Accountability for Suharto's Crimes
Must Not Die With Him
East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network (ETAN)
http://globalresearch.ca/, January
28, 2008
Indonesia's former dictator General Suharto
has died in bed and not in jail, escaping justice for his numerous
crimes in East Timor and throughout the Indonesian archipelago.
__One of the worst mass murderers of the 20th century, his death
tolls still shock:
* 500,000 to one million Indonesians in
the aftermath of his 1965 seizure of power;
* 100,000 in West Papua;
* 100,000 to 200,000 in East Timor, which
his troops illegally invaded in 1975;
* tens of thousands more in Aceh and elsewhere.
Suharto also accumulated an appalling
legacy of corruption - 15 to 35 billion dollars stolen by him
and his family.
Suharto has avoided personal accountability
for the genocide, destruction and corruption he inflicted upon
those he presumed to rule. However, the generals, cronies and
family members who carried out his orders via massacre, torture
and theft must not get off so easily. Those who murdered and pillaged
on behalf of Suharto and his "New Order" regime must
be brought to justice.
We cannot forget that the United States
government consistently supported Suharto and his regime. As the
corpses piled up after his coup and darkness descended on Indonesia,
his cheerleaders in the U.S. welcomed the "gleam of light
in Asia." In the pursuit of realpolitik, U.S. administration
after administration, fully aware of his many crimes, provided
military assistance and hardware, training and equipping Suharto's
killers. The Indonesian dictator sought and received U.S. approval
before he launched his invasion of East Timor; ninety percent
of the weapons used in this illegal attack came from the U.S.
In the face of broad domestic opposition
as his "economic miracle" had collapsed in 1998, he
finally stepped down. But only after U.S. Secretary of State Albright
hinted he should do so, even as the White House insisted she was
not calling on the U.S.-backed dictator to "step down now."
Persistent advocacy by concerned activists
from East Timor, Indonesia, the U.S. and within Congress finally
succeeded in curtailing U.S. military assistance to the Suharto
regime in the 1990s. After Suharto was ousted, East Timor broke
free and the Indonesian military lost some perks. Since then,
military reform efforts have stalled or been reversed. Suharto's
favored military still maintains substantial power. Its higher-ranking
officers, and powerful retired military, like President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, built their careers during his reign. The military
continues to violate human rights with impunity and in West Papua
and some areas operates by Suharto-era rules, restricting outside
access and employing terror in service of its commercial interests.
Limited investigations dealing with Suharto-era
crimes have added some information to the public record, but the
few trials that have occurred have largely failed, as defendants
have lied, intimidated or bribed their way to acquittals, crushing
the hopes of the victims and their families for justice or even
an apology.
To overcome Suharto's legacy and to uphold
basic international human rights and legal principles, those who
executed, aided and abetted, and benefited from his criminal orders
must be held accountable. The U.S. must undergo a complete accounting
for its role in backing the dictator. As a start, the U.S. government
must support for an international tribunal to prosecute human
rights and war crimes committed in East Timor from 1975 to 1999,
and Washington should condition military assistance to Indonesia
"on progress towards full democratisation, the subordination
of the military to the rule of law and civilian government, and
strict adherence with international human rights" as recommended
by East Timor's Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation.
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