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East Timor Association for Law, Human Rights and Justice September 2008 Activity Update


Activity Update Association HAK (Association for Law, Human Rights and Justice) 30/09/2008 (Extract) - HAK hopes to increase information exchange about the current situation in Timor-Leste, especially regarding human rights and our work.


We are pleased to share news of our latest publications, and some our activities related to the National Parliament and in the security sector reform. We welcome your comments and look forward to future collaboration to increase respect for human rights in Timor-Leste.

Demonstration against National Parliament plan to buy luxury cars On 11 and 12 June 2008, university students (Timor-Leste University Front, FUTL) assembled 1500 to 2000 people for a peaceful demonstration in front of the National Parliament to protest the planned purchase of 65 luxury cars for members of parliament.

According to the students the actual situation the average person faces includes an inability to cope with rising prices; as representatives of the people, the members of parliament deny this reality and push to buy luxury cars for themselves.

From a moral perspective, they are insensitive to the people’s suffering. From a legal perspective, the budget existed to purchase 26 cars, one for each commission, at a total cost of $910,000; not to purchase 65 cars­one for each member of parliament for a total of two million dollars.

This meant an additional $1,090,000 in the mid-year budget ratification to secure sufficient funds. From an economic perspective, why not allocate the funds to meet people’s basic needs, especially in the current situation. From a social perspective, the deputies are creating a gap between themselves and the population, and developing a bad social culture for the future. They are creating the idea that becoming a Member of Parliament means getting a car. Because of all this the students demonstrated to stop them from buying these luxury cars.

Assocaition HAK was involved in the organization of the demonstration with both moral and material support, along with other national NGOs such as Fokupers, Haburas and the National Youth Commission of Timor-Leste (CNJTL).

FUTL planned a second, five-day demonstration from 7 to 11 July 2008 at the main National University of Timor-Leste (UNTL) campus in Dili, as a continuation of the 11-12 June protests. However when FUTL and another student group, FOKUTIL, submitted a letter to the Dili District Police requesting authorization for the demonstration, they were denied use of the main UNTL campus citing Law No. 01/2006.

The law prohibits demonstrations less than one hundred metres from public buildings. Consequently, the Timor-Leste National Police and UN Police (UNPOL) authorized the demonstrators to use the Democracy Field. The organizers did not accept the change in venue, and taking advantage of the campus’ autonomy, demonstrated from the main UNTL campus again expressing their demands that parliament cancel its plans to buy an additional 39 luxury cars to have one to distribute to each Member of Parliament.

The demonstration, a peaceful, silent action with mouths taped closed and fasting could not be realized due to police intervention during which 51 students were detained when they taped their mouths closed and stood silently with a banner on the balcony of the national university’s main campus, only about 25 metres from the national parliament building. During the activity University property was damaged­glass from windows and doors broken. According to HAK, some of the damage was done by the university students themselves and some glass was broken when the police shot tear gas at the students.

The 51 arrested university students were investigated, while in police detension for seventy two hours, and then had a preliminary hearing at the Dili District Court. All the students were represented by attorneys during this process, Natercia de Deus Bárbosa from HAK Association and Wilson Cabral acting in his professional capacity. The final result of the hearing was that the Dili District Court released all 51 on their own recognizance (identities and residence­TIR).

Reform of Timor-Leste National Police

Since January 2008 HAK Association has represented Timor-Leste’s civil society and national NGOs, as a nomine of the Prime Minister, on the panel evaluating the Timor-Leste National Police (PNTL).

Aniceto Guro Berteni Neves is HAK’s representative; his role member-observer. From January until June the panel, established by government resolution 22/2008, evaluated and made recommendations regarding 1430 police.

They recommended 1196 PNTL members for re-training and recertification. 234 PNTL members were given pending status due to allegations of involvement in criminal activity against them. Some of the allegations stem from early in their police careers and some relate to their involvement in the 2006 crisis.

The allegations are based on data from PNTL, UNPOL, the Provedor for Human Rights (PDHJ), Prosecutor-General, United Nations Human Rights Unit and the Transitional Justice Office of the United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT). There are also complaints and reports from civil society organizations, including HAK itself, and from the general public. The national evaluation panel is composed of representatives chosen by the President of Timor-Leste, Prosecutor-General, UNMIT Human Rights Unit, UNMIT Transitional Justice Office, the Catholic Church, and UNPOL itself.

For more information please contact: Antonio Maria Soares at direito@yayasanhak.minihub.org
Jill SternbergAssociation HAK (Association for Law, Human Rights and Justice)Rua Governador Serpa Rosa T-091, Farol, Dili, Timor-LesteTel. +670-331-3323 or +670-740-2774 mobileEmail: jillberg@igc.org skype: jillberg

East Timor: Land and Biofuel


Timor, Land, and Biofuel - Tim Anderson Tim Anderson, lecturer in Political Economy at Sydney University has researched land tenure and ownership in the South Pacific, Latin America, and more recently, East Timor.

He recently published a report about the implications of an Indonesian Biofuel project the AMP government signed onto recently.

He cites pressures on the government of East Timor recently, to change the Constitution allowing foreigners to buy and sell land in East Timor.

Some of Timor's political leaders appear to be wavering in their original intent to keep Timorese soil in Timorese hands.

And is it just coincidence that USAID and AUSAID have recently launched a US$500,000 project to establish who owns what land in East Timor?

Traditional communal ownership of land could suffer in the growing push for privatisation.

See further: Community Rights to Customary Land in East Timor post on ETLJB which includes links to other posts about the land issue in East Timor.

East Timor - Justice For All?


Written by Jesse Wright The National Monday 29 September 2008 - As parliament debates its first penal code, one East Timorese official is pushing for village justice Since the dawn of time justice in East Timor has been measured in water buffalo. Generally a goat theft costs one buffalo and a rape is worth two, although it varies from town to town.

Though traditional justice was never institutionalized, it has remained an underpinning of village life here. Before Indonesia’s 1975 invasion Timor was a Portuguese colony and for 400 years whatever went on outside the capital Dili was ignored. During the occupation courts were notorious for their corrupt judges whose decisions were not respected. When the Indonesians were ousted in late 1999 there was a lot of hope for improvement.

But though independence came in 2002—following two years of United Nations interim rule—East Timor is still struggling to create a set of comprehensive laws. Talk to any legal aid group in this tiny Asian nation and they’ll tell you the best hope is a judicial system including formal justice with trained judges and lawyers. According to the constitution, everyone has the right to a fair trial and an attorney and innocence is presumed until proven otherwise. There’s no mention of water buffalo.

But even as the legislature moves to finalize the nation’s first penal code this month, a minor government official is on a crusade to formalize terra bandu. Usually terra bandu is traditional law used to protect natural resources, but the state secretary for the environment says it can do more.

State Secretary Abilio Lima has already convinced about one third of the nation’s one million people that everything from cattle rustling to rape are crimes best resolved outside courtrooms by water buffalo justice.

To those who know him Lima is an odd character to push for justice. In 1999, the year of Timor’s bloody break from Indonesia, Lima stood firmly with Indonesia as a member of the FPDK, an Indonesian umbrella group which gave money and support to some of the most notorious and bloodthirsty pro-Indonesian gangs. The FPDK is responsible for the death of hundreds of innocent Timorese.

Now as state secretary of the environment he believes he has been tasked to look after the natural environment as well as the home environment of his countrymen.

“I think the environment has a relationship with sexuality,” he said. “When you talk about environment, you talk about human environment, about the social environment. I focus on the total comprehensive environment.”

In the last year Lima says his office has approved a terra bandu system in about half the districts in East Timor. Last week he was in Tulatakeo, a village a few hours south of Dili. He was the government representative in a ceremony which marked the acceptance of traditional justice. Now the village chief can treat serious crimes according to local whim.

“The advantage of terra bandu is that it comes from the community,” Lima said. “Because it comes from the community, they have a responsibility to it.”

According to Lima, the problem is the penal code. Six years of independence and East Timor is still without its own set of laws, relying instead on Indonesian laws last updated in 1999.
“People who don't like Indonesia don't respect the laws,” Lima said. “So we will use traditional law until we can agree on a national law.”

Judicial authorities here are shocked.

“If the secretary of state for the environment is doing this, he is very wrong,” said Fernanda Borges, a member of parliament who sits on the judicial oversight committee. “He’s very wrong because he is operating outside the constitution and outside the judicial system.” Borges has said she will launch a parliamentary enquiry into the matter.

But officials in the justice ministry say they are not concerned with Lima. Although no one in the ministry of justice had heard about Lima’s push for terra bandu, the permanent secretary for the minister said he supported parts of the plan.

“Rape is a crime you can’t resolve through terra bandu,” Crisagno Neto said. “You have to take that to court.” But he added that smaller crimes like minor domestic violence could be resolved using traditional justice. This directly contradicts the Indonesian penal code—which Timor follows.

“Domestic violence is a crime at whatever level,” said Mitch Dufrense, head of the United Nations Justice Support Unit in Timor. “The severity of the specified level is something for the court to decide.”

But women’s rights groups here say community police often tell victims to take their problems to the village elders. According to a lawyer at a local NGO, the police usually won’t get involved in domestic violence or rape cases unless the village chief cannot resolve the problem.

Besides, the permanent secretary for the justice ministry says the courts in Timor are not for everyone.

“Terra bandu is easier and faster [than court trials] in rural areas for people who have no money,” Neto said. “But in cities and in areas where people have money, they can’t use terra bandu. They need to go to court.”

But East Timor is one of the most impoverished nations in Asia where unemployment is around 60 per cent and the average income is about a dollar a day. Most Timorese don’t live in cities and spend their days farming or hunting for food. Under Neto’s criteria almost no one should go to court.

And as it stands today virtually no one does.

In a country where it is estimated that about half of all women will suffer gender based crimes this year, officially closing the door on formal justice has serious consequences. According to the local United Nations office, only 132 women have come forward so far this year to report gender based violence to the police—a far cry from the estimated 250,000 victims.

Instead of a courtroom, many of these women are being dealt with in mean thatched huts. Instead of judges, these women will visit elderly village leaders like Florindo Mesquita Lorego.
Lorego is a balding, snowy bearded village chief in a hamlet hours away from the capitol. He, along with a dozen other village leaders, decides terra bandu cases.

“[Terra bandu] applies to people who are thieves, horse thieves, cattle rustlers, and rapists,” Lorego explained. “People who go into someone's garden without permission from the owner, that's a crime.”

He said rape is not a big problem in his community, but it happens.

“Rape is resolved with two cows and you close the woman's wound,” Lorego said. In Timor when you close the wound you make the problem better—and the problem with rape is the family name. The two cows (as well as the occasional goat or pig) are given to the victim’s family. Often one of the animals is killed, cooked and then the rapist and the men from the victim’s family eat and drink palm wine together. The woman is not involved in the resolution. For her part, all the victim is expected to do is tell Lorego what happened.

Lorego has lived all his life according to these values and now that he has government approval to dole out village justice, he is happy to oblige.

East Timor Graduate Summer School Australian National University


Asia Pacific Week 2009 and East Timor Graduate Summer School

PLEASE NOTE CLOSING DATE FOR APPLICATIONS IS 3 October 2008

Asia Pacific Week

Asia-Pacific Week is a conference and summer school that brings together hundreds of PhD candidates from Australia and overseas to workshop projects, benefit from master classes and form networks committed to understanding the world's most dynamic region.Since its inception in 2004, Asia-Pacific Week has become a signature event for postgraduates in Australia and for scholars of the region. In 2008, 200 doctoral candidates took part, along with three dozen senior scholars.Asia Pacific Week is a container for a number of “Graduate Summer Schools” focusing on different areas of the Asia-Pacific region (the Pacific Islands, China, Japan, Indonesia, South Asia, Mainland Southeast Asia and East Timor).

During a week of activities, graduate students have a chance to present their research interests, meet other students and academics, participate in a wide range of training activities, be introduced to the rich holdings on Asia and the Pacific at the ANU Library and the National Library of Australia and participate in a stimulating program of events including cross-area workshops, keynote speeches, seminars and master classes, film screenings, cultural performances and social events.

More information at http://rspas.anu.edu.au/asiapacificweek/index.php

East Timor Graduate Summer School

The East Timor Studies Graduate Summer School and conference is a week of workshops and research activities designed to bring together young scholars who are working on East Timor. The Summer School is held at the campus of The Australian National University in Canberra, and is open to participants from within and outside Australia.


The program is still provisional at this stage. If you wish to take part you should let the program convenor know as soon as possible. The program will showcase the work of young East Timor scholars in a formal setting and will include seminars, roundtable discussions, guest lectures as well as library visits and cultural events. The program also aims to provide students with an opportunity to use the rich resources held at the ANU library and the National Library of Australia. The East Timor Studies Graduate Summer School is open to postgraduate students currently enrolled in any tertiary institution inside or outside Australia who have not already attended a previous Asia Pacific Week. Recently completed post-doctoral students and Honours students may also be considered. Several provisional themes for guest lectures have been proposed, and participants will be expected to make presentations on their own research interests.

Provisional discussion topics for guest lectures are:

agricultural development
justice / legal system
language
oil and gas reserves
education
economy
cultural heritage

Roundtable discussions on the following topics may be held: Future directions for East Timor research Challenges for fieldwork in East Timor

ANU Asia Pacific Week
The Summer School will take place as part of the University's Asia Pacific Week. This is designed to provide a forum for building networks among postgraduate scholars through exchange of knowledge and experiences around the study of the Asia Pacific region.

The 2008 East Timor Summer School is to be held in conjunction with summer schools in China Studies, Indonesian Studies, Japan Studies, and South Asia Studies. The Asia-Pacific week will feature special events such as keynote speeches, films, performances and exhibitions. Participants in the East Timor sessions will interact with participants from other summer schools in combined social functions and there will also be an opportunity for discipline-based groups from across the range of Asian Studies to meet.

Applications
The cost of accommodation (single room plus three meals per day) is provided for participants. Participants in Asia-Pacific Week 2009 will be accommodated at John XXIII on the ANU campus.

Participants are strongly encouraged to seek funding for travel expenses from their own institutions. There may be some contribution towards domestic travel costs for participants presenting their research.

Applicants are required to complete the online application form. Applications close on 3 October 2008. Applicants will be advised about the success of their applications in early November.

Contact details
For further information contact the East Timor program convenor: Dr Andrew McWilliam Department of Anthropology Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200 AUSTRALIA Email: andrew.mcwilliam@anu.edu.au

East Timor signs Nuclear Test Ban Treaty


26 September 2008 Final day of UN event sparks endorsement of 11 treaties – On the final day of the United Nations treaty event to promote universal participation and implementation of multilateral pacts, six Member States undertook nine treaty actions by signing or ratifying separate conventions, agreements, treaties and optional protocols.


Following Uganda’s lead from yesterday, Austria ratified both the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and its Optional Protocol.

Chilean President Michelle Bachelet personally ratified a second optional protocol to the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, aimed at eliminating the death penalty.

Timor-Leste’s President, José Ramos-Horta, similarly took part in the event, signing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty.

The Bahamas actively endorsed four treaties, ratifying the Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, and three additional protocols concerning human trafficking and the illicit manufacturing and trafficking of firearms.Small island nation Kiribati followed Burundi’s example and ratified the Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism.

In total 30 States took 57 actions during this year’s treaty event, the tenth in the series held on the sidelines of the General Assembly’s General Debate at UN Headquarters.As 2008 marks the 60th anniversary of adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, this year’s event – which began on 23 September – centred on the theme “Universal Participation and Implementation – Dignity and Justice for All of Us.”

UNHCR East Timor Human Rights Training Expert Position


Training Expert United Nations

Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)

Closing date: 05 Oct 2008

Location: Timor-Leste - Dili

In April 2006, soldiers from the Timorese army, known as the F-FDTL, protested against alleged discrimination against members of the armed forces originating from the west. This served as a starting point for a violent crisis that highlighted an east-west divide in Timorese society. However, what happened was also about how an ex-guerrilla force undergoes a transformation from war to peace and how the PNTL, Timor Leste’s young police force, can be built from scratch.

Accountable security forces founded on international human rights standards is a key requirement for the development of Timor Leste into a prosperous and democratic state. Within the framework of the Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP) signed with the Government of Timor Leste in 2007 OHCHR/UNMIT Human Rights and Transitional Justice Section (HRTJS) is in the process of recruiting a consultant to support training programme efforts aiming to build the capacity of the security forces to respect and protect human rights.

The ideal candidate should have extensive experience in the design and implementation of human rights training programmes for police and/or armed forces, preferably in a post-conflict/UN peace-keeping context.

She/he should have excellent research and drafting skills in English, as well as knowledge and previous experience of the Timor-Leste situation. Knowledge of Portuguese, Bahasa or Tetun would be valuable.

The candidate should be prepared to spend 25 working days plus weekends inside Timor Leste to conduct research and write a report containing her/his findings and recommendations with regard to human rights training programmes for PNTL and F-FDTL.

BackgroundBeginning in April 2006, Timor Leste experienced a serious crisis after soldiers in the Timor Leste Defence Force, F-FDTL (Falantil- Forcas de Defesa de Timor Leste), protested against alleged discrimination against members of the armed forces originating from the west. The allegations were not new but were made in an atmosphere poisoned by political manipulation that caused the Timor Leste National Police, PNTL (Policia Nacional de Timor-Leste) and F-FDTL to be divided internally and against each other.

The east-west divide were transferred to the streets of Dili where wide-scale violence erupted. F-FDTL and PNTL were at the centre of the complex crisis which was also about how F-FDTL is undergoing a difficult transformation from a guerrilla movement to a modern defence force, and how PNTL is being built from scratch.

Accountable security forces founded on international human rights standards is a key requirement for the development of Timor Leste into a prosperous and democratic state. On 11 February 2008 the stability of the state was again threatened when an armed group led by fugitive Alfredo Reinado, a former F-FDTL member carried out attacks against the President and the Prime Minister resulting in the nearly fatal injury of the President and the death of Reinado. Fortunately, the Government and other actors took its responsibility and were able to avoid a breakdown in law and order.

However, following the attacks there was a significant increase in the number of allegations of human rights violations by members of PNTL and F-FDTL. This negative trend further demonstrated the importance of building a culture of human rights and respect for the rule of law within the police and the army. Both PNTL and F-FDTL are new institutions that began to be formed during the mandate of the UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) from 1999 to 2002. In the area of human rights, PNTL has benefited from a number of human rights initiatives implemented by the different UN missions as well as bilateral actors. F-FDTL, on the other hand, have been exposed to human rights training only recently with a first course organised by UNMIT HRTJS in July 2007.


The top leadership of the country has on numerous occasions expressed their commitment to improving the human rights record of PNTL and F-FDTL and to ensure accountability for misconduct. Recently, the Government has called for a more structured approach to the human rights training provided to the security forces. In view of this, it is essential to undertake a stock-tacking of the wide range of human rights training activities undertaken until date for the police and the army. In particular with regard to PNTL a comprehensive overview of relevant initiatives is needed.

The same is true in relation to F-FDTL albeit to a lesser extent.

A better understanding of the past experiences can form the basis for recommendations for more effective human rights training programmes for the security forces. The training consultant will play a key role in this important exercise.

Duties and responsibilities- Undertake a research study to map and analyse human rights training initiatives undertaken by different actors for PNTL and F-FDTL from 1999-2008.

Produce a report based on the study outlining findings and concrete recommendations to relevant stakeholders on how to enhance the effectiveness of the human rights training efforts for PNTL and F-FDTL. The report should outline a suggested plan for PNTL and F-FDTL training programmes for the period 2009-2010.

Provide advice as appropriate to UNMIT HRTJS in relation to its training activities for the security sector in Timor Leste.

Qualifications, Experience and Skills Required:-

Advanced university degree, preferably in law, political science, international relations or other discipline related to human rights.
- Extensive experience in the design of training programmes, preferably on human rights, for security forces in an international setting.
- Excellent research and drafting skills.
- Ability to work in a consultative and collaborative manner.
- Demonstrated ability to communicate complex ideas and concept in a simple manner.
- Necessary personal qualities: flexibility, patience, and excellent listening skills.
- Fluency in English.

Desirable:-

Experience from or knowledge of Timor Leste.

- UN work experience, preferably in the area of human rights.
- Tetun, Portuguese or Indonesian language skills.

Conditions of service and remunerationThe consultant will be based in Dili (Timor Leste) in the premises of the United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT) for a maximum period of 25 working days.

At the end of this period, she/he must have produced a report with findings and recommendations. Travel expenses plus a generous remuneration package will be provided. How to applyShould you be interested please forward your CV, preferably by a UN personal history form (P-11, available e.g. on http://www.ohchr.org/) and brief cover letter to the attention of Ms. Teri Ann Bryans (bryans@un.org) copied to Mr. Joacim Carlson (carlsonj@un.org) before 5 October 2008.Please indicate in the subject of your e-mail the reference: “TCP-funded Training

ExpertReference Code: RW_7JT56R-87

Simu Malu: Finding Peace in East Timor


ETLJB Editor Note: This item is being posted notwithstanding that it dates back to 2007 (apparently) to promote the work of CRS in peace building in East Timor and also because it includes a report on traditional law - tara bandu - which has been the subject of recent press reports and posts on ETLJB.

Water buffalo justice reigns in East Timor
Custom and conflict:The uses and limitations of traditional systems in addressing rural land disputes in East Timor
East Timor mulls traditional justice
Community Rights to Customary Land in East Timor

From Catholic Relief Services - A market that used to sell rice and tropical fruit is now a beaten expanse of dirt and burnt remains. The road that children used to walk to church and school is now the setting for battles between youth. A city that used to be populated with just "other Timorese" now consists of West Timorese and East Timorese.

Sebastiao Ximenes, the village leader of Moris Foun, works to create a peaceful community where his neighbors can feel safe.

And Sebastiao Ximenes, who used to be leader of a whole community, now struggles to bring families home to Moris Foun again.

Moris Foun is one neighborhood in Dili, the capital city of East Timor, where civil unrest has driven thousands of the 167,000 residents to seek safety in makeshift camps in schools, parks, convents and empty buildings. Churches are again a place of sanctuary. It has been over a year since accusations of discrimination in the military set off a wave of violence in East Timor, and Dili still doesn't know when the arson, looting and violent clashes between gangs of youth will end.

In a place where chaos can descend at any moment, Sebastiao and CRS are trying to bring simu malu — that is, mutual understanding — and with it, peace.

A Vision of Peace

As a first step, CRS' Simu Malu project team carried out a Vision of Peace workshop where Sebastiao and other determined community members imagined what peace would look like in Moris Foun. Then, they put their plans into action — with events like a CRS-sponsored soccer tournament.

In preparation for the tournament, youth from conflicting communities came together to paint peace-themed murals on the walls around town. These new friends were joined on the day of the opening game by government officials, leaders from other nearby neighborhoods, CRS East Timor's country director Jason Belanger, and at least 200 local citizens.

Among them was a village elder, who, with his son, had left a camp for people displaced by violence for the first time in five months. The elder was warmly welcomed and hugged, and spoke to the crowd before the first game of the monthlong event began.

From Trauma to Healing

"Those who did not leave were attacked," remembers Judit, a Moris Foun resident who now works for CRS. "Given the circumstances, I felt I must leave." So she packed her things and sought safety in a camp. CRS runs five camps in Dili for as many as 8,000 displaced people and provides support for several more camps.

Back in February, many people were fleeing Moris Foun and the nearby neighborhood known as 30th of August because of confrontations between local youth and residents from other villages, says Judit.

Renewed violence swelled the population of the closest camp from 775 people to over 1,700. CRS provided tarpaulins and bamboo to build temporary shelters and contributed critical funding for food. Until it was safe outside the camp, a CRS health promotion team kept conditions safe inside the camp with activities for children that focused on improving hygiene and hand-washing.

Despite the Pacific blue of the waters that edge the city, most citizens are too familiar with fear and violence. They have already lived through the abuses of an Indonesian occupation and the war that won their independence.

But Sebastiao says that the activities first imagined at the Vision of Peace workshop have managed to bring a sense of trust and security to Moris Foun, and that hundreds of families have begun to return. "CRS has provided support which has allowed the community to heal from the trauma of the recent crisis," he says.

Bringing Them Home

In fact, just a month after the surge in violence, over 600 people felt safe enough to leave the overpopulated camp because Sebastiao and the community leader of 30th of August — named for the date in 1999 that East Timorese voted for independence from neighboring Indonesia — had taken a vow of peace.

The vow was made with CRS support in a public ceremony known as the Tara Bandu. Residents gathered at the sacred house to hear an elder read the terms of the agreement — no more blades used in fighting, no more destruction of property, no more killing. The elder slaughtered a cow as a sacrifice. Then Sebastiao and 30th of August's leader shook hands and signed an accord.

The law of the Tara Bandu is not lightly broken. Anyone who breaks the Tara Bandu must pay the sacred house an amount equal to the value of the sacrifice. If the guilty do not pay, they either enter the judicial system or are punished by the sacred house.

"With the Tara Bandu … people finally felt free to return home, children were able to resume school and small businesses reopened," says Judit.

Despite this progress, simu malu still has further to spread. Citizens fear that when they go back to Moris Foun they may just have to leave again. Until everyone returns, Sebastiao says, "I will go back to my people and try to figure out how to bring them home."

Our Work in East Timor

CRS East Timor started as a division of CRS Indonesia in 1979. It became an independent country program in June 2000 to better respond to the devastation of East Timor's struggle for independence from Indonesia. In addition to food and agricultural assistance, CRS East Timor runs microfinance, peace and reconciliation, and civil-society programs. CRS East Timor works closely with local nonprofits and promotes active participation of Timorese citizens to address injustices in their lives.

Water buffalo justice reigns in East Timor


Earth Times Online 28/09/2008 Dili - Justice in East Timor has traditionally been measured out in water buffaloes. A goat theft costs one buffalo and a rape of a woman is worth two, although it varies from village to village. While it has never been institutionalized, the traditional way of meting out justice has remained an underpinning of village life on the impoverished half-island, even under 400 years of Portuguese rule.

After Indonesia's 1975 invasion, courts were established but not respected because of a corrupt system and judges. Since 2002 and following two years of United Nations interim rule, East Timor has been independent and eager to abandon the Indonesian system and adopt its own judicial system.

Legal aid groups said the best hope for East Timor is a formal judicial system with trained judges and lawyers. According to the country's constitution, everyone has the right to a fair trial and an attorney, and innocence is presumed until proven otherwise. There is no mention of water buffalo in the constitution.

But even as the National Parliament moves to finalize the nation's first penal code this month, a minor government official is on a crusade to formalize tara bandu - traditional law Timorese have used to preserve natural resources and regulate other matters of daily life.

Secretary of State for the Environment Abilio Lima has already persuaded about a third of the nation's 1 million people that everything from cattle rustling to rape are crimes best resolved outside courtrooms by water buffalo justice.

Last week, Lima was in Tulatakeo, a village a few hours south of the capital, Dili, as the government representative in a ceremony to mark the acceptance of traditional justice. Now, the village chief has the authority to treat serious crimes according to local whim.

"The advantage of tara bandu is that it comes from the community," Lima said. "Because it comes from the community, they have a responsibility to it."

According to Lima, the problem with East Timor's penal code is that it relies on Indonesian laws and was last updated in 1999, three years before the country gained independence.

"People who don't like Indonesia don't respect the laws," Lima said, "so we will use traditional law until we can agree on a national law."

Many judicial authorities in Dili said they were shocked at the moves by Lima, who has no legal authority to impose tara bandu or any system of justice.

"He's very wrong because he is operating outside the constitution and outside the judicial system," said Fernanda Borges, a member of Parliament who sits on its judicial oversight committee.

Borges said she would launch a parliamentary inquiry into the matter. However, some officials in the Justice Ministry seemed unconcerned with Lima's actions.

Although not informed about the environmental secretary's push for terra bandu, the permanent secretary for the minister of justice said he supported parts of the plan.

"Rape is a crime you can't resolve through tara bandu," Crisagno Neto said. "You have to take that to court."

However, Neto said smaller crimes like minor domestic violence could be resolved using traditional justice, a statement that contradicts East Timor's penal code.

"Domestic violence is a crime at whatever level," said Mitch Dufrense, head of the UN Justice Support Unit in East Timor. "The severity of the specified level is something for the court to decide."

Yet Neto said the courts in East Timor are not for everyone.

"Tara bandu is easier and faster in rural areas for people who have no money," Neto said, "but in cities and in areas where people have money, they can't use tara bandu. They need to go to court."

In East Timor, where unemployment hangs around 60 per cent and the average income is about a dollar a day, the majority of the population lives where they can farm and hunt for food. Under Neto's criteria, almost no one should go to court, and, as it stands today, virtually no one does.

The United Nations estimated that about half of all women in East Timor would be the victims this year of gender-based crimes, yet according to the local UN office, 132 of the estimated 250,000 victims have come forward to report such offenses to police. Instead of a courtroom and a judge, these women could visit the thatched hut of a village elder.

One such elder is Florindo Mesquita Lorego, a balding, snowy-bearded village chief in a hamlet hours away from Dili who, along with a dozen other village leaders, decides tara bandu cases.

"(Tara bandu) applies to people who are thieves, horse thieves, cattle rustlers and rapists," Lorego explained. "People who go into someone's garden without permission from the owner, that's a crime."

He said rape is not a big problem in his community, but it happens. "Rape is resolved with two cows, and you close the woman's wound," Lorego said.

Closing the wound means the perpetrator makes the problem better, and the problem with rape is damage to the family name. The two cows, as well as the occasional goat or pig, are given to the victim's family. Often one of the animals is killed, cooked and then the rapist and the men from the victim's family eat and drink palm wine together.

The woman is not involved, except to report what happened. The secretary of state for the environment has put his stamp of approval on such a system for about half the districts in East Timor and said he sees his portfolio as reaching far beyond ecology.

"I think the environment has a relationship with sexuality," Lima said. "When you talk about environment, you talk about the human environment, about the social environment. I focus on the total comprehensive environment."

Custom and conflict:The uses and limitations of traditional systems in addressing rural land disputes in East Timor


A discussion paper prepared for a regional workshop on “Land Policy and Administration for Pro-Poor Rural Growth” Dili December 2003

By Laura S. Meitzner Yoder Ph D

With research assistance from Calisto Colo, Zacarias F. da Costa, and Francisco Soares

Published on East Timor Law Journal on 27 September 2008

Abstract

A dynamic background of customary land ownership and recent migrations, overlaid with successive political transitions, are behind many land conflicts in the new nation of East Timor. Some of the forms of land claims and authorities in regions which have experienced migration or formal land schemes replicate customary patterns.

Almost all rural land disputes in East Timor are taken first to traditional leaders and village-level government, and handled by outside authorities only when these mechanisms do not reach settlement. Rural people have a clear preference to settle land cases at the lowest level possible, due to proximity to physical evidence and local expertise in circumstances surrounding the case.

Disputants take their cases to traditional authorities, who hear testimony from disputants and witnesses, consider evidence, observe the disputed land, facilitate and legitimize decisions, and oversee a reconciliation ceremony if the case is resolved. Methods of settlement range from arbitration to mediation.

Cases involving parties from different villages, conflicting customary claims, political differences, and the private sector are frequently deferred or taken to outside authorities, including the Directorate of Land and Property or courts.

Even in conflicts surrounding titled land, abandoned properties, migration, state claims, and government administrative boundaries that require state involvement, traditional and village leaders often participate at all levels of settlement as witnesses and counselors.

Many traditional authorities and government officials are expectant that future land laws will clarify decision-making authority in intractable land disputes and will assist them in settling rural land disputes.

