Document - Timor-Leste: Letter to President Jose Ramos-Horta on post-conflict justice
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
PUBLIC STATEMENT
17 March 2010
AI number: ASA 57/004/2010
Timor-Leste: Letter to President Jose Ramos-Horta
on post-conflict justice
Amnesty International has written today to President Jose
Ramos-Horta to follow up on his meeting on 5 March 2010 in the
United Kingdom with Amnesty International’s interim Secretary
General, Claudio Cordone. The letter also took note of President
Ramos-Horta’s remarks at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on
11 March.
In the letter, Amnesty International addressed the role of criminal
justice in dealing with the crimes of the past in Timor-Leste,
including the proposal to set up an international tribunal to
investigate and prosecute those responsible for the crimes
committed during Indonesia’s occupation of Timor-Leste between 1975
and 1999.
Amnesty International acknowledged President Ramos-Horta’s
long-standing objections to such a tribunal, while noting his
statement that “ifthe Security Council decides
to establish such an International Tribunal, he will not oppose
it”, as cited in a press release issued by his office on 10 March
relating to the meeting with Amnesty International on 5 March.
Amnesty International noted President Ramos-Horta’s views
reiterated before the Human Rights Council on 11 March that “in the
efforts to bring about peace between long-standing rival
communities, often we have to compromise on justice.”
While acknowledging the challenges of ensuring justice after a
conflict, Amnesty International stressed that its advocacy for an
international tribunal stemmed primarily from its strong belief
that confidence in the rule of law is necessary for a stable and
peaceful society, and that the continued impunity for crimes of the
scale and nature such as those committed under Indonesian
occupation can only undermine such confidence. International
justice mechanisms, such as an international tribunal, can play a
role to address impunity given the continuing inadequate responses
of national courts in Timor-Leste and Indonesia. The tribunal has
been recommended by UN justice experts and Timor-Leste’s own
Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in 2005, as well
as by Timorese victims most recently in September 2009.
The right of victims of crimes under international law to obtain
justice, truth and full reparations has long been recognized under
international law. In this perspective peace and justice are not
mutually exclusive, but complementary concepts that can and must
exist together. While recognizing President Ramos-Horta’s
scepticism about the political will within the UN Security Council
to address impunity for the crimes under Indonesian occupation,
Amnesty International pledged to continue to press for
international justice to play a role in this regard.
Amnesty International stressed that the international tribunal is
only one component of a long-term comprehensive plan to address
impunity. Other key elements of the plan should include
prosecutions in Timor-Leste, Indonesia and other countries willing
to exercise universal jurisdiction; the search and identification
of those gone “missing” during the Indonesian occupation; the
establishment of a scheme to provide full and effective reparations
for the thousands who suffered and the relatives of those who
perished; and an approach to pardons that does not undermine the
rule of law.
Amnesty International expressed the hope that President Ramos-Horta
would support the Timor-Leste Parliament’s decision to establish a
follow-up institution to implement the recommendations of the
report of the Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation
and the report of the Commission for Truth and Friendship. Such a
follow-up mechanism can provide an opportunity to consider all
points of view within Timor-Leste on the best way forward in
dealing with the legacy of the crimes committed under Indonesian
occupation.
ENDS/
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