February 10, 2000
His Excellency Abdurrahman Wahid
President, Republic of Indonesia
Office of the President
Bina Graha, Jalan Veteran No. 17
Jakarta Pusat, Indonesia
VIA FAX: +62-21-778-182
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply concerned about
the recent harassment of three Portuguese television journalists, who
were detained for three days by police in the Indonesian province of
West Timor before being forced to leave the country.
On February 3, the SIC television crew--reporter João Ferreira,
news editor Rita Nolasco, and cameraman Fernando Faria--was filming
an interview with Moko Soares, commander of the local Sakunar militia,
which has been accused of committing atrocities against East Timorese
civilians who voted for independence from Indonesia. The journalists
were interviewing Soares just across the border from the East Timor
town of Passabe, where United Nations investigators recently discovered
mass graves containing the remains of at least 50 people, massacred
in the violence that followed East Timor's August referendum.
Officers from a nearby Indonesian army (TNI) checkpoint told the reporters
they could not film without a special permit. The television crew had
obtained journalists' visas from the Indonesian consulate in Darwin,
Australia, and had registered with Indonesian police in the West Timor
town of Motoain upon crossing the border from newly independent East
Timor.
Nevertheless, TNI soldiers summoned the police, and an officer arrived
shortly before 12:00 p.m. He invited the journalists to accompany him
to the police station, where he said they could obtain a letter of recommendation
allowing them to resume their work.
Once the journalists arrived at the Kefamenanu police station, however,
they began to be interrogated. They were questioned for more than seven
hours, according to Ferreira, who told CPJ that he and his colleagues
were also fingerprinted, photographed, and generally treated as criminals.
Authorities repeatedly told the journalists that they were not under
arrest, but denied them permission to leave. At around 8:00 p.m., the
journalists were escorted by police back to their hotel, and six armed
guards were posted outside. Police told the journalists that the guards
were there to "protect" the crew from local militia members, though
the journalists had emphasized that they did not want police protection.
The next morning, February 4, police arrived at the hotel to escort
the journalists to the provincial capital of Kupang. Police told the
journalists that they had entered West Timor improperly, and therefore
had to report to police headquarters in Kupang, which is about a five-hour
drive from Kefamenanu.
At the police headquarters in Kupang, the journalists were told that
because their visas were not stamped upon their entry to West Timor,
in Motoain, they could be fined, or jailed for up to three years. The
officers, after confirming with police in Motoain that Ferreira, Nolasco,
and Faria had indeed registered at the border, said that they would
not arrest the journalists, but told them that they would have to return
to the Motoain checkpoint. The immigration authority in Kupang confiscated
the journalists' passports, and police escorted them to a hotel, where
they stayed overnight.
On February 5, the journalists, accompanied by two immigration officials,
made the ten-hour journey from Kupang to Motoain. An official at the
immigration office had instructed the journalists that they must "cooperate,"
according to Ferreira, by paying for the fuel costs incurred on the
trip, as well as for all meals and accommodation required by their official
escorts. Upon arriving in Motoain, the immigration officials turned
over the journalists' passports to the police, who stamped them "Entry
Denied," effectively forcing them to return to East Timor.
As an organization of journalists dedicated to defending the rights
of our colleagues around the world, CPJ is dismayed that the authorities
in West Timor continue to harass journalists, preventing them from carrying
out their professional duties. Members of the SIC television crew believe
they were harassed because of their interviews with Moko Soares, and
for their reporting on the links between the militia leader, the Indonesian
military, and the police. Indonesian police arrested Soares on February
5 and have charged him with the illegal possession and sale of firearms.
United Nations officials in East Timor have said they have massive evidence
connecting Soares to at least twelve murders, as well as a series of
raids in East Timor.
CPJ strongly urges Your Excellency to order an immediate investigation
into the actions taken by officials in West Timor, and to discipline
those officers responsible for the harassment endured by Ferreira, Nolasco,
and Faria. We also ask that you instruct the Indonesian police and armed
forces to respect the right of journalists to work freely.
.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director