Posts Tagged ‘Timor’
Saturday, June 28th, 2008
Paul Toohey; 28/6/08
East Timor doesn’t need any more confusion, but it got in doses yesterday. Jose Ramos Horta announced he would no longer chase a job as the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and would stay on as President - at the same time refusing to guarantee serving out his term. Mr Ramos Horta had said on Thursday that he was considering the UN position and needed the night to think about it. This was despite UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon denying yesterday that he had offered Mr Ramos Horta the Geneva-based post or decided on a preferred candidate. Mr Ramos Horta said an “idiot journalist” in New York had backed Mr Ban into a corner, and made him look like he was claiming the job was his.
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Tags: Political, Timor
Posted in Timor | No Comments »
Friday, June 27th, 2008
Paul Toohey; 27/6/08
Jose Ramos Horta had his country on tenterhooks last night as he asked for another 24 hours to decide whether he would stay on as East Timor’s President or pursue a job in Geneva as the UN Human Rights Commissioner. It seems almost certain that Mr Ramos Horta will go. His heart was never in the presidency but that was compounded on February 11 when he was shot twice in the back, outside his own home, by rebels he had been trying to help. As he recovered in Darwin, he remained deeply traumatised and revealed to The Australian that he was likely to throw in the towel some time after his return to the capital, Dili, in April. He said at the time: “I will address the parliament when I return and I will not promise the country that I will serve the full term.”
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Tags: Political, Timor
Posted in Timor | No Comments »
Wednesday, June 25th, 2008
25/6/08
East Timor’s Government is under fire over an agreement to turn more than a sixth of the country’s arable land over to a $US100 million ($A105 million) foreign-funded ethanol project. The Fretilin opposition has branded as a “land giveaway” a memorandum of understanding between the Agriculture Minister and GTLeste Biotech for a 100,000-hectare sugar plantation and ethanol plant. The agreement with the little-known Indonesian company guarantees at least $US100 million in investment in return for granting GTLeste a 50-year lease over “unproductive land” with an option for 50 years more. The Government is touting the move as a major potential source of foreign cash that could generate more than 2000 jobs. But opposition agriculture spokesman Estanislau da Silva said the plan was made with little public consultation and could threaten food production in the impoverished and overwhelmingly agrarian country.
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Tags: Environment, Indonesia, Timor, Trade
Posted in Aid / Trade, Environment, Human Rights, Indonesia, Timor | No Comments »
Wednesday, June 25th, 2008
Paul Toohey; 25/6/08
East Timor President Jose Ramos Horta says Australia will never be the true gateway to Asia until it relaxes attitudes to visiting Asian students and workers. “I want to see hundreds of Timorese youths coming to this country, and yet right now we have 10 or 12 East Timorese students in this country,” he said in Darwin yesterday. “(This is) compared with Cuba, a poor country, one thousand times poorer than Australia. They have received, (on) full scholarships from Cuba, 700 medical students from East Timor.
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Tags: Cuba, Education, Timor
Posted in Health & Children, Human Rights, Timor | No Comments »
Monday, June 16th, 2008
Steve Bracks; 16/6/08
Thousands gathered in the square in front of the main Government buildings in Dili, the Palacio do Governo, last month to celebrate the sixth anniversary of the Democratic Republic of East Timor. There were fireworks, traditional dancing and a band. The highlight of the night was a spontaneous song by the Prime Minister, Xanana Gusmao. For many in the audience this was a night of firsts. The first time they’d seen fireworks, the first time they’d heard their Prime Minister sing, and most importantly, the first time they’d gathered en masse outside the Government buildings without fear, anger and resentment and without violence since the chaos of 2006. The AMP Coalition Government of Gusmao is only nine months old and yet in that short period I have witnessed a remarkable transition.
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Tags: Terrorism, Timor
Posted in Terrorism, Timor | No Comments »
Saturday, June 14th, 2008
Stephen Fitzpatrick; 14/6/08
UN police in East Timor will hand over responsibility to the national force sooner than expected, despite a high-level report casting doubt on Timorese policing capacity. The head of the UN mission in East Timor, Atul Khare, will announce an “expedited” handover of policing duties - with complete control ceded by early next year - during an Australian trip beginning today. Some of the slack will be taken up by an increase of about 80 Australian Federal Police officers, announced in the federal budget as part of a bilateral policing arrangement. Mr Khare denied the handover meant a reduction in police numbers, saying UN police would remain in East Timor in an advisory role for several months.
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Tags: Australia, Timor, UN
Posted in Human Rights, Terrorism, Timor, United Nations | No Comments »
Thursday, June 12th, 2008
Stephen Fitzpatrick; 12/6/08
Controvesial former East Timorese defence minister Roque Rodriguez is to be dismissed from his role as security consultant to President Jose Ramos Horta, after a flurry of high-level cables between Dili and New York over the UN appointment. The sacking comes as senior security analysts in the country warn of a dangerous lurch back towards anarchy, even as the UN prepares for the “expedited” withdrawal of its international police force. Mr Rodriguez, implicated in the weapons distribution scandal that led to former interior minister Rogerio Lobato being jailed for seven years last year, signed a substantial deal several weeks ago, understood to have been for up to 12 months, to help advise on security sector reform. This was despite a commission of inquiry in 2006 recommending that he face criminal charges over the violence earlier that year, in which dozens died.
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Tags: Terror, Timor, UN
Posted in Human Rights, Terrorism, Timor, United Nations | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 27th, 2008
Paul Maley; 27/5/08
The Australian Federal Police is considering pressing charges over the shooting death of Australian journalist Brian Peters, one of the Balibo Five believed to have been murdered by Indonesian troops during the 1975 invasion of East Timor. AFP Commissioner Mick Keelty told a Senate estimates committee in Canberra yesterday the AFP was considering a referral from the Attorney-General’s Department “in relation to the death of Brian Peters”. Mr Keelty declined to give any details on who, if anybody, might be prosecuted. “I don’t think it is appropriate to take it any further other than to say we are working with the department on this request,” he said. “Because the events are alleged to have occurred in a foreign country, there are a lot of issues about the gathering of evidence and where jurisdiction (lies), if it is possible, for any private prosecution that might take place.”
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Tags: Australia, Indonesia, Terrorism, Timor
Posted in Australia, Human Rights, Indonesia, Terrorism, Timor, USA | No Comments »
Sunday, May 25th, 2008
24/5/08
East Timor President Jose Ramos Horta said no foreign elements were involved in an assassination attempt against him but criticised Australia’s silence on a bank account held by his slain attacker. In an interview in Sin-gapore, Ramos Horta also asked why the Australian police failed to question some Timor-born Australians who were in East Timor before the attack in February and immediately fled to Australia after the shooting. The 58-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner suffered multiple gunshot wounds in the February 11 attack on his residence led by rebel leader Alfredo Reinado and required life-saving surgery in Australia.
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Tags: Assassination Attempt fallout, Australia, Timor
Posted in Human Rights, Terrorism, Timor | No Comments »
Thursday, May 22nd, 2008
22/5/08
The Catholic Church in East Timor is helping the government encourage thousands of people who left their homes in fear of violence to now return home. At a Mass on May 15 for 2,000 refugees preparing to go home in the coming days, Bishop Alberto Ricardo da Silva of Dili said, “The Church is always ready to collaborate with the government to resolve the IDP (internally displaced people) problem.” Parliament President Fernando de Araujo, other members of parliament and government officials attended the Mass at the Garden of Mother Mary from Fatima, a public park near the Dili harbor. Refugees have been a source of concern since 100,000 people sought safety from gang violence that erupted in 2006 and killed at least 20, following a dispute within the army. About 60,000 remain in makeshift camps, many on Church property, largely in the capital area.
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Tags: Dili, Displaced, Timor
Posted in Aid / Trade, Human Rights, Refugee & Migrant, Terrorism, Timor | No Comments »