Click on the following link to read this article.

Custom and conflict: The uses and limitations of traditional systems in addressing rural land disputes in East Timor

Image: East Timorese men in traditional attire (tais mane).

Land Rights in East Timor - Policy Analysis and Draft Law


ETLJ 27/09/2008 - The following reports are the legislative drafting for democratic social transformation analyses of the social problem of land rights in East Timor together with draft legislation produced by Civil Society Working Group A (Constitutional Affairs, Rights, Guarantees and Liberties) in the University of San Francisco School of Law Legislative Drafting Initiative in East Timor conducted in Dili during 2003-2004.

These reports and draft legislation are published on the East Timor Law Journal (ETLJ) in English, Indonesian and Portuguese (except a Portuguese translation of the draft land rights law) and may be read by clicking on the following links that will open word documents from ETLJ.

Analysis of the Social Problem of Land Rights Draft Land Rights Act

Analisis tentang Hak Atas Tanah Rancangan Undang Undang ttg Hak Atas Tanah

Direitos a Terra

Legal Reports Summaries National Media 26 September 2008


East Timor approves UN Convention against corruption - Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 26 September 2008
East Timor's Council of Ministers approved the United Nations Conventions Against Corruption Wednesday (24/9), paving the way for the establishment of an anti-corruption commission.

Parliament holds public audience on law for witness protection - Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 26 September 2008
Parliamentary Committee A for Constitutions, Justice and Public Administration yesterday held a public audience with civil society, Timorese Legal Advisor Association and Public Prosecution analyzing about law for the protection of witness in the court trial.

Public Prosecution to submit report on police missing money - Radio Televisaun Timor Leste 26 September 2008
Prosecutor General, Longinhos Monteiro, said the Public Prosecution would submit report on Timorese National Police's money went missing during the Joint Operation for manhunt for the rebels was held.

Government extends mandate of task force for TT Company Radio - Televisaun Timor Leste , 26 September 2008
The Government has made decision to extend mandate of Task Force team to another six months for negotiating Timor Telecom Company (TT) allowing other companies to invest in the country.

Around 50.000 followers to take part in FRETILIN's Peace March - Suara Timor Loro Sae 26 September 2008
Secretary General of the FRETILIN party Mari Alkatiri said Thursday (25/9) that the party would mobilize more than 50.000 people for its peace march to show the world that FRETILIN did not recognize the legitimacy of the AMP.

NGO takes on women's rights


DILI, 26 September 2008 (IRIN) - As a girl, Laura Pina was not expected to slave in the kitchen simply by virtue of her gender. Then she got married.

Pina was shocked when she went to visit her in-laws for the first time. "They thought women had to serve the husband's family," she said.

"They thought I had to stay and cook in the kitchen for all the ceremonies. They expected me to stay in the kitchen all day and then eat last because that was their custom - even if we sometimes ate in the middle of the night."

Pina could not agree to such traditional behaviour. Her parents were teachers and they had always encouraged her to get an education and be independent.
When she saw how Timorese women were treated as second-class citizens, she decided to do something about it. She started by arguing with her mother-in-law. Read more...


East Timor Women - Raising awareness of the plight of women in East Timor

East Timor Parliament Extraordinary Plenary Meeting 25 September 2008


Automated translation. Not an official translation. Original Portuguese text follows.


Secretariat
Office of Public Relations
Agenda No. 132/II

Extraordinary Plenary Meeting ofThursday, 25 September 2008

As part of today's morning was not the Extraordinary Plenary Session of Thursday, 25 September 2008 by reason of a lack of a quorum. A public hearing was held by Deputies of the Commission and the institutions of JSMP, ATTL, Advocate Sans Frontieres, Post CAVR, UNMIT Human Rights, with the theme of witness protection.

In this matter the PDHJ only sent its report of opinion and PGR did not participate. The Commission B also held a public hearing with the representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of RDTL, National Directorate of Trade and Industry on the treaty "approving the International Coffee Agreement."

In the afternoon there was also cancellation of today's meeting because of lack of a quorum. The second Vice-President of the National Parliament, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao apologized to Mr. Freitas Cancio Minister of Education, Mr. Deputy Minister of Education Paulo Assis adviser and as drafters of the bill in 8/II (Law of Basic Education).

Finally Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao Chairman of the Board informed that tomorrow September 26, 2008, at 09:00 there will be meeting the leaders of the benches and at 10:00 there Extraordinary Plenary Meeting on the Convention "approving the International Coffee Agreement" as the public hearing B made by the Commission and Representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of RDTL, National Directorate of Trade and Industry this morning in the National Parliament of Timor-Leste.

End.
-----
Secretariado
Gabinete de Relações
PúblicasAgenda No. 132/II

Reunião Plenária Extraordinária deQuinta-Feira, de 25 de Setembro de 2008

Na parte de manhã de hoje não foi realizada a Sessão Plenária Extraordinária de Quinta-Feira, de 25 de Setembro de 2008 por motivo do quórum e da audiência pública feita pelos Senhores Deputados da Comissão A e as instituições de JSMP, ATTL, Advocat Sains Border, Post CAVR, UNMIT Human Rights, com o tema Protecção de Testemunha. Neste assunto o PDHJ só enviou o seu Relatório de Parecer e PGR não participou.

A Comissão B também realizou audiência pública com o Representante do Ministério dos Negócios Estrangeiros da RDTL, Direção Nacional do Comércio e Indústria sobre o tratado “Que Aprova o Acordo Internacional do Café”.

Na parte da tarde de hoje também não houve reunião por motivo do quórum. A II Vice-Presidente do Parlamento Nacional, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão pediu desculpa ao Sr. Ministro da Educação Câncio Freitas, Sr. Vice-Ministro da Educação Paulo Assis e Assessor como redactores da Proposta de Lei No 8/II, (Lei de Bases da Educacao).

Finalmente a Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão Presidente da Mesa informou que amanhã 26 de Setembro de 2008, às 09h00 haverá reunião dos Líderes das Bancadas e às 10h00 haverá Reunião Plenária Extraordinária sobre a Convenção “Que Aprova o Acordo Internacional do Café” conforme a audiência pública feita pela Comissão B e Representante do Ministério dos Negócios Estrangeiros da RDTL, Direção Nacional do Comércio e Indústria hoje de manhã no Parlamento Nacional de Timor-Leste.

Fim.

East Timor Parliament Plenary Session 24 September 2008


Automated translation. Not an official translation. Original Portuguese test follows.

National Parliament
Secretariat Office of Public Relations

Agenda No. 131/II Extraordinary Plenary Meeting of Wednesday, 24 September 2008

The plenary session today was presided over by Vice-President II of the National Parliament, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao, assisted by Secretary of the Bureau, Sra. Deputada Maria Terezinha Viegas and II Deputy Secretary, Sra. Deputada Maria Teresa de Carvalho.

Was present the Minister of Education Mr. Freitas Cancio and Deputy Minister of Education Paulo Assis as drafters of the Bill 8/II.

The agenda of today did not address any subject in the period before the Order of the Day.

During the period of the Agenda was the only scheduled topic:

Discussion and vote in the general and specific proposal of the Law no. 8/II (Law on Education).

Chairman of the Board gave time to minister of Education to explain the Proposed Law referred to above. After the explanation, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao, President of the Bureau, gave time for the President of the Standing Committee F Mr Virgil Dias Marcal and Draftsman Mr Mateus de Jesus to submit the report of opinion. The gentlemen made comments and corrections to the Proposed Law no. 8/II (Law on Education).

After dinner, the Plenary Session continued with the same chair and the same subject. After the intervention of the gentlemen the minister gave explanations and answers.

Therefore, before the vote on the Proposed Law. 8/II (Law on Education) Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao Chairman of the Board gave notice that she had received an urgent request from the government. It was about the coffee organisation treaty and there will be a meeting of leaders of party benches tomorrow.

The vote was 29 votes to 0 against and 5 abstentions.

Explanations of votes and protests on the request of urgency regarding the aforementioned treaty.

The Treaty of coffee was referred to the Commission C. Finally President Sra. Maria Paixão of the Bureau closed the plenary session and thanked the Minister and Deputy Minister of Education. End.
--
Secretariado
Gabinete de Relações Públicas

Agenda No. 131/IIReunião Plenária Extraordinária de Quarta-Feira, de 24 de Setembro de 2008

A Sessão Plenária de hoje foi presidida pela II Vice-Presidente do Parlamento Nacional, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão, coadjuvada pela Secretária da Mesa, Sra. Deputada Maria Terezinha Viegas e II Vice-Secretária, Sra. Deputada Teresa Maria de Carvalho.Esteviram presentes nesta o Sr. Ministro da Educação Câncio Freitas e o Sr. Vice-Ministro da Educação Paulo Assis como redactores da Proposta de Lei No 8/II.

A agenda de hoje não abordou qualquer assunto no período de Antes da Ordem do Dia.No período da Ordem do Dia foi agendado o único assunto: “Discussão e votação na generalidade e na especialidade da Proposta de Lei no. 8/II, (“Lei de Bases da Educação”).

A Sra. Presidente da Mesa deu tempo ao Sr. Ministro da Educação para explicar sobre a Proposta de Lei acima citada. Após a explicação, a Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão, Presidente da Mesa, deu tempo ao Presidente da Comissão Especializada Permanente F Sr. Deputado Virgílio Dias Marçal e ao Relator Sr. Deputado Mateus de Jesus para apresentarem o Relatório de Parecer. Os Senhores Deputados fizeram apreciações e correcções à Proposta de Lei no. 8/II, (“Lei de Bases da Educação”). Depois do jantar, a Sessão Plenária continuou com a mesma presidência e o mesmo assunto. Depois das intervenções dos Senhores Deputados o Sr. Ministro deu explicações e respostas.

Consequentemente, antes da votação da Proposta de Lei no. 8/II, (“Lei de Bases da Educação”) a Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão Presidente da Mesa informou que tinha recebido um pedido de urgência do Governo. Era um tratado da organização do café e vai haver uma reunião dos Líderes das Bancadas amanhã. O resultado da votação foi 29 votos a favor, 0 contra e 5 abstenções. Declarações de votos e protestos sobre o pedido de urgência respeitante ao tratado acima mencionado.

O tratado do café foi baixado à Comissão C. Finalmente a Sra. Deputada Maria Paixão Presidente da Mesa encerrou a reunião plenária e agradeceu ao Sr. Ministro e Vice-Ministro da Educação. Fim.

UN presses on with East Timor violence probes


Source: Reuters - DILI, 26 Sept 2008 - The United Nations aims to complete investigating nearly 400 cases related to the bloodshed surrounding East Timor's 1999 independence vote from Indonesia, the chief U.N. investigator said on Friday. Leaders in East Timor and Indonesia said in July that the issue was closed after expressing regret at the findings of a joint truth commission that blamed Indonesian security and civilian forces for 'gross human rights violations'.


But the United Nations, which boycotted the truth commission, has said it will continue to back prosecutions through the Serious Crime Unit, which it set up to assist East Timor's prosecutors' office in probing the violence in which the United Nations says about 1,000 East Timorese died.

Several Indonesian military officials were tried in Indonesian human rights courts following the 1999 violence, but none were convicted.

'Bringing them back from Indonesia depends on bilateral agreements on extraditions. It depends also on the will of Indonesian authorities,' Marek Michon, chief investigator of the U.N. body, told reporters.

Michon said it had submitted 20 cases to East Timor's prosecutors' office, while it could take three years to conclude all 396 cases.

(Reporting by Tito Belo; Writing by Olivia Rondonuwu; Editing by Ed Davies and Jerry Norton)
-----
ETLJB Editorial Note: For accounts of human rights violations and crimes against humanity committed in East Timor by Indonesian state agencies and their proxies in 1999, visit 1999 East Timor Crimes Against Humanity.

East Timor entering period of peace, its leader tells high-level UN meeting


25 September 2008 – East Timor has entered a new phase of peace, economic growth and reduced crime since the unsuccessful assassination attempts against the leaders of the small South-East Asian nation in February, the country's President told the United Nations today.


Addressing the General Assembly's annual high-level segment, Jose Ramos-Horta, said the attacks against him and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao shocked the nation and served to unite the people in opposing violence.

The period following the attacks 'has been the most peaceful in many years without any politically motivated violence registered so far and even common criminality has been significantly reduced,' he said.

Mr. Ramos-Horta praised Mr. Gusmao and the Government for the positive steps made in consolidating stability and delivering services to the population.

'The progress is visible,' the President said, noting that a growing number of people displaced during the violent 2006 clashes - attributed to differences between the eastern and western regions - are returning to their homes.

East Timor can also take pride in its economic growth, with real GDP rising 7 per cent this year, with that figure being revised upwards to 19 per cent when oil and gas revenues are taken into account.

'However, we would not have succeeded in pulling back from the brink without the prompt and steadfast support from the international community,' Mr. Ramos-Horta, co-laureate of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize, said, highlighting the assistance received from the UN and countries such as Australia and New Zealand.

In August, the Security Council commended East Timor's Government and public institutions for the 'rapid, firm and responsible manner' in which they responded after the attempts on the lives of the President and Prime Minister. ENDS
-----
For an analysis of the constitutionality of the F-FDTL-PNTL joint command during the state of seige declared after the 11 February shootings referred to in the final paragraph of the above item, please click the following link to read Joint Command for PNTL and F-FDTL Undermines Rule of Law and Security Sector Reform in Timor-Leste by Bu V. E. Wilson B Sc Env Sci (Hons) LLM 19 February 2008 on East Timor Law Journal Article Citation: 2008 ETLJ 2

There have been 43 cases filed with the ombudamn of alleged human rights violations by the security forces during the emergency that followed the 11 February shootings.

East Timor mulls traditional justice for serious crimes


ABC Radio Australia 26/09/2008 - For many in East Timor, access to the justice system is almost impossible. Institutions are weak and the remoteness of many villages means it can take days to reach the nearest police station. Now, one government official is travelling around East Timor promoting the use of traditional justice for all crimes, including rape.

Presenter: Stephanie March Speakers: East Timor MP Fernanda Borges; Albilio de Jesus, Remexio sub-district police commander; Tulatakeu village chief Florindo Mesquita Lorego; State Secretary for the Environment Albilio De Jesus Lima; Chief of the United Nations Administration of Justice Support Unit in East Timor, Mitch Dufrense

Listen: Windows Media

MARCH: Tulatakeu village, is 14km from the nearest police station. It takes an hour and a half to walk there, and the road's in poor condition, and is cut off for several months of the year during the wet season. Albilio de Jesus is the Remexio sub-district police commander. He has 11 staff, and one motorbike, to police a population of 10,000.


DEJESUS: According to us, that's not enough. But while United Nations police are here we coordinate with them when we go on patrol. We got to maybe one town or two towns a day. Then we will go to more towns the next day.


MARCH: For many people in East Timor, access to formal justice is almost impossible. Institutions are weak, and it can take hours to reach the nearest police station and days to the nearest courthouse. For centuries, communities have relied on local mechanisms to resolve problems. Community leaders, from Tulatakeu including village chief Florindo Mesquita Lorego recently signed a document formalizing a committee to dish out traditional justice.

LOREGO: It applies to people who are thieves, horse thieves, cattle rustlers, rapists. People who go into someone's garden without permission from the owner, that's also a crime.

MARCH: I asked him what the penalty would be for someone found guilty of rape.

LOREGO: That will depend on what the council demands, they could demand two cows, maybe three, and they have to restore the reputation of the woman's community to other communities.

MARCH: And one East Timorese government official is traveling around the countryside, promoting the type of traditional justice adopted in Tulatakeu. State Secretary for the Environment Albilio De Jesus Lima recently visited the village to congratulate them for adopting traditional justice to include crimes like theft and rape.

East Timor is governed by the Indonesian penal code, and other laws developed during the period of United Nations administration following independence. Mr Lima says people don't trust those laws, so while the government works to establish an organic law, it's best to rely on traditional mechanisms.

LIMA: I think the environment portfolio includes sexuality, you talk about environment, you talk about human environment, about social environment, I focus on a total comprehensive environment. I am a public servant, aren't I?

MARCH: The inclusion of rape in the informal justice system is alarming for human rights advocates. Traditional law known as terra (tara ed.) bandu is mainly used to resolve community disputes about land and resource management, not crimes against the person. Traditionally in East Timor, often the crime of rape is not considered a crime against the person, but against her family. The belief is that if a woman becomes a victim of sexual assault, the community will believe her family can't take care of her.

Chief of the United Nations Administration of Justice Support Unit in East Timor, Mitch Dufrense says the biggest concern with traditional justice is whether or not the process and outcomes meet basic human rights standards.

DUFRENSE: The Minister of Justice has already stated that gender-based violence linked crimes are to be dealt with in the formal justice system. Those cases have traditionally been very challenging in the traditional mechanisms and have been examples of types of cases that fall below international standards.

MARCH: MP Fernanda Borges says traditional justice in East Timor is not set up to support victims of gender based violence.

BORGES: Usually it is the men that are the nucleus of power in the local community, and women are underneath that system. It works for other things, but I think definitely for domestic violence it is not an appropriate form to engage.

MARCH: State Secretary for the Environment Albilio de Jesus Lima says he has visited six districts that are using traditional law, which means up to one third of East Timor's population could be using this form of justice.

But MP Fernanda Borges says what he is promoting goes against many of the international human rights conventions signed by East Timor

BORGES: If the secretary of state is doing that he is very wrong, because he is operating completely outside of the constitution and the judical processes that are established in the country.

Post sponsored by East Timor Women - Raising awareness of the plight of women in Timor-Leste.

Mirko Daniel Fernandez, Canada, Forensic Anthropologist, UNMIT


03 June 2008 Dili, Timor-Leste: I am tasked with forensically examining individuals allegedly killed during Timor-Leste's bloody Popular Consultation period (1999).


This is both for legal identification and to examine the physical evidence in collaboration with the forensic pathologist, crime scene officer and regional investigation teams.

In short, I put names to the dead and help see that justice is done.

The role involves the search for and exhumation of human remains; assisting in the creation of a DNA identification programme; and developing, implementing and revising policies and procedures relating to the forensic laboratory, including coordination with human rights groups and family associations.My job is important for the maintenance of the rule of law in the country as it upholds the UN’s stance against an amnesty for the crimes against humanity that occurred in 1999.

The policy contains essential components of good governance and universal human rights, which the United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT) is mandated to promote.

At present, a typical day includes revision of our medical-legal documents with the Serious Crimes Investigation Team (SCIT) legal coordinators; liaising with NGOs on past forensic cases; preparation of lecturing material for the national police (PNTL) and coordinating on behalf of the SCIT with the Office of the Prosecutor General on DNA testing matters.

One way I think I’m currently making a difference actually began during an administrative delay. There was a hold-up in attaining a Memorandum of Understanding between the SCIT and the Prosecutor General’s office, but I was able to use the period constructively by helping build the local SCIT forensic officer’s capacity in best practices.This included mentoring the officer in international forensic standards; improving their awareness of gender-based violence (GBV) in homicide investigations; and networking with NGOs representing victims to improve the exchange of identification information.

Once trained, the forensic crime scene officer and I jointly provided more training to the national police Vulnerable Persons Unit (VPU). For example, we showed them how to conduct effective forensic investigations of missing persons in GBV homicide situations according to international standards of human rights and jurisprudence.

I believe that as a result of my mentorship, the SCIT forensic officer I helped will become one of the country’s most knowledgeable forensic experts within the context of human rights and GBV. The mentorship programme will continue throughout my contract.

I have worked for seven years in numerous countries recovering and examining the remains of people allegedly killed in conflicts. My experience includes time with the UN International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in Bosnia (2000) and again in 2005-06 with the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).My other work experience includes assisting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in Vancouver, Canada; in Guatemala with the Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation (FAFG); and in Colombia as a consultant to the International Bar Association.

This is my second spell as a UNV volunteer in Timor-Leste: I was the UNV Forensic Anthropologist for the United Nations Mission in East Timor (UNMISET, the mission prior to UNMIT) Serious Crimes Unit in 2003-2004. Back then I chose to become a UNV volunteer as a means to contribute my professional skills in the arena of justice, human rights and identification of missing persons.

This time I chose to become a UNV volunteer again since I knew that in Timor-Leste I could make more of a difference in capacity building. I knew I would be able to apply my recent academic training in international human rights law within the medico-legal setting. I would have not had the same opportunities at time of recruitment with another organisation.

From UNV

Mirko Daniel Fernandez from Canada, graduated from the University of Essex in July 20007 with an LLM in International Human Rights Law.

ETLJB salutes Mirko Daniel Fernandez.

President Ramos-Horta statement to the 63rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly


Extract from the Statement by H. E. Dr. Jose Ramos-Horta

President of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste
Noble Peace Prize Laureate 1996

to the 63rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly

NEW YORK, 25 SEPTEMBER 2008 Mr. President, Majesties,Heads of States and Government, Ministers, Excellencies, First, it is my duty to congratulate you Mr. President for your well deserved election to preside over the 63rd session of the General Assembly.

I now turn to the situation in my own country.

On 11th February I was almost fatally shot. I escaped by an act of God and thanks to the professionalism and dedication of doctors and nurses at the Australian army medical centre in Dili and the doctors and nurses in the Darwin Royal Hospital.

To them and to all who have prayed for my life and recovery. I reiterate my eternal gratitude. I stood at the frontier between Life and Death, saw darkness of death and the beauty of life that I almost left behind.

The attack on me and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao shocked the nation and my near death served to unite the people in opposing violence. Since then the situation in Timor-Leste has been the most peaceful in many years without any politically motivated violence registered so far and even common criminality has been significantly reduced.

The Government led by Mr. Xanana Gusmao, a resistance hero, has made enormous efforts in stabilizing the country and in delivering services to the people. The progress is visible. A growing number of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) caused by the 2006 crisis is returning home. Most camps that existed for two years are now empty.

More than 700 former soldiers who were at the origin of the 2006 mutiny have accepted a Government financial package and returned home.

On the economic front, our real GDP will register 7% growth by the end of this year. However, if we factor in oil and gas revenues. our economic growth will be around 19%. While our real annual per capita GOP is less than US$400, this figure jumps to over US$4,000 if we factor in oil and gas revenues.

However, we would not have succeeded in pulling back from the brink without the prompt and steadfast support from the international community. I thank the Secretary-General and through him the entire UN family and in particular those serving in my country in different capacities for their selfless contribution to preserving peace in Timor-Leste.

I also thank Australia and New Zealand for maintaining a robust and credible security force in my country in assistance to, and close coordination with, our government and UNMIT under the leadership of Dr. Atul Khare, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General, who is a most compassionate human being, and a dedicated and tireless professional.

The professionalism of the International Security Forces is visible to all and the behaviour of the soldiers is irreproachable. The same can be said of the UN police force in my country comprising police from 40 countries with particular reference to Formed Police Units from Portugal. Pakistan, Malaysia and Bangladesh.

We are blessed by The Almighty with non-negligible resources and can count on the generosity of our development partners but challenges remain complex and multifaceted. However, with a shared vision and commitment to serve the poorest of our people, I'm confident we will meet the Millennium Development Goals. We cannot fail. We shall not fail.

May God the Almighty and the Merciful bless us All. END

Australian police urged to arrest East Timor collaborator


Connie Levett Immigration Reporter SMH 26/09/2008 - GUY CAMPOS, the East Timorese man accused of high-level collaboration with the Indonesian military involving kidnapping and torture of East Timorese citizens during Indonesia's occupation, was convicted of "torture leading to death" of an 11-year-old boy, Francisco Ximenes, in 1979, according to newly uncovered East Timorese court documents.

The conviction was overturned within months in the Superior Court, in Kupang, across the border in West Timor.

Members of Australia's East Timorese community are campaigning to have Mr Campos, at present in Australia on a World Youth Day visa, arrested and tried for war crimes here. They say he will escape justice if he is allowed to return to East Timor.

Clinton Fernandes, principal analyst, East Timor, for Australia's intelligence corps in 1998-99, who saw the court documents in Dili last week, said the conviction was contained in a large court file on the death of the boy. The file is in the archives of East Timor's Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation.

Dr Fernandes said Mr Campos's role as a collaborator was to identify East Timorese for interrogation and torture by the Indonesian military, and that he participated in their "disappearances".

"The Australian embassy in Dili was presented with the [commission's] report in February 2006," Dr Fernandes said, "but, more than 2 ½ years later, they have never followed up by visiting the [commission] and asking for more information about war criminals."

He said the Immigration Department had a representative in the embassy, so it could have discovered details of Mr Campos's activities any time after February 2006.

Joanna Ximenes, the sister of the boy who died, said that on July 20 she alerted the Immigration Minister, the Attorney-General, Paul Lynch, the MP for Liverpool, the Prime Minister and the Department of Immigration Dob-In Line that Mr Campos had entered Australia.

On August 8 she gave a detailed statement to the federal police about Mr Campos' alleged role in her brother's death but has heard nothing since.

Dr Fernandes has also told the federal police of the role played by Mr Campos, who belonged to Satuan Tugas Intelijen - the intelligence taskforce/implementing body - in the Indonesian occupation of East Timor.

An Immigration Department spokesman said Mr Campos had not been convicted of any war crime and did not appear on a watch list, and that having referred the matter to the federal police, it could do nothing more. The existence of the court documents was first reported on Channel Seven's Today Tonight.

Mr Campos could not be reached for a response.

East Timor Government to decriminalise defamation


Diario Nacional 24 September 2008 - East Timor's Justice Minister Lucia Lobato said the government will decriminalise defamation in the proposedl penal codes presented the National Parliament Tuesday (23/9) if the Parliament authorizes the government to do so.

'If the National Parliament authorised (the government), when the new penal codes are presented in May, defamation would not be a crime,' said Lobato.

Lobato explained that if anyone felt defamed then the person could file civil process against the person.

Domingos Sarmento, a FRETILIN's MP in the Parliament disagrees with the proposal of decriminalising defamation in the future penal codes, arguing that those who are poor may not be able to pay for compensation.

Meanwhile, MP Vital dos Santos from Democratic Party (PD) said that he entirely agreed with the proposal. However, he suggested the government create special conditions if defamation is to be decriminalised.
-----
Timor Leste government vows to decriminalize defamation25 September 2008
Source: Timor Lorosae Journalists Association - The government of Timor Leste announced on September 24 its decision to decriminalize the country's Defamation Law, a move that was welcomed by the Timor Lorosa'e Journalists Association (TLJA).

Minister of Justice Lucia Lobato announced to members of the press gathered at the national parliament that the government will remove the Defamation Law from the country's Penal Code and will treat violations thereof as a civil case.

She added that the government will sign into law a revised penal code as soon as the national parliament passes the bill.

TLJA, a SEAPA partner based in Dili, Timor Leste, said it welcomes this decision of the government and considers it as a crucial step towards the promotion of freedom of expression in Timor Leste.
-----
See also UNTAET EXECUTIVE ORDER NO 2000/2 ON THE DECRIMINALISATION OF DEFAMATION

East Timor National Parliament to initiate anti corruption law


Suara Timor Lorosae 24 September 2008 - The second Vice President of the National Parliament Maria Paixao said Monday (22) that in order to fight and eradicate corruption in the country the parliament would urgently initiate a draft law on anti corruption.

'The National Parliament also sees that it is extremely urgent to initiate a draft of anti corruption law and to be urgently approved by the same parliament enabling the judiciary system to start prosecuting those involved in corruption,' Paixao said.

She also encouraged the office of Prosecutor General to courageously do their functions in eradicating corruption in the country regardless of mounting threats against the office.

She stressed that she is in favor of the establishment of the new anti corruption commission by the government and urged the office of Ombudsman to specifically focus on the issue of human rights.

Meanwhile, Estanislau Aleixo da Silva, an MP from FRETILIN, said that the office of Prosecutor General should take necessary legal measures against those who threaten the office via telephone because the law permits the office to have access to the telecommunication system.

Prosecutor names Lere Annan Timur and Falur as suspect in 2006 crisis


Suara Timor Lorosae 24 September 2008 - Dili District Prosecution has named Timor-Leste Defense Force Chief of Staffs, Lere Annan Timur and Falur Rate Laek as suspects in the country's recent crises of 2006.

The prosecution's decision was made through notification to summon Lere Annan Timur and Falur Rate Laek to be questioned in the upcoming 29 September.

Lere Annan and Falur said they recognised the notification from the Prosecution Office, yet they were still yet to know about the reason why the Court had named them as suspects.

Lere Annan said he respected the notification and that he would cooperate with the Court and would respond it.

“I think justice is for all, we all are under the law and the Court has its power to ask whoever to respond it,” Lere Annan said.

-----
ETLJB Editorial Notes:

Extract from the Report of the United Nations Independent Special Commission of Inquiry for Timor-Leste (The 2006 Crisis) Prosecution Recommendations page 51:

The evidence relating to the unlawful movement, possession and use of F-FDTL weapons is described in paragraphs 95 and 96 and demonstrates that those weapons were distributed by and/or with the knowledge and approval of the following persons:

Roque Rodrigues
Taur Matan Ruak
Tito da Costa Cristovao, aka Lere Anan Timor
Manuel Freitas aka Mau Buti
Domingos Raul aka Rate Laek Falur.

The Commission recommends that these persons be prosecuted for illegal weapons transfer.
-----
BBC Historic Day for East Timor 30 August 1999

'Historic' agreement

Commanders from the pro-independence rebel movement Falantil and leaders of militias opposed to cutting ties with Indonesia met on Sunday at the UN's headquarters in Dili to announce their accord.

At a press conference attended by Indonesian police and military, they pledged to keep their forces in designated areas and to accept the results of the ballot.

Eurico Guterres, commander of one of the pro-Indonesian militias, Aitarak, described the agreement as "historic", while Falantil leader Falur Rate Laek said it paved the way for a peaceful vote.

"We wanted this agreement so that the people in the mountains can come down and vote tomorrow," he said.








Rival militia leaders: All smiles on the eve of the poll.
Falur Rate Laek (left) with Eurico Guterres in 1999 at
the time of the autonomy referendum.

East Timor Procurement Director tells MP's to shut-up


Suara Timor Lorosae 24 September 2008 - The National Director of the Procurement Services Francisco Soares Borulako said Tuesday (23/9) those who do not know the working procurement systems should stop questioning the procurement services.

'We have a lot of criterion about bidding systems which we often give out to our contractors and if they are eligible then we give them the tender' Borulako said.

He therefore urged the members of the Parliament who know nothing about the procurement systems to shut up.

Borulako explained that the single source mechanism which became a common polemic is also regulated in the law to be applied during emergency situation such as the purchase of weapons.

Recently, an AMP MP, Aderito Hugo of CNRT, accused the procurement services for what he called as conspiracy with contractors in implementing certain government projects.

Meanwhile, the Director of the Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman Sebastiao Dias Ximenes said that in most cases the bidding systems and procedures are only to fulfill formality by the procurement already identified or even chose the winners of the biddings.

Public Prosecution to summon Lere and Falur for inquiry


Televizaun Timor-Leste 24 September 2008 - Prosecutor General Longuinhos Monteiro said Wednesday (24/9) that the office of Public Prosecution had summoned Colonel Lere Anan Timor and Lieutenant Colonel Falur Rate Laek to face inquiry in relation to the 2006 crises.

Monteiro said that the two F-FDTL officers were summoned to simply give their testimonies but not as suspects. Lere and Falur are scheduled to give their statement to the public prosecution on 29 September and 1 October 2008.

Meanwhile, Monteiro also advised that in the near future, two F-FDTL and an UNPOL officer would be called to give their statements in relation to 11 February, as he was also on board PM Xanana Gusmao's convoy.

Longuinhos explained that after the hearing, the office of Prosecutor General would issue indictments which is likely to be happen in December 2008 or January 2009.

Thus far, the office of Prosecutor General had identified 23 suspects; all of them were followers of the former rebel leader Alfredo Reinado Alves.

Image: Colonel Lere Anan Timor

Applicable Indonesian land law of East Timor


Further to the recent posts on East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin on the issue of land and land law reform in East Timor (see, for example, Community Rights to Customary Land in East Timor), the following links are provided for those wishing to learn more about 2 of the the principle applicable Indonesian laws, in English; namely:






East Timor Directory - Discover enigmatic East Timor online!

Links to Serious Crimes and Amnesty Research Report corrected


East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin apologises for the dead links in the Serious Crimes and Amnesty in East Timor Research Report post.

These links have now been corrected.

Inconveniences caused are regretted.


Editor



Image: East Timorese children - and their chauffeur!

East Timor Court Papers show Campos convicted of torture leading to the death of a person


From Kevin Rudd's at the UN but President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walks free The Daily Telegraph By Piers Akerman 25/09/2008 - Closer to home, it would appear that the Rudd Government is similarly committed to avoiding brutal realities in an attempt to dodge diplomatic friction.


Last week, I noted that the Government seemed reluctant to act on evidence provided by the Seven network's Today Tonight reporter James Thomas who had revealed that an East Timorese man, Guy Campos, accused of contributing to the beating death of 11-year-old Francisco Ximenes, and involvement in the disappearance of numerous others during Indonesia's occupation of East Timor.

Campos entered Australia on a 90-day pilgrim's visa issued in connection with World Youth Day and is scheduled to leave next month.

A spokesman for Home Affairs Minister Bob Debus told me that the evidence against Campos, who numerous East Timorese say worked as a spy and enforcer for the Indonesian army's intelligence agency, was "flimsy".

Immigration department officials said they were unaware of any evidence that would have prevented them issuing Campos with a visa.

Reporter Thomas returned to Dili at the weekend and has returned with court papers showing Campos was convicted in April, 1979, for, "torture leading to the death of a person (namely Ximenes)".

It appears that Campos, aged 28 at the time, was sentenced to three years' jail but went to another Indonesian jurisdiction and successfully appealed. Dr Clinton Fernandes, an ex-Australian army major and former principal intelligence analyst on East Timor for the Australian Defence Force, now the senior lecturer in strategic studies at the Australian Defence Force Academy, told me it was probable that Campos was protected by the Indonesians.

"Given the state of Indonesian justice at the time, this is not surprising," Fernandes said.

Fernandes was in Dili last weekend with Thomas and said he met a number of witnesses willing to testify against Campos if the Australian Government was prepared to arrest him and charge him with war crimes.

The principle of double jeopardy which would normally prevent a person being tried twice for the same crime should not apply, he assured me, if the initial trial was designed to shield a criminal from a proper trial or if the original trial didn't follow due process.

Given that there are now scores of witnesses prepared to testify, those arguments should be left to the courts. The question is whether Australia is prepared to act or if it will only pay lip service to the notion of justice.

Sister Susan Connelly, a nun working at the Mary MacKillop centre in Dili, told me yesterday that Australia should act against Campos and not let the issue die quietly, on the grounds that the relationship between Australia and Indonesia is more important.
"If Guy Campos and his crimes join so many others under the carpet, it will be another instance of covering-up the role of the Indonesian military," she said.

"Campos, of course, is Timorese, but his crimes and those of other militia were at the behest and with the active assistance of the (Indonesian army intelligence)."

Campos is walking the streets of Sydney, where he has been confronted by relatives of those he has been charged with torturing and murdering.

Rudd is walking the streets of New York, along with Ahmadinejad, enjoying the uber-bureaucrat bazaar at the UN.

Australia has Buckley's chance of upsetting the Iranian despot but could demonstrate its real concern about war criminals by sending a couple of officers around to arrest Campos today.

Going by Rudd's form, nothing will happen. Well, a committee might report by 2010.

Government Workshop to Support Women's Rights to Land and Property


USAID / RDTL / Ita Nia Rai


PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE :24 September 2008

Government Workshop to Support Women's Rights to Land and Property 24 September 2008 Dili Timor-Leste

Through collaboration with the Ministry of Justice, the Secretary of State for the Promotion of Equality (SEPI), and the USAID-funded "Ita-Nia Rai" project, a Gender Land Law working group was established in May 2008 to determine how to further the Government's efforts to address gender equality in forthcoming legislations on land and property.

The working group held a workshop this week to develop recommendations on how to strenghthen women's rights to land and property through inheritance.

"The majority of women in Timor-Leste have few opportunities to acquire assets during their lifetime," commented Mrs. Idelta Maria Rodrigues, the Secretary of State for the Promotion of Equality.
She added, "For women and girls, inheritance can be an important means of obtaining property, such as land.

Such property is essential to enable women and girls to provide for themselves and their families. Developing mechanisms to strengthen women's rights to land and property are important to move forward and give women security, particularly in the event that they become separated, widowed, or divorced."

The workshop participants gave recommendations on appropriate inheritance procedures given women's situation in Timor-Leste. Such recommendations include to whom and how property should be distributed.

Participants also discussed what happens when someone dies having left or having not left a will. Strengthening women's rights to land and property is important to improve women's lives to be able to contribute to the development of Timor-Leste.

Timor-Leste is a signatory to the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and has committed to developing mechanisms to promote equality in access and control of land and property, including access to credit and capital.

"This is in line with the country's Constitution: which in Article 17 guarantees equal rights to women and men, and Article 54 states that all Timorese citizens have the right to private property".

In December 2008, the working group intends to submit its recommendations to the Ministry of Justice, the Council of Ministers and the National Parliament for consideration in legal frameworks regulating property rights.

Working group members include government representatives from the Secretariat of State for the Promotion of Equality (SEPI), the Ministry of Justice, the National Directorate for Land, Property and Cadastral Services (DNTPSC), the Ministry of Agriculture, representatives from civil society and international organizations, including Fokupers, Rede Feto (the women's network), the Justice Sector Monitoring Program (JSMP), Caucus: Women in Politics; the Hak Association, Belun, Advocats Sans Frontieres (ASF); the Asia Foundation; chief of sucos in Dili, and the United National Mission in Timor-Leste (UNMIT).

Strengthening Property Rights in Timor-Leste (known locally as the "Ita Nia Rai" or "Our Land" program) is a five-year program funded by USAID and implemented by ARD, Inc. and ACDI/VOCA.

Both implementing organizations have worldwide experience in developing land systems in post-conflict countries and in conflict prevention for community stabilization.

Working with the National Directorate for Land, Property, and Cadastral Services and the Ministry of Justice, the program provides technical and policy support to develop a sustainable and transparent property rights system in Timor-Leste. - Ends

East Timor Legal News Television and Radio Reports 24 September 2008


Headlines: Six months provisional sentence for two homicide suspects - Government submits draft law on the penal code to National Parliament - Recruitment of new soldiers can be postponed, says State Secretary for Defence

Full Stories:

Six months provisional sentence for two homicide suspects - Radio Timor-Leste 23 September 2008

Suai District Court decided Tuesday (23/9) to impose six months provisional sentences on two suspects involved in the murder of a teenager in Raifusan sub-village in Betano, Same. The decision to impose the provisional imprisonment was made during the first hearing on the killing of Jorge dos Santos Reis.

The body of the 18 year old man killed last Sunday (21/9) has been handed back to the family to be buried after the post mortem autopsy. The two suspects have been transported to the Becora Penitentiary Centre.

Government submits draft law on the penal code to National Parliament - Radio Timor-Leste 23 September 2008

East Timor's Justice Ministry Lucia Lobato submitted a proposal for a new penal code to the National Parliament on Tuesday (23/9).

After the submission of the proposal, Lobato said the Government wanted to listen to various opinions from the members of the parliament. She also mentioned that in the near future, the ministry would organise a series of public hearings in order to have opinions from various entities regarding the proposed law on the Penal Codes. The proposal will be firstly discussed by the standing Commissions of the Parliament.

Image: East Timor Justice Minister Lucia Lobato

Recruitment for new soldiers can be postponed, says State Secretary for Defence - Televisaun Timor-Leste 23 September 2008

State Secretary for Defence, Julio Thomas Pinto, said recruitment for new Timorese Defence Force soldiers could be postponed until January next year if the law for the recruitment was not approved.

‘If law for the recruitment is yet to be approved by the Parliament, the recruitment can be postponed until January next year. If it were to be approved soon, the recruitment would be held this year,’ Pinto said.Pinto further said that the draft of the law was still in the Council of the Ministers and would later be submitted to the Parliament for approval. According to the Government’s plan, the defence force will recruit only 150 military officers this year.

East Timor's money dilemma


By Lucy Williamson BBC News 24/09/2008 - The goverment is sitting on lots of money, while people are still poor.

One day, perhaps, the place where Isabel sits will be a five-star hotel looking out onto the sea near the western corner of Dili's beach road.

But for now, six years after independence from Indonesia, there is just Isabel. Her flimsy bamboo stall shades her from the sun's glare, her tiny piles of tomatoes and garlic are waiting naked in the afternoon heat for a sale. Read the full story...

Community Rights to Customary Land in East Timor


ETLJ 24/09/2008 Land Rights in East Timor - Attention was recently focused on the issue of land rights in East Timor by Professor Tim Anderson, Senior Lecturer in Political Economy at the University of Sydney and the United States Agency for International Development in East Timor. See ETLJB Post of 22/09/2008 USAID On Clarifying Land Ownership in Timor-Leste

Reforms in relation to the land laws in East Timor need to take account of the continuing existence of traditional communal land tenures systems (hak ulayat) because the impacts of modern land title ownership registers can be deleterious to these traditional tenure systems and their communities.

The third in the Social Problems in East Timor (Legislative and Policy Considerations) series of research reports created under the University of San Francisco Legislative Drafting Initiative in East Timor (2003-2004) entitled "Community's Rights to Traditional Lands in East Timor" was published on the East Timor Law Journal today, 24 September 2008.

The report has been published in English, Indonesian and Portuguese and may be freely accessed by following the links below which will open a word file from East Timor Law Journal.

Community Rights to Customary Land in East Timor - English Version

Hak Masyarakat atas Tanah Adat di Timor-Leste - Indonesian Version

Direitos Comunitarios a Propriedade Consuetudinaria - Portuguese Version

For some further analysis of land issues in East Timor, see further:

Report on Research into Adat Land Law in East Timor

Some Observations on the Report on Research Findings & Policy Recommendations for a Legal Framework for Land Dispute Mediation in East Timor

A Note on Land Rights in East Timor (Indonesian Government Regulation No 18 of 1991 on the Conversion of Land Rights in East Timor) & the Purported Suspension of Article 5 by Government Regulation No 24 of 1992

Some Land Tenure Issues in Post-Conflict East Timor

US State Department 2008 Report on International Religious Freedom: East Timor Chapter


Timor-Leste
International Religious Freedom Report 2008
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor

The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and other laws and policies contributed to the generally free practice of religion.

The Government generally respected religious freedom in practice. There was no change in the status of respect for religious freedom by the Government during the period covered by this report.

There were no reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on religious affiliation, belief, or practice.

The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom with the Government as part of its overall policy to promote human rights.

Section I. Religious Demography
The country has an area of 5,406 square miles and a population of 1.1 million. According to a 2005 report from the World Bank, 98 percent of the population is Catholic, 1 percent Protestant, and less than 1 percent Muslim. Most citizens also retain some vestiges of animistic beliefs and practices, which they have come to regard as more cultural than religious.

The country had a significant Muslim population during the Indonesian occupation, composed mostly of ethnic Malay immigrants from Indonesian islands. There also were a few ethnic Timorese converts to Islam, as well as a small number descended from Arab Muslims living in the country while it was under Portuguese authority. The latter group was well integrated into society, but ethnic Malay Muslims often were not, and only a few hundred remained in the country following independence in 2002.

Section II. Status of Religious Freedom Legal/Policy Framework
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and other laws and policies contributed to the generally free practice of religion. The law at all levels protects this right in full against abuse, either by governmental or private actors.

There is no official state religion; however, Catholic values remain prominent in the political life of the country. After assuming the office of Prime Minister in July 2006, José Ramos-Horta repeatedly emphasized the importance of government consultation with the Catholic Church on all major decisions; however, members of Protestant and Muslim communities also have some political influence and have held high positions in the executive branch of the Government, military, and National Parliament.

In August 2007 the Ministry of Interior, the body formerly charged with registering religious organizations, was abolished and registration authority fell under the purview of the State Secretary for Public Security. During the period covered by this report, this agency had not yet developed registration procedures.

An October 2003 law on immigration and asylum states that "foreigners cannot provide religious assistance to the Defense and Security Forces, except in cases of absolute need and urgency." Based in part on this law, immigration authorities established residence and visa fees for foreigners residing in the country. Missionaries and religious figures were exempt from paying these fees.

Police cadets receive training in equal enforcement of the law and nondiscrimination, including religious nondiscrimination.

The Government observes Good Friday, Assumption Day, All Saints' Day, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Christmas, Eid al-Fitr, and Eid al-Adha as national holidays.

Restrictions on Religious Freedom

The Government generally respected religious freedom in practice. There was no change in the status of respect for religious freedom by the Government during the period covered by this report.

There were no reports of religious prisoners or detainees in the country.Forced Religious Conversion

There were no reports of forced religious conversion, including of minor U.S. citizens who had been abducted or illegally removed from the United States, or of the refusal to allow such citizens to be returned to the United States.

Section III. Societal Abuses and Discrimination
There were no reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on religious affiliation, belief, or practice. Attitudes toward the small Protestant and Muslim communities generally are friendly in the capital of Dili; however, outside of the capital, non-Catholic religious groups are sometimes viewed with suspicion.

In contrast with the previous reporting period, there were no reports of harassment of non-Catholic groups.

Section IV. U.S. Government Policy
The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom with the Government as part of its overall policy to promote human rights. The U.S. Government regularly expresses support to government leaders for consolidation of constitutional democracy, including respect for basic human rights such as religious freedom.

In addition, the U.S. Government maintained a dialogue with members of the National Parliament during their deliberations on legislation affecting religious freedom. The U.S. Government supported the justice sector to encourage the development of judicial institutions that would promote the rule of law and ensure respect for religious freedom as guaranteed in the Constitution.

Released on 19 September 2008 International Religious Freedom Report Home Page

See further:

1. ETLJB Post 0f 16 September 2008 Catholic Church guards its dominance in East Timor; and
2. National Catholic Reporter 17 Jan 2003 Bishop apologizes for riot, attack on mosque
Image: Mesjid Annur, Dili

Government unable to champion onshore LNG plant from Greater Sunrise


Frente Revolucionaria do Timor-Leste Independente
FRETILIN
Media Release 23 September 2008

Government unable to champion onshore LNG plant from Greater Sunrise – Mari Alkatiri

The de facto AMP government lead by Xanana Gusmao is showing itself to be totally incapable to provide the legal, technical and economic arguments that can convince the Greater Sunrise joint venture partners that a pipeline to Timor-Leste and an onshore LNG processing plant is the best and most viable option for the field's development, said the former Timorese Prime Minister Dr Alkatiri today.

Dr Alkatiri negotiated both the Timor Sea treaty and the Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS) Treaty. He was speaking from Dili today after having met with his parliamentary colleagues to discuss recent developments and media reports that the Greater Sunrise joint venture had decided on Darwin as the location for the LNG plant to process the gas from Greater Sunrise.

"I think that the media reports of a site location decision by the Sunrise joint venture are premature. From recent discussions with Woodside's top executives in charge of the project during a recent visit to Dili, I don't believe the investment decision has been made yet. So the media reports are misleading and mischievous. As far as I can gauge, it is just a lot of noise," Dr Alkatiri said.

"But they are uncomfortable about other noise coming from the Timor-Leste side that may lead them to question whether or not this Timor-Leste government knows the ground rules for the legal and technical process which will guide the discussions on which will be the best and most viable option for developing the Greater Sunrise field. I am worried by statements from people like the de facto Prime Minister and his Secretary of State for Natural Resources that it is a matter for the two governments to discuss. This is just wrong," stressed Dr Alkatiri.

In recent media reports following Mr Gusmao's visit to Australia, where this issue was discussed between Mr Gusmao and Australian Prime Minister Rudd, Mr Gusmao is quoted as having said: "This is an issue for negotiation between the two governments", meaning the governments of Timor-Leste and Australia.

"This is wrong because the Treaty documents set out the criteria, the process and the mechanism for joint decision making. The developers of Greater Sunrise will present a proposal to the Sunrise Treaty Commission which will decide whether or not the development plan meets the technical and economic criteria set out by the treaty. Its not for the two government's to negotiated as this de facto government thinks," added Dr Alkatiri."

Then you add the suspicion arising from the government's signing of hitherto secret agreements with international oil companies who have no legal stake in the Greater Sunrise field. According to the explanation given by the Secretary of State during recent parliamentary hearings, this secret agreement purports to give them rights to market the gas from the field which they do not have, but in fact rests with the downstream contractors.

I think we have a very volatile mix that will place in jeopardy Timor-Leste's chances of getting a pipeline and LNG plant on our shores. This is a goal we all share and we support any government that tries to achieve that. But we have an obligation to speak out when we see actions that could jeopardize our chances," Dr Alkatiri stressed.

Dr Alkatiri repeated his offer that FRETILIN have always been ready, willing and able to contribute with their extensive experience in negotiating these resource-related matters, through an appropriate inclusive and consultative body established for this specific purpose.

"That is how we were able to negotiate the outcomes we did during our government against the odds. We included everyone, civil society, opposition in parliament, the president, everyone," he said in closing.

Contact: Jose Teixeira +670 728 7080 Nilva Guimaraes +670 734 0389

Public Forum (Sydney): The Commission of Truth and Friendship Report


SISC Public forum - Hosted by the Indonesian Department of the University of Sydney and Indonesian SolidarityFriday 26 Sep 200816:00 - 18:00 Multimedia room 332 Old Teachers College


East Timor: The Commission of Truth and Friendship Report Wayne Sievers (Canberra) Former UN peacekeeper and police officer

1999: The Australian government and knowledge of atrocities Dr Clinton Fernandes UNSW@ADFA The Report and its context

Professor Adrian Vickers University of Sydney Reconciliation processes in Indonesia: the experience of reconciliation over the 1965 killings

All welcome

Parking: After-hours parking is available in the University grounds for $2 per hour, best spots are near the Number 2 Oval (close to the Ross St Gates), enter via Parramatta Road, or catch a bus along Parramatta Road and alight near the Ross St entrance.

Legal Reports National Media 23 September 2008


Headlines: Three PDHJ staff to Philippines for comparative studies - Timor Telecom won't negotiate with Govt about change - Govt to hold public consultation on new telecommunication operator - Task Force Police in protest - Police commander should not be appointed based on feelings - Poland to train future F-FDTL Air Force - Prosecutor General Longuinhos should resign - Caritas holds dialog for youths

Full Reports

Three PDHJ staff head off to the Philippines for comparative studies – Timor Post 23 September 2008

Three staff from the Office of Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman working in the area of human rights went to the Philippines on Friday (19/9) to attend a one-month comparative studies there.

Silverio Baptista Pinto, Vice Ombudsman for Human Rights Division, said the objective of the comparative studies is to learn from other nations their systems and procedures and how to work in partnership with Non-Governmental Organizations.

He explained that the office of the Ombudsman and the Philippines Human Rights Commission have cooperation and the comparative studies for the staff is a fruit of such cooperation.

Pinto also said the current dispatch is the third group to the Philippines and the program is supported and financed by the UNDP and the UN Human Rights Commission.

The participants of the comparative studies are Silvino Saldanha Pereira, Antoninho da Silva and Maria Verdial.

Timor Telecom not to negotiate with Govt about change - Timor Post 23 September 2008
East Timor's Finance and Planning Minister, Emilia Pires, said on Monday (22/9) that although the government had tried its best to negotiate with Timor Telecom (TT) regarding the possibility of bringing in other new telecommunication operators to compete with it, the TT decided not to negotiate with the government.

'On the part of the government, we already sent them (TT) a letter to start negotiation but Timor Telecom did not want to negotiate with the government,' said Pires.

She also said that in the near future the government would consult with civil society organizations on whether to go on with the existing telecommunication operator or to liberalise telecommunication sector.

She explained that if Timor-Leste wanted liberalisation of telecommunications, then we would like to see more than one operator in the country so that no monopoly of telecommunication is permitted here.

Task Force Police in protest – Timor Post 23 September 2008
Task Force Police of Timorese National Police (PNTL) have protested to the police command urging it to provide them per diems for the joint operation for the manhunt of former rebel leader Gastao Salsinha and followers.

The Police Task Force officers said they had not received any per diem during and after the joint operation was held. They are also unhappy with the police command, based on the fact the Task Force Police had been successfully doing their tasks, mainly in responding emergency situations, yet they had received nothing.

They therefore urged the police command to give them their rightful entitlements and called on the Dili Police Commander to respond to their demand.

Police commander should not be appointed based on feelings, says MP Nunes – Timor Post 23 September 2008
President of Parliamentary Committee B for Defense and Security, Duarte Nunes, has urged Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao to not use feelings in appointing someone as Timor-Leste's police commander.

Nunes said in nominating someone to become the country's police commander ought to be based on criteria and internal law within the police force.

'The law can define criteria on how someone might be nominated as the police's top commander,' Nunes said.

Nunes was referring to the Government's plan of appointing the general commander for Timorese police in the upcoming November.

Poland to train future F-FDTL Air Force – Suara Timor Lorosae 23 September 2008
The Polish Ambassador to Indonesia, who is also accredited Timor-Leste, Tomasz Lukasz, has promised that his country is ready to train the future Air Force of the East Timor Defence Force (F-FDTL) to develop the institution as a proper modern defence force.

The Secretary of State for Defense, Julio Tomas Pinto, made the statement Monday (22/9) after holding an official meeting with the Polish diplomat.

'We will send our force to be trained in the area of air force in Poland according to the 2020 plan,' he explained. He said, the training for the defence force would be an important step in the creation of the country's Air Force.

Ambassador Lukasz said the cooperation is important to help develop the defence sector in the country, hoping to see a better future for the Defence Force.

However, the Memorandum of Understanding for the cooperation is yet to be elaborated by the counties' Defense Ministries in the future.

He explained that the Defense Ministry had also proposed the participation of the Timorese Defence Force in the Peacekeeping Operations in the world.

Longuinhos should resign, says Luta Hamutuk – Suara Timor Lorosae 23 September 2008
East Timor's Attorney General should resign because he is not serious in carrying out his functions according to the Constitution, says Luta Hamutuk's Program Manager, Mericio Akara, Monday (22/9).

Akara made the statement in relation to the results of the case of the December 4 riot and other cases that are still not known to the public.

Akara argued that the resignation of Longuinhos Monteiro is also because the current Prosecutor General lacks integrity and he has cast public doubt over the Public Prosecution Office.

He said only the resignation of Longuinhos will secure the public trust in the institution and the access of the public to important cases affecting the country such as December 4 and February 11.

He stressed that a person with moral integrity and capacity is needed to maintain the office's function according to the Constitutions. However, he said the case of December 4 is the responsibility of the UN.

Caritas holds dialog for youths – Televizaun Timor-Leste 23 September 2008
Australian NGO Caritas yesterday held a one-day dialog for youths in the Capital Dili, aimed at strengthening the Government's program of reintegrating the IDPs with residents.

The dialog involved youths from Comoro and Lahane suburbs to build good relations between them, mainly how the youths could create peace and stability.

Caritas Project Officer, Carlito Gonsalves said this program they made was to support the Government in returning the IDPs to their homes.

Comoro Village Chief, Eurico da Costa, said he was pleased with the dialog, because it would strengthen the relationship among the youths and how could they trust in each other.

Govt to hold public consultation on new telecommunication operator – Televizaun Timor-Leste 23 September 2008
The Government has planned to invite other telecommunication companies, coming to invest in the country, but should consult first with the public, Minister for Planning and Finance, Emilia Pires says.

The minister made the comments yesterday in connection with the Government's plan to invite new telecom operator in Timor-Leste. Pires said the Council of Ministers had made a plan to set up a task force looking at policy for new operators in the country.

Pires stressed if the country only had one telecommunication company, it would be harder for the people, because it was too expensive. She added that the draft of the telecommunication policy had been made and later would be consulted with the public for feedback.

Government also has officially urged Timor Telecom Company to get involve in negotiation, but there was no response.

Serious Crimes and Amnesty in East Timor


ETLJ 23/09/2008 The second in the series of research reports on social problems in East Timor using the legislative drafting for democratic social transformation methodology has been published on East Timor Law Journal.

This research report analyses the problem of serious crimes and amnesty in East Timor. This issue continues to be contentious in East Timor.

On 20 May 2008, President Jose Ramos-Horta pardoned several East Timorese prisoners convicted of serious crimes committed in 1999. The Indonesian courts have acquitted or released all Indonesian citizens accused of serious crimes committed in East Timor during the 1999 autonomy referendum. The post-independence political leadership has abandoned the pursuit of justice for these crimes in favour of good relations with Indonesia. Civil society continues to demand an international criminal tribunal to prosecute all those accused of serious crimes, crimes against humanity and other human rights abuses. This demand is reflected in this report.

This research report identifies and describes some of the central issues arising from the issue of serious crimes and amnesty in East Timor.

The reports in the 3 languages can be read by following the links below which will open a word file on East Timor Law Journal.

Serious Crimes and Amnesty in Timor-Leste English

Kejahatan Berat dan Amnesti di Timor-Leste Indonesian

Crimes Graves e Amnestia em Timor-Leste Portuguese




East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of law in Timor-Leste!

Image: A serious crime: 25 May 2006 massacre of police officers (PNTL) by East Timor Defence Force (F-FDTL) personnel. To read an analysis of this massacre see 25th of May 2006 Massacre & War Crimes in Timor-Leste by Andrew Harrington.

Legal News Television and Radio Reports 22 September 2008


Police seize illegal beverages - Radio Timor-Leste 22 September 2008
Liquica District Police seized 150 boxes of illegal beverages on board a truck last Saturday in the town of Liquica.

Police District Commander, Inspector Afonso dos Santos said the police seized the illegal beverages from two businessmen who attempted to smuggle them into the capital, Dili. Dos Santos stressed those beverages were illegal because there were no supporting documents, such as an invoice from the Department of Customs.

The beverages with the trade mark known as 'General' were comprised of 100 boxes of beer and 50 boxes of wine.

Government postpones debate on the Penal Code: Deputy Parliamentary President - Radio Timor-Leste 22 September 2008
Deputy Parliamentary President Maria Paixao said the Minister for Planning and Finance, Emilia Pires, who was one the speakers in the Penal Code session in the national parliament had postponed attending the Parliament because she had to attend overseas meeting.

'Unfortunately we cannot hold the debate on the Penal Code, as the minister has no time and she should attend an oversea meeting,' Paixao said. She added that the Minister for Justice, Lucia Lobato would come to the Parliament to defending the draft of the Penal Code.

MP wants the results of Dec. 4 2002 case be released - Televizaun Timor-Leste 22 September 2008
A Democratic Party Member of the National Parliament, Rui Menezes, called on the current government to release the results of the investigation into the 4 December 2002 case if the country is committed to establishing justice and peace in the nascent democratic country.

Menezes made the statement in relation to the public outcry for the release of the results of the investigation into the 11 February attacks on President Ramos Horta and Prime Minister Gusmao.

He stressed, we should not only demand for the results of 11 February but demand also for the other related cases such as 4 December because it is considered as the beginning for those cases.

He said that the most recent cases such as 2006 crises and even the 11 February case are not independent of the 4 December 2002 case and therefore if the people really want to seek justice, then they should demand also the release of the results of the case to the public.

Editor's Note: There was a disintegration of the rule of law in Dili on 4 December 2002 when police attacked a demonstration in front of the Palacio do Governo and shot several students in the central Dili suburb of Kolmera; killing 2. On that day also the private residence of the then Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri and the famous 'Hello Mister' supermarket were the subject of selective arson attacks. The mosque and the Parliament were also stoned and one MP seriously injured. Reprisals by the police the following day saw numerous human rights violations committed against citizens.

Image: Hello Mister supermarket in central Dili burns on 4 December 2002

For an analysis of the 4 December 2002 riot, see The Riot of 4 December 2002: Who Is To Blame? by Joao Boavida

See also Joint Statement of Civil Society Organizations in Timor Lorosae on the incident.

Analysis of the Social Problem of Gambling in East Timor


The problem of illegal gambling in East Timor has recently been the subject of some press coverage in the country. See, for example Legal Reports National Media 18 September 2008 and Police conduct operation against illegal gambling in Dili.

Today (23 September 2008), East Timor Law Journal begins publishing a series of research reports generated under the University of San Francisco School of Law Center for Law and Global Justice Legislative Drafting Initiative conducted in East Timor from 2003 - 2004 under the auspices of The Asia Foundation's Access to Justice Program in East Timor.

In relation to the social problem of gambling in East Timor, one of the civil society groups constituted under the Legislative Drafting Initiative, Group F Health, Social Affairs, Labour and Solidarity, applied the Legislative Drafting for Democratic Social Transformation methodology to the issue of gambling and produced a research report. The report was originally produced in Indonesian and was then translated into English and Portuguese.

The report may be read in these various langauges by following the links below.



Who Eats What? Rice and Circus in East Timor


By DOUGLAS KAMMEN Counterpunch 11/08/2009 - Since coming to power in September 2007, the new Parliamentary Majority Alliance (AMP) government of East Timor has made rice a central instrument of state policy. The government has spent millions of dollars on the purchase of imported rice. Free rice has been distributed to civil servants, a constituency recruited under the previous Fretilin government and hence of questionable loyalty.

Free rice is part of the incentive offered to encourage the tens of thousands of internally displaced people (IDPs) to vacate the camps and return to their places of residence. Subsidized rice is being sold to the populace at large. Lacking a distribution mechanism, the government has also granted the right to sell this subsidized rice to selected veterans, who represent another politically sensitive group.

Intended to address East Timor’s chronic food insecurity, these side-payments, triggered a host of accusations and scandals. There are widespread allegations that government rice contracts were granted without proper tendering processes and involved collusion. Read the full story...

Image: Rice distribution in East Timor

IDP returns slowed by squatters occupying homes


DILI, 22 September 2008 (IRIN) - Efforts to return the remaining internally displaced people (IDPs) to their homes are being hampered by squatters.

Some 100,000 people were displaced throughout Timor-Leste in 2006 after an implosion of the national police and defence forces and fighting between eastern and western factions of the country over the distribution of power and economic benefits.

However, as of this month, 90 percent of 6,500 IDP families have been able to return to their original homes, the Ministry of Social Solidarity said. Teams comprising government, UN and other agencies are working with communities to mediate between the returning IDPs and the people occupying their houses.

"Many secondary occupants have their own needs … they may well be housing insecure themselves," UN Development Programme (UNDP) social reintegration specialist Ben Larke told IRIN. In many cases the squatters have agreed to vacate houses when approached by the returning families.

But some claim a stake, saying they spent their own money repairing or improving the houses, or feel their presence prevented further attacks and destruction." So in some cases, they are asking for compensation," Larke said.

A common and effective solution has been for the returnees to pay some of their government relocation compensation funds to the occupants as recompense.

Verification problems

Most of the 6,500 families have received relocation or recovery packages and 22 camps have been closed since March.

While most families have cooperated with the return programmes, there has been some resistance and threats to government staff during camp closures, according to authorities. Local and UN police now accompany government staff to diffuse tensions.

Some families are frustrated with the process of proving to authorities the exact extent of the damage to their homes, which is critical to receiving fair compensation, and thus have been moved to transitional shelters while the extent of damage and amount of compensation are assessed.

Filomeno, who did not want his last name used, told IRIN that while he would rather be going home, he preferred a cement and tin transitional shelter than remaining in a tent while he verified his details with the government." It's the solution," he told IRIN.

Underlying issues

Many of the camps that were most politically volatile and violent, such as the massive one near the airport, are among those now closed.

"I think things are going better than expected," Liuz Vieria, country director of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), told IRIN.

But he warned that the long-term success reintegrating IDPs to their homes would depend on communities working collectively to resolve the underlying issues of the 2006 crisis.

"I don't think anyone is sure of the extent to which we have gotten to that point," he said.He said while it would not be an easy task, examples existed throughout the world and even in Timor-Leste, where communities recognised the benefits of solidarity could outweigh those of continued division and conflict.

"I don't think it's an impossible battle," Vieira said. sm/bj/mw

Justice and Conflict Resolution in East Timor


Integrating Indigenous Approaches into a New Subsistence State: The Case of Justice and Conflict Resolution in East Timor Nixon, Rod PhD Thesis

Submitted February 2008 Charles Darwin University

Abstract

This thesis begins by proposing the typology of the New Subsistence State as a conceptual tool for understanding governance challenges typically faced in jurisdictions characterised by subsistence social and economic relations.

Defining features of the New Subsistence State include (1) an overwhelmingly subsistence economy corresponding to little or no historical experience of the generation and administration of large surpluses, (2) minimal workforce stratification and labour specialisation, (3) the predominance, especially in rural areas, of traditional authority relations, and (4) the realisation of statehood as a result of either the adoption or bestowal of the state model, rather than the autochthonous development of the state form.

The thesis then examines ways in which the case-study of East Timor conforms to the typology of the New Subsistence State. This analysis includes consideration of a range of geographic, historical and socio-political features, and some of the ways these aspects restrict the capacity of the new state to operate effectively in accordance with the modern state model.

A particular theme concerns the minimal extent to which the territory of East Timor has experienced meaningful social and economic modernisation throughout any of the chapters of its history. Additionally, a range of other influences contributing to governance challenges in East Timor in contemporary times are examined, including post-conflict aspects, demographic trends and political antipathies which have their origins in the 1974–1975 period.

The analysis demonstrates that East Timor faces major challenges in all main areas of public administration, with the justice sector an area of particular concern. Whereas state institutions remain weak, the country has the option to draw on suco institutions to support some areas of governance, including justice and conflict resolution.

In a number of comparable New Subsistence State contexts elsewhere, strategies have been implemented to link village-level forums to the state justice sector, yet no such initiative has been implemented in East Timor. However, a community justice and mediation program could be a relatively economical means of improving the efficiency of suco-level justice and conflict resolution forums, promoting human rights values and reducing the burden on the national courts system.

Sue Harris Rimmer SJD thesis: Transitional Justice and the Women of East Timor


Abstract

This dissertation examines the impact of international law on East Timorese women engaged with transitional justice processes.

I provide a feminist examination of the role of international law within the overall framework of transitional justice interventions designed for the violations of human rights in East Timor, focusing on the UN trials in Dili, the Jakarta trials and the truth commissions.Most feminist research has been done on the project of categorising gender-based violence as international crimes, and the prosecution of such crimes.

My analysis shows there are still gaps and silences with international law’s engagement with gender issues in Timor. The question is whether feminist analysis needs to refocus on the obligation to prosecute that is imposed by international law.

In other words, do feminists need to re-engage with some of the Realpolitik criticisms of law in post-conflict settings, particularly in light of insights gained by feminist international relations scholars?

This study takes a holistic view of all the formal mechanisms employed in Timor. It explores the fissures between the claims made for the role of international law in transitional justice processes, and what law can actually achieve.

Timorese women in the independence period face the problem of ‘changing the curtains’, in the sense that they may still be facing private violence in peacetime as they faced violence during the conflict. Trials may need to be delayed until they can be of an appropriate standard to uphold the rule of law.

I ask whether, even if perfect trials and truth commissions were held which achieved all the traditional goals of transitional justice mechanisms, there may be limitations on what law, especially international law, can achieve to benefit women.

I therefore propose that feminist international law scholars need to consider alternative, creative ways of addressing the situation of women. In particular there is a need to move beyond ideas of women as victims or even survivors, by redefining what it is to be a ‘veteran’, as veterans receive both maintenance and status in the new State.

Post sponsored by East Timor Women - Raising awareness of the plight of women in Timor-Leste.

East Timor National Parliament Plenary Session 22 September 2008


National Parliament
Secretariat of the Office of Public Relations
Agenda No 129/II

Plenary Session Tuesday 22 September 2008
Unofficial automated translation.

The plenary Session of today was presided over by the Second Vice President of the Parliament, Mrs. Deputy Maria Paixao, supported by the Secretary of the Table, Mrs. Deputy Maria Terezinha Viegas and Second Vice-Secretary, Mrs. Deputy Teresa Maria de Carvalho.

In the period of the agenda was scheduled the only matter:

Argument and voting of the Proposal of Law on Legislative Authorization in Penal Matters.

The President informed that onthis Wednesday, 23 of September 2008, Mr. Prime Minister is going to be present in the extraordinary plenary session to explain or respond to the scheduled matter. End.

Legal News Full Reports 22 September 2008


TL still needs ISF and UNPOL, says PM - Diario Nacional 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao affirmed that the International Stabilisation Forces (ISF) and the United Nations Police (UNPOL) would maintain their presence in the country because Timor still needed many things from them.

The Head of the Executive made the statement after a meeting with his counterpart Australian Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon here Friday (19/9) in relation to the contradictory statements made about the presence of the ISF and UNPOL in the country. He also said that Timor-Leste still needs the presence of the International Stabilisation Forces because if undesirable things happened, it would be hard to call them back.

He also reiterated that the presence of the ISF and UNPOL were needed here to help the security and defence sector reforms. Gusmao stated that Australia is a long-term partner of East Timor.

Image: East Timor Prime Minister Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao

Government vows not to intimidate the future anti-corruption commission - Diario Nacional 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao reaffirmed Friday (19/9) the commitment of his Government that there would be no intimidation against the future anti-corruption commission because the commission itself would not be responsible to his office.

If the anti corruption commission were under the Prime Minister, that would be the case; however, what we are preparing is that the commissioners would be elected by the Parliament, like the Ombudsman, said Xanana.

During the conference, the ousted Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri argued to simply strengthen the existing systems such as the Ombudsman's Office and the office of the Inspector General, instead of creating a new anti corruption commission.

The Director of Human Rights and Justice (HAK) Association, Jose Luis Oliveira said the establishment of the new anti corruption commission would weaken the existing bodies dealing with corruption. He also said that one condition to put in place in relation to combating corruption was a law on public access to information. Meanwhile, the office of Ombudsman is reported as saying that the office is fully committed to serving the interest of the people in fighting corruption regardless of the huge challenges it faces.

Australian Defense Minister Fitzgibbon said Australia is always willing to help the security and defense sectors of the country. He also said that Australia could help the training of the F-FDTL and PNTL if it was asked by the Government.

We are threatened, says deputy prosecutor general - Timor Post 22 September 2008
Deputy Prosecutor General, Ivo Jorge Valente, said they had been threatened by certain people through telephone during the process of handling corruption cases.

Valente recognized certain people had threatened them when they talked about corruption practices in the country. Valente said although they were threatened, yet they had always consulted with Timorese Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman and Inspectorate General on the issue.

He added the Public Prosecution had also investigated a corruption case in Oecusse district that had been tried in the court and the verdict was successfully taken.

Xanana Gusmao pleased with martial art clubs - Suara Timor Lorosae 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao has called on martial art clubs in the capital Dili to strengthen peace and stability in the country.

The prime minister made the call yesterday during a speech marking the ceremony for commemorating the World Peace Day, falling on (21/9). Gusmao said he was pleased with the martial art clubs who had spent their time to join a peaceful long march held yesterday in Dili. 'I am pleased because today the martial art clubs are taking part in this event and this is showing that the martial art clubs want to create peace and stability in the country.'

East Timor's situation is far better than other countries' says PM - Diario Nacional 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao said Sunday (21/9) that the country's situation was better than the situation of other countries because the level of violence that occurred were not as high as other countries' level of violence.

'I believe that the international community would agree with me on this' he said during the commemoration of international peace day here. Xanana stressed that the state of Timor-Leste should not be swayed by the relatively calm situation in the country because the people of the country deserve to live in a country where there was freedom and no violence.

'The Timorese people deserve to live in a community where is no fear about the security, in a community where there is no rush to avoid themselves from being victims of violence,' said Gusmao. He said the 2006 crises, the IDPs and the attack of February 11 represent red records in the sense of conquering a long-standing peace in the country.

However, he highlighted, the people were happy now as the current government has succeeded in halting the circles of violence and in finding peaceful solutions to some of the conflict-related issues.

USAID On Clarifying Land Ownership in Timor-Leste


USAID Timor-Leste

On Clarifying Land Ownership in Timor-Leste

We would like to thank Professor Tim Anderson for the interesting article “Privatizing Land in Timor-Leste,” which was originally published in Timor-Leste’s Kla’ak (The Flame) newspaper and was posted on ETAN on September 16, 2008.

The article raises salient points about key issues Timor-Leste is facing at the moment, including the undervaluation and underutilization of land, the sustainability of certain agricultural practices, and food security.

Professor Anderson does a good job of describing the interconnectedness of these issues, using as a starting point recent high-profile land lease arrangements involving the Government of Timor-Leste.

We would like to clarify a few points pertaining to USAID’s work, particularly with respect to what the author calls “privatization of land:”

(1) The author of the article "Privatizing Land" seems to be equating our efforts to clarify land ownership in Timor-Leste with "commercialization" or exploitation of land:

Through the Strengthening Property Rights (known locally as Ita Nia Rai) program, USAID is supporting the Government to -

(1) systematically collect and record land claims; and

(2) develop legislation to allow for the issuance of first-time ownership certificates or titles.

All subsequent land transactions will be governed by the country’s Civil Code, the draft of which is pending approval by the Council of Ministers.

We believe the initiative to collect land claims nation-wide will, in fact, protect the rights of Timorese, individually and collectively, to their land.

By creating a comprehensive record of current land use and claims to land ownership, the rights of the current land users -- mostly small-scale farmers -- will be recorded and ultimately recognized by law.

(2) We agree with the author that "undervaluation of land" is a problem in developing countries like Timor-Leste. The author himself says that “uncertainty over title” contributes to undervaluation of land.

Informed land titling, which is what we are promoting, should improve the valuation of land and make it more attractive for owners to make production-enhancing investments in their land, thereby contributing to improved food security.

We do not deny that clearer land ownership may increase the number of land transactions in Timor-Leste. Indeed, it would be a natural consequence of correcting the undervaluation of land.

However, with clearer ownership, these sales will be more informed sales, with less risk of Timorese being taken advantage of due to unclear or multiple land claims. In addition, a system that clearly records land ownership, based on current and historical land usage, is likely to help prevent the type of land deals that Professor Anderson is criticizing in his article.

(3) The author claims that “the big powers, through AusAID, USAID, and the World Bank...would like to see Timor-Leste's constitution amended”, to allow foreign corporations to own land.

We have not advocated amending the constitution to allow foreign corporations to own land, and we are not aware of any "push" or proposal to do so.

(4) The author accuses the big powers of “hostility” to self-reliance and self-sufficiency for Timor-Leste.

USAID supports Timor-Leste’s goal of fully realizing its agricultural potential and increasing agricultural productivity and farmers’ incomes. U.S. assistance in the area of agriculture in Timor-Leste supports efforts to transform the agriculture system from its current subsistence nature to one that is profitable and self-reliant.

In 2006, then Prime Minister Jose Ramos-Horta asked the international community for assistance to develop a system to provide the people of Timor-Leste with secure land rights as a way of promoting social stability and laying a strong foundation for economic growth.

This request was supported by Timor-Leste's own land tenure experts within the National Directorate of Land, Property and Cadastral Services (DNTPSC), who identified land tenure issues as a potential trigger for conflict throughout the nation.

Numerous experts noted that a greater number of Timorese people themselves were speaking of the need for secure property rights during community consultations. USAID’s 2006 conflict assessment also raised concerns that uncertainty over land ownership and the inability to resolve land conflicts could be a contributing factor to future violent conflict in Timor-Leste.

In early 2007, the Strengthening Property Rights program was part of a comprehensive package of assistance launched by USAID following the recommendations of the conflict assessment.

I thank the author again for the relevant opinion piece and this opportunity to address the issues raised.

Mark White Representative, USAID Timor-Leste U.S. Agency for International Development Rua Sergio Vieira de Mello Farol, Dili, Timor-Leste Phone: (670) 332-2211/2 Fax: (670) 332-2216

---
Privatising Land in Timor Leste by Prof. Tim Anderson Global Research, September 15, 2008

This article was first published in the Tetun language, in Timor Leste's Kla'ak (The Flame) newspaper

In July 2008 Timor Leste’s Agriculture Minister Mariano Sabino spoke at seminars about agricultural sustainability and food security in Dili and Dare. Yet a few months earlier the Minister had signed a document which could deliver the most devastating blow to Timor Leste’s sustainability and food security since independence.

In a January 2008 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Indonesian-based GT Leste Biotech, Minister Sabino agreed to hand over 100,000 hectares of Timor’s scarce agricultural land to be used as a sugar-cane plantation.

Similarly, in February, Secretary of State Avelinho da Silva signed a contract with the Australian-based biofuel company Enviroenergy Developments Australia for Jatropha development on 59 hectares of land at Baucau. It is rumoured that even larger tracts of land are under discussion for rubber plantations.

These documents signal a move underway in the AMP Government to privatise large tracts of Timor Leste’s land. Yet the country’s Constitution says that “only national citizens have the right to ownership of land” (s.54). This means neither foreigners nor corporations can own land. However the recent agreements would effectively alienate prime agricultural land to foreign corporations through long term leases.

When Minister Sabino’s MOU and the Enviroenergy contract were made public, they attracted widespread condemnation. Demetrio de Carvalho, Director of the Haburas Foundation, said a sugarcane monoculture would threaten East Timor’s biodiversity and that the chemicals used would pollute the country’s water. Fretilin MPs warned this land ‘give away’ was corrupt and would threaten the country’s food supply. NGO representatives argued that large plantations would destroy the soil and that participation in the biofuel industry would push food prices even higher.

The AMP Government responded with counter-claims that biofuel plantations would generate thousands of jobs, provide cash opportunities for neighbouring farmers and add to the country’s infrastructure and training capacity. Minister Sabino claimed the plantations would not compete with food crops and argued the benefits of biofuels.

The big powers, through AusAID, USAID and the World Bank, have pushed for commercialisation of land in Timor Leste. They would like to see Timor Leste’s constitution amended, to allow foreign corporations to own land. Yet they too were unhappy, because of the way in which contracts seem to have been awarded. The corruption claims are serious, but will not be discussed here.

In this article I want to highlight the serious food security and sustainability consequences of land privatisation for Timor Leste, with reference to the experience of other developing countries in land alienation, agricultural liberalisation and large monoculture cash crops. I also present some reasons why Timor Leste’s constitutional ban on foreign ownership of land is worth defending.

The problems come from three linked processes: the likely undervaluation of land, poor accounting of the costs and benefits of large monocultures, and the instability introduced through agricultural liberalisation.

Undervaluation of land Agricultural land in developing countries is seriously undervalued when it is alienated, either by long-term lease or sale. The AMP Government has suggested the land to be handed over to GT Leste is unused and ‘unproductive’. But with one of the fastest growing populations on earth, Timor Leste will certainly have to expand its food crop lands, in the very near future.

Reference to land being ‘unused’ is one factor that contributes to undervaluation. Another is the uncertainty over title. Whose land is this that is to be leased? Many disputes over title remain in Timor Leste, a product of colonial history. A third factor is that most land has never been commercialised and there is no market for land. With no experience in valuing land, and short of cash, Timorese communities are highly vulnerable to ‘bad deals’.

The undervaluation of land is widespread. Studies I have carried out in Papua New Guinea, show that local communities there have leased their land to oil palm plantations for as little as $10 per hectare per year, plus minimal royalties. Yet the subsistence production value of one hectare of good land in PNG (the local market value of one family’s food, grown and consumed) will often reach $5,000 per year, or five times the minimum wage. Companion planted cash crops can add between several hundred and several thousand dollars to this amount. Imagine the total value of those thousands of dollars per year, over many generations. This capacity of land to deliver sustainable yields, year after year, is never fully reflected in rents or sale prices.

When PNG communities realise a company is making thousands of dollars from their land, they want a share of that money – but long term leases creates legal barriers to their claims. Land is a people’s most precious and enduring asset – far more valuable than minerals, oil or gas. Yet cash-poor communities often give away this precious asset, in their desperation for a few dollars.
Poor accounting of large monocultures While land is undervalued, the claimed social benefits of large monocultures are typically over-stated. Corporate investors encourage this. Yet the extraction of profits from local resources and labour is the main reason large monocultures are created. So the income benefits to local communities are exaggerated and the environmental costs are played down.

The AMP government plans to charge no rent at all “during the first nine years” for the 100,000 hectares of land offered to GT Leste Biotech. The only consideration that can be seen, from the MOU and government statements (and putting aside the possibility of corrupt payments), is an “expectation” of several thousand jobs, a vague offer to “provide community facilities” and promises to share some electricity capacity and to sell sugar and ethanol at “reasonable” prices.

However, from the MOU, there would be no claim on the company if this “expectation” of thousands of jobs became just a few hundred. Further, it is almost certain that most will be lowly paid jobs. While the benefits for Timor are vague, the company’s rights in the MOU are more emphatic. The first 50 years of the lease will be “irrevocable” and there will be “no state participation of any sort, whatsoever” in the business. That is, Timor Leste will not share any of the sugar-cane-ethanol profits.

There is also a suggestion to engage local smallholder farmers in cane production, to provide additional fodder for the company’s sugar-ethanol mill. This is the ‘agro-nucleus estate’ model promoted by the Asian Development Bank, and seen in some parts of PNG over the past thirty years.

In PNG ‘village oil palm’ farmers are paid by for their oil palm fruit contributions to the monopoly mill. However they are forced to accept fruit prices set by the company, and complain bitterly about fruit prices. The average income for oil palm farmers in PNG’s Oro province (61 Kina per week) is higher than the minimum wage (37 Kina) but less than half the average informal sector incomes (130 Kina) for example in small businesses, fruit selling and transport.

Monocultures reduce the diversity of production in a region, and reduce the capacity of small farmers to companion plant and spread their crop options. Sugar cane is similar to oil palm in this regard. The land clearing erodes and degrades the soil, silting up rivers and choking surrounding coral reef. Over half the fertiliser used runs into the water, causing algae blooms. In the oil palm areas of PNG there has been obvious loss of crop diversity, biodiversity and damage to rivers.

Finally, monocultures undermine small farming and local food production and contribute to food insecurity. The economic liberal argument is that they produce more income, which can then be used to purchase imported food. However most of that new income is appropriated by the investor company and local communities become more dependent on cash income to feed their families.

Small farms are undermined yet, as U.S. food security expert Peter Rosset says: “Small farms are ‘multifunctional’: more productive, more efficient and contribute more to economic development than large farms. Small farmers can also make better stewards of natural resources, conserving biodiversity and safeguarding the future sustainability of agricultural production.”

Local communities are no better off financially with these monocultures yet they bear very serious environmental and food insecurity costs. None of this is properly accounted for when governments hand over precious land to private investors.

Instability from agricultural liberalisation Concerns over sustainable agriculture are closely linked to food security concerns and to the current global food crisis. Until the recent crisis, brought on by steeply rising food prices, small farmers had been hurt by cheap imports. When imported staple food is cheap, farmers cannot justify planting next season’s crop. They just cannot compete.

The earlier low prices were a result of heavy domestic subsidies by the big grain exporters, such as Australia, the EU and the USA, and pressures for agricultural liberalisation. Since the WTO’s Agreement on Agriculture, the big powers have poured large subsidies into agriculture (allowed under WTO rules as they are not directly ‘trade related’), yet tried to dismantle the tariff protection and food price regulation that was more common in developing countries.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said in 2004: “Although lower basic food prices on international markets bring short-term benefits to net food-importing developing countries, lower international prices can also have negative impacts on domestic production in developing countries that might have lingering effects on their food security.” Indeed, some countries experienced famines from the impact of low food prices on domestic farming.

PNG has few food security problems, because the land is fertile and families have kept their traditional lands.

However if we go to a poor Caribbean country like Haiti we see a different picture. Like many countries, Haiti had moved from more diverse staple foods (rice, corn, cassava, millet) to greater dependence on rice. Yet Haiti had been almost self-sufficient in rice, until the 1980s. Then, under financial pressure from the World Bank it began to dismantle its tariffs and other forms of protection. Haiti began to import 200,000 tonnes of rice per year, mostly from the US. This drove many local farmers out of business and, when prices rose again, poor people could not afford to buy rice. Today, more than half the population of Haiti is food insecure or malnourished.

Low food prices damage local production. High food prices hit poor people who have to buy their food. This is the unstable situation created by trade-dependent food patterns.

The recent high food prices have been driven by the high oil prices (which contribute to fertiliser and transport costs), demand for richer diets (meat, oil seed) in the wealthier countries and pressure on land, including from the biofuel industry. The FAO points out that these rising prices, in the last year, have pushed the number of hungry people in the world from 850 million to nearly one billion.

Biofuels have raised introduced competition between food for people and food for cars. The UN’s Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Jean Ziegler, who has called biofuels a “crime against humanity” puts it this way: “232kg of corn is needed to make 50 litres of bioethanol. A child could live on that amount of corn for a year.”

Now, in the middle of Timor Leste’s own food crisis, it has been proposed that Timor, on the one hand, gives away farm land which could produce food and, on the other hand, participates in a global industry which will raise even more the price of imported food. Will Timor export ethanol at the expense of food for its children?

Concluding comments A prudent approach to food security, in any country which does not have a staple food surplus, must involve strong measures of domestic self-reliance and self-sufficiency. This includes Timor, which has special reasons of history, environmental damage, population growth and climate to be concerned about food security and sustainable agriculture.

Putting aside the word games some agricultural exporting neighbours play with the words ‘self-reliance’ and self-sufficiency’, self-reliance must mean Timor seeking to grow most of its own food, support small farmers to remain on their land, encourage domestic markets and place agricultural exports in second place.

Such an approach will meet hostility from the big powers who advocate agricultural liberalisation and the privatisation of land. But they are looking to their own advantage and are not the ones who have to live with food insecurity and environmental damage.

Niche and companion planted exports such as organic coffee and tropical fruits may not compromise the land, but export oriented monocultures certainly will. And after all, well managed tourism will raise many times more money that any agricultural exports, and distribute that money far more widely.

No sensible person should seriously link land privatisation and large monoculture cash crops to ‘agricultural sustainability and food security’, but this is now happening in Timor Leste. It is the East Timorese people who, with their great spirit of resistance, will have to ensure that they do not, once again, become beggars in their own country.

Image: Dr Tim Anderson Senior Lecturer in Political Economy University of Sydney

Ambassador Highlights Justice at Timor-Leste's World Day of Peace


19 September 2008 - At a World Day of Peace program sponsored by the Catholic Diocese of Dili on 19 September 2008, Ambassador Hans Klemm underscored the importance of justice and the rule of law for Timor-Leste's development.

In his remarks, the Ambassador highlighted Timor-Leste's progress since the political crisis of 2006 and the 11 February 2008 assassination attempts against the President and Prime Minister of the republic by armed rebels.

He also lauded the work of Timor-Leste's Justice and Peace Commission in providing skills training and education to over 3,000 young people, including internally displaced persons and members of gangs and martial arts groups.

The Ambassador observed that the U.S. cooperates with Timor-Leste in strengthening its security and justice institutions, and underscored that a climate of justice where people are held accountable for their crimes, and victims receive restitution, must be promoted.

The Ambassador was invited to provide the keynote speech by the Justice and Peace Commission.

The event was attended by over 400 guests, including Bishop of Baucau Basilio do Nascimento, officials from the United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste and the embassies of Norway and Brazil, martial arts groups, religious officials, and members of the Armed Forces of Timor-Leste (F-FDTL).

Image: The Honourable Hans Klemm, United States Ambassador to East Timor

Life in East Timor in 1994


The following link has been posted here on East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin as a look-back to life in the country in 1994 when it was still under the illegal and genocidal occupation by Indonesia.

It is but one insight into the brutalisation of East Timorese society during that darkest epoch in its history and is a reminder to those who seek to rebuild a robust rule of law in present-day East Timor that their efforts must be continuous and pervasive at all levels and that all deviations from the rule of law must be identified, exposed and condemned.

Warning: This video link contains mature content and may be disturbing to some viewers.

Click here or on the image below to view.



Post sponsored by East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of just law in Timor-Leste!

Legal News Summaries 22 September 2008


Peace should not be separated from human rights: UNMIT chief - Timor Post 22 September 2008
Chief of the United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste, Atul Khare said peace and human rights should not be separated from each other, because was no one could live in peace if his/her right was not guaranteed.

Situation in Timor-Leste still volatile, says Gusmao - Timor Post 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, said Timor-Leste was a new country and had just reached its independence, therefore situation and peace in the country were still volatile.

We are threatened, says deputy prosecutor general - Timor Post 22 September 2008
Deputy Prosecutor General, Ivo Jorge Valente, said they had been threatened by certain people through telephone during the process of handling corruption cases.

Xanana Gusmao pleased with martial art clubs - Suara Timor Lorosae 22 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao has called on martial art clubs in the Capital Dili to strengthen peace and stability in the country.

Free Angelita Pires


East Timor Legal News 21/09/2008 2200 hrs AEST - The Australia-based family of Ms. Angelita Pires, Australian citizen and former partner of deceased East Timor rebel leader, Major Alfredo Reinado Alves, has called on the Australian government to demand that the East Timor government bring legally admissible charges against her, or return her Australian Passport.

The family, through her brother, Mr. Antonio Pires, has asked that all foreign aid to East Timor be suspended until the East Timor government complies with such a demand.

"The incompetence and corruption of East Timor’s government is only matched by the cowardice and gutless inhumanity of Kevin Rudd’s government," said Mr. Pires.

"We, the family of Angelita Pires, have appealed to the Australian government to extradite Angelita Pires to Australia on humanitarian grounds on an undertaking that her passport would be held by authorities to guarantee her return to East Timor to face any legally admissible charges."

Ms. Pires has been the subject of scathing accusations by the President of East Timor, Jose Ramos-Horta, as a participant in a conspiracy to assissinate him on 11 February 2008 when Major Alfredo was, according to an autopsy report, shot at close range in the grounds of the President's residence in Dili.

Ms. Pires' passport has been confiscated by the East Timorese authorities and she is unable to leave East Timor even though no charges have been laid against her by the Prosecutor-General, Longinhos Monteiro, with whom Ms. Pires worked in the United Nations Serious Crimes Unit in East Timor.

National network on anti-corruption established to combat corruption, enhance good governance


East Timor's National Parliament has established a national network on anti-corruption. The initiative is a result of a two-day conference which aimed to create a network of parliamentarians and independent State institutions dedicated to combating corruption and enhancing good governance.

The President of the Sub-Committee on Anti-Corruption, Cipriana da Costa Pereira told participants at the opening session that corruption is more than a threat to democracy, as it also undermines economic development, violates social justice, and destroys State institutions. “Corruption is the biggest barrier to the poor being able to have access to opportunities for basic services provided by the State,” she said.

The anti-corruption network is seen as a platform on which to build alliances with other stakeholders and mobilize people from the grassroots to all levels of Government to fight against corruption. It intends to educate the public about the existence and threat of corruption, support communities to follow up on publicly funded projects, and empower civil society to mobilize community action, generate political commitment, and promote integrity and good governance. Organizers expect that the network will make a significant contribution to the drafting of a law on anti-corruption. It could also pave the way for the Parliament to join regional and global coalitions and parliaments dedicated to good governance and combatting corruption.

The meeting was attended representatives of the highest levels of government including by President José Ramos-Horta, President of National Parliament Fernando 'Lasama' de Araujo, Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão, and members of Parliament, as well as representatives of the Government, United Nations, civil society, diplomatic corps, academia, private sector, media, and religious institutions.

The anti-corruption caucus, held from 18-19 September in the capital city Dili, was organized by Sub-Committee on Anti-Corruption, Committee C of the National Parliament, and funded by the National Parliament and the Australian Government/AusAID. UNDP’s Parliament Project provided support for the meeting.

Also: Primary school teachers trained on human rights education

In an effort to raise the awareness of primary school teachers on basic human rights concepts, principles, and standards, UNMIT’s human rights office has been conducting trainings across Timor-Leste on human rights education. The initiative also aims to show the teachers how to integrate human rights messages, principles and concepts in their daily Estudo do Meio lessons.

Primary school teachers were selected as an initial target audience for the training due to the importance of beginning human rights education at an early age, says Louis Gentile, who heads UNMIT’s Human Rights and Transitional Justice Section and represents the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Timor-Leste.

“The emphasis on ‘respect’ is already reflected in the primary school curriculum in Timor-Leste. But to fully understand respect and human dignity, education about human rights is vital,” he told the UNMIT Weekly. “When respect for human rights is encouraged at an early age, there is a high probability that the knowledge and skills will remain with the child for life. This can contribute to long-term peace, security and stability of any nation, including Timor-Leste,” he added.

UNMIT expects to introduce human rights education to at least 350 primary school teachers by December 2008. To date, training sessions have been conducted in Dili, Liquica, Manatuto, Lautem, Viqueque, Baucau, Covalima, Bobonaro, Ermera, Manufahi, Ainaro, and Aileu districts, with the next session scheduled in Oecusse from 2225 September.

The project is a collaborative effort of UNMIT, the Ministry of Education, and the Provedoria for Human Rights and Justice, with funding provided by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and UNDP.

From the English language version of the UNMIT Weekly No 59 available at http://unmit.unmissions.org/Default.aspx?tabid=221&language=en-US

East Timor police panned for crackdown on poor vendors


20/09/2008 Dili - National police in East Timor, one of the poorest countries in Asia, are being criticized for a crackdown on snack vendors working a lucrative part of the capital, Dili. No laws ban the sales across from the Palacio do Governo, or Government Palace, and the police are targeting poor people just trying to make ends meet, politicians and vendors complained.

Until two days ago, dozens of small carts loaded with drinks and snacks were stationed across from the government offices in a picnic area under shade trees that sits on the sea. On evenings and weekends, the picnic tables in one of the most popular public areas in Dili are usually jammed with couples and families, and business for vendors boomed there.

But on Saturday, only one cart dared show up for fear of the police.

"They chased me away a few days ago, but I have come back," said Tios Sila. As the sole vendor, Sila was doing a brisk business in soft drinks, biscuits and cigarettes.

In East Timor, unemployment hangs around 60 per cent, and most people make less than 1 dollar per day. Sila said he could make 5 to 10 dollars from the crowds in front of the Palacio do Governo. He said he couldn't make that much anywhere else in the city.

Jose Texeira, a member of East Timor's Parliament, said he was unaware of any law prohibiting the carts.

"I don't care if there's a law or not," he said. "The fact is they have just started doing this without telling anyone. It's nonsense, cracking down on people who just want to make a living."

Acting commander of the national police, Alfonso de Jesus, said no law had been passed but, nonetheless, he ordered his officers to shoo away the vendors last week after government workers complained to him about traffic congestion in front of their offices.

Police patrolling the area said they have not yet arrested anyone but if they saw any snack carts, they would ask them to move elsewhere.

"This isn't government property," Sila said. "Lots of people come here. If you want to sell anything, you have got to find a place that's popular."

From Earth Times

The Kraras Massacre of 1983 in East Timor


Massacre at Kraras, East Timor - Indonesia in 1975 invaded and forcibly annexed East Timor, beginning a campaign of violence that killed 200,000 East Timorese.

One element of this campaign was the massacre of entire villages. During the summer of 1983, nearly three hundred residents of Kraras, thereafter known as "the village of widows," were killed by Indonesian troops.

John Pilger reported on one of the East Timorese resisters, identified only as Domingos:

Domingos is 40 and has been in the jungle since 1983. "My wife was tortured and burned with cigarettes," he said. "She was also raped many times. In September [1993] the Indonesians sent the population of her village to find us. My wife came to me and said, `I don't want to see your face because I have been suffering too much.' At first I thought she was rejecting me, but it was the opposite; she was asking me to fight on, to stay out of the village and not to be captured and never to surrender. She said to me, `You get yourself killed and I shall grieve for you, but I don't want to see you in their hands. I'll never accept you giving up!' I looked at her, and she was sad. I asked her if we could live together after the war, and she said softly, `Yes, we can.' She then walked away."

Domingos and his wife came from Kraras, now known by the Timorese as the "village of the widows." During the summer of 1983, 287 people were massacred there. Their names appear on an extraordinary list compiled in Portuguese by the church. In a meticulous, handwritten script, everything is recorded: the name and age of each of the murdered, as well as the date and place of death and the Indonesian battalion responsible.

Every time I pick up this list, a testimony of genocide, I find it strangely compelling and difficult to put down, as if each death is fresh on the page. Like the ubiquitous crosses, it records the slaughter of whole families, and bears witness to genocide: Feliciano Gomes, 50; Jacob Gomes, 50; Antonio Gomes, 37; Marcelino Gomes, 29; Joao Gomes, 33; Miguel Gomes, 51; Domingos Gomes, 30; Domingos Gomes, 2 -- "shot."

So far I have counted forty families, including many children: Kai and Olo Bosi, 6 and 4, "shot"; Marito Soares, 1, "shot"; Cacildo Dos Anjos, 2, "shot." There are babies as young as 3 months.

Source: 'Journey to East Timor: Land of the Dead' by John Pilger in The Nation 25 April 1994

Read more accounts of crimes against humanity and human rights abuses committed in East Timor in 1999.

UNMIT Weekly Press Briefing 19 September 2008


Speakers:

Aniceto Neves: Coordinator for Peace Building of HAK Association
Caesar Ranawera: UNPol Representative
Hipolito Gama: UNMIT Spokesperson

Hipolito Gama: Good morning everyone and thank you for coming to our weekly press briefing. On Sunday 21st of September, it is the International Day of Peace. There are programmes and t-shirts for all of you and today we would like to talk about peace with one of the most prominent civil society representatives working to achieve piece in Timor-Leste. His name is Aniceto Neves and he is the Coordinator for Peace Building of HAK Association.

Aniceto Neves Thank you for this opportunity to speak to you all today. I am the head of the peace-building at HAK and I feel proud to be here today and share our vision for peace-building in Timor-Leste. Our vision is a little different to the UN’s. At the UN you ask “what are you doing for peace”at Hak, we ask “what is your vision of peace?”.

I will talk today about how to work for changes around the reality and obstacles after the crisis of 2006 and I would like to talk about the development of peace, specifically dialogue and reconciliation.

In the context of Timor-Leste, people are facing the challenge on how to transform from an era of colonization to independence. So the reality deals with the struggle for how to identify their positions and fight for Timor-Leste and move towards the realization of Timor-Leste as an independent nation.

In the context of conflict, we deal with the issue of identity and what it is to be Timorese, which is an effort to build an identity and to make the Timorese feel they own the process. This is an external and internal struggle.

Externally, the Timorese are not ready to assimilate themselves with the change taking place globally. Internally, the Timorese face the challenge and obstacle of who will give them information on their identity. Because of this internal conflict, it has an impact on the Timorese mentality and violence is used as recognition for the identity. So the need for peace and to change violence acts to peaceful acts is the challenge. Because of the accumulation of all of these problems, it exploded in 2006. Some people feel excluded from the process of independence which causes a negative undercurrent and discontent in the community. This happens in the levels of the state leadership and the ordinary community. At the leadership level, we feel that there are strong political factions and this has a strong impact on creating community divisions. Because of this division it is easy for conflict to arise.

With this is mind, how do we have peace in Timor-Leste? We need a definition and we need for Timorese to consider themselves a part of the process. If the Timorese themselves do not feel their identity is recognized, it will make them feel that their rights are not identified. Based on our observations, we ask what is the state policy to deal with this?

We find the policy is not dealing with the root cause in society. We also recognize the policy from the Government and the UN is responsible for change taking place. Because of this we notice there are reductions in violent actions and we also notice has tried its best to help the IDPs return home and there has been a reduction in conflict amongst the martial arts groups.

All of these changes take place because of a collective effort and it is evidence of a positive change.

Now what comes to us are questions. Why do we try to establish peace with an approach that uses force. We accept that this approach we will create a temporary peace but I think this is a negative peace. We need to build a positive, just, realistic and sustainable peace.

At HAK, we see ourselves involved in the efforts by the Government and the UN in trying to push for peace in two ways. Firstly we can learn and secondly we can offer our capacity to build peace. Dialogue is a mechanism to settle the conflict, and this is widely accepted by the UN. We try to use this mechanism but some dialogue does fail. The evidence shows that the leadership dialogue failed in April 2007 when the state accepted to send the ISF to Same to attack Alfredo and his group. As somebody who was involved in the negotiation between the state and Alfredo I found failures on both sides. Now we have the new government in place, we say we’ll use dialogue but we don’t use it properly. We use dialogue to settle conflict and also as a means to insult each other. We don’t use the mechanism as a means to create understanding. My perception is that dialogue should be used to build a vision for peace in Timor-Leste. Dialogue is a process.

Why doe we think we are now entering a negative peace process phase? First, even though we find there are a lot of changes taking place, we find that these happen not because of awareness, but because the State is using force to tackle this. We can be proud that after February 11, Salsinha and his members were arrested, and the IDPs said they were ready to go home as the situation is back to normal. It’s true that IDPs feel that they now have the conditions to go home, but the goal of a true, just and sustainable peace has not been achieved. We can be proud of the fact that we managed to create reconciliation between the two groups involved in the 2006 conflict – the F-FDTL and the PNTL and we recognize this. For us, people who were involved in the peace process the policy chosen by the government to compensate the petitioners has brought change but for us, we are concerned that the $8,000 compensation may not address the root cause of conflict.
So what have we done to change the mentality of those involved in the conflict? How do we reflect on the changes and think about the matters that have not been dealt with that may create an explosion? We have two things we think that can build peace.

Firstly, to build a culture of non-violence we need to shift the structure in all levels of society. Secondly, to strengthen peace and justice, we need to create awareness through education between local leaders, leaders in parliament, civil society and others.

Hipolito Gama: Thank you, now we will take questions

Adelina – Timor-Post: So far we notice the character our society is that force is needed to make us move and also because of this, the police use force to carry out their duty abusing human rights. What do you think about that.

Aniceto Neves – Thank you for the question. Yes it’s true that the Timorese people have a violent character so there is a need to use force to deal with them but from the conflict transformation approach, this is not the approach, but from a cultural point of view this is true. There has been also some opinions from some leadership that violence is the Timorese culture, I just want to say that this is not true. Timorese are the same as people throughout the world, whom think that violence should not be used to promote culture. Conflict is a natural phenomena, conflict exists when we as humans live in this world. With this, we cannot justify that violence is part of Timorese culture. The violence that has been taking place so far, we can consider and accept that Timorese society has been through a long conflict and long foreign occupations, therefore in the transitional era we have failed to transform the violent mentality into a peaceful one. When it comes to dealing with the police who use force, this is beyond the regulations of the police force, in reality what happens is that police fail to comply with the procedures that regulate them. Because of this failure we have violence, because of this violence, we have a violation of human rights.


Pedro Mendes – LUSA News Agency – You mentioned the petitioners and that mobilization was somehow bought with 8,000 dollars, from your perception, was does this money mean to petitioners. Are they being paid to keep quiet? Are they being compensated for something, what is the nature of this payment?

It’s not a perception, it is my opinion, which is the opinion of somebody who is active in the process of building peace in this country. When we look at the nature of the conflict within the F-FDTL the conflict took place because of discrimination due to no proper system for promotion and the application of internal rules. As a member of the Commission of Notables, in our investigations we did find the nature of provocation was discrimination and that the recommendations of the Commission have not been adopted which has led to two failures. Firstly, dialogue between the petitioners and the Commanders did not take place and secondly, on the process of establishing truth and accountability for those officers alleged to be involved in discrimination did not take place. This is the root of the nature of the conflict within the F-FDTL. That is my opinion.

Post sponsored by East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of law in Timor-Leste.

OCHA East Timor Humanitarian Update


OCHA East Timor Humanitarian Update 2008/Issue No 16 17/09/2008 Extracts - Full Report is at http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/TUJA-7JM8V8?OpenDocument&rc=3&cc=tls

Reporting Period: 30 August - 12 September 2008

CAMP DECOMMISSIONING

The EWASH-WG continues to decommission IDP camps as IDP returns are facilitated by The Ministry of Social Solidarity (MSS).:

• Arte Moris: Two families remain in this camp. The rehabilitation work, undertaken by Oxfam, was completed. This included repairs of latrines facilities, taps, and a portion of the access road damaged by frequent trips of trucks delivering water. Letters of decommissioning will be handed-over in the next two weeks.

• Dom Bosco: DNSAS, Oxfam, HealthNet and Catholic Relief Services (CRS) conducted the IDP Return WatSan Workshop at Dom Bosco. UNICEF will decommission the site.

• Seminario Balide: All IDPs have left the camp. Oxfam has been rehabilitating the site for the past two weeks according to the results of the negotiation with the land owner, as summarised in the decommissioning form (standard form used to support the discussions while negotiating the destination for the main assets installed in the camp by Oxfam, after all IDPs have left). This rehabilitation work has now been completed.

• Balide Iglesa and Balide San Jose: Oxfam held decommissioning meetings with the landlords in anticipation of the coming closure of these sites.

SITE LIAISON SUPPORT (SLS), CAMP MANAGEMENT AND COORDINATION

• Hera Port

IOM (SLS agency), along with Oxfam (the water and sanitation agency), are working closely with MSS to ensure that the closure of Hera Port camp is completed well before the next rainy season, to avoid unnecessary water and sanitation, health, safety and other problems. At this point it appears that MSS will attempt to return and reintegrate IDPs from that camp in the coming weeks.

• Tent replacement for camps that do not close before the next rainy season

MSS informed the SLS Working Group that no decision has been taken regarding tent replacement for IDPs remaining in camps beyond the useful of life of theircurrent tents. The SLS Working Group will continue to advocate for their replacement.

CHILD PROTECTION

• Child Protection Workshops: In August, UNICEF and MSS conducted workshops with new MSS Child Protection district officers as well as members of the Child Protection Networks (Police, Education, Health, State Administration, the Church, etc) in Viqueque, Baucau, LosPalos, Manatutu and Ainaro. There workshops were about child protection case identification, referral and management as well as community mobilisation actions to raise awareness about children's right to protection at district, sub-district and village levels. They will continue throughout September and October to extend to all districts and will be conducted with a range of partners, including Plan International, Ba Futuru, the Missionary Sisters of the Holy Spirit and others.

• Child Protection Working Group: The Child Protection Working Group (CPWG) chaired by MSS met on 27 August to discuss possibilities of extending the mandate of the Working Group to cover development, transition and emergency activities. A new TOR will be developed and finalised by MSS as well as all participants in the coming meetings, including contingency measures for sudden onset of crises.

• Child Care Centres: Members of the CPWG were informed that in Timor-Leste, the current policy on child care centres/ boarding houses and orphanages is that all such institutions must be registered by MSS prior to operations. The MSS Policy on Child Care Centres outlines minimum standards of care and professionalism required for the management of such institutions. Given the limitations of existing human resources within the Child Protection Unit of MSS to monitor the welfare of children in these institutions, it has been recommended by Government that no new orphanages should be opened.

• Child Protection Consultations: Plan International held child protection consultations with children and their parents in Motael Camp and Tibar Ismaek, UIR, Karantina and Becora I Transitional Shelter Sites. As in previous consultations in other Camps and Transitional Dhelters, the consultations explained to the participants about the new ECHO-funded Emergency project and how it will entail a change of focus, whereby camp residents are more actively engaged in providing their own child protection and children’s animation services, with support and training from Plan. They sought feedback from participants on this new project and how it could best meet their needs, whether through training, mentoring or the provision of other resources.

• Child Protection Focal Points: New child protection focal points (CPFPs) were nominated or volunteered following consultations in IDP Camps and Transitional Shelters where there were none previously. Training commenced this week for new CPFPs, as did refresher training for existing CPFPs.

• Child Protection Orientation Sessions: Child protection orientation sessions were conducted with child protection focal points in Becora I and UIR Transitional Shelter Sites. The sessions covered topics including: what child protection is; an introduction to the role of CPFPs and; mentoring support to monitor and report child protection incidents.

• Mobile Libraries: The Mobile Libraries team participated in a workshop on singing, guitar playing and writing children’s songs with a member of their team Jose Freitas. Jose is the lead singer of popular Timorese band Cinco do Oriente.

The Mobile Libraries team has been taking children’s paints to all IDP camps and Transitional Shelter Sites to run painting and printing workshops with the children.

GENDER

The Alola Foundation held a training on gender based violence during the week of 1 September in Metinaro IDP Camp for the husbands of 40 women in the handicrafts group. The Alola Foundation is preparing other essential trainings to support the women and their families as they leave the camp for
their communities.

RECOVERY PROCESS

ASPOL

On 1 September, PNTL and F-FDTL went to the ASPOL site to commence the execution of an eviction order that had been issued by the Ministry of Justice on 12 May 2008. The reason for the eviction notice is that the land of the ASPOL site is Government owned and is to be used for PNTL housing.

The Aspol/EDTL site gathers a mix of people:

a) Some who claim to have lived there since 1999,

b) Some who used to live there before the 2006 crisis, then moved to an IDP camp, before coming back recently once they received their recovery package because they consider this area theirhome,

c) and those in the same situation as the latter but who have not yet received their recovery package. In a letter addressed recently to the highest authorities of the Government, the representatives of the ASPOL residents express their concern, and state that the eviction process and options available remain unclear.

According to MSS, 33 families returned to the site from IDP camps (including Jardim, Hospital and Sional) with the Hamutuk Hari’i Futuru programme’s Recovery Package. The remaining families (not registered as IDPs but living at the site) could be entitled to compensation. However, at this time, the exact nature of this compensation remains uncertain, and both the MSS and the Ministry of Justice are still discussing the nature of the compensation.

UPDATE ON IDP MOVEMENTS

• Movement out of Dom Bosco camp commenced on 8 September and progressed smoothly with 10 families out of 628 registered to move remaining as of 12 September.

With the return of the IDPs from Dom Bosco camp a total of more than 6,500 IDP families will have received a recovery or reintegration package under the Hamutuk Hari’i Futuru National Recovery Strategy programme.

• Movement out of San Jose is expected to begin on 15 September with 97 families registered to move.

• Verification of Hera Port Camp is ongoing as is verification of Tibar and Tasi Tolu Transitional Shelters.

• Recent camp movements are reflected in the map attached to this Update.

RETURN MONITORING

• The post return monitoring process continues, with the engagement and support of, among others: the Provedor for Human Rights and Justice; Jesuit Refugee Service; IOM and partners CARE, BELUN and CRS, HAK Association and; the UNMIT Human Rights and Transitional Justice Unit. Developments and new information are currently discussed in the Hamutuk Hari’i Konfiansa Working Group meetings, which currently take place bi-weekly on Fridays at 2pm in the meeting room of the Ministry of Social Solidarity.

• In partnership with the IOM Return Monitoring project, CARE began conducting baseline surveys with community leaders in Bairo Pite. This will be followed by surveys of community members and former IDPs in each of the 32 Aldeias in Bairo Pite.

TRANSITIONAL SHELTER UPDATE

To date, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) has built a total of 597 Transitional Shelters located in Tibar, Tasi-Tulu, Becora Unital, Becora Market and Hera. The Government has built 72 transitional shelters in Karantina, bringing the total of transitional shelters to 667 shelter units. See the table below for additional details. Excluding Hera, the current occupancy rate is approx. 85 %.

[see chart in original PDF]

• Tibar: The MSS verification process is ongoing at Tibar with a view to commencing the return and reintegration process there.
• Karantina: Due to a significant lack of potable water, WatSan implementing partner Triangle GH continue to truck water (average ten litres per person per day plus on-site brackish water for washing). A formal request is with the Goverment to take over this responsibility.
• Tasi Tolu: Some IDPs have begun the MSS verification process with the view to rebuild their former houses before the wet season commences.
• Becora UNITAL: IDPs claiming block C as their former residence continue blocking access for other / new IDPs to the ten rooms within this block. Similarly other ‘illegal’ occupants await an MSS decision on how best to proceed. Individuals breaking into rooms and claiming them has been an ongoing problem for some time.
• Becora Market: Tensions within the Transitional Shelter have eased following meetings between Watsan implementing partner Triangle GH, Watsan committee members and block leaders.

• As some IDPs have already received the MSS return package, there is a continued lack of clarity over their eligibility for ongoing food distributions; NRC will provide a detailed list for food distribution to MSS prior to next distribution.

HAMUTUK HARI’FUTURU

HAMUTUK HARI’I KONFIANSA

• MSS Dialogue Teams
On Monday, 8 September 2008, the Ministry of Social Solidarity and UNDP officially launched the joint UNDP/MSS project ‘Strengthening Institutional Mechaisms and Structures for Dialogue’. At the ceremony in Hotel Timor, H.E. Ms. Maria Domingas Fernandes Alves, Minister of Social Solidarity, Mr. Jacinto Rigoberto Gomes, Secretary of State for Social Assistance and Natural Disasters, Mr. Akbar Usmani, UNDP Country Director, and Mr. Ben Larke, UNDP/MSS Social Reintegration Specialist jointly welcomed the valuable contributions of the Dialogue Teams in the ongoing reintegration process of IDPs in their former communities. This occasion also marked the introduction of José Belo as the project manager.

Six dialogue teams recruited by MSS under the project have been in place since mid-July and in the past six weeks have facilitated mediation for 177 families relocating from IDP camps in Dili. At this point the team have approved funding for three community dialogue events to take place in the coming weeks and are supporting partners to accompany IDPs from camps in Baucau on ‘go and see visits to their former homes in Dili.

An additional Dialogue Team has been selected to be based in Baucau, from where they will cover activities across the district as well as in the districts of Viqueque and Lautem; they will begin working as soon as the team is fully equipped. In Ermera, recruitment has begun for an eighth team after consultation with local administration, police and Church representatives indicated a strong demand for community dialogue to secure ongoing stability in areas which were among the first to receive returning IDPs from Dili.

Most recently, the Dialogue Teams worked closely with partner organisations to facilitate the return of the IDPs living in the Dom Bosco IDP camp. Several problematic cases were solved successfully. Further coordination between the MSS dialogue teams and partners supporting the Government is paramount and will be supported through interactions between MSS representatives, UNDP project staff and an array of stakeholders and involved actors in the regular meetings of the Hamutuk Hari’i Konfiansa working group.

• Trust-Building Small Grants Scheme
The Project Management Board, comprising UNDP, AusAid and MSS, met on 5 August 2008 and approved seven initial applications under the small grants scheme. Applicant organizations are now in the process of completing full project documents and MoU’s with UNDP. The Project Management Board also decided that the remaining funds yet to be allocated will be made available only for project initiatives by local NGOs. Preference was also expressed by the board for programs addressing IDP return and reintegration in the Western districts of Timor Leste. For any additional information, please contact Ben Larke on ben.larke@undp.org

• CARE’s Peace building Project: This project continues to assist the MSS, IOM and other
organisations with IDP return and resettlement. CARE assisted in the verification of IDP status within Bairo Pite Suco in Dili, and worked closely with the MSS Dialogue Team to facilitate the mediation of various disputes over housing and other return-related issues.

HUMAN RIGHTS
CARE and Ba Futuru conducted a week long training event in the Manleuna area of Bairo Pite
focusing on Human Rights and conflict resolution.

AGENCY HIGHLIGHTS

AVOCATS SANS FRONTIERES
Avocats Sans Frontières (ASF) continues to raise awareness at the grassroots level, offer free legal advice and build the capacity of community members to act as Community Legal Liaisons (CLLs). The activities are carried out by the “Access to Law Project” (ALP) in Dili and Reach out for Rights (RoR) in Dili, Liquica and Baucau and benefit vulnerable persons including IDPs and Returnees.

• Domestic Violence Training for IDPs
On 12 and 13 August, tASF’s Reach out for Rights (RoR) team, in co-operation with Judicial Systems Monitoring Programme (JSMP), Belun and IOM, conducted training about domestic violence for IDP women of all ages in Hera. IOM and Belun selected 15 women, with potential to become leaders in the community, to participate in the two day training aimed at increasing their knowledge about Domestic Violence and the process for dealing with it. ASF’s RoR team who specialise in providing public information aimed at increasing access to justice, provided training about the legal process associated with cases of domestic violence, while JSMP provided a general background about women’s rights and domestic violence.

• Domestic Violence Awareness for IDPs in Liquica District
On 1 September, the RoR team in conjunction with the Justice and Peace Commission (JPC) provided awareness for the IDP communities in Tibar and Turleo Ismaik (Liquica). A half day session was conducted in each IDP camp and included the presentation of a drama about domestic violence, conceived by ASF and performed by specially trained youth from the Licquica district. In Turleo, 35 people attended the session and in Tibar 54 attended. Each group was made up of a cross section of the IDP communities.

• Capacity building of CLLs in Dili including Child Protection Traning
ASF’s RoR team has been continuing its work in Dili, to build the capacity of community members to act as Community Legal Liaisons (CLLs) thus enabling them to assist their communities, including returnees, with legal issues. ASF currently supports CLLs in the following Succos around Dili: Comoro, Santa Cruz, Mascarinhas, Kuluhun, Becora, Vilaverde, Bairopite, Motael and Bidau Santana. On 4 and 5 September, the RoR team facilitated a training for Dili based CLLs about Child Rights and Child Protection. During this training, the CLLs visited the child protection office at MSS to find out more about the role and function of the office. The CLLs and staff of the child protection office were also able to meet and develop relationships. As a result of this training and networking CLLs are better equipped to deal with child protection cases arising in their communities.

• Public Information Sessions in Dili
ASF’s RoR team has been working with CLLs to deliver legal information to communities around Dili, including returnees. 597 people participated in these sessions in August. The sessions focused on information about and how to access the formal justice system and included a screening of ASF’s film about court process, “Road to Justice”. Public information sessions were conducted in all succos where ASF is working with CLLs, namely: Comoro, Santa Cruz, Mascarinhas, Kuluhun, Becora, Vilaverde, Bairo Pite, Motael and Bidau Santana.

• Public Information via Radio
ASF presented two sessions on criminal law and process on Dili Radio Station RTK (Radio Timor Kmanek) on Saturday 6 September and Thursday 11 September, to provide the Dili community, including IDPs and returnees, with more information about the how crime in the community can be dealt with through legal process.

• Provision of Legal Advice and Mediation Services
ASF’s Access to Law team continues to provide free legal advice consultations to clients in Dili, including in IDP and returned communities. Anyone in and around Dili can contact the lawyers to ask for free consultations on 730 1881. The lawyers also conduct mediations to assist in resolving disputes.

East Timor Security Update 27 Aug - 9 Sept 2008


SECURITY UPDATE Source: Joint NGO Security Office and UNMIT)

The overall security situation in Timor-Leste remained calm. Of note is the following:

• Between 27 August and 9 September, 77 incidents were recorded across Timor-Leste. UNPOL made 72 arrests. The level of incidents remains constant from the last reporting period.

• The weapons collection campaign finished on 31 August. The campaign collected over 18,000 weapons, almost all were homemade weapons along with a limited number of air guns. Reportedly only one industrial firearm was recovered.

• Reportedly all F-FDTL personnel have been withdrawn from Ermera/Bobonaro.

• On 8 September in Wailill village in Baucau district, four houses were set on fire. No injuries were reported. It is believed that this was as a result of a local land dispute and is not expected to escalate.

• On 19 August, a 14 year old Timorese child was injured after playing with an Unexploded Ordinance (UXO) at the F-FDTL training range in Metinaro (this incident happened during the last reporting period but no information was available at the time).

Legal Reports National Media 19 September 2008


It is good to set up an anti-corruption commission, says Indonesia's KKP president – Suara Timor Lorosae 19 September 2008
President of the Indonesian Anti-Corruption Commission, Antasri Azhara, said it is good will on behalf of the Timorese Government in combating corruption and that it was positive to enliven the country's economic development.

Azhara made the comments during the international conference held at the Hotel Timor on combating corruptions.

'The Timorese Government's policy of setting up an antic-corruption commission is showing a positive signal, because corruption is an error committed by Government officials to enrich themselves,' Azhara said.

Azhara added that corruption appeared because there were interests from those who had power aiming at enriching themselves with the people's money which should actually be spent for facilitating people's lives, such as constructing school buildings and clinics.

State is committed to combating corruptions, says Lasama – Suara Timor Lorosae 19 September 2008
Parliamentary President Fernando 'Lasama' de Araujo said that state bodies, such as the presidency, the parliament and the Government were committed to combating corruption in the country.

'The president of the republic, prime minister and parliamentary president and NGO’s participation in the conference shows that we have a commitment to combat corruption in the country,' Lasama said. Lasama made the comments yesterday during a speech marking the opening of 2 day international conference on anti-corruption held at Hotel Timor.

The conference was financially funded by both the Timorese Parliament and the Government of Australia.

Parliament holds international conference on corruption – Timor Post 19 September 2008
Timor-Leste has been urged to clean up corruption, collusion and nepotism known as KKN, because, like terrorism and narcotics, it would only damage the country’s economy and image.

Parliamentary President of Committee C for anti-corruption, Cipriana Pereira, said if corruption was rising in the country, it would destroy the politicians and public development, as well as the private sector.

Pereira said corruption was a major challenge in the world and that there needed to be a proper strategy to deal it well. She added that the conference was aimed at gathering ideas and thoughts for setting up a national anti corruption network.

Parliamentary President Fernando 'Lasama' Araujo said he agreed with producing a special law and having a good commitment were two main keys of combating corruption in the country.

Police should tell the truth, says Acting police commander – Timor Post 19 September 2008
Timorese Acting police Commander, Inspector Afonso de Jesus, said the police force he was currently leading had the responsibility to talk about the firearms which were still at large in the community.

The commander was responding the recent comments made by the former police commander, Paulo de Fatima Martins, saying there were no firearms belonging to police that went missing during the country’s recent crises.

'PNTL should tell the truth. It should not tell falsehoods. The police should uncover things that have gone missing,' De Jesus said. De Jesus added the security forces would make efforts and seek a proper mechanism to recall all the firearms which had gone missing.

State Secretary for Security, Francisco da Silva Guterres, Acting Police Commander, Inspector Afonso de Jesus, and F-FDTL Commander Brigadier Taur Matan Ruak had discussed about mechanisms for recalling those firearms.

Security situation returns to normal: PM Gusmao – Timor Post 19 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, said that the security situation throughout the territory of Timor-Leste had gradually returned to normal.

The prime minister made the comments yesterday after participating in the meeting of the State Security Council at the Palace of the president. Gusmao said during the meeting he was presenting the country’s security situation to the President Jose Ramos Horta.

'The consultative body informed the president on the security situation in the country, saying generally that the security situation has returned to normal,' Gusmao said. He added during the meeting that some of his ministers were also conveying information about the problem of IDPs and the food shortage problem.

Ombudsman urges Government for strongest support – Televizaun Timor-Leste 19 September 2008
Timorese Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman, known as PDHJ, has urged the Government to provide them a strongest support in combating corruption within the country.

PDHJ Director, Sebastiao Diaz Ximenes said the 2-day international conference held was very important, as it was on corruption which had been raised in the Parliament. Ximenes said the conference was another way to gather and exchange opinions on producing relevant laws.

He called on the Government to give him more power to hold investigations into corrupt practices and hopes the Government could make proper recommendations to the court on corruption.

PSD nominates three candidates to replace Papito Monteiro: Carrascalao – Televizaun Timor-Leste 19 September 2008
Social Democratic Party (PSD) Mario Viegas Carrascalao, said his party [PSD] had presented three names to replace former state secretary for cooperative and rural development, Papito Monteiro, who resigned from the post recently.

Carrascalao said PSD had presented those names to Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, yet until now the Government was yet to decide. Carrascalao said the decision was yet to be made, as his party would also conduct consultations with the minister for economy and development.

In response to whether there are some other names from the other political parties, Carrascalao said it was the prime minister’s power to decide.

Corruption appears within state institutions: President Horta – Radio Timor-Leste 18 September 2008
President Jose Ramos Horta, said corruptions were found within the state institutions, however there had been no strong evidences.

The President called on the media to keep updating news stories relating to corruption, so that it could awake the leaders to not commit corruption. Horta made the comments today (18/9) after participating in international conference on a national network for anti-corruption at Timor Hotel.

Horta said Timor's media had worked positively in publicising corruption practices to the public in the country. He added Timor-Leste should learn corruption prevention from other countries to produce an anti-corruption law for avoiding corruption during the implementation of decentralization.

No execution to Reinado, says President Horta – Televizaun and Radio Timor-Leste 18 September 2008
President Jose Ramos Horta said there was no execution of the former rebel leader Alfredo Reinado Alves and one of his men, they [Reinado and Leopoldo] were shot because they were well-armed, trespassing on the residence of the president.

The president made the comments today (18/9) in connection with the report findings of the Hospital, saying Reinado and his follower, Leopoldino, were shot at close range. Horta said it was impossible for the defence force soldiers to capture those rebels, as they were carrying weapons.

Horta said the president guards shot at Reinado and his followers because they had disarmed first a solider at the main gate of the president's residence and attempted to enter into the president's room. Horta said the distance between the scene of Reinado's dead body and the position of the defence force soldiers was about 20 meters and the shootings were the last choice to save the president. He added he was ready to testify in the court if the court needed him to explain about the attack on his residence.

Meeting of State Security Council held – Televizaun Timor-Leste 18 September 2008
President of the Republic Jose Ramos Horta held a meeting of the State Security Council at his residence in Farol, Dili Thursday (18/9).

After the meeting, Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao said that during the meeting the Council members discussed issues such as the general security situation, returnees, food security, and the 2009 state budget.

In relation to security, the Secretary of State for Security, Francisco Guterres, said during the meeting a provision was set to enable PNTL and F-FDTL to work together if there is any urgent situation. Guterres also explained that the government had a plan with international organisations to deal with illegal fishing in the territory of Timor-Leste.

Australian Defence Minister gives East Timor troop guarantee


ABC News 19/09/2008 The Federal Defence Minister has told East Timor's Prime Minister, Xanana Gusmao, that Australia will not pull its 750 troops out of East Timor until it is certain the current level of stability will continue.

Joel Fitzgibbon gave the guarantee during a brief visit to East Timor.

Both countries agreed that international forces should remain in East Timor for at least another year, but Mr Fitzgibbon says there is a chance troop levels could be reduced.

"We will be guided by the Government of Timor Leste and we certainly won't be reducing that until we can be absolutely confident that a reduction in numbers won't lead to a reduction in the stability we have enjoyed," he said.

Foreign troops are still needed to ensure security in the wake of a foiled rebel attack on the country's leaders in February, Mr Gusmao told reporters alongside Mr Fitzgibbon.

The attack, which wounded the country's President Jose Ramos-Horta and left rebel leader Alfredo Reinado dead, raised fears of a return to chaos similar to 2006 fighting among soldiers and police that killed at least 37 people.

Mr Gusmao said he was responding to "conflicting reports" at home and abroad that a reduction in troops from Australia and New Zealand was imminent. "As a state, our security is still fragile and all must agree that the ISF (International Stabilisation Force) should remain for the next year," he said.

The Australian troops in East Timor make up the bulk of the ISF.

Mr Gusmao said the scope for unrest after the February attacks "may have been even worse than the 2006 crisis" but for the presence of international forces.

The East Timorese Government would look at the security situation before deciding whether to ask for a reduction in foreign troop numbers, he said.

Last week Mr Fitzgibbon said Australia would like to reduce its troops in East Timor "in the not too distant future".

Challenges facing East Timor's internally displaced


Two years ago, East Timor descended into chaos and violence forcing tens of thousands of people to flee their homes in the capital Dili. Since then, the government has done all it can to try and return its internal 100-thousand refugees. But the long term challenge will be ensuring the re-integration is a long term success.

Presenter: Stephanie March
Speakers: Filomeno, internally displaced person; Ben Larke, social reintegration specialist United Nations Development Program; Luiz Vieria, East Timor country director International Organisation for Migration.

Listen

United Nations Integrated Mission in East Timor Quick Impact Projects (QIPs)


UNMIT

United Nations Integrated Mission in Timor-Leste

UNMIT has been authorized by the United Nations Secretariat in New York to fund Quick Impact Projects (QIPs). QIPs are generally associated with a strategic effort to establish and build confidence in the mission, its mandate, and the peace process, thereby improving the environment for effective mandate implementation. QIP selection is based on the following criteria:

- the non-recurrent quality of the activity funded;
- a quick impact on the defined target group;
- a labour-intensive character;
- visibility;
- cost-effectiveness;
- the potential for ownership by the community;
- the urgency of the need;
- support of local authorities;
- the reliability of the implementing partner and the absence of duplication with existing programmes.

Individual QIPs should not exceed USD 25,000 in cost and should be completed within three months of initial disbursement. A Project Review Committee (PRC), which consists of the Chief of Staff, the Chief Finance Officer, and representatives from the Office of the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Governance Support, Development and Humanitarian Coordination, Integrated Humanitarian Coordination Unit, Office of the Chief of Mission Support, as well as UNPol, will be responsible for vetting project proposals.

The review and selection of projects by the PRC will commence as soon as suitable projects proposed by reliable implementing partners, both national and international, are submitted through the QIPs Secretariat.

During the 2008/09 financial period, the Mission will undertake and implement projects to support the rule of law and improve the livelihood of Timorese citizens.

A provision of $250,000 would cover quick-impact projects focusing primarily on the restoration and repair of PNTL facilities, including its headquarters, and public sanitation facilities, the renovation of basic community infrastructure, the provision of clean drinking water and the rehabilitation of school buildings and roads.

Please find attached the Quick Impact Project proposal form. Please submit any project proposals to Ms. Radhika Padayachi (padayachi39@un.org).


Quick Impact Project Proposal

Advice for Applicants:

Proposals are invited for small-scale projects thatsupport the peace process, support implementation of the mandate of the peacekeeping operation, or address immediate needs of the population. Projects should not exceed $25,000 in value, and should be implementable within 3 months. Projects may take a variety of forms, including limited infrastructure-related projects, the provision of equipment, short-term employment-generating projects, non-recurrent training activities, the holding of confidence-building or similar fora, and so on.

Projects that meet the minimum criteria (including a realistic budget, and submission by a reputable organisation) will be considered by a project review committee within the mission, following an initial visit to the project site by a mission representative. The committee will decide which projects best meet the priorities of the mission within the funds available for these purposes. There is no guarantee that projects submitted will be selected, even if they meet the minimum criteria. The applicant will be notified in writing by the mission of the decision of the committee. The project may be amended by the committee before approval.

If the project is selected, the implementing agency will be asked to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with the mission, and project funding will be released in two or more stages, following monitoring by the mission of successful ongoing implementation. Projects must be completed within three months of the release of the first installment of funds. Implementing agencies must maintain, and submit on request, an up-to-date list of expenditures with receipts. Partners will be usually expected to publicise the project upon completion, in coordination with the mission. Action will be taken to recover funds that are not used in the agreed way.



Project proposals should be submitted to: The Project Review Committee (PRC) through the Secretariat ad interim of the PRC, Ms. Radhika Padayachi of Planning and Best Practices Unit.

NAME OF PROJECT PROPOSAL

DATE SUBMITTED

LOCATION

APPLICANT (Organisation, name and contact details)

NAMES OF ANY MISSION REPRESENTATIVES

THE PROJECT HAS BEEN DISCUSSED WITH (if relevant)

TOTAL COST IN US DOLLARS
(Attach cost estimates in US dollars only, and any relevant information)

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ORGANISATION (Including the number of members and the status of the organisation, e.g. NGO, community organisation, UN agency, mission component. Describe or any similar projects previously implemented by the organisation.)


HAS A SIMILAR REQUEST BEEN SUBMITTED TO OTHER DONORS? IF YES, GIVE DETAILS
IN THE EVENT OF CO-FINANCING, PROVIDE CONTACT DETAILS OF OTHER DONOR(S)

DESCRIPTION AND TIME-LINE OF THE PROJECT (Provide details and sequencing of activities that would be undertaken, any separate phases of the project, materials that would be used, how long the project would take.)

PURPOSE OF PROJECT (Describe the beneficiaries of the project, how many there are, and how they would be affected. Describe how the project would support the peace process, support implementation of the mandate of the peacekeeping operation, or address immediate needs of the population)

CONTACT DETAILS OF ANY REPRESENTATIVES OF NATIONAL OR LOCAL AUTHORITIES THE PROJECT
HAS BEEN DISCUSSED WITH

ACTIVITIES THAT WOULD BE PLANNED TO PUBLICISE THE PROJECT

REMARKS

I / We hereby undertake to use the funds, if granted, for the abovementioned purposes only.

NAME_______________________________________

SIGNATURE____________________________________

Australia won't withdraw troops until East Timor remains stable


ABC Radio Australi 19/09/2008 - Australia's defence minister, Joel Fitzgibbon, says his government won't pull troops out of East Timor until it's certain the current level of stability will continue.

Our reporter in Dili, Stephanie March, says during a whistle-stop visit to East Timor Mr Fitzgibbon met with East Timor's prime minister, Xanana Gusmao.

Both leaders agreed the security situation in the country is fragile, and further economic development is required to create lasting peace.

Prime Minister Gusmao said the state agreed international forces should remain throughout 2009, but didn't rule out the possibility of a reduction in numbers.

Minister Fitzgibbon said troop numbers are constantly under review.

"So the time will come when we can start to reduce numbers, but we will be guided by the government of Timor-Leste and we certainly won't be reducing until we can be absolutely confident that a reduction in numbers won't lead to a reduction in [the] stability we have enjoyed," he said.

Australia currently has 750 troops deployed in East Timor.

Finance holding up business development in East Timor


The World Bank says it's no easier to run a business in East Timor now than it was a year ago, despite government efforts.

Radio Australia's Stephanie March reports that a key priority for the Alliance of a Parliamentary Majority (AMP) coalition government led by Xanana Gusmao is to develop the private sector.

Tax cuts came into effect on July 1 and new investment legislation is expected to go before the Council of Ministers in coming weeks.

But the recent Doing Business survey by the World Bank's International Finance Corporation (IFC) says there's still a long way to go. Read more...

Displaced East Timorese rally to return home


16/09/2008 By Matt Crook and Domingos Fernandes - DILI, EAST TIMOR Disgruntled Timorese living in one of Dili’s camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs) were told on Tuesday that the verification process that will allow many of them to return home will begin on Wednesday, although thousands more remain in IDP camps around the district.


About 100 IDPs marched from the Obrigado Barracks camp, which is located in a car park opposite the United Nations compound, to the Ministry of Social Solidarity to demand answers as to why they have been unable to return to their homes since being displaced in 2006 when clashes within Timorese security forces incited violence among local street gangs and youth groups.

The protesters congregated at the entrance to Obrigado Barracks at about 1 pm, locking the gates to the camp and leaving UN staff unable to remove their vehicles from the compound.

In a bid to draw attention to their plight, the protesters shook the gates and heckled passing government vehicles, a foreign source working for a local security firm said.

The source added that the protesters opened the gates and calmed down after it was suggested that they wait for journalists to arrive.

UN Police officers and local security officials maintained the peace.
Ilidio Gayo, resident of Obrigado Barracks and head of security at the camp, told reporters that the families living there are ready to return home, but the government has been unable to give a definite answer as to when.

Some 322 families comprising 1,508 people are registered on the Ministry of Social Solidarity database as living at Obrigado Barracks.

“First we were told we could leave in June, then they told us August and now we are told we cannot leave,” said Mr Gayo.

At about 2:30 PM Mr Gayo led a march to the Ministry of Social Solidarity, located five minutes’ walk from Obrigado Barracks.

There protesters rallied outside the entrance and demanded a meeting with an official of the ministry.

The group were blocked from entering the building by National Police of East Timor Officers while armed Portuguese Republican National Guard troops arrived at the scene and kept watch over the proceedings.

After a brief standoff, seven of the protesters were allowed into the building and the remainder were escorted outside the grounds.

The seven protesters were granted an audience with Jacinto Rigoberto Gomes, secretary of state for Social Assistance and Natural Disasters.

The two parties discussed the situation and Mr Gomes said that verification of displaced people living at Obrigado Barracks would begin the next day.

The Ministry of Social Solidarity has 15,000 people registered in its database awaiting verification, which is part of a five-part process leading up to IDPs returning home.

During verification, representatives from the Ministry of Social Solidarity travel to the homes of IDPs, often accompanied by members of international aid organizations, to assess individual circumstances.

Nadia Hadi, humanitarian affairs officer for the UN Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said that the verification process can take up to three weeks and is dependant on factors such as where IDPs lived and whether their homes are still standing after the conflict.

A government schedule dictates when verification at each IDP camp begins, although a source from the Ministry of Social Solidarity said that the march on Tuesday likely only brought forward the date for Obrigado Barracks by a few days.

Estimates put up to 30,000 people still living in Dili’s 28 remaining IDP camps, the source added.

Some 22 IDP camps in Dili have been closed by the government and those living there have returned home or to host communities. IDPs typically receive a recovery package of between US$500 and US$4,500 per family, added Miss Hadi.

All but one of Dili’s “big four” IDP camps have closed, with Metinaro the largest camp in Dili still housing IDPs, she said, adding that displaced persons living in the Don Bosco camp, previously the largest in the district, returned to their homes last week.

In 2006, up to 150,000 Timorese fled to rural areas or else into one of dozens of IDP camps around East Timor after violence erupted across the nation when one-third of the country’s defence forces were laid off by the government.

The resulting tension accentuated the east-west divide in the country and bloody clashes ripped through the streets.

IDP camps sprang up all over Dili after the arrival of Malaysian and Australian peacekeeping forces.

In March, IDPs began returning home when the internal security situation showed signs of improving after the death of rebel leader Alfredo Reinado, while many of the former rebels angry with the government began negotiating settlements.

Initially many IDPs were weary of leaving behind government support and relative safety to return home, particularly as many Timorese still felt unsafe in their home communities.

East Timor President appeals for forgiveness and reconciliation


Presidency of the Republic
Office of the President
Department of Social Communications

English

Dili 18 September 2008


President Jose Ramos-Horta appeals for Forgiveness and Reconciliation

President of Republic, Dr Jose Ramos-Horta, accompanied by the Vice Prime Minister, Dr Jose Luis Guterres, and the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in Timor-Leste, Dr Atul Khare, flew yesterday to Kraras, a village in the district of Viqueque to participate on the 25th anniversary of Kraras massacre where TNI soldiers killed many people.

This event was coordinated by Fr. Martinho Gusmao from Diocese Baucau and commenced with a mass that also participated by Minister of Social Solidarity, Maria Domingas Alves, Minister of State Administration and Ordainment Territory, Arcangelo de Jesus Leite, Secretary of State for Former Combatant of National Liberty, Marito Reis, Secretary of State for Culture, Virgilio Smith, F-FDTL Commander, Brigadier General, Taur Matan Ruak and the other military authorities, PNTL and local authorities, as well as the local community.

On a brief speech, the Head of State appealed to all Timorese to forgive each other.

“I also feel your suffering, but I would like to appeal that the best way for the Timorese is forgiveness and reconciliation, including to forgive the Indonesian because during this fight Timorese also killed each other and many Indonesian also died in this land. They died because of Suharto dictatorship at that time”.

“Therefore as I have appealed many times that even the biggest responsibility of Kraras massacre is coming from the Indonesian, however, they also suffer like us, so since 1999, “maun bo’ot” (Big Brother) Xanana Gusmao has opened an idea of reconciliation between two countries,“ said the Head Of State to the participants.

“There is no reason to hate each other. As the President as well as your “maun bo’ot”, I would like to appeal to all Timorese to avoid violence,” the President said.

“The President for the Poor” also congratulates and recognizes the government that in the very short period of time have been able to identify and provide supports to the most members of Former Combatants of National Liberty.

This ceremony also completed with putting flowers to remember the victims of the massacre, and continued with putting the first brick to establish a new monument of the massacre. The Head of State also inaugurated a solar panel project that is funded by the government to the locals.

At the end of ceremony, the President Ramos-Horta also handed offer some new clothes to the locals. These clothes are offered by the people of South Korea through its embassy in Timor-Leste. END

Contacts: telephone:(+670) 333 9003, mobile:(+670) 723 0160, e-mail Dep. Com. Social rriko .joel@gmail.com, or motaana48@gmail.com

Legal Reports National Media 18 September 2008


AMP and Fretilin have ways to recall weapons – Diario Nacional 18 September 2008
Following the recent news that the Timorese National Police (PNTL) weapons went missing during the country's recent crises, MPs from both Fretilin and Parliamentary Majority Alliance (AMP) propose to cooperate with residents and search residents' houses.

Social Democratic Party (PSD) MP Mario Viegas Carrascalao said the police should cooperate with the residents in recalling the illegal weapons. Carrascalao urged PNTL to make a strong appeal to the residents, saying those who did not want to hand in illegal weapons would be given a strong sanction.

Fretilin MP Francisco Miranda Branco said the security forces should search residents' houses, so that people could uncover anyone who was still hiding weapons.

Internal conflict within KOTA is due to Tilman aligning himself with FRETILIN, says acting President – Timor Post 18 September 2008
The internal conflict within the KOTA party happens because the current KOTA President, Manuel Tilman, made a unilateral decision to enter into an alliance with Fretilin, declared the acting President of the party, Pedro da Costa Ramalho.

According to Pedro, due to Tilman's personal interest, he made an alliance with the Fretilin party and because of this Tilman's standing as president of the party was now questioned by the party's followers.

He added that the founder of the party was not Manuel Tilman but Pedro da Costa Ramalho. Commenting on the political move, Manuel Tilman said that he would not allow the party to be taken over by other irresponsible people.

Government needs to regularise gambling – Timor Post 18 September 2008
A member of parliament from the PD bench, Vital dos Santos, said the government had to regularize gambling such as lottery (SDSB) to make sure that the gambling is in the right tract as gambling will also benefit the nation.

Vital added that SDSB had to be legalised so that government can control it. 'I think (the government) should regularise illegal gambling,' he said. He also admitted that under the current penal codes adopted, gambling such as lottery or SDSB was not allowed here. He suggested the government to make a law especially to regularise gambling in order to prevent illegal gambling.

Paulo denies PNTL weapons go missing – Timor Post 18 September 2008
Former East Timor PNTL Commissioner Paulo Martins disagrees with the information saying that during the 2006 crises many PNTL weapons were missing and they ended up in other people's hands.

Paulo is now a CNRT's MP in East Timor's National Parliament. The actual Operational Commander of the PNTL, Mateus Fernandes, said that based on the recent audit into the weapons of the institutions, it was reported that 13 weapons were still missing.

However, Paulo said no single weapon went missing when he was in charge of the PNTL. He added when he was in charge, those who wanted to take revolvers with them had to fill in a form which was to be kept by the administration of the PNTL.

'Weapons that were distributed by the former Interior Minister to Rai Los were not in the knowledge of the Command, for other weapons there was knowledge about them,' he said.

Asked about the missing weapons of the PNTL, he responded that he did not know anything about those 13 weapons. 'You should go and ask the commander of the PNTL or the logistics of the PNTL; that's it,' Paulo stressed.

Meanwhile, PSD MP, Mario Viegas Carrascalao said the government should take strong measures to make sure that missing weapons were collected saying that civilians having weapons was a very dangerous idea.

President Horta launches Kararas monument laying foundation – Radio Timor-Leste & Diario Nacional 18 September 2008
President Jose Ramos Horta has officially launched the laying foundation of the Kararas Massacre Monument yesterday in Bibileu, an eastern town inViqueque.

During a speech marking the ceremony, President Horta said the state recognized all the tragedies that occurred during the country's resistance, yet no time for evaluating the existing data. Horta said the massacre of Kararas in 1983 was part of the innocent people's struggle to achieve the country's national liberation.

Horta also said there were insufficient data for the country to reach justice, however the state would make efforts to pay attention to the orphans and the widows by the war.

Horta called on the residents to respect as well the Indonesian soldiers who were killed in Kararas, as they worked under the Indonesian military regime.

The ceremony was also attended by the UN Secretary General's Special Representative, Atul Khare, the Timorese Defense Force Commander, Brigadier General Taur Matan Ruak, Government officials and diplomatic corps.

Recruitment for new F-FDTL soldiers will be cancelled, says defence secretary – Radio Timor-Leste 17 September 2008
State Secretary for Defence, Julio Thomas Pinto, said recruitment for the Timorese Defence Force (F-FDTL) soldiers in the upcoming October might be cancelled, because the law for the recruitment had not been approved yet.

The state secretary said this would a challenge for the Government to recruit new soldiers in this year. Pinto said the decision would be made by the Council of Ministers. 'It might be cancelled, if the Council of the Ministers decide to cancel it and then we will cancel it and we will wait for next year,' Pinto said.

Pinto added if the recruitment would be made next year, they would not only recruit 150 or 300, but would recruit 600 new soldiers.

Joint marine team operates in southern coast – Radio Timor Leste 18 September 2008
Joint Marine Team consisting of the Timorese Defense Force Naval Unit, the Timorese Police Marine Unit and a unit from the Fisheries Department is currently conducting operations in the southern coast of Manufahi to monitor illegal fishing in the Timor Sea.

Director for Fisheries and Agriculture Department, Lourenco Dos Reis Amaral said the Joint Operation Team had removed to Ainaro, because fishermen provided information that there were two suspicious boats on the southern coast of Ainaro.

The Joint Operation Team started holding its operation on 10 September and would end it on Thursday (18/9).

Government denies news about authorising companies to reopen gambling – Televizaun Timor-Leste 18 September 2008
Minister for Tourism, Commerce and Industry, Gil Alves has denied the recent news that the Government had made decision to authorise Totoy Timor Draw to reopen illegal gambling known as SDSB.

The minister said the Government was yet to allow any kind of gambling to be reopened, because the Government was still discussing it. Alves was responding to the recent comments made by certain people that the Government had allowed the SDSB gambling to be reopened, but it would be discussed profoundly by the council of the ministers.

Minister for Justice, Lucia Lobato, said the country had no law yet to regulate all kind of gambling, such as SDSB and Casino.

Meanwhile, Deputy Prosecutor General, Ivo Jorge Valente, said there should be proper laws to regulate such gambling and until now the gambling had not been legalised.

East Timor - A Land of Graves: Bodies found near Dili airport


Transcript of ABC News Report 18/09/2008 - UN investigators in East Timor have uncovered a number of bodies near Dili's International Airport in East Timor.

Between the sky and the sea, for years, this coastline has hidden a grisly secret.

The first clues to be exposed along the fenceline of Dili's international airport were pieces of clothing - as these photographs obtained by the ABC show. It wasn't long before the remains of at least 5 people were exhumed from the site.

Juan Carlos Arevalo, Acting UN Police Commissioner: "From the initial report, the only thing that we assume is that those remains have been there for many years."

The cause of death was easier to establish - 2 bullets to the back of the head. Some of the victims were bound. Human rights campaigners blame the former Indonesian occupiers.

Jose Luis Oliveira, Human Rights Activist: "The whole world knows that Indonesia acted against human rights at this time. But the Indonesian government does not take responsbility for their crimes."

East Timor's President says the victims found next to Dili airport should be honoured. But Jose Ramos Horta has told the ABC that reconciliation with Indonesia is more important than dredging up its former crimes.

Jose Ramos Horta: "We must not allow ourselves to be hostage of the past - no matter how ugly that past was - in relation to Indonesian occupation".

The case is now in the hands of East Timor's Prosecutor General. Only he can order more exhumations and answer questions about whether more bodies lie under Dili's airport. But even the country's president acknowledges that the mystery is unlikely to be solved.

Jose Ramos-Horta: "He has 4000 cases of unresolved cases on his desk."

Dr. Soren Blau, Australian Forensic Pathologist: "I think for the families they've expresed frustration at the government's lack of support to, you know, progress the investigation."

East Timor is a land of graves. Almost every week more of the missing are found. But the discovery of these lost souls is no guarantee that their names will ever be known. Mark Willacy ABC News

Watch the video

East Timor PM rejects reports of Reinado execution


ABC Radio Australia 18/09/2008 15:45:13 - East Timor's President Jose Ramos-Horta has rejected reports that rebel leader Alfredo Reinado was executed rather than killed in a gunbattle with police.

The government says Ramos-Horta was critically wounded and Reinado was killed by police as the rebel led an assassination attempt at the president's compound on the outskirts of Dili in February.

But The Australian newspaper said last month it had obtained the autopsy reports for Reinado and fellow rebel Leopoldino Exposto which showed they had been shot at very close range.

President Ramos-Horta says Alfredo wasn't shot from one or two metres away, nor was he arrested before he was shot.

He came armed to the head of state with a lot more people -- this was a serious situation.

The Australian has reported, forensic pathologist Muhammad Nurul Islam, who conducted the autopsies, saying Reinado and Exposto were killed at close range with a high-velocity rifle.

From ABC Radio Australia

East Timorese call for action on collaborator


Pressure is growing for Australia to investigate a Timorese visitor who is accused of being a war criminal, reports Connie Levett. JOSE BELO identified the face in the picture as Guy Campos, claiming the East Timorese man was present when he was interrogated and tortured by the Indonesian Special Forces on the night of 9 January 1995. Read more...

East Timor Council of Ministers Meeting 3 September 2008


Unofficial automated translation. Original Portuguese text follows.

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF EAST TIMOR
IV CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT
SECRETARIAT OF STATE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS
PRESS RELEASE

MEETING OF COUNCIL OF MINISTERS OF 03 SEPTEMBER 2008


The Council of Ministers meeting is held this Wednesday, 03 September 2008, in the Meeting Room of the Council of Ministers, at the Government Palace in Dili, and adopted:

1 - Decree Law Amendment to the Organic Law of Government
Decree-Law No 7/2007 of September 5, as amended by Decree-Law No 26/2008, July 23, established the organic structure of the IV Constitutional Government. According to the Programme of the Government, the National Parliament approved the establishment of a Civil Service Commission. While the legislation is awaiting approval, it is implementing the National Office of Civil Service and also the necessary measures for setting up the Commission, from the National Directorate of Public Service of the Ministry of State Administration and Spatial Planning.

Among the powers of the Ministry is studying, proposing and implementing policies and regulations governing the civil service, social security for employees and agents of Public Administration and other administrative procedures to those affected and that is the charge of the National Directorate of Public Service.

With this modification, and in accordance with the decree approved by the Council of Ministers in its meeting today, these are powers of the Prime Minister, that carries through a National Service.

2 - Decree Law Amendment to the Organic Structure of the Ministry of State Administration

Decree-Law No 6/2008, of March 5, established the organic structure of the Ministry of State Administration and Spatial Planning. Among the powers of the Ministry is studying, proposing and implementing policies and regulations governing the civil service, social security for employees and agents of Public Administration and other administrative procedures to those affected and are in charge of the National Directorate of Public Service.

We respect the government, expressed in the Programme for Government approved by the National Parliament, the establishment of a Civil Service Commission. While the legislation is awaiting approval, it must be implemented, from the National Directorate of Public Service, a National Office of Civil Service and also to the installation of that committee, which now happens with the approval of this law by the Council of Ministers in its meeting today.

3 - Decree Law on the Statute of the Public Defender

This law, which the Council of Ministers approved in its meeting today, establishing and regulating the status of the Public Defender, which are defined mission, the organization, functioning and powers of the Public Defenders, and their órgaos.

The Constitution guarantees, in article 26, access for all to the courts to defend their legally protected rights and interests, ensuring that justice should be promoted regardless of economic means of holders.

4 - Resolution approving donation to the Republic of Cuba

The Republic of Cuba was hit by hurricane Gustav, considered the most violent of the last 60 years, on August 30. As information from official Cuban sources, the hurricane destroyed totally or partially tens of thousands of homes, public buildings, 3,500 tobacco drying stores and 136 high-voltage towers, and also caused serious damage to telephone networks and power and devastated trees and crops.

Among the buildings destroyed included are public schools, some of which are frequented by East Timorese students.

Considering that solidarity and fraternity between peoples are fundamental principles enshrined in the Constitution of East Timor, the Council of Ministers approved in its meeting today a resolution to donate the amount of $500,000 to the people and Government of the Republic of Cuba In order to minimize the adverse effects of hurricane Gustav.

The Council of Ministers also looked at:

5 - Presentation of the National Policy on Housing Recovery

The Council also heard a presentation on the Manual for Implementation of the Program of Assistance and Social Housing Rehabilitation for Victims of Disasters, having examined the document in question and agreed with their proposals.
--
REPÚBLICA DEMOCRÁTICA DE TIMOR-LESTE
IV Governo Constitucional
SECRETARIA DE ESTADO DO CONSELHO DE MINISTROS
COMUNICADO À IMPRENSA

Reunião do Conselho de Ministros de 03 de Setembro de 2008


O Conselho de Ministros reuniu-se esta Quarta-feira, 03 de Setembro de 2008, na Sala de Reuniões do Conselho de Ministros, no Palácio do Governo, em Díli, e aprovou:

1 - Decreto-Lei que Altera a Lei Orgânica do Governo
O Decreto-Lei no. 7/2007, de 5 de Setembro, alterado pelo Decreto-Lei no 26/2008, de 23 de Julho, instituiu a orgânica do IV Governo Constitucional. Segundo o Programa de Governo aprovado pelo Parlamento Nacional a instituição de uma Comissão da Função Pública é propósito a ser alcançado pelo Governo. Enquanto a legislação pertinente aguarda aprovação, cabe implementar o Serviço Nacional encarregado da Função Pública e também das providências necessárias à instalação da Comissão, a partir da Direcção Nacional da Função Pública do Ministério da Administração Estatal e Ordenamento do Território.

De entre as competências do Ministério está o estudo, proposição e execução das políticas e regulamentos relativos ao funcionalismo público, segurança social dos funcionários e agentes da Administração Pública e demais procedimentos administrativos a estes afectos e que está ao encargo da Direcção Nacional da Função Pública.

Com a presente modificação, e de acordo com o diploma aprovado pelo Conselho de Ministros na sua reunião de hoje, estas competências passam ao Primeiro Ministro, que as exerce por meio de um Serviço Nacional.

2 - Decreto-Lei que Altera a Orgânica do Ministério da Administração Estatal
O Decreto-Lei n.o 6/2008, de 5 de Março, instituiu a orgânica para o Ministério da Administração Estatal e Ordenamento do Território. De entre as competências do Ministério está o estudo, proposição e execução das políticas e regulamentos relativos ao funcionalismo público, segurança social dos funcionários e agentes da Administração Pública e demais procedimentos administrativos a estes afectos e que estão a cargo da Direcção Nacional da Função Pública.

É propósito do Governo, manifestado no Programa de Governo aprovado pelo Parlamento Nacional, a instituição de uma Comissão da Função Pública. Enquanto a legislação pertinente aguarda aprovação, cabe implementar, a partir da Direcção Nacional da Função Pública, um Serviço Nacional encarregado da Função Pública e também da instalação da referida Comissão, o que agora acontece com a aprovação do presente diploma pelo Conselho de Ministros na sua reunião de hoje.

3 - Decreto-Lei que aprova o Estatuto da Defensoria Pública
O presente diploma, que o Conselho de Ministros aprovou na sua reunião de hoje, estabelece e regulamenta o Estatuto da Defensoria Pública, onde são definidas as atribuições, a organização, o funcionamento e as competências dos Defensores Públicos, bem como dos respectivos órgaos.

A Constituição garante no seu art.º 26.º o acesso de todos aos tribunais para a defesa dos seus direitos e interesses legalmente protegidos, assegurando que a Justiça deve ser promovida independentemente dos meios económicos dos titulares.

4 - Resolução que aprova doação à República de Cuba
A República de Cuba foi atingida pelo furacão “Gustav”, considerado o mais violento dos últimos 60 anos, no passado dia 30 de Agosto. Conforme informações de fontes oficiais cubanas, o furacão “Gustav” destrui total ou parcialmente dezenas de milhares de habitações, edifícios públicos, 3.500 armazéns de secagem de tabaco e 136 torres de alta tensão, tendo provocado igualmente sérios danos em redes telefónicas e eléctricas e arrasado árvores e culturas agrícolas.

Entre os edifícios públicos destruídos incluem-se escolas, algumas das quais frequentadas por estudantes timorenses.

Considerando que a solidariedade e a fraternidade entre os povos são princípios fundamentais consignados na Constituição de Timor-Leste, o Conselho de Ministros aprovou na sua reunião de hoje uma Resolução no sentido de doar a quantia de 500,000.00 USD ao povo e ao Governo da República de Cuba, a fim de minimizar os efeitos nefastos do furacão “Gustav”.

O Conselho de Ministros analisou ainda:

5 - Apresentação da Política Nacional de Recuperação Habitacional
O Conselho de Ministros ouviu ainda uma apresentação relativa ao Manual de Implementação do Programa de Reabilitação Social e Assistência Habitacional às Vítimas de Desastres, tendo analisado o documento em questão e concordado com as suas propostas.

National Parliament Extraordinary Plenary Session 17 September 2008


Unofficial automated translation. Original Portuguese text follows.
Secretariat

Office of Public Relations

Agenda No. 128/II
Extraordinary Plenary Meeting of
Wednesday 17 September 2008


The Plenary Session of today was chaired by Vice-President of Parliament, Mrs Maria Paixo, assisted by Secretary of the Bureau, Mrs. Maria Terezinha Viegas and II Deputy Secretary, Mrs Teresa Maria de Carvalho.

The Chairman of the Board reported that this session could not be held on Monday, 15 September 2008 because the quorum was incomplete.

The meeting was started after completing the quorum. The President of Parliament could not be present at the meeting because he had to go get the members attending the conference on anti-corruption.

During the agenda were discussed the following scheduled topics:

1. Information on the formal session of the II Legislature, which will be held on 22 September 2008, at 10:00. Will be invited the President of Timor-Leste, the Prime Minister and Members of the Government and the diplomatic embassies, but the President said that the Bureau will consult with the Chairman of the National Parliament on whether this sitting could be held without the presence of the President of the Republic.

2. Information on the preparation of Parliament's National Budget for fiscal year 2009.

3. Information on the priorities of the matters pending, according to the outcome of the Conference of Leaders of 15 September 2008.

4. Presentation of reports of the Special Permanent Committee to the Bureau of the National Parliament, on 18 September 2008.

Finally the President of the Bureau reported that the Anti-Corruption Commission is conducting a seminar that will be carried out over 2days, 18-19 September 2008 at Hotel Timor. He applied to all members in attendance in that seminar marking the seminar because it is an activity of the National Parliament. They will also participate in this workshop some of the speakers from the Philiippines, Indonesia and Australia.

End.
---
Secretariado
Gabinete de Relações Públicas

Agenda No. 128/II
Reunião Plenária Extraordinária de
Quarta-Feira, 17 de Setembro de 2008


A Sessão Plenária de hoje foi presidida pelo II Vice-Presidente do Parlamento, Sra. Deputada Maria Paixao, coadjuvada pela Secretária da Mesa, Sra. Deputada Maria Terezinha Viegas e II Vice-Secretária, Sra. Deputada Teresa Maria de Carvalho.
A Presidente da Mesa informou que esta sessão não pudesse ser realizada na segunda-feira, 15 de Setembro de 2008 porque o quórum era incompleto e agora também ainda falta um deputado(a) para completá-lo.

A reunião foi começada depois de completar o quórum. Disse que o Sr. Presidente do Parlamento não pudesse estar presente na reunião porque tinha de ir receber os membros participantes da conferência de anti-corrupção que vão chegar de outras nações.

No período de Antes da Ordem do Dia foram discutidos os seguintes assuntos agendados:
1. Informação sobre a sessão solene de aberura da 2a sessão legislativa da II Legislatura, que será realizada no dia 22 de Setembro de 2008, pelas 10h00. Serão convidados o Sr. Presidente da República de Timor-Leste, o Sr. Primeiro Ministro e Membros do Governo e as embaixadas diplomáticas, mas, a Presidente da Mesa disse que vá consultar ao Sr. Presidente do Parlamento Nacional se essa sessão solene poderia ser realizada sem a presença do Sr. Presidente da República ou não.

2. Informação sobre a elaboração do Orçamento do Parlamento Nacional para ano fiscal de 2009.

3. Informação sobre as prioridades das matérias pendentes, de acordo com o resultado da Conferência dos Líderes de 15 de Setembro de 2008.

4. Apresentação dos relatórios das Comissões Especializadas Permanentes à Mesa do Parlamento Nacional, dia 18 de Setembro de 2008.

Finalmente a Presidente da Mesa notificou que a Comissão de Anti-Corrupção está realizando actividades para um Seminário que vai ser realizado durante dois dias, 18-19 de Setembro de 2008 no Hotel Timor. Pediu a todos os deputados para marcarem presenças nesse seminário porque é esse seminário é uma actividade do Parlamento Nacional. Vão participar também nesse seminário alguns oradores da Pilipina, Indonésia e Austrália.

Fim.

Legal Reports National Media 16-17 September 2008


Government presents strategies for security sector reform - Suara Timor Lorosae 17 September 2008
State Secretary for Security, Francisco Da Silva Guterres has presented strategies for making change to the structure of the Timorese National Police (PNTL) in the high level meeting held yesterday.

The state secretary said the PNTL was currently making amendment to the organic law for the police, career regiment for improving rules, staff welfare and ranking systems.

Guterres said he would inform president draft of the law about reforming the structure of the PNTL and would be discussed in the Council of Ministers meeting. Guterres said model of the police would be defined after a joint workshop by the Timorese Defense Force (F-FDTL) and PNTL had been conducted. He added that the new PNTL commander would be appointed in the upcoming November and the promotion would be made by internationals from New Zealand, Australia Portugal and Singapore.

Government urged to take a courageous decision - Diario Nacional 17 September 2008
The Program Manager of the Luta Hamutuk (Struggle Together) organization, Mericio dos Reis Akara said Tuesday (16/9) that if the Woodside Company disagreed with the proposal of the government to build the pipelines from Greater Sunrise in Timor-Leste, then the government should be courageous to take decisions.

'From the outset the principle of Luta Hamutuk has been clear that the pipelines from the Greater Sunrise Gas and Oil fields have to be brought into Timor due to two main reasons.According to Akara, the first reason was that the distance from Greater Sunrise to East Timor's land was relatively closer than to Australia's land. And secondly, if the pipelines are taken to East Timor, then it would give a lot of economic benefits to the people of East Timor, Akara said.

He also added the stubborness of Woodside indicated that the oil company did not have willingness and therefore the government should stop the development of oil and gas in the Greater Sunrise with the company.

Akara urged the government to keep maintaining its current position to land the pipelines in Timor and that all components of the society should support the government's efforts.

Timor-Leste still needs UN, says Fretilin president - Diario Nacional 17 September 2008
Former President of the National Parliament who is also the President of the FRETILIN party Francisco Guterres 'Lu Olo' said Tuesday (16/9) Timorese people and the state still need the presence of the UN forces here. Lu Olo said the Timorese just came out of a big crisis and therefore the presence of the UN forces should be prolonged.

'I have different opinion from the Prime Minister but in terms of making decisions they have right to do so because they are leaders', added Lu Olo. According to Lu Olo, the UN forces and its police could leave the country if the defense and security institutions are already in the right tract and if the country is already stable.

He also explained that unless the defense and security institutions were used by politicians to attack here and there then it would be unreasonable to keep the ISF and UNPOL here in Timor-Leste.

An MP from the ruling CNRT party, Natalino dos Santos said he totally agrees with the statement of the Prime Minister to send the UN forces home. Dos Santos said that the East Timor's Defense Force (F-FDTL) and the National Police (PNTL) are able to deal with security and defense of the country and therefore it is now time for the UN forces to leave the country.

Public Prosecution firmly to fight against SDSB gambling - Timor Post 17 September 2008
Deputy Prosecutor General, Ivo Jorge Valente, said although the Government had decided to reopen illegal gambling known as SDSB next month, the Public Prosecution was firmly fighting against this kind of gambling, because it breached the law. The Government's decision to authorise such illegal gambling was against the Timorese Penal Code, article 303, Valente said.

Valente said according to the law, the SDSB gambling was a kind of illegal activity by two companies in the country. Meanwhile, the Director for National Investigation Development, Eugenio Pereira, said the decision made by the Government was a political decision, yet the police would keep maintaining law and order in the country.

PM should investigate his ministers, says Carrascalao - Timor Post 17 September 2008
Social Democratic Party (PSD) President Mario Viegas Carrascalao, said the ongoing inspection held by Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, showing that he did not trust in some of the ministers in doing their tasks.

Carrascalao said the prime minister should not directly hold the inspection into the ministers' works and it was better to be held by the minister for finance. Carrascalao stressed the inspection held by the prime minister and this showed him [PM] was suspecting his ministers of doing something wrong. He added distrust could appear, because the state budget was not executed properly by some of the ministries.

Thirteen firearms of PNT yet to be recalled: Fernandes - Timor Post 17 September 2008
Timorese Police Operational Commander, Mateus Fernandes, said a recent audit report had found that thirteen of the police's automatic weapons went missing during the country's recent crises were yet to be recalled. The commander said those weapons went missing were seven pistols, five HK 33 high-powered weapons and one caliber 12 high powered weapon.

Fernandes said many of the weapons went missing in the police headquarters during the country's crises had been recalled by the joint operation command after the attempted assassination on February 11. Fernandes added the police would make efforts to recall the referred weapons by cooperating with the residents.

Government decides to continue purchasing ships from China: PM Gusmao - Televizaun Timor-Leste 17 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao said the Government was committed to purchasing ships from China to help support the country’s defense force for watching over Timor Sea.

'Looking at illegal fishing by foreigners in the Timor Sea, the Government, through the Council of the Ministers, has decided to buy ships from China to be used for watching over the country's sea,' Gusmao said.

Gusmao said it was the Government's obligation to purchase the ships soon, although the policy was protested by certain people, as the country had lost plenty of riches from the sea. He added the Government had cancelled to ships from Australia, because it was too expensive.

East Timor to remember 25 years of Kraras Massacre - Radio and Televizasaun Timor-Leste 16 September 2008
East Timor is going to commemorate the Kraras Massacre taking place 25 years ago in the Kraras village in Vikeke on 17 September 2008 in Kraras, Vikeke. Speaking to the local population, the President of the National Parliament Fernando La Sama de Araujo said Timor-Leste had to honor those were slain during the massacre.

He added, the National Parliament would make 17 September a national holiday to remember those who fell. The Ministry of Solidarity would provide also 50 solar cells to the widows of Kraras, which is known as the village of widows. The massacre took place on 17 September 1983 and it is reported that around 50 people were killed by the Indonesian Armed Forces.

39 maladministration and corruption cases registered with the public prosecutor, says Deputy Attorney-General - Televizaun Timor-Leste 16 September 2008
East Timor's office of the Attorney General said Tuesday (16/9) that around 39 cases of maladministration and corruption have been registered at the public prosecutor's office in order to be processed according the applicable laws.

Ivo Valente made the statement in relation to the recent press conference by the office of the Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman. Valente added that three of the cases were accusations and some of the accusations had been heard at the Suai District Court.

He informed that the cases are pending due to lack of human resources. However, he said, in the near future four national defenders would be appointed as permanent public defenders to quickly process the cases.

IDPs launched peaceful protest against MSS - Televizaun Timor-Leste 16 September 2008
Internally displaced persons (IDPs) who have been staying in Origado Barrack Kaikoli launched a peaceful protest against the Ministry of Social Solidarity Tuesday (16/9) demanding their quick reintegration.

The protest was done because earlier this year, the Ministry of Social Solidarity said the reintegration process for the IDPs in Obrigado Barrack would have been done in August.

Responding to the demand, the Secretary of State for Natural Disasters Jacinto Rigoberto de Deus had a meeting with the representatives of the IDPs, assuring them that the verification team would start tomorrow with the IDPs living in and around Obrigado Barrack.

De Deus said the reintegration process for the IDPs at Hera Port finished today and the next is the IDPs from the Obrigado Barrack. An IDP representative said they have been in the camps for almost three years and now it is the time for them to go back to their houses.

The meeting of the representatives of the IDPs and the Secretary of State for Natural Disaster was also attended by Dili District's PNTL Commander, Inspector Pedro Belo. The peaceful demonstration of the IDPs was closely monitored and secured by UNPOL, PNTL and International Stabilization Forces (ISF).

Timor-Leste Donates US$500,000 each to China, Cuba and Burma


Unbelievable but true! See http://www.mne.gov.tl/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=314:photo-fausto-da-sousa-&catid=1:latest&Itemid=40

The IV Constitutional Government and the people of Timor-Leste have decided to donate five hundred thousand dollars (US$500,000) to the Chinese people to express the Solidarity of the Timor-Leste Government.

The government through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has organized the handover to H.E. Mr. Su Jian, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the People’s Republic of China through its representative in Dili.took place on Friday the 12th of September

The objective of the donation is to make a contribution to the Chinese people who were badly affected by the natural disasters that occurred this year.

China and the broader Chinese community have played an important role in the development of Timor-Leste in different areas. Over 10 regular soccer courts have been built. The biggest is the Municipal Court in Dili with floodlights and the capacity of 10.000 spectators.

China was one of the first countries in the world to establish diplomatic relations with Timor-Leste on restoration of Independence in May 20, 2002.

Since establishing its diplomatic relations with Timor-Leste, China has continued to support the Timorese people in different areas such as construction and capacity building. In Dili many Chinese doctors operate their medical centers to serve Timorese people with their Chinese medicines.

Timor-Leste's Government has decided to donate an equivalent amount to the people of Cuba and Myanmar in accordance with the Government's Program, approved by the National Parliament. Minister for Foreign Affairs Mr. Zacarias Albano da Costa, on behalf of the Government, delivered a speech during the handover ceremony on Friday 12 September 2008

East Timor Council of Ministers Meeting 17 September 2008


DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF EAST TIMOR
IV Constitutional Government
SECRETARIAT OF STATE FOR THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS
PRESS RELEASE

Meeting of the Council of Ministers 17 September 2008

The Council of Ministers met this Wednesday, 17th September 2008, in the Council of Ministers meeting room, Government Palace, in Dili where it approved:

Decree-Law that approves the Financial Incentives to be given to the Health Professionals
The diploma that the Council of Ministers approved in today’s meeting regulates the criteria and conditions to give financial incentives to the professionals in the Ministry of Health, and these are applied to the doctors, nurses, professionals and health assistants and also to administrative staff.

The Ministry of Health considers of utmost importance to introduce an additional retributive system, with the aim to improve the usage of the available human resources and the service delivery in the health area.

The introduction of this subsidy aims to achieve the streamlining of health sector professionals and is an attempt to equalize the salary level with the responsibility that the positions entail and to the high and specialized demand in the health sector. We also aim to improve customer satisfaction and overall performance.

Decree-Law that approves the Regulation of Licensing, Commercialisation and Quality of Drinkable Water
The Council of Ministers approved in today’s meeting the regulation of licensing, commercialisation and quality of drinkable water, which is one basic needs to sustain human life, and this aims to improve the quality of water that is made available to the consumer

The Council of Ministers also analysed:

The draft Law that approves the Organic of the Central Bank of Timor-Leste
The Council of Ministers analysed in today’s meeting the draft Organic Law for the Central Bank of Timor-Leste. A diploma that is in accordance with article 143 of the Constitution of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, and this diploma will be scheduled for approval after the changes are made by the Council of Ministers.

The Central Bank of Timor-Leste is the institution responsible for price stability, for the financial system and for the decisive contribution to the economic development and reduction of social inequalities in Timor-Leste.

Decree Law that approves the Regulation of Recreational and Social Games
The Council of Ministers analysed and debated in today’s meeting the Regulation of Recreational and Social Games, with the purpose to integrate these activities in the legal economy and for them to be developed in social, economic and financial harmony.

It is vital to avoid financial impunity and the unregulated development of illicit activities, which have created an environment of public antipathy, and in some situations a feeling of insecurity that have not contributed at all, to the development of the country.

The Council of Ministers considered that the diploma requires some adjustments, and will be scheduled for presentation after these are made.

Presentation of the report made by LABEH regarding the national consultation on the Anti-Corruption Commission
The Council of Ministers heard a presentation on the report made by LABEH regarding the national consultation on the Anti-Corruption Commission.

Draft Law that creates the Anti-Corruption Commission
This draft Law which aims to create the Anti-Corruption was analysed and heavily debated in the Council of Ministers (CoM), after which it and was decided that it needs some changes and after these are made it will be presented again to CoM for approval.

Indonesian ID card found on body of East Timor rebel leader


17/09/2008 Dili - Slain East Timor rebel leader Alfredo Reinado had an Indonesian citizenship card in his pocket when he was shot on February 11 during an attack on the president, media reports said Wednesday.

Reinado, a former commander of the military police in Dili until he left his post and took up arms against the state in 2006, led a handful of rebels to the president's home in Dili, where he was shot dead by presidential guards. However, his men continued the shootout and 30 minutes later President Jose Ramos-Horta was shot twice as he walked toward his home.

According to the autopsy report, the card was found during the autopsy the afternoon of February 11, reported The Timor Post.

With a citizenship card, or KTP card as they are known in Indonesian, Reinado could have fled Timor after the attack.

The Indonesian Embassy in Dili denied that the document was ever officially given to Reinado, diplomats told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa. Victor Sambuaga, the Indonesian head of political affairs in East Timor, said KTP cards are given only to citizens born in Indonesia.

Sambuaga said he had no idea whether or not the card was real or forged as Timorese authorities have yet to release the card to his government for inspection.

He added that after seven months of investigation, the Timorese government has yet to request any information about the document.

According to The Timor Post, Reinado's card bore the name Simplisio de la Crus.

Sambuaga said newer cards are digital and solid plastic, but an older card could have been tampered with quite easily. He suggested Reinado got a real card and doctored it.

'The old type was only laminated so the photo could easily been cut open and changed,' Sambuaga said.

When President Ramos-Horta returned to East Timor in April after two months of recovery in a Darwin, Australia, hospital, he accused Indonesian television station Metro TV of giving Reinado travel documents and smuggling the rebel over the border in 2007 to do a TV interview.

Metro TV has denied any illegal activity and Ramos-Horta has since rescinded his accusations, though this latest revelation could spark renewed speculation.

Image: Deceased Major Alfredo Reinado Alves

Monsters and Critiques

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No timeline for Australian troop withdrawal from East Timor


ABC Radio Australia 17/09/2008 - Australia says it will withdraw troops from East Timor when local forces are able to take care of security. Australia's Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon says he is still unable to say when Australia will be able to start lowering its military involvement in East Timor.

Mr Fitzgibbon will be in East Timor later this week after first spending around 24 hours in Jakarta meeting with Indonesia's Defence Minister. A recent visit to Australia by East Timor's Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao provoked further speculation over when Australia may begin to reduce its military involvement. Australia has 1,000 soldiers and Australian Federal Police officers in East Timor. Read the full report...

Commentary on the Draft Arms Law in Timor-Leste - Tetum, Indonesian and Portuguese Translations


The Commentary on the Draft Arms Law in Timor-Leste by Sarah Parker LLB (Hons) is now available in Tetum, Indonesian and Portuguese on the East Timor Law Journal Articles List.

Click here for the Tetum translation.

Click here for the Indonesian translation.

Click here for the Portuguese translation.

Click here for the original English text.

The text of the draft law is also available in English, Tetum & Portuguese.

East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of law in Timor-Leste.

Legal Reports National Media 16 September 2008


East Timor no longer needs International Stabilisation Force-United Nations Police - Suara Timor Lorosae 16 September 2008
The Prime Minister of East Timor, Xanana Gusmao said on Monday (15/9/08) that the presence of the International Stabilisation Force (ISF) and the United Nations Police (UNPol)is no lonber needed because they create difficulties for the country's Defence Force and its National Police in executing their functions.

"Timor should not accustom itself to getting into a situation where the people disturb each other, the solution has to come from foreign forces and in order to deal with arguments we have to ask for help from foreign police and then after that they start to accuse each other," Xanana explained.

Xanana added, "We see ISF wandering around East Timor though our force only stays in their headquarters; we see the United Nations Police wanting our police to ask permission from them should they want to deal with a problem, only complicating the problem."

CNRT Party Bench Leader in the National Parliament Eduardo Barreto "Dusae" said that Timor-Leste does not need the presence of the ISF here as the situation gets back to normal.

However, Fretilin MP Estanislau Aleixo da Silva said, the work of the PNTL is extremely challenging so there it needs continued capacity development and support. He also suggested the government choose a particular country to have comparative study for the officials of the PNTL.

Meanwhile, the UNPol Acting Commissioner Juan Carlos Arevalo believed that the PNTL is capable of taking the security responsibility. However, he added, UNPOL will keep monitoring the development of the PNTL in maintaining law and order here.

Government to cancel the purchase of two patrol boats – Timor Post 16 September 2008
Minister for Defense and Security Xanana Gusmao said on Monday (15/9) that he had ordered Secretary of State for Security Francisco Guterres to cancel the agreement of buying two patrol boats from China. The reason for the cancellation of the patrol boats purchasing is due to the increase in its original price.

"I have asked the Secretary of State for Security to cancel the agreement made with China in relation to the purchase of two boats and to request the return of money already paid" said Gusmao. Xanana also explained that during his recent visit to Australia he was frequently asked why Timor-Leste only want to buy boats from China.

"Australia nation questioned me why we always want to buy boats only from China however I told the Australian that we in Timor-Leste would like to buy two boats for maritime police but since China keeps increasing the price we then decided to cancel it," he added.

11 February ballistic examination to arrive in the next week says Attorney-General Monteiro – Timor Post 16 September 2008
East Timor's Attorney General Longuinhos Monteiro informed Monday (15/6) that next week the results of the ballistic examination into the events of 11 February which had been done by the Australian Federal Police (AFP) would arrive in Dili, paving the way for the justice process in the court.

Longuinhos visited Australia last week to closely monitor the investigation process where he found out that the investigators had establsihed several things, including the type of weapon used to shoot the President of the Republic.

He said that the user of the weapon has also been identified but due to existing law he could not tell the public while the investigation is underway. However, he added that once the results of the ballistic examination arrive, he would present them to the court.

66 newly recruited PNTL undergo basic training – Televizaun Timor-Leste 16 September 2008
At least 66 newly recruited members of the East Timor National Police underwent a basic training course in Dili recently in order to improve their knowledge and capacity to better serve the people and the country. The Director of the PNTL Academy Police Carlos Jeronimo said that the training was designed for 250 new members of the PNTL who could not complete their training due to 2006 crises.

He added that similar training would be given to 3,196 members of the active PNTL in the immediate future. Jeronimo stressed that those who did not take part in the training would have lost their rights to be members of the PNTL. Though the training itself is not easy, the participants were happy to take part in it as it would help them to improve their capacity in the future.

"I am happy because though the training is hard it is designed to improve our capacity, to have confidence building and to listen to each other and to respect each other in serving and protecting the people and the country," said Teodolindo Alves Correia.

Four of the participants are women and the training itself was carried out by the members of the PNTL.

IDPs in Watulari demanded Government's attention for their plight - Radio Timor-Leste 15 September 2008
Around 180 families of internally displaced persons (IDPs) from Matahoi village in Uatulari demanded the attention of the state for their plight as they have been IDPs for more than two years but there is no humanitarian assistance provided to ease their suffering.

A spokesperson of IDP groups, Augusto da Silva, said Monday (15/9) that they have been IDPs since the 2007 post election political crises. However, he added, no state institutions had helped them out.He explained that there were lot promises, including from the President of the Republic, to help the group but to date those promises are still kept unfulfilled.

Traditional laws to be upheld? Radio Timor-Leste 15 September 2008
The head of Tulatakeu village in Remexio, Aileu said Monday (15/9) the village would apply traditional laws to regulate criminal acts such as homicide; stealing and destruction of environment should these things happen in the village.

Adolfo Mendonça said that based on the traditional laws there are two categories of penalties to be imposed.

He explained, for a serious offense, the perpetrator would be given penalties which include payment of a water buffalo, cash of US$50, a box of alcohol and a box of cigarettes.

However, for petty crimes, a perpetrator is demanded to pay a goat, a pig, a sack of rice, and US$25 cash.

He said that such penalties are agreed upon to restore law and order and respect for the environment in the village. The adoption of the local traditional law was also witnessed by the Secretary of State for Environmental issues, Abilio de Jesus Lima.

TL loses $36 M due to illegal foreign fishing - Radio Timor-Leste 15 September 2008
East Timor is estimated to lose more than US$35 million every year due to illegal fishing in its national territory by foreign ships.

National Director for the Fisheries Department of the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Lourenco dos Reis Amaral, made the statement Monday (15/9) in relation to the loss on the Timor side due to illegal fish catching in the Timor Sea areas belonging to Timor-Leste. The figure is made based on the number of ships illegally fishing in the territory of Timor-Leste.

East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of law in Timor-Leste.

Catholic Church guards its dominance in East Timor


Earth Times 15 Sep 2008 Maliana, East Timor - A few years ago Domingos Pereira and his wife did something dangerous. They quit the East Timorese Catholic Church. It started in 2004 when a handful of foreign Jehovah's Witness missionaries showed up in their tiny village near the Indonesian border. Every week the missionaries held services from their home and by 2006 they had converted five families, including the Pereiras.

The Catholic Church, which claims near total support in this tiny Asian country, lashed out. A couple of nuns drove to the Pereira home and accused the family of selling their faith for cash.

Domingos protested. He said he was never given money - only a Bible, which he and his wife read. After they read the Bible he said he and his wife believed what the missionaries had to say.

Domingos said the nuns were furious. "They told us, 'You can't study the Bible. If you read the Bible every day, you'll go crazy,'" he said. "They said the Bible was for the catechist, the sisters, the priest and that's it. They said it wasn't for everyone."

In August 2006 the catechist told the townspeople to throw the missionaries out. So the missionaries moved a dozen kilometers up the road to Maliana.

Five hours from the capital, Maliana is one of the most remote large cities in East Timor. Here the church, overseen by a local priest who refused to be interviewed, is the highest authority, superseding even the police.

The Pereiras say they have faced Catholic Church torment as well as abuse from their neighbors. Their story is not unique. Other members of the evangelical religion reported visits from nuns, death threats or beatings. Meanwhile the police do nothing.

After their 2006 roust, the Jehovah's Witnesses lasted two years. Last month a group of about 20 people surrounded their home and told them to get out. The mob was led by Anise Barreto, a 54-year-old grandmother and a self-proclaimed disciple of the Catholic Church. Barreto lives across the street from where the missionaries used to teach.

"We are Catholic," she said. "We have been Catholic since birth and we don't want any other religion here."

Barreto said the priest told her that, as a Catholic community, they couldn't accept any other religions in the neighborhood. Barreto and other Catholics who helped drive them out claim the Jehovah's Witnesses were giving out money in exchange for conversions.

Barreto said the Jehovah's Witnesses would take photos of their converts and, for each photo, they'd hand over money. But Barreto couldn't say how much money was given as no Catholic interviewed had attended a service.

Domingos Pereira said rumours are rampant. "People believe the foreigners gave us money so we would join them," he said. "Because we were no longer Catholic, people would ask why we'd left the Church. They assumed we were given money."

Maliana was not always that intolerant. During the 24-year Indonesian occupation, the town boasted a Protestant church, a Buddhist temple, a Catholic church and a mosque.

When the Indonesians left in 1999, they took with them the Buddhists, Protestants and most of the Muslims.

Many Timorese say the Catholic Church helped them throughout the bloody struggle against Indonesia, and, they say, without the church Timor would not be independent.

To some, questioning the Catholic Church is heretical and traitorous. But the church's authority is being questioned, and not just by the Jehovah's Witnesses.

Natalia Duarte left the Catholic Church last year to be a Seventh Day Adventist. She left in a dramatic way.

"People hate me because I burned my statue of Mary in front of my house," she said. "Lots of people didn't like that because they said it went against the church."

One night, when she thought most of her neighbors were asleep, she grabbed her wooden statue of the Virgin Mary, the most sacred Catholic object in a Timorese home, took it outside and set fire to it.

A few months ago the priest and some others came to her house to ask her why she'd changed religions. They asked about the statue.

"They said, 'Give us back our statue.' I said, 'It's my right to do what I want with it,'" she explained. "They knew what I did with it."

To some she is evil. Carlito Guterres, a middle-aged man and father of four, assaulted her on the main street in town in broad daylight. He said he'd do it again, too. He said she was walking down the street and he called her over to talk religion.

"She took out her Bible and she started to quote from it. I slapped it out of her hands and then I slapped her in the face," he said. "She ran away."

He said she had no authority to talk about religion because she is not a priest.

When war criminals hide out in the open


The Daily Telegraph 16/09/08 Joanna Ximenes, an East Timorese woman living in Sydney, says she has identified the man who she believes was responsible for the death of her brother, and the Rudd Government seems reluctant to treat the matter seriously.

Channel 7's Today Tonight reporter James Thomas last week aired two segments about an East Timorese man, Guy Campos, who Ximenes accuses of contributing to the beating death of a young boy in 1979 and another woman, Odetty Moniz Alves-Platt, accuses of assisting Indonesian soldiers in seizing her father in 1979 and placing him aboard an Indonesian military helicopter, never to be seen again.


Thomas' files contain further accounts from others who claim that Campos collaborated as a spy with the Indonesian special forces and participated in a number of acts of torture.

Naldo Rei, author of Resistance: A Childhood Fighting for East Timor, identified Campos as one of a number of intelligence officers who beat him with an iron rod until he was unconscious. Jose Belo, another East Timorese, says Campos was among the collaborators who tortured him with electric shocks, kicking and beating in 1995.

But it would seem that is insufficient for Home Affairs Minister, Bob Debus, to take an interest and not good enough for the Australian Federal Police, who seem to be dragging their feet even though Campos is in Australia on a 90-day pilgrim's visa issued in connection with World Youth Day and is scheduled to leave the country next month.

East Timorese MP Jose Teixeira, the former minister for the East Timorese sea negotiation, told me he believes Campos should be held in Australia under Australia's war crimes legislation, which, he says, was intended to ensure such accountability.

"One of Australia's citizens is seeking to hold such a person accountable for his actions. It is fair and reasonable to take the view that, at this stage, Timor-Leste's justice system would not dispense justice to either the alleged victim's family or the potential accused," he said.

"The prosecutorial arm is notoriously slow and inefficient in bringing matters before the courts in a timely manner. Similarly, even the United Nations has reported that the office of the Prosecutor General is extremely susceptible to political interference. Though it is matter for the Australian justice system, it is with utmost certainty that I can say, on the balance of convenience, this matter, left to the Timorese justice system, would be extremely unlikely to be dealt with in a timely and just manner for all."

The MP is not alone in this view.

Dr Clinton Fernandes, a former major in the Australian army and the former principal intelligence analyst on East Timor for the Australian Defence Force, now the senior lecturer in strategic studies at University of NSW at the Australian Defence Force Academy, told me: "I am certain he (Campos) participated in and supervised the administering of beatings with iron rods, torture through electric shocks, and by placing the leg of a table on someone's foot, and jumping on it, in violation of the 1984 UN Convention Against Torture."

Government sources say action against Campos was not initiated on his arrival here because the Immigration Department relies on material prepared by International Criminal Tribunals, the International Court of Justice and the UN. However, the East Timor conflict has never been brought before an international criminal tribunal, or the ICJ or an enquiry by the UN, and its 2006 commission of inquiry was not into war crimes but the conflict which led to the fall of the last government.

The argument is specious and leaves one with the conclusion that Rudd Labor talked the talk on pursuing war criminals while in Opposition, but is not prepared to walk the walk in Government. See the full report...
Image: Guy Campos

Legal Reports National Media 15 September 2008


217 UNPOL posted in Dili – Diario Nacional 15 September 2008
Dili District PNTL’s Acting Commander sub-inspector Delfim da Silva said that there are about 217 United Nations Police (UNPOL) posted in the district of Dili. He added, UNPOL are working closely with the National Police in doing patrolling. Da Silva said generally Dili is back to normal though there are still sporadic skirmishes in the district.

UN urged for adoption of law on domestic violence – Diario Nacional 15 September 2008

The Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General in East Timor, Atul Khare, said during a women's congress in Dili that as a developing country East Timor should adopt a penal code in relation to domestic violence in order to reduce violence against women in their life time.

According to Khare, domestic violence against women is a violation against fundamental human rights. He then encouraged the National Parliament to quickly start the legislative process of the law. In relation to the question, Fernando Lasama de Araujo said the National Parliament would remind the government to process again the law to be approved by the National Parliament.

Image: Atul Khare, United Nations Secretary General Special Representative to East Timor

Horta: Woodside should stop being too big mouth – Timor Post 15 September 2008
East Timor's President Jose Ramos Horta said Friday (12/9) Woodside Company should stop being too big mouth by claiming that the pipelines from the Greater Sunrise would be taken to Darwin, Australia because the decision on whether to land the pipelines in Darwin or in Timor would be determined by technical and commercial factors. “I therefore ask the Woodside Company not be big mouthed because this has to be in line with technical and commercial data; there should no unilateral decision,” he said.

Horta also said he had not get any information from the country's Prime Minister if there was any discussion on pipeline issues during his current visit to Australia. However, he stressed he is firm on his position, the position he previously held when he was still the country's Foreign Minister. He said that leaders of the country are united in defending the legitimate national interests to bring pipelines to East Timor. “Any big county should not impose their own decisions, neither should any big oil companies,” Horta said. He said, often times big companies make a lot of money but they contribute almost nothing to East Timor. Horta also said he had no friendship relationship with oil companies.

Timor remembers priests of freedom struggle


15/09/08 COVALIMA, Timor Leste (UCAN) -- Catholics in Timor Leste have commemorated the ninth death anniversary of three priests whom anti-independence militias murdered along with people they were sheltering in a church.

Eyewitnesses said pro-Jakarta militiamen and Indonesian army personnel killed Fathers Tarcisius Dwanto, Hilario Madeira and Francisco Soares on Sept. 6, 1999, at Ave Maria Church in Covalima, 100 kilometers south of Dili. The priests were protecting hundreds of people sheltering there at the Suai parish church. Survivors said the militiamen and soldiers killed more than 100 people in the incident. The anniversary Mass took place on Sept. 9 at Father Soares' hometown in Catrai Kraik village, 60 kilometers west of Dili.

Father Lorenco de Jesus, the parish priest who celebrated Mass, called the slain priests martyrs for defending people against violence and intimidation by military and paramilitary groups. "They followed the path of Jesus by giving their lives to save other people," he said in his homily. Trouble began in the area on Sept. 4, 1999, the day the results of the Aug. 30 U.N.-sponsored independence referendum were announced. Almost 80 percent of East Timor (Timor Leste) voters chose independence from Indonesia.

The priest recounted how people had fled to Ave Maria and Nossa Senhora de Fatima Churches, both in Covalima, after Laksaur (eagle) pro-Jakarta militia members and Indonesian security forces killed a high school student that day, and burned homes and government buildings in Covalima the following evening. Militia members attacked Ave Maria Church the next day. Domingos Sousa, a parishioner, told UCA News he and others took refuge at the church because "we were scared of the militia."

He said he saw about 50 people murdered that day. "Father Hilario was shot in the chest, Father Francisco was stabbed and Father Tarcisius was hacked to death in the church." After the commemorative Mass, the congregation placed flowers on the graves of Fathers Madeira and Soares in the village. Father Dwanto was buried in Atambua in western Timor, Indonesia. The remains of the three priests were among the 26 bodies exhumed on Nov. 25, 1999, from three mass graves in Alas Selatan village, three kilometers from the border in western Timor.

The Indonesian government's Commission for the Investigation of Human Rights Abuse in East Timor exhumed the bodies and identified the three priests. "The rest could not be identified yet, but it is sure that some of the victims are women and children," it said in a statement at that time. Locally recruited militia groups linked to the Indonesian military were active in Timor Leste at the time of the 1999 referendum on whether the former Portuguese colony should remain part of Indonesia, which had taken control in 1975 and integrated East Timor as a province the following year.

The militias responded to the pro-independence vote by killing hundreds of people and destroying much of East Timor's infrastructure. Timor Leste, which became fully independent on May 20, 2002, after more than two years under a transitional U.N. administration, has a population of about 1 million, 95 percent of whom are Catholics. From Indian Catholic

Ramos Horta slams UN hypocrisy


Lucy Williamson BBC News Jakarta - Mr Ramos Horta has been criticised for being soft on perpetrators of violence East Timor's President Jose Ramos Horta has accused members of the UN Security Council of "extraordinary hypocrisy". He said small, post-conflict countries like his could not pursue justice blindly, as some UN states insist. Dr Ramos Horta and Indonesian leaders say their joint Truth and Friendship Commission went far enough. But East Timorese and others say it has failed to draw a line under the bloodshed that accompanied Indonesia's withdrawal from East Timor in 1999.

East Timor Ministry of Social Solidarity: Ceremony to Present Recovery Packages to Victims of Crisis in Viqueque and Baucau


MINISTRY OF SOCIAL SOLIDARITY
PRESS RELEASE
12 September 2008

Ceremony to Present Recovery Packages to Victims of Crisis in Viqueque and Baucau

On 11 September 2008, at a ceremony in Viqueque, the Secretary of State for Social Assistance and Natural Disasters, Jacinto Rigoberto Gomes, announced that, commencing today, 383 victims of the crisis in Viqueque and 56 victims in Baucau, will be able to receive their recovery grants through bank accounts at the BNU.

The Secretary of State said, “The Fourth Constitutional Government developed the Hamutuk Hari’i Futuru National Recovery Strategy to ensure the victims of the 2006 and 2007 crisis would be able to rebuild their homes. On behalf of the government, I wish to apologise to the families who have been living out in the open or under tents for more than a year. I wish to thank you for your patience. During this time, MSS has been working alongside the local authorities, including the Chefe Sucos, Chefe Aldeias, and District Administration, to facilitate the registration, verification and socialization process. We hope that these recovery grants will help enable you to rebuild and return to your homes.”

MSS decided the most secure way for the victims of the crisis in Viqueque and Baucau to receive their recovery grants would be through the BNU branches in Viqueque and Baucau. MSS has opened an account for each recipient at the BNU. Recipients will not pay any bank charges. Recipients can collect their recovery package at any branch of the BNU in Timor-Leste. In order to receive their recovery packages, recipients will have to show their electoral card. Each of the victims will also receive 16kg of rice.

The District Administrator of Viqueque, Francisco da Silva, thanked the government for its attention to the problems of the people Viqueque, especially the victims of the 2007 crisis. “We hope that as a result of the implementation of the government’s policy, the lives of the victims will improve again, and each family will again be able to live in their own house.”

A representative of the Baucau victims, Sebastiao Uairia, thanked the government, and especially MSS for their work to assist the victims of the 2007 crisis. He encouraged the government to try to improve conditions so that people in these districts can live together in peace. He said the crisis had occurred, in part, because the formal justice system is not functioning well: “people can commit crimes, and because the justice system is not working, many years later the perpetrators are still walking free. I therefore entreat the government to improve the justice system so that we can try to resolve this ongoing cycle of violence.”

The Secretary of State thanked the BNU for facilitating the payment process so that victims of the crisis in Viqueque and Baucau can receive their recovery packages in a safe and secure manner. He also thanked the District Administrators of Viqueque and Baucau, the Sub-District Administrators, the PNTL, NGOs and the church for working together with MSS to facilitate the registration, verification and socialization processes.

UNMIT investigation into the shooting of Ramos-Horta 2008


Summary

The document presents the confidential results of an United Nations investigtion into the security response to the 11 Feb 2008 shooting of President Ramos Horta and rebel leader Alfredo Reinado. The report is the result of approximately 80 interviews that were conducted between 1-24 of April 2008.

Two example extracts:

17. The shooting started around 06:50 hrs. when an F-FDTL jeep coming from Metinaro was shot at from inside the Compound. The driver, an F-FDTL member on his way to Dili, was seriously wounded and his vehic1e crashed in the ditch alongside the road. Meanwhile, the President walking on his way back home was seen at the Caz Bar. The Senior Legal Advisor to the President, Paulo Dos Remédios who lives in the area noticed that he-had two missed-calls on his mobile telephone - one from the President at 06:55 hrs. and one from the President's brother, Arsenio Horta, at 06:58 hrs.

31. According to witness accounts, Alfredo Reinado and his men were inside the President's Compound for at least 50 minutes before the F-FDTL soldier shot Reinado and one of his men. None of those present during that time, some 20 people including the eleven F-FDTL soldiers, relatives, IDPs and staff, notified the police or alerted the President of the armed intrusion into the Presidential Compound. The Panel notes they chose to inform their personal contacts of the shootings, rather than the police. A number of people outside the Compound reportedly heard gun shots between 06:47 hrs. and 06:59 hrs, when the NOC was first made aware of gunfire at the President's Compound

Full document at http://secure.wikileaks.org/wiki/UNMIT_investigation_into_the_shooting_of
_East_Timor_President_Ramos_Horta_2008

Australian Defence Force to investigate East Timor car crash


14/09/08 4:20PM - Australian Military Police in East Timor are investigating a car accident allegedly involving two Australian soldiers in Dili late on Saturday night.
Taxi driver Anis Maukura said two soldiers, in civilian clothing, hailed him outside the Dili Beach Hotel on the waterfront at around 10pm local time. Read the full story...

Kung Fu Peace-building in East Timor


Policy Innovations By Sheila Oviedo 12 September 2008 - East Timor's youth gangs have been more than a headache for the nation's new government, flaunting names like Devoted Heart Lotus Brotherhood, Sagrada Familia, Seven-Seven, and El Diablo. Notorious gangsters such as Lito Rambo, Ameu Van Damme, and Kung Fu Master were behind the country's first post-independence outbreak of mass violence in 2006.

But this summer, after riots resulted in 30 deaths and the displacement of around 200,000 people in Dili, the capital, gang violence appears to have subsided as a result of intensified government and NGO initiatives. Read more...

Policy Innovations online magazine for a fairer globalization


Post sponsored by East Timor Directory - Discover enigmatic East Timor online.

Legal Reports National Media 12 September 2008


FRETILIN does not deny Xanana's struggle: Mari Alkatiri – Diario Nacional 12 September 2008

FRETILIN's Secretary General Mari Bin Amude Alkatiri said Thursday (11/9) FRETILIN does not deny the current Xanana Gusmao's struggle for Timor-Leste's independence. “History remains history. We should not deny history. Those who deny history are those who want to deny the contribution of FRETILIN. Unless FRETILIN contributed, they or even all of us would have been called Ibu or Bapak,” said Alkatiri.

Alkatiri said the transformation of the ASDT to FRETILIN marked the beginning of national unity, not by the current Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao. However, once Xanana Gusmao took charge of the resistance he did work also on national unity and therefore Alkatiri urged everyone not to deny this fact. Alkatiri added that peace rally would be done soon and if there was any violence occurred during the rally he would resign from his position as secretary general of the party.
Among the distinguished guests present were Atul Khare, ambassadors of Cuba, China, Brazil, Portugal, and others. Prominent national leaders such as Francisco Xavier do Amaral and the President of the Democratic Alliance Manuel Tilman also seen among the guests. Around one thousand militants of the party took party in the commemoration of the transformation of ASDT into FRETILIN.

PM to suspend police involved in cock fighting – Suara Timor Lorosae 12 September 2008
The Prime Minister and Minister of Defence and Security affirmed Thursday (11/9) that he would suspend the members of the PNTL who were involved in illegal gambling, including cock fighting. He said that based on his personal observations, many inspectors and agentswere involved in cock fighting and other illegal gambling and this affects their economic lives. “I do not want to hear of an agent, let alone an inspector, to be taking part in any cock fighting event,” said Gusmao.

Arson case of customs office heard – Timor Post 12 September 2008
Dili District Court on Thursday (11/9) started its hearing for the suspects who set fire to the office of East Timor's Customs during the 2006 crisis.

The five suspects believed to be involved in the act of arson presented to the court were Eugenio Candido Alves, Juliao Soares, Orlando Marques, Deolindo F. da Silva and Raimundo da Cruz. Elizio Guterres, a security guard of the office who witnessed the event told the court that Eugenio is the main actor in the arson case. The other four suspects were acquitted as there was no witnesses against them.

The decision of the court is to be handed down on 2 October 2008. According to the law, the maximum sentence for an arsonist is eight years in prison.

Government to cancel veterans housing projects – Timor Post 12 September 2008
The State Secretary for Former Combatants and Veterans Affairs, Marito Reis, said the government is going to cancel housing projects for veterans in 10 districts of East Timor because the contractors could not meet the deadline for transferring the houses to the government. “We had a meeting to cancel the housing construction for veterans in 10 districts,” said Reis.

In nine districts, the housing construction has reached 80% of its completion. However, in Viqueque, the project has been abandoned and the construction in Aileu could not proceed as there was no agreement reached with the contractor. In four districts (Dili, Manufahi, Liquica and Manatuto) the resettlement housing for veterans had been 100 % completed.

PM wants to speedily acquire PNTL patrol boats – Suara Timor Lorosae 12 September 2008
Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao urged the Secretary of State for Security to quickly buy patrol boats for the National Police as the budget for the item is not yet executed. “Why the money to buy boats is not yet executed?” asked Gusmao. Gusmao added, “Data should be gathered now so that the money can be executed soon.”

He said that the ministry had to buy the boats this year and that they could not wait until next year to do the purchase. Secretary of State for Security, Francisco Guterres, said that the ministry planned to acquire boats from Australia. However, the purchase has not been done yet because the money appropriated for the item is not enough.

According the secretary of state, the shipping company has now asked for an increase of the original price between US$ 63 up to US$97 millions.

Legal Reports National Media 11-12 September 2008


Prime Minister Gusmao advises East Timor National Police to avoid carry over -Televizaun and Radio Timor-Leste 12 September 2008
East Timor's Prime Minister, who is also the Minister of Defense and Security, Xanana Gusmao, advised the East Timor's National Police (PNTL) to seriously execute its 2008 state budget. Gusmao explained that budget execution is important in order to avoid carry over into the next fiscal year. Although the PNTL is requested to seriously execute its budget, the government cannot hand over the budget directly to the PNTL as there are still many institutional-related problems facing the PNTL. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister also announced one week period for PNTL to register vehicles belonging to the institution. Gusmao said a lot of money is allocated annually for the maintenance of vehicles however the number of vehicles is yet unclear.

Finance Ministry ready to work with justice system, says Finance Vice Minister - Televizaun Timor-Leste 11 September 2008
East Timor's Ministry of Finance and Planning will be ready to cooperate with the judicial systems if there are facts and evidence about the ministry's staff being involved in maladministration and corruption.

Vice Minister for Finance and Planning, Rui Hanjam, made the statement Wednesday in relation to the comments of the Ombudsman's office saying the ministry is not serious in considering the recommendations of the Ombudsman about cases of maladministration and corruption found in the Ministry. Hanjam advised the Ombudsman to submit its reports to the public prosecutor so that the cases can be processed according to the applicable laws.

East Timor Council of Ministers Meeting 10 September 2008


Automated translation. Original Portuguese text follows.

DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF EAST TIMOR
IV CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT
PRESS RELEASE

MEETING OF COUNCIL OF MINISTERS OF 10 SEPTEMBER 2008

The Council of Ministers meeting is held this Wednesday, September 10, 2008, in the Meeting Room of the Council of Ministers, at the Government Palace in Dili, and adopted:

1 - Proposed Law that Amendment to the Law on Military Service
The Council of Ministers approved in its meeting today a proposal for a law amending the Law on Military Service. This law, which will now be submitted to the National Parliament, seeks to introduce the estimates of military service be also done on a voluntary basis, which seems appropriate to the reality of the country. The Armed Forces of Timor-Leste (F-FDTL) need to make one or two annual intakes. But the number of people in age to do so is too high for the incorporation is based on a system of compulsory military service, given the difficulties and high operating costs inherent in a process of classification and selection from thousands of young people . On the other hand, there is no need to compel young people to the provision of military service where young people volunteer.

2 - Proposed Law that creates the Civil Service Commission
The Council of Ministers approved in its meeting today a Proposed Law to be submitted to the National Parliament that creates the Civil Service Commission, whose establishment was declared as an intention of the IV Constitutional Government since the adoption of its programme. The Government hoped that the Commission on condition that an independent entity, to ensure an apolitical civil service, based on merit, with high standards of professionalism and can provide high quality services to government and the people of East Timor. To be effective, the Commission will hold a series of functions in relation to civil service, that exercise by itself or by leaders of delegations to the main organs of government, including decisions, provide guidance, establish parameters, develop policies and procedures, apply penalties and assess resources. The Commission will act as a counsellor of the government to obtain maximum efficiency and effectiveness in public administration and management and development of their human resources.

The Council of Minsters also looked at:

3 - Proposed Law Division of Administrative and Territorial
This Draft Act, which the Council of Ministers reviewed and discussed at its meeting today, down units of Power Place, or the municipalities. The objective is the promotion of institutions of a state strong, legitimate and stable throughout the territory of East Timor and the promotion of opportunities for the local democratic participation of all citizens, and promoting a range of services more effective, efficient and for equitable social and economic development of the country. The current administrative jurisdictions - that is, this informal territorial division, which includes the subdistricts and district levels - will be merged, to form new administrative units consolidated and efficient the district level, with meetings of representatives, which can provide adequate services to citizens. The municipalities are being based on ensuring that each hold a homogeneous ethnic-linguistic and cultural identity place; balance between showing potential for development and resources; have an administrative center that allows hosts the Assembly Hall and the municipal services, and holds a minimum population of allowing a certain level of efficiency in administration and services.

4 - Proposed Law Local Government
The purpose of this law, that the Council of Ministers reviewed and discussed at its meeting today, it to establish local authorities in East Timor in accordance with Article 72 of the Constitution of RDTL having regard to the principle of decentralization provided for in Article 5. It will define the structure, the positions of governance, the role of functions, the powers of government revenue and its connection to the government.

5 - Proposed Law Municipal Election
This law, which the Council of Ministers reviewed and discussed at its meeting today, governs the election of members of the Municipal Assemblies. The Constitution of the Republic, in Article 65, paragraph 1, stipulates that "the sovereignty of elected bodies and local authorities are chosen through elections, by universal, free, direct, secret, personal and regular." Article 72 stipulates that "the local power is composed of persons of territory endowed with representative bodies, with the aim of organising the participation of citizens in solving the problems of their own community and promote local development, notwithstanding the participation of State ". Once the municipalities are formed, elections should occur in all districts of East Timor. Accordingly, there is an urgent need for a law itself, which regulates the municipal elections of holders of a concise, consistent with the reality of the country and complete their pleas.

6 - Telecommunications Policy
The Council of Ministers reviewed and discussed at its meeting today, issues related to telecommunications policy for the national territory.

7 - Preparation of the State General Budget for 2009
At its meeting today, the Council of Ministers also discussed the preparation of the State General Budget for 2009.

-----

REPÚBLICA DEMOCRÁTICA DE TIMOR-LESTE
IV Governo Constitucional
COMUNICADO À IMPRENSA

Reunião do Conselho de Ministros de 10 de Setembro de 2008

O Conselho de Ministros reuniu-se esta Quarta-feira, 10 de Setembro, 2008, na Sala de Reuniões do Conselho de Ministros, no Palácio do Governo, em Díli, e aprovou:

1 - Proposta de Lei que Altera a Lei do Serviço Militar
O Conselho de Ministros aprovou na sua reunião de hoje uma Proposta de Lei que altera a Lei do Serviço Militar. A presente lei, que vai ser agora submetida ao Parlamento Nacional, visa introduzir a previsão do serviço militar ser efectuado também em regime de voluntariado, o que se afigura adequado à realidade do país.

As Forças Armas de Timor-Leste (F-FDTL) necessitam de proceder a uma ou duas incorporações anuais. Mas o número de cidadãos em idade de o fazerem é demasiado elevado para que a incorporação se faça com base num regime de serviço militar obrigatório, dadas as dificuldades e os custos operacionais elevados inerentes a um processo de classificação e selecção a partir de milhares de jovens. Por outro lado, não há necessidade de compelir os jovens à prestação de serviço militar quando haja jovens que se voluntarizem.

2 - Proposta de Lei que Cria a Comissão da Função Pública
O Conselho de Ministros aprovou na sua reunião de hoje uma Proposta de Lei a submeter ao Parlamento Nacional que Cria a Comissão da Função Pública, cuja instituição foi manifestada como intenção do IV Governo Constitucional desde a aprovação do seu Programa.

Espera o Governo que a Comissão, na condição de entidade independente, possa garantir uma função pública apolítica, baseada no mérito, com elevados padrões de profissionalismo e que possa prestar serviços de qualidade ao Estado e à população de Timor-Leste.

Para ser efectiva, a Comissão vai deter uma série de funções em relação à função pública, que exercerá por si ou mediante delegações aos principais dirigentes dos órgãos do Governo, incluindo tomar decisões, dar orientações, estabelecer parâmetros, desenvolver políticas e procedimentos, aplicar penalidades e apreciar recursos. A Comissão agirá ainda como conselheira do Governo para obter a máxima eficiência e eficácia na Administração Pública e na gestão e desenvolvimento dos respectivos recursos humanos.

O Conselho de Minstros analisou ainda:

3 - Proposta de Lei da Divisão Administrativa e Territorial
A presente Proposta de Lei, que o Conselho de Ministros analisou e discutiu na sua reunião de hoje, estabelece as unidades de Poder Local, ou seja, os municípios. O objectivo é a promoção de instituições de um estado forte, legítimo e estável em todo o território de Timor-Leste; a promoção de oportunidades para a participação local democrática de todos os cidadãos; e a promoção de uma oferta de serviços mais efectiva, eficiente e equitativa para o desenvolvimento social e económico do país.

As actuais jurisdições administrativas - isto é, a presente divisão territorial informal, que inclui os níveis subdistritais e distritais – serão fundidas, para formarem novas unidades administrativas consolidadas e eficientes ao nível distrital, com assembleias de representantes, que podem prestar serviços adequados aos cidadãos.

Os municípios estão a ser estabelecidos com base na garantia de que cada um mantenha a homogeneidade étnico-linguística e a identidade cultural local; demonstre equilíbrio entre potencial de desenvolvimento e recursos; possua um centro administrativo que permita abrigar a Assembleia Municipal e os serviços municipais; e detenha um mínimo de população que permita um certo nível de eficiência na administração e prestação de serviços.

4 - Proposta de Lei do Governo Local
O objectivo desta lei, que o Conselho de Ministros analisou e discutiu na sua reunião de hoje, é definir o poder local em Timor-Leste de acordo com o Artigo 72º da Constituição da RDTL e atendendo ao princípio da descentralização prevista no Artigo 5º.

Na definição local inclui-se a estrutura, as posições de governação, as atribuições de funções, os de governo poderes das receitas e a sua ligação ao Governo.


5 - Proposta de Lei Eleitoral Municipal
O presente diploma, que o Conselho de Ministros analisou e discutiu na sua reunião de hoje, regula a eleição dos membros das Assembleias Municipais.

A Constituição da República, no seu artigo 65º, n.º 1, determina que “os órgãos eleitos de soberania e poder local são escolhidos através de eleições, mediante sufrágio universal, livre, directo, secreto, pessoal e periódico”. No seu artigo 72º determina que “o poder local é constituído por pessoas colectivas de território dotadas de órgãos representativos, com o objectivo de organizar a participação do cidadão na solução dos problemas próprios da sua comunidade e promover o desenvolvimento local, sem prejuízo da participação do Estado”.

Uma vez constituídas as municipalidades, as eleições deverão ocorrer em todos os municípios de Timor-Leste. Nestes termos, urge a necessidade de uma lei própria, que regule as eleições dos titulares municipais de forma concisa, coerente com a realidade do país e completa nos seus fundamentos.

6 - Política de telecomunicações
O Conselho de Ministros analisou e discutiu, na sua reunião de hoje, questões relacionadas com a política de telecomunicações para o território nacional.

7 - Preparação do Orçamento Geral do Estado para 2009
Na sua reunião de hoje, o Conselho de Ministros debateu ainda a preparação do Orçamento Geral do Estado para 2009.

UN finds shooting was poorly policed


Sydney Morning Herald Darwin 12/09/2008 by Lindsay Murdoch - RED tape delayed Australian soldiers pursuing rebels involved in the February 11 attacks on East Timor's two most senior political leaders, a confidential UN investigation has found.

The inquiry also found that troops serving in the Australian-led International Stabilisation Force (ISF) were among people "with no official function" who had compromised critical forensic evidence by walking into the crime scene where the President, Jose Ramos-Horta, was shot. Read the full story...


Image: East Timor President Jose Ramos Horta

Legal Reports National Media 11 September 2008


Parliament would not help if Ombudsman's investigation is secretive – Timor Post 11 September 2008
President of the Committee A of the National Parliament Fernanda Borges said the National Parliament would not be a help for the office of Ombudsman to demand the contribution of the government to fight corruption if many reports on investigations done are inaccessible publicly.

“We would not help them to demand the government or any ministries to consider their reports of investigation if they never give the reports to the National Parliament,” said Borges. She added the committee does not know what the PDHJ had done and what kind of investigation and consequently the results of those investigations.

The president of the PUN party also mentioned that thus far the works of the Ombudsman has been secretive as none of the results of its investigation is known to the Committee A of the National Parliament.

Recently, PUN and other representatives of civil society organization submitted a petition to the office of Ombudsman in relation to the pardon given by the President to more than 80 criminals to be followed up but unfortunately there was no measures taken.

She explained that the National Parliament is committed to support the works of the office but the Ombudsman itself has to be transparent in carrying out its works. Image: East Timor PUN MP Fernanda Borges

Ombudsman Work is ‘zero’ in human rights: Xanana – Suara Timor Lorosae and Timor Post, 11 September 2008

Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao considered the works of Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman (PDHJ) in the field of human rights, particularly violations against women, is 'zero'.

“What has PDHJ achieved? Its work is broad, not only to focus on corruption and politics,” said Gusmao. He further explained that the scope of the PDHJ covers also good governance, corruption and human rights but thus far he viewed the Ombudsman's office does not set human rights as a priority, especially violence against women.

However, the head of the Human Rights and Justice Ombudsman Sebastiao Dias Ximenes commented that the field of human rights is a big success for the PDHJ compared to other areas such as corruption.Ximenes added that internationally the PDHJ is praised for its works in the field of human rights, especially during a recent international meeting held in Malaysia.

'Grade A for the PDHJ of East Timor means the PDHJ has been working hard in the area of human rights,' said Ximenes.

The Ombudsman also made several recommendations related to the human rights violations committed by the PNTL and F-FDTL to be followed up the ministry of defense and security.

Ximenes stated, as a the minister of defense and security and also the country's Prime Minister, he had to do at least disciplinary actions against those members involved in the violation so that the same things cannot be repeated.

UN promotes women’s equality, says SRSG – Suara Timor Lorosae, 11 September 2008
The Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General Atul Khare said during a women congress in Dili Wednesday (10/9) that it is the commitment of the Untied Nations to promote fundamental principles of equality since its inception.

Mr Khare explained equality faces strong challenges in many cultures of the world where patriarchal systems are very dominant. He mentioned that UN had organized four women conferences and the last one was Beijing Conference from which 12 critical areas were identified in the area of promotion of equality and women empowerment.

Mr Khare further explained the Timorese women’s national congress had taken into account Beijing platforms and had developed eight objectives and strategies.He suggested the participants of the congress to look carefully into the issues participation of women in politics and capacity development programs for women, including budget allocation in these areas.

PNTL strives to improve professionalism – Suara Timor Lorosae, 11 September 2008 The Operational Commander of the East Timor’s National Police (PNTL) Inspector Mateus Fernandes believed that in the future the PNTL would be more professional due to strong supports from the people.

“We have courage to keep making efforts to improve our service to the people in the areas of law and order,” said Fernandes Wednesday (10/9).

Fernandes did not agree with the public opinion saying some PNTL members act like bandits as they beat as they wish. He argued if police members are under threat, they can use techniques to arrest the people.He explained these techniques are learned at the police academy during their training.

PM met UNPol and PNTL on weapon collection campaign- Radio Timor Leste, 10 September 2008
East Timor's Prime Minister who is the minister for defense and security, Xanana Gusmao, Wednesday (10/9) met with the United Nations Police (UNPOL) and PNTL to discuss the illegal weapon collection campaign.

After the meeting, Gusmao thanked the population for their cooperation with the law enforcement in handing in illegal weapons, both hand-made and modern ones. He also informed that during the campaign, there were some explosives found and that in the immediate future the ministry would work together with the International Stabilization Forces (ISF) to help destroying those explosives. The date for the detonation of the explosives is yet to be set, Gusmão added.

Police to control alcohol vending- Radio Timor Leste, 10 September 2008
Dili District PNTL Acting Commander, Sub-Inspector Delfim da Silva said Wednesday (10/9) during a press conference that in the near future the police would call a meeting with bar and restaurant owners to control the vending of alcohols.

He said the police would inform the bar and restaurant owners on the effect of alcohol consumption hoping them to limit the sale of alcohol in the capital. He stressed that the measure is taken to prevent alcohol-related violence in the country as alcohol triggers violence. “Violence happens due to alcoholism,” Da Silva reiterated.

UN to gradually hand over security responsibility to the PNTL- Radio Timor Leste,10 September 2008
The United Nations Police (UNPol) Acting Commissioner Juan Carlos said Wednesday (10/9) the United Nations would gradually hand over the security responsibility to the East Timor National Police (PNTL) by May
2009.

However, UNPol will keep monitoring the development of the institutions by giving them advices and on-job training. Mr Carlos explained by this gradual hand over of responsibility the UNPol would delegate more responsibilities to the PNTL to do policing tasks.

Women's organisation urges government to improve its working mechanisms- Televizaun Timor-Leste, 10 September 2008
The Coordinator of the Rede Feto (Women’s Network), Uvalda Alves, urged the government to improve its working mechanism to make the programs of the government benefit women in remotes areas. Alves made the statement during a congress of Rede Feto held in Dili's Gym.

Alves said the Timorese women are working hard in many aspects of development of the country despite of daunting challenges the women have. Speaking after officially opening the congress, Acting President of the Republic Fernando La Sama de Araujo told women organizations to define their new strategy, plans and structure in order to really promote equality, even to the most remote areas in East Timor.

Meanwhile Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao in his speech reminded the participants of the congress to clearly define their roles in the development and to be able to translate those roles in practice. The third congress is attended by almost 250 representatives of women's organisations from all the districts in East Timor.

East Timor Law Journal - Towards the rule of law in Timor-Leste!

Timor veteran lobby wants financial recognition


ABC Online 11 September 2008 11:32:48 Presenter: Stephanie March - In East Timor a group claiming to represent 200 former resistance fighters is demanding financial recognition for its contribution to the country's independence struggle. They say they shouldn't have to wait until next year for government action. The group call themselves 'The Petitioners' - a similar name to the group of 600 soldiers who mutinied in 2006, sparking months of bloody violence. But this new group claims to have a more honorable cause. Speakers: Anacleto Belo, former resistance fighter and spokesperson for the petitioning veterans; Mario Reis, State Secretary for Veterans and National Liberation; Jose Sousa Santos, Youth Worker at Uma Juventude Read more...

Ministry of Social Solidarity assists 628 IDP families from Dom Bosco camp to return home


MINISTRY OF SOCIAL SOLIDARITY
PRESS RELEASE
8 September 2008

MSS assists 628 IDP families from Dom Bosco camp to return home

Commencing today, as part of the government’s Hamutuk Hari’i Futuru national recovery strategy, 628 families from the Dom Bosco IDP camp will be assisted to return to their homes.

The Minister of Social Solidarity, Maria Domingas Fernandes Alves, thanked the Dom Bosco school, and the Salesian brothers and fathers for their patience and good will in providing shelter for the displaced people at the camp. She reaffirmed that MSS would only assist those people to return home who were willing and able to return to their communities. “For those who are unable to return because their house is occupied, or there are ongoing issues with the receiving community, please inform the MSS Dialogue teams, and they will try to help you resolve these problems.”

The Secretary of State for Social Assistance and Natural Disasters, Jacinto Rigoberto Alves, explained that according to the Hamutuk Hari’i Futuru National Recovery Strategy, those whose houses were destroyed or damaged during the crisis, between 1 April 2006 and 31 October 2007, are entitled to receive a recovery package according to the level of damage to their house. For families living in IDP