News & Updates 27 November 2017

Press Release “Bringing Them Home: Fifteen Stolen Children Reunited with their Families in Timor-Leste”

Press Release
Bringing Them Home: Fifteen Stolen Children Reunited
with their Families in Timor-Leste
Jakarta, Indonesia and Dili, Timor-Leste
20-27 November 2017

“I feel reborn today,” said Antonio Ximenes in the car on the way to the airport in Bali. He carefully took out a tattered black and white photograph of his sister from his wallet. “I have carried this picture with me for 35 years. It was my source of strength.” A day later Antonio held his sister in a long embrace, in his village near Same, Manufahi.

Antonio along with fourteen other “stolen children” (now adults, living in Indonesia) have been reunited with their families during a week-long visit on 20-27 November. Asia Justice and Rights (AJAR), as part of a working group spanning two countries, has traced these individuals in Indonesia. Based on their memories, working group members searched for the children’s families in Timor-Leste. Galuh Wandita, AJAR’s Director stated, “Finding and reuniting these stolen children with their families is part of a list of urgent unfinished business from a violent and tragic past. The fact that the two governments have contributed to the travel costs for this reunion is a first step towards a larger and more sustained effort to tracing these children and their families. Until they are reunited with their families, they are still living with the consequences of the violations they experienced as children decades ago.”

(AJAR Photo/Neo Pasopati)

During this visit, the 15 survivors came from Liquisa, Ermera, Aileu, Ainaro, Manufahi, Dili, Viqueque, Baucau and Lautem. They were taken from their families between 1977-1998, with almost no contact for two or three decades. The youngest was taken when he was six years old. Of the 15, three are women who were taken when they were ages 8, 12 and 13 years old.

Timor-Leste’s truth commission, the CAVR (2005), found that several thousand Timorese children were forcibly removed to Indonesia during the conflict (1975-1999). The CAVR found that “the widespread practice of removing children displayed a mindset that by taking control of Timor-Leste’s territory, Indonesia also gained unfettered control over its children…ABRI members and other individuals with power in Timor-Leste felt that they were entitled to take an East Timorese child home without their parents’ permission.” Both the CAVR and the bi-lateral Commission for Truth and Friendship (CTF, 2008) made recommendations that the Governments of Indonesia and Timor-Leste take effective steps to find these individuals and facilitate reunion with their families. After many years of inaction, human rights groups from the two countries have taken the initiative to facilitate these family reunions.

(AJAR Photo/Neo Pasopati)

A Working Group was formed in 2015, led by AJAR, involving civil society groups such as the Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence (KontraS), Association of the Families of the Disappeared in Indonesia (IKOHI), Labarik Lakon-Sulawesi in Indonesia, and in Timor-Leste, Asosiasaun Chega Ba Ita (ACbit), Asosiasaun HAK, Fundasaun Alola, Timor-Leste Red Cross (CVTL), and International Committee of the Red Cross in Timor-Leste (ICRC-TL). The Working Group works closely with Indonesia’s National Commission for Human Rights (Komnas HAM), Timor-Leste’s Ombudsman for Human Rights and Justice for Timor-Leste (PDHJ), and Centro Nacional Chega (CNC). This working group has now identified more than 100 stolen children and facilitated five reunions for 57 stolen children and their families.

Welcoming the group, Silverio Pinto, Timor-Leste’s Ombudsman, endorsed the commitment to this issue, stating, “It is the right of all persons to know their families and their heritage. This remains the duty of the countries.” Vella Oktarini, representing Komnas HAM, reaffirmed the cooperation between the PDHJ and Komnas HAM saying, “Our Memorandum of Understanding includes a joint commitment to finding these separated children as a foundation of friendship between the two countries.”

Building upon the momentum brought by this reunion, the Working Group asks the Governments of Indonesia and Timor-Leste to implement the recommendations of the CAVR and CTF. These include:

  • Form a commission to “acquire information about the fate of disappeared people and cooperate to gather data and provide information to their families,” including those of the stolen children.
  • Together with civil society; relevant international agencies; government ministries; the two national human rights institutions, Komnas HAM and PDHJ; and the Centro Nacional Chega, develop a program or mechanism to fund and facilitate reunion visits for greater numbers of stolen children who have been located.
  • Uphold the rights of stolen children by issuing identification and citizenship documents and providing free visa status for stolen children and their families who hold Indonesian passports and who wish to visit Timor-Leste.
  • Support and fund civil society in the two countries who seek to trace, document and address the legal, financial and psychosocial needs of the stolen children and their family members.
(AJAR Photo/Neo Pasopati)

Contact persons:

José Luís de Oliveira, AJAR Timor-Leste Program Director, lurumata@gmail.com, +67077237170
Indria Fernida, AJAR Regional Program Manager, ifernida@asia-ajar.org, +628161466341

Download PDF of press release (English)
Download PDF of press release (Indonesian)