INDONESIAN GENERAL TO BE ARRESTED !!!
East Timor Action Network Applauds Lawsuit Against Indonesian General
Suit Targets Role in Post-Independence Vote Violence
The East Timor Action Network (ETAN) applauds the filing of a lawsuit
against Indonesian General Johny Lumintang for his role in devastating
human rights abuses in East Timor.
Lumintang, who was the Vice Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army, was
served notice of the lawsuit late this afternoon at Dulles International
Airport.
"All available avenues must be used to bring justice for East Timor," said
John M. Miller of ETAN. "Lawsuits like this one can help insure that those
responsible for last year's devastation of East Timor are called to
account, while putting future rights abusers on notice."
The suit was filed on behalf of a mother whose son was killed, a man who
was beaten and shot in the foot which had to be amputated, and a man whose
father was injured and brother killed. The plaintiffs also had
their property destroyed or were forced from their homes in the aftermath
of the August 30, 1999 vote on East Timor's independence. The lawsuit was
filed by the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), San
Francisco-based Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA), and DC-based
James Klimaski. (Additional background can be found at
http://etan.org/news/2000a/11suit.htm; for a copy of the legal complaint
filed in court send a blank e-mail to complaint@etan.org).
"The suit here is especially necessary because the U.N. has put an
international tribunal on hold, and Indonesia's Attorney General has stated
that he plans to focus his efforts on a mere handful of the best known
incidents and a small number of Indonesian military commanders."
Legal papers filed in U.S. District Court on Tuesday cite a telegram signed
by Lumintang and sent to the regional military head Major General Adam
Damiri and other commanders just hours before the agreement to conduct the
plebiscite was signed at the United Nations on May 5. The telegram ordered
the commanders to plan a crackdown should the East Timorese vote in favor
of independence. This was to include "a plan to move to the rear/evacuate
if the second option independence is chosen." Soon after the vote, such a
plan was put into action and hundreds of thousands were forced from their
homes.
The suit also cites a June 1999 army manual, also signed by Lumintang,
which states that Kopassus intelligence operatives were to be trained in
propaganda, kidnapping, terror, agitation, sabotage, infiltration,
undercover operations, wiretapping, photographic intelligence and
psychological operations. Kopassus operatives were involved in the
kidnapping of East Timorese independence activists prior to and after the
independence vote.
In 1994, CCR successfully sued Major-General Sintong Panjaitan for his role
in a 1991 massacre in Dili, East Timor in which more than 270 Timorese were
gunned down. U.S. District Court Judge Patti Saris ordered the general to
pay $4 million in compensatory damages and $10 million in punitive damages
to Helen Todd, the mother of Kamal Bamadhaj, the only non-East Timorese
killed that day.
The Lumintang lawsuit, like the Panjaitan case, is based in part on the
Alien Tort Claims Act of 1789 which allows anyone, citizen or not, to sue
for acts committed outside the United States "in violation of the law of
nations or a treaty of the United States." The 1992 Torture Victim
Protection Act restates the 1789 law and applies it to torture victims.
Lawsuits can only go forward if the defendant is served legal papers while
in the U.S.
The plaintiffs wish to remain anonymous at this time because East Timor
remains subject to Indonesian military and militia attacks.
A U.N. Commission of Inquiry in a report issued earlier this year concluded
that the Indonesian military was involved in systematic human right
violations before and after the vote. An Indonesian government
investigation reached similar conclusions saying it found evidence "that a
planned, systematic and massive scorched-earth campaign was launched" and
that among the perpetrators were "those who held responsibility for
national security policy, including but not limited to, high-level military
officials who actively or passively were involved in these crimes."
The East Timor Action Network/U.S. founded following the November 1991
massacre supports genuine a peaceful transition to an independent East
Timor. ETAN has 27 local chapters throughout the U.S.