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Meanings and definitions for CAVR
What does CAVR stand for? What does CAVR mean?
- The Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor (more commonly known by its Portuguese acronym CAVR: Comissão de Acolhimento, Verdade e Reconciliação de Timor Leste) was an independent truth commission established in East Timor in 2001 under the UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) and charged to “inquire into human rights violations committed on all sides, between April 1974 and October 1999, and facilitate community reconciliation with justice for those who committed less serious offenses.” The idea of a truth commission in East Timor was first agreed by the National Council of Timorese Resistance in 2000.The Commission had a triple mandate as reflected in its name, to address:
(1) reception (acolhimento), the return of Timorese displaced into Indonesian West Timor and their reintegration into their communities, which the Commission described as "people embracing each other as East Timorese, of coming back to our selves, living under one roof, after many years of division and violence";
(2) truth seeking, rendering a full accounting of human rights violations between 1974 and 1999 (the end of the period of Indonesian rule), primarily though the collection of 7,669 statements; and
(3) reconciliation, conducted through a "novel and previously untested programme" called the Community Reconciliation Process, designed to reintegrate low-level offenders into their community.The commissioners, all Timorese nationals, were:
Aniceto Guterres Lopes, from the human rights group "Yayasan Hak"
Jacinto Alves
Maria Olandina Isabel Caeiro Alves, chair of "Women against violence"
Isabel Amaral Guterres
Father Jovito Araujo, a Catholic priest and former member of the resistance group OJETIL (Organização de Jovens e Estudantes de Timor Leste)
Jose Estevao Soares
Agustino de Vasconcelos, a minister in the East Timor Protestant Church (GKTT)CAVR was housed in the Comarca, a former Portuguese and Indonesian prison, which today houses the Centro Nacional Chega!, the CAVR archive, and a museum open to the public.The Commission delivered its 2,500-page report entitled Chega!
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