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March 09, 2010 
Markus Junianto Sihaloho

Indonesian Military Doubts Talk of E. Timor Military Tribunal

The Indonesian military on Tuesday said it doubted claims by Amnesty 
International that East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta had promised to 
support the establishment of an international criminal tribunal by the UN 
Security Council over crimes committed during the 1975-99 conflict with 
Indonesia. 

In a press release on Tuesday, Amnesty International said that Ramos-Horta had 
told the human rights group in a private meeting that he would support the 
establishment of such a tribunal, should the UN Security Council be behind it. 

In a meeting with Claudio Cordone, Amnesty International's interim secretary 
general on Friday, the Timor president was said to accuse the United Nations of 
"hypocrisy" for using his government's antitribunal stance as a pretext for not 
establishing it. 

Military spokesman Air Vice Marshall Sagom Tamboen said that he doubted Amnesty 
International's claim. 

He said East Timor's ambassador to Indonesia, Manuel de Araujo Serrano, on 
Monday visited Military Chief Gen. Djoko Santoso at his headquarters in 
Cilangkap, East Jakarta, and stressed his country's willingness to build better 
ties with Indonesia, especially with the military. 

"So it means that there is no problem between the two countries. The Indonesian 
military is even seen by East Timor as a reference for the establishment of its 
armed forces," Tamboen said. 

Tamboen added that anything dealing with the past conflict between the two 
countries was to be aired by the Truth and Friendship Committee (KKP) 
established by two states. 

"The main spirit of the agreement is that what happened in the past would be 
left behind and both countries would move forward together by building mutual 
relationships," Tamboen said. 

He said the recommendations produced by the KKP over past incidents in East 
Timor involving Indonesia had been agreed to, approved and signed by the 
leaders of the two nations. 

"If there were another purpose [to criminalize the Indonesian military over the 
case], then they should not have agreed and signed all the recommendations made 
by the KKP," Tamboen said. 

Ramos-Horta, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, has previously said that he would 
not support an international tribunal into the human rights abuses that 
occurred during Indonesia's rule over the former Portuguese colony. 

At last year's 10th anniversary of his country's vote for independence, he 
reportedly called on the UN to stop gathering evidence against the killers of 
hundreds of Timorese, saying his people must put the past behind them. He also 
called on them to forgive Indonesians who "committed heinous crimes against 
us." 

Foreign Affairs spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said Jakarta would verify what 
exactly Ramos-Horta had told Amnesty International. 

"Because as far as we know, Indonesia and Timor Leste have agreed to settle the 
problem through the KKP," Teuku said. 

He said Indonesia would always have a commitment to improving its relationship 
with Timor's government. 

"Any such propaganda would never influence the good relationship between 
Indonesia and Timor Leste," he said. 

Amnesty International has repeatedly urged the UN Security Council to set up a 
tribunal with jurisdiction over all crimes committed from 1975 -99, when East 
Timor was occupied by Indonesia.




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