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[DOCID: f:sr91ats.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 91
Condemning the murder of a United States citizen and other civilians,
and expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the failure of the
Indonesian judicial system to hold accountable those responsible for
the killings.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
May 21, 2001
Mr. Nelson of Florida (for himself, Mr. Feingold, Mr. Leahy, and Mr.
Harkin) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the
Committee on Foreign Relations
June 5, 2001
Reported by Mr. Helms, with an amendment and an amendment to the
preamble
June 20, 2001
Considered, amended, and agreed to
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Condemning the murder of a United States citizen and other civilians,
and expressing the sense of the Senate regarding the failure of the
Indonesian judicial system to hold accountable those responsible for
the killings.
Whereas on September 6, 2000, a paramilitary mob in the West Timor town of
Atambua brutally killed 3 United Nations aid workers, including United
States citizen Carlos Caceres, in an unprovoked attack;
Whereas Caceres, an attorney originally from San Juan, Puerto Rico, whose family
now resides in the State of Florida, had e-mailed a plea for help saying
that ``the militias are on their way,'' and that ``we sit here like
bait'' before he and the others were killed;
Whereas on May 4, 2001, an Indonesian court in Jakarta handed down only token
sentences to the murderers of Carlos Caceres and the other United
Nations workers, and failed to allot any punishment to the Indonesian
military personnel alleged to have sanctioned this attack;
Whereas these token sentences were condemned as ``wholly unacceptable'' by
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, and described by the
Department of State as acts that ``call into question Indonesia's
commitment to the principle of criminal accountability'';
Whereas the self-confessed killer of Carlos Caceres, a pro-government militia
member named Julius Naisama, was sentenced to spend not more than 20
months in jail, and remarked afterwards, ``I accept the sentence with
pride'';
Whereas the murders of Carlos Caceres and the other United Nations workers fit a
pattern of killings perpetrated, sanctioned, or condoned by certain
elements within the Indonesian military in Timor, both during and since
the end of the Suharto regime;
Whereas, despite the stated intent of the Government of Indonesian to put into
place a system of increased judicial accountability, since the
initiation of democratic rule in Indonesia in 1998, no senior military
official has been put on trial for human rights abuses, extrajudicial
killings, torture, or incitement to mob violence; and
Whereas the Government of Indonesia could probably have prevented both the
murder of the United Nations workers and the subsequent miscarriage of
justice if the government had--
(1) upheld its explicit commitment, made after the August, 1999,
referendum in East Timor, to ensure that Indonesian military forces
would safeguard United Nations workers and Timorese refugees from
attacks by the paramilitary militias on the island who had killed
approximately 1,000 East Timorese civilians in the preceding weeks;
(2) brought charges of murder or manslaughter against the 6 men who
admitted to killing the United Nations workers, rather than only the
lesser charge of conspiring to foment violence; and
(3) brought charges against senior military commanders who,
according to the United Nations, the Department of State, and the
Government of Indonesia itself, are suspected of arming and directing
the paramilitary militias responsible for the carnage on Timor: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That (a) the Senate--
(1) condemns the brutal murder of Carlos Caceres, a United
States citizen, and the other United Nations aid workers, and
offers condolences to their families, friends, and colleagues;
(2) decries the inadequately disproportionate sentences
handed down by the Indonesian court to the self-confessed
killers of the United Nations aid workers;
(3) calls on the prosecutorial organs of the Government of
Indonesia to indict and bring to trial the senior military
commanders described in a September 1, 2000, statement by that
government as suspects in the mass killings following the
August, 1999, East Timor referendum.
(b) It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) officials of the Department of State should, at every
appropriate meeting with officials of the Government of
Indonesia, stress the importance of ending the climate of
impunity that shields those individuals, including senior
members of the Indonesian military, suspected of perpetrating,
collaborating in, or covering up extra-judicial killings and
abuses of human rights in Indonesia; and
(2) the President should consider the willingness of the
Government of Indonesia to make substantive progress in
judicial reform, and in the criminal accountability of those
responsible for human rights abuse on the island of Timor,
among those factors taken into account when determining the
level of financial support provided by the United States to
Indonesia, whether directly or through international financial
institutions.
Sec. 2. The Secretary of the Senate shall transmit a copy of this
resolution to the President.
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