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Press release from the Technical Secretariat of the Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation (CAVR)
MEDIA MISREPRESENTATIONS OF THE CAVR REPORT
Although not yet officially released, the 2500 page
CAVR Report 'Chega!' has been the subject of several prominent reports
in the media based on leaked versions of the Executive Summary and
particularly its section on Recommendations. Stories on the Report
have been carried by AFP, AP, the Japan Times, the
Singapore Straits Times, Sydney Morning Herald,
Lusa,Timor-Leste press and Bali Times - to name some.
Regrettably some of these stories contained serious misrepresentations
of the Report which can largely be traced to a Lusa Report of 20
December. For example, a front page report in the Bali Times, 23-29
December 2005, was headed: 'Under Indonesia, 183000 perished in
E.Timor, claims Report'. The report's byline was
Lisbon, Portugal.
The purpose of this email is to ensure that these
errors are not repeated and become 'fact' and that
they do not damage the credibility of the Report.
They were:
- The statement that at least 183,000 died during the Indonesian
occupation of Timor. This statement contains three errors: (a) the
representation of the figure of 183,000 as a minimum; (b) the
suggestion that that figure represents the number of people who
died rather than those who died from conflict-related
causes; and (c) the suggestion that the period covered
was the period of the Indonesian occupation rather
than the period of the Commission's mandate.
- The statement that the Report found that 70% of
deaths "occurred at the hands of" the Indonesian
security forces and their Timorese auxiliaries. The
Report actually says that the Indonesian security
forces etc were responsible for 70% of killings and
disappearances.
- The statement that the Report identified "more than
8000 victims". This is presumably a reference to the
number of statements taken (the number of victims
identified by the statement-taking process alone being
far higher).
- The statement that "the first victims, 3000
according to the Report, date from (the) period of the
civil war". The chapter on Killings in the Report
clearly distinguishes between the total number of
deaths during the civil war, including those of
combatants (the context in which CAVR cited ICRC's
estimate of 3000) and the smaller number of deaths
that occurred as a result of violations committed
during this period. The conflation of the two figures
in the Lusa report was probably the basis for Prime
Minister Alkatiri's justified scepticism about the
supposed use of the 3000 figure in the Report (see
Lusa, 21 December).
- The statement that the Commission had found that at
least 84,200 people had died from hunger and illness
during 1977 and 1979 "as a result of forced transfers
of the population to camps under strict Indonesian
military control". The figure represents the estimated
minimum number of "excess" deaths from hunger or
illness during the whole mandate period in all
circumstances and not just as a result of transfers to
Indonesian-controlled camps.
- Statements that the Report is a "government probe"
and that the President has said its findings and
recommendations should not be made public. The Report
is not a Government report but the work of an
independent statutory authority whose Commissioners
were legally required to act impartially and
objectively. The President has not suppressed the
Report and will make it publically available in due
course. A Post-CAVR Technical Secretariat was
established by the President on 20 December to
disseminate and socialise the Report and its related
products in the first half of 2006.
DEATH TOLL ESTIMATE AND METHODOLOGY
CAVR's estimate of the minimum total number of conflict-related deaths
is 102,800 (+/- 12,000). This figure includes both killings and deaths
due to privation. The figure of 183,000 is CAVR's upper-bound
estimate of total conflict-related mortality.
The methods used by CAVR are fully described in the
Report and will be available when the Report is
officially released. In summary, CAVR analysts used
new empirical data analysed by well-known statistical
methods to estimate the level of conflict-related
mortality in Timor-Leste during the Indonesian
occupation. CAVR analysts used three new data sources
and two independent techniques to calculate the
estimates, and their work was reviewed by
international experts. Conflict-related mortality in
(a) killings and disappearances and (b) deaths due to
hunger and illness ("deprivation") which exceed the
total that would be expected if the death rate due to
hunger and illness had continued as it was in the
pre-invasion peacetime period.
CONCLUSION
Public confusion about the Report is understandable
because access to its contents remains very restricted
and discussion has been conducted largely in a vacuum
and dominated by public comment by the President and
those challenging his policy on justice. It is a
matter of regret, however, that this confusion has
been further compounded by mis-reporting.
It is to be sincerely hoped that the official release
of the Report in due course, accompanied by a clear
public presentation of its main findings and
methodology, will serve to reduce further
misrepresentations.
Kindly pass this on to others you think should see it.
Pat Walsh
Advisor, Post-CAVR Technical Secretariat
4 January 2006
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