Committee for Conflict Transformation Support |
CCTS
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Truth commissions: One option when dealing with the recent past in countries that have endured war or dictatorshipsRoberta Bacic, a Chilean working for War Resisters International, provides more information about truth commissions as a way of dealing with the past
Diana Francis' recent book People, Peace and Power appears at a moment when it seems almost impossible to stop the war machine. In it she encourages academics and practitioners of conflict transformation to acknowledge the need for dealing with the past if we do not want 'conflicts to grow from the seeds of past suffering and hatred'2. She courageously addresses the complexities and demands of justice, the realities of power, and the impact of social injustice - key topics in keeping the peace once hostilities end. Looking into any of the recent conflicts, this has been the reality: Kosovo/a, Chechnya, Afghanistan, Iraq, just to name a few. Truth commissions represent an attempt to deal with some aspects of the problem of dealing with the past. They have been set up in countries that have endured violent conditions or where human rights have been systematically violated. The new administrations - whether following war, dictatorship, or a transitional government - lack a system of justice capable of dealing with the consequences of the past. The existing systems cannot be relied upon to prosecute those responsible for human rights violations, because violence has usually been perpetrated by the state and its institutions, including the judicial system. At the very least, these institutions have been complicit in the violence by ignoring or denying its existence. We can also add the dimension that all of us who constitute society share responsibility in varying degrees for what has happened. In Anil's Ghost we read: 'We are often criminals in the eyes of the earth, not only for having committed crimes, but because we know that crimes have been committed'3. Hamber agrees with this point: 'Responsibility needs to be taken not only for direct actions, but also for silence and covert support'4. In the political discourse which accompanies the establishment of truth commissions, the individual needs of those who have suffered are generally subordinated to the interests and timetable of the new government. There is no acknowledgement that the healing process of victims may require a different timetable. Referring to the Guatemala Truth Commission, Beristain says: 'However, telling the truth and documenting it is not in itself any assurance. After the testimonies and the reports, it is crucial for the government to implement thorough structural changes to the institutions implicated in human rights abuses'5. Truth commissions are established as independent bodies capable not only of conducting a proper investigation and but also of offering suggestions on how to proceed after the facts have been officially and openly acknowledged. They also aim at reaching some level of agreed understanding about the past. As we have pointed out, in most cases the legal system in the countries concerned has been part of the old order. Many of those who played a part in that system, and may continue to do so, supported the politics of the previous regime. We can not ignore the fact so well and clearly expressed by Ondaatje: 'Sometimes law is on the side of power, not truth'. In fact, I would add that this has been the case in most of the situations of this kind. Truth commissions vary in terms of their degree of authority, legal capacity, moral acceptance and support from survivors, the size of their budgets and the number of their staff. The extent of a truth commission's authority will depend not only on the kind of people who serve on it, but on the strength of the new government and its acceptance by society as a whole. Usually the chair of the commission is a figure of moral stature who has struggled for justice, has international prestige and has managed to expose human rights violations in the past. A truth commission's legal capacity will depend on the mechanisms available to it to unearth evidence of human rights violations and on its ability to link up with the judicial system which is ultimately responsible for the prosecution of the perpetrators. In my view - as someone not pretending to be neutral but standing beside those who have suffered the human rights' violations - dealing with the past means neither more nor less than learning to live / cope/ struggle with it in the present. Forgiveness and reconciliation may follow as a conclusion of the process. But they will not be my focus as generally the call for them constitutes a further demand upon those who have suffered human rights violations, made by those who have negotiated a political settlement to their own advantage and now exercise political power. After having worked with relatives of the disappeared for about twenty-five years in my country, having been part of the investigation team of the National Corporation of Reparation and Reconciliation for four years - the follow-up of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission - and having researched and lectured on the topic for several years, I would like to make a number of observations about these institutions in order to clarify how they can be extended and be as effective as possible at different levels of society. This is important in order to see how, when and where NGOs, grassroots groups, the educational system, professionals, individuals and social actors can act upon and be helpful in the healing process of both individuals and society as a whole.
For those who have suffered violations and repression most directly, it is difficult and controversial to trust an institution set up by the government, since during the period of repression it was the state that was responsible for the violations, either because it perpetrated them itself, or because it allowed them to happen. They have no real reason to suppose that a new body created by the state will be trustworthy. On the other hand, those who supported the previous government will also be suspicious of this new body. Over the past twenty years, many truth commissions have been set up (around 30 by now), the best well-known being those in South Africa and Chile. Of crucial importance is the way they are organised: how they select their staff; their means of co-ordinating with other organisations that are able to provide information and insights into procedures, and how long they have been allocated to fulfil their task. These factors will affect the way they connect with society as a whole and the extent to which they can help build a society where human rights are respected. As a result of the suggestions set forth by the Chilean Truth and Reconciliation Commission, a law - NR. 19.123 - was passed by parliament, article 6 of which reads: 'It is declared that the location of the disappeared people, as well as the bodies of the executed ones, and the circumstances of that disappearance or death, constitute an inalienable right of the relatives of the victims as well as of the whole of Chilean society.6' As these truth commissions get set up in countries experiencing political transition, following lengthy periods of repression and violence, their establishment has to be negotiated with the very people responsible for the oppression. Negotiated transition involves compromise. Perpetrators of human rights atrocities, many of whom still hold or seek positions of power in the new political dispensation, may refuse to submit themselves to justice. On the other hand, great numbers of victims demand accountability. The existence of such commissions is a result of the struggle of social movements which have organised around the concept of a right to truth, the right to end repression and the right to protest against an unfair and brutal society. These movements - often involving the relatives of the disappeared, victims of extra-judicial assassinations, the exiled and displaced - have been both a medium of resistance and a living testimony to what has been happening in their countries. They have drawn international attention to state-directed terror. However, it is important to realise that, although these commissions may be said to have been established on behalf of the victims, it is not always clear whether or not they have in fact been helping them. In the majority of cases, the negotiation process and amnesty are likely to be of benefit to the perpetrators whose impunity will persist. As Gillian Slovo says through one of her characters - 'And the fact remains: the Truth Commission amnesty seems to be a way of saying that the guilty can go free'7. Often victims' organisations play little or no part in setting up commissions or determining their procedures. Moreover, the granting of an amnesty may enable many perpetrators of human rights violations to stay in power. In Argentina, Chile and Uruguay, people accused of human rights violations have retained their jobs in the armed forces both during and after the transition period. As Rojas et al conclude: '... impunity constitutes in itself a human rights violation'8. Zalaquett, who suffered political repression in Chile and had to come as an exile to Europe, and was later Director of Amnesty International, has stated: 'Dealing with the past injustices and human rights violations is both an ethical and a political task. This is true not only for politicians but for human rights activists as well... In a transition one is dealing with a situation where meeting ethical requirements and political restraints creates dilemmas'9. To give you an insight into what it means to have lived through the disappearance or execution of a loved one, I invite you to read the following short accounts and then consider what the Truth Commission in Chile could have done, what could not be achieved then or ever; what other social organisations have done; and what could still be done. At the Seminar we could look into these questions. Suggested further reading
Roberta Bacic References
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