Update on East Timor

E Timor govt rejects corruption claims

By Steve Holland and Stephanie March

Posted Mon Jun 29, 2009 9:06pm AEST
Updated 11 hours 33 minutes ago

East Timor Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao

Xanana Gusmao has given a multi-million-dollar government contract to a company in which his daughter was a major shareholder. (Reuters: Gary Ramage/Pool)

East Timor's government has defended Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao's authorisation of a multi-million-dollar contract to a company in which his daughter was a major shareholder.

The government says it is taking action to eliminate corruption and on Monday approved plans to establish an anti-corruption commission.

But the leader of the National Unity Party, Fernanda Borges, has told Radio Australia's Asia Pacific program the new commission's first task should be an investigation into the Prime Minister's office.

An investigation by Radio Australia found Mr Gusmao signed off on a deal with Prima Food last year for it to supply rice worth $US3.5 million.

Zenilda Gusmao, the Prime Minister's daughter, is listed as a Prima Food shareholder in East Timor's 2008 business registry.

On Saturday, the East Timor government released a statement.

"While we welcome the interest of the ABC in reporting on Timor-Leste, we would ask for better due diligence in ensuring the facts are correct before misinformation is widely disseminated," it said.

"There are several inaccuracies in the reporting, especially when referencing the laws of the constitution, which seem to be the basis of the corruption allegations."

The statement was issued by Agio Pereira, the Secretary of State for the Council of Ministers and official spokesman for the Fourth Constitutional Government.

It also declares that Mr Gusmao has not broken any laws under the constitution that address guidelines for business interests.

'Convenient' interpretation

But Ms Borges says the government has chosen a convenient interpretation of the constitution.

"I'm very unhappy the government interpreted in that fashion because that shows denial of responsibility for acts which members of the government have the responsibility to ensure that anything it does is done with transparency, and is not in the interest of any family member," she said.

"And the Prime Minister should be very, very aware himself that he was awarding very healthy contracts to his own daughter who is a shareholder of this company," she said.

"That is highly unacceptable, highly irregular in any democracy."

But one watchdog organisation has voiced concerns about the new corruption commission's ability to function effectively.

The non-government organisation La'o Hamutuk, which has been working in East Timor since before the country gained independence, has reiterated concerns that the commission would make East Timor more vulnerable to corruption.

East Timor's Deputy Prime Minister, Mario Carrascalao, has told Radio Australia there will be inquiries into the rice contract scandal, while the Fretilin Opposition says it will be calling for answers when parliament sits on Tuesday.

Timor hosts conference

NATION building will be the theme of an international conference in East Timor next month.

The Dili conference is called Nation-Building in Urban and Rural Timor-Leste: Gender, Justice, Peace and Security, Development and Governance.

Charles Darwin University School of Creative Arts and Humanities research associate Steven Farram said the three-day conference would provide an opportunity to develop intellectual culture.

The conference runs from July 8 to 10.

Monday, June 29, 2009 7:53 AM

Jimmy

East Timor hopes for decision on pipeline--June 25, Online

East Timor's president said Wednesday that venture partners in a vast underwater oil and gas field would be better served if they choose to lay a deep sea pipeline to his country instead of Australia. President Jose Ramos-Horta said he hopes agreement on where to pump oil and gas from the Greater Sunrise field will be reached by the end of the year.

Your comments:
The East Timorese government does not really govern their own country; it is run by the Australian and European governments with all their so-called aid programs. Go to Dili and see what is happening!

Timor Leste has a split economic, legal and social sector: One for the Timorese and one for the thousands of foreign aid workers, NGO staff and the various UN and foreign government agencies.

Look at the offices of the European Commission; they are housed in one of East Timor's most historic landmarks.

However, instead of making the building an East Timor government office or cultural center, no, the European Commission restored it and took it over as their offices. Can you imagine something like that happening in Brussels?

No decision is really made by the Timorese. It is dictated from abroad. That is why it is unlikely East Timor will benefit from a pipeline and refinery on Timor Leste soil.

It is high time the government of East Timor woke up and took its destiny into its own hands, rather than let it be hijacked by so-called experts from abroad!

Henry Manoe


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