Esmeralda dos Santos sobbed as she told a truth commission on Thursday how she was dragged from a church and repeatedly raped by a pro-Indonesian militiaman during a frenzy of violence following East Timor's vote for independence in 1999.
Her shocking testimony about mass sexual abuse and beatings came during a week of hearings in Jakarta by the Commission of Truth and Friendship, a 10-member bilateral panel seeking to reconcile the countries' troubled past.
On Sept. 6, 1999, Indonesian forces and their proxy militias separated younger women from the elderly and took them to makeshift detention centers, dos Santos said.
She was held captive with about 45 other women at a school where scores were raped and assaulted for a week before being transferred to a squalid refugee camp along the border.
They were seized when troops and militia stormed the Suai Catholic Church, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of the capital, Dili, two days after the announcement that East Timor voted to break from Indonesia in a U.N. referendum.
At least 31 people -- including three Catholic priests -- perished in the attack, among the bloodiest during months of violence which investigators say left as many as 1,500 people dead.
A separate East Timorese commission has found that rape and sexual slavery by pro-Indonesian groups was "widespread and systematic" during 24 years of occupation. Only one Indonesian perpetrator, militia leader Eurico Guterres, has been punished for the violence that followed the vote. He is serving a 10 year prison sentence.
The joint commission, which will hold hearings for several months, has no powers to prosecute perpetrators, but can offer amnesty to those who come before it. Rights groups call it a whitewash, serving only to exonerate criminals and perpetuate a culture of impunity.
This is cache, read story here
