Saturday, October 18, 2008

BORROMEO BREAKS TIMOR’S HEART




PHNOM PENH (17 Oct 2008) – A solitary strike from Alexander Borromeo in the second half of an evenly contested match gave the Philippines a well-deserved 1-0 win over Timor Leste in the opening match of the AFF Suzuki Cup 2008 qualifiers here at the National Olympic Stadium. The score was a far cry from the 7-0 beating Timor Leste suffered in the last qualifiers in 2006 which was played in Bacolod City – a thought not lost on Philippines head coach Juan Cutillas.“Sure, the Philippines beat them 7-0 in the last match but that was played at a neutral venue and also Timor did not have some of the quality players they have now,” said Cutillas.“Timor played very well but we deserved to win because we created a lot of chances.”Playing under sweltering conditions, both teams were a little slow off the block where Philippines only created the first chance in the 12th minute off a header from Ian Araneta but which went wide.Two minutes later, Timor fought back through Manuel Pereira but even though he managed to beat the off-side trap, he just could not get the last touch as both teams contend with the deadlock at the break.The failure of either Philippines or Timor to put some muscle at the centre of the park meant that the midfield struggle continued in the second half.Philippines then carved their first goal after the break in the 68th minute when Borromeo slammed home the lead following a botched freekick.Timor had a great chance of stealing the one point but their goal was disallowed after the second linesmen spotted a technical fault with the ball not being in play.“I enjoyed the way we played,” said Pedro Almeida, the head coach of Timor Leste.“And the disallowed goal was the mistake of our goalkeeper, so there’s no contention on that. We will just pick up from what we have shown here and improve to our next game.”(aseanfootball)

Asian Beach Games 2008 - Indonesia Gasak Timor Leste 9-1

Sanur - Kemenangan besar diraih tim sepakbola pantai Indonesia. Menjalani laga pertama menghadapi Timor Leste, I Nyoman Jumada cs meraih kemenangan meyakinkan 9-1.
Menjalani laga di Pantai Sanur, Sabtu (18/10/2008), tim Indonesia mengawali langkahnya dengan hasil memuaskan. Tampil meyakinkan di tiga babak, skuad besutan pelatih Mahayasa memetik kemenangan 9-1.
Adalah I Kadek Yuli Pari Mawan yang menjadi bintang kemenangan tim tuan rumah dengan tiga gol yang dilesakkannya. Putra Bali kelahiran 24 Juli 1986 itu menjebol gawang lawan di menit 1, 5 dan enam babak ketiga.Juga tak kalah gemilang adalah I Nyoman Jumada dan Dewa Dwipa Yuda dan masing-masing menambah dua gol buat pasukan merah putih. Sementara dua gol Indonesia lainnya masing-masing datang dari AA Artadinata dan I Wayan Metra Jaya. Satu-satunya gol Timor Leste yang bersarang di gawang Indonesia datang di menit keempat babak ketiga melalui Chiquito Do Carmo. Di pertandingan selanjutnya Indonesia akan menghadapi tim Qatar. Pertandingan tersebut juga akan dilangsungkan di Sanur pada Minggu (20/10/2008). Indonesia sendiri tergabung di Grup A bersama Timor Leste, Uzbekistan dan Qatar.Pada pertandingan lainnya di Grup B, Uni Emirat Arab juga membuka lebar jalannya ke babak kedua. Menghadapi Myanmar, UEA memetik kemenangan 2-0.(Detik)

Friday, October 17, 2008

Climate Change, Global Credit Crisis Deepen Poverty and Hunger in East Timor


By Phil Mercer

Sydney

16 October 2008


Aid agencies warn that East Timor faces a food crisis and more than half of its youngest children are going hungry as global food prices soar. A new survey reveals that more than 70 percent of households across East Timor are unable to find enough to eat each day for almost half the year. From Sydney, Phil Mercer reports.
A group of international aid organizations says that East Timor's "hungry season", which usually lasts for a couple of months, now extends for almost half of the year.The number of children under age five suffering from chronic malnutrition has hit as high as 59 percent in many areas. In some districts the food crisis has touched 90 percent of households.Aid workers say the global financial meltdown has contributed to the problem, as jobs are lost and donors cut back aid, while food prices have spiraled upward. Charities estimate that an extra 100 million people have been pushed closer to hunger in other parts of Asia, the Pacific and Africa, as well. Andrew Hewett, the executive director of Oxfam Australia, says changing weather patterns have cut into East Timor's harvests."We are finding that climate change is causing problems for people's livelihoods and people's food security in that country," Hewett said. "It was already a pretty desperate situation in East Timor. People were used to the idea that for at least a couple of months a year that they just did not have enough food. The problem is that that period has got greater."Despite turmoil in international financial markets, charities urge wealthier countries to support emergency food programs.Aid workers have reported similar problems in Cambodia and the Solomon Islands, where children are increasingly surviving on just one meal a day.It has been a hard road for East Timor since independence from Indonesia in 2002. It suffers ethnic and regional divisions, and youth unemployment is above 60 percent.In addition, a rebellion by disaffected soldiers in 2006 triggered violence that killed more than 30 people and forced 150,000 residents from their homes. Thousands remain in refugee camps. (VAONews)

Oxfam: Timor Timur Hadapi Krisis Pangan Serius


Penduduk Timor Timur menghadapi krisis pangan serius karena adanya perubahan iklim dan kemelut keuangan internasional.
Kata laporan badan bantuan internasional Oxfam, 70 persen lebih penduduk Timor Timur sejak setengah tahun terakhir tidak punya cukup makanan tiap hari. Kata Oxfam, di daerah-daerah tertentu, hampir 60 persen anak-anak dibawah usia lima tahun