and Friendship (CTF) co-director and
Indonesian representative to the United Nations Transitional Administration in
East Timor (UNTAET).
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