The Endtimes of Human Rights
Subject
: Human rights—International cooperation, Human
rights—Moral and ethical aspects, Human rights—
Political aspects
Publisher
: Cornell University Press
Summary :Writing this book has been on my mind since Mary Robinson visited
Dili in East Timor in 1999. Indonesia’s brutal occupation had recently
ended. Robinson, at the time UN high commissioner for human rights,
opened a two-day workshop designed to embed East Timor’s pledge to
uphold international human rights law. Her speech was titled “Building
the Future of East Timor on a Culture of Human Rights.” Each of
160 participants received a kit containing all the major human rights
documents and a badge that carried the words “Human rights: know
them, live them, defend them,” written in the local language, Tetun. 1
For twenty-five years, since 1975, the East Timorese had fought a
guerrilla war against the Indonesian military and militias. Civilian
deaths from hunger, illness, killings, and disappearances during this
period are conservatively estimated at more than one hundred thousand.
This was out of a population of under a million. Numerous human
rights abuses were committed. 2 Somehow, led by future president
Xanana Gusmão, the armed Timorese resistance kept the fi ght alive as
the international community made empty, rhetorical protests. Even the
international human rights activists and journalists who highlighted East
Timor’s cause made little impact.
Gusmão’s liberation fi ghters always seemed to me exemplary human
rights defenders. What they knew was that no one else was coming to
save them. Through their own tight communal bonds, shoulder-toshoulder
with people on whom they depended and who in turn depended
on them, they defeated a threat to their very existence. During
this time, the United States continued to train some of Indonesia’s top
army officers. 3 One of them, former president Suharto’s son-in-law General Prabowo, accused of masterminding systematic human rights
abuses in East Timor, is now a leading candidate for the 2014 Indonesian
presidential election. More than ten years after Indonesia was driven
from the country, there has still been no accounting for the crimes committed
under occupation.
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