A new political generation rises in East Timor
As a student activist in Jakarta, Avelino Coelho da Silva sought
refuge in the Austrian embassy to avoid capture by Indonesian troops.
Now as East Timor's Secretary of State for Energy Policy, he installs
solar power in villages.
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President Jose Ramos-Horta |
Coelho, 46, is likely to be among the next generation of leaders in
the tiny, oil and gas-rich nation which voted overwhelmingly for
independence from Indonesia exactly a decade ago.
Both Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, 63, who was imprisoned by
Indonesia, and President Jose Ramos-Horta, 59, who campaigned abroad to
keep East Timor's struggle in the public eye, are independence heroes.
But a new generation of political leaders, most of whom were children
or students during Indonesia's rule, is getting ready to take over.
A former Portuguese colony, East Timor was invaded in 1975 by
Indonesia. An estimated 180,000 died during the occupation, and the U.N.
estimates about 1,000 East Timorese died in the mayhem that surrounded
the 1999 vote for independence.
Since then, Dili has struggled to tackle security, social and
economic woes including high unemployment, splits in the army, and poor
infrastructure, healthcare and education.
"If you look at other members of cabinet, I tell you, 80 to 85
percent are new generation. People no more than 35-45 years old, who
grew up in the era of occupation. This is the new generation running the
country. They are the hope of this country," said Ramos-Horta.
Damien Kingsbury, an East Timor analyst from Australia's Deakin
University, said there are already several people in East Timor ready to
take over the reins from Gusmao and Ramos-Horta.
"It's essentially the student generation, members of the student
resistance organisations and expat Timorese who went back from Australia
and Indonesia," Kingsbury said. The next elections are due in 2012.
Illiterate
Almost 30 percent of the adult population is illiterate: the young
men who hang around on Dili street corners are evidence of the 40
percent jobless rate in a country where average household monthly income
is just $27.
Coelho's Rural Electrification Master Plan has brought electricity to
17 isolated villages in just over a year by installing solar power
systems, funded by the government but owned, installed and maintained by
community cooperatives.
Ramos-Horta, who survived an assassination attempt in February 2008,
said he sees Fernando Lasama de Araujo, the 46-year-old speaker of
Parliament, as a future leader.
Araujo, who got almost 20 percent of the vote in the 2007
presidential elections, was acting president for several months after
Ramos-Horta was shot by disgruntled former soldiers. He was also
involved in negotiations with the militants, who eventually laid down
their arms.
Araujo, from the Democratic Party, says the government cannot just
rely on its $5.1 billion Petroleum Fund, where money from oil and gas
deals is collected, to fund development. "We need to get the money from
somewhere to accelerate development. I support foreign loans to achieve
this," he said.
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UN electoral officials counting ballots at a Dili museum
following the country’s historic referendum. REUTERS |
"After 10 years of independence, we should have achieved more than we
have. Water is a very important one and roads, and schools. Until we
build a port we cannot attract investors and tourism."
Education, health and infrastructure
Finance Minister Emilia Pires, 48, is another leader carving out a
name for herself, as she tries to increase spending on education, health
and infrastructure.
Borges, 40, quit as finance minister in 2002 after accusing the
government of corruption, and formed her own party, the National Unity
Party.
East Timor ranked 145th out of 180 countries in Transparency
International's 2008 Corruption Perceptions Index on a par with
Kazakhstan and below Indonesia.
"I understand my limitations as a member of a small party. I know I
don't have the resistance hero image behind me.
But with three seats in parliament we can be a voice to say this is
wrong and when the government is doing the right thing, we can say this
is the right thing too," she told Reuters in an interview.
"We are the new kids on the block but people trust us.
REUTERS |