East Timorese recall 25 years of massacres
East Timorese recall 25 years of massacres
Guido Guillart, Associated Press, Dili
Felismina da Conceicao told how her brother died in her arms,
wounded in the neck by Indonesian soldiers who invaded the tiny
nation of East Timor in 1975.
Ilidio Maria de Jesus told the East Timor Commission for
Reception, Truth amd Reconciliation how a pro-Indonesian
political party captured and killed his father and 10 others just
before Indonesia invaded.
Their emotional testimonies -- aired live on national
television and radio -- marked the start Wednesday of a three-day
hearing in East Timor on massacres and executions from 1974 until
Indonesia's brutal occupation ended in 1999.
The United Nations has documented more than 120 massacres
during that time.
Witnesses were expected to recount the Nov. 12, 1991 killings
of more than 200 people at the Santa Cruz cemetery in the
capital, Dili, and the 1999 killing of 22 refugees in a Liquica
town church by Indonesia troops and their proxy militias.
There will also be testimony on lesser-known tragedies,
including the 1983 Kraras massacre, in which Indonesian troops
killed up to 400 Timorese.
"This hearing offers recognition to survivors and family
members of the many terrible massacres that happened across East
Timor," said Kieran Dwyer, an adviser to the commission, which
has held hearings on issues from forced displacement to violence
against women.
"The first step is to speak the truth and acknowledge the
massacres, which hasn't been done before," Dwyer said. "We're
trying to use the truth to ensure that these terrible violations
never happen again."
Conceicao, who was only 11 at the time, recalled the day
Indonesian troops invaded on Dec. 7, 1975. She said she was
separated from her father and brother, then heard shooting and
ran to find her father covered with blood. Her wounded brother
lay nearby and died later, she said.
"When (my brother's) head rested on my lap, I gave him the
water," she told a crowd gathered in a building that held
political prisoners during Indonesia's rule.
"Then I realized that the water I was giving my brother came
out of his neck, because his neck had been seriously wounded by a
grenade or maybe a bullet," she said.
De Jesus said his father and 10 others were taken prisoner in
August 1975 by members of the United Democratic Party of East
Timor, which supported the Indonesian invasion. His family ran to
the hills, and later returned to a horrifying scene.
"We arrived at the massacre site near Meti-Oan beach and found
10 of the bodies," de Jesus said. "My father has been shot so his
intestines came out and (another victim) had his hand cut off."
After the hearings, the Commission will prepare a report that
includes recommendations for criminal prosecutions and give it to
the president's office, Parliament and the United Nations.
Since East Timor's independence in May 2002, former officials
and army officers in East Timor have been tried in both
Indonesian and East Timorese courts for crimes against humanity
that took place before and after a 1999 referendum, in which East
Timorese voted for independence. Indonesian troops and their
proxy militias killed more than 1,000 people in the chaos that
followed.
A special Indonesian rights court was dismissed as a sham
because it convicted only six of 18 Indonesian military and
government officials. All remain free pending their appeals.
East Timorese courts have charged 367 people -- including at
least 32 Indonesian commanders and the country's former militant
chief Gen. Wiranto -- for the violence, and convicted 35. Of
those indicted, 280 remain at large in Indonesia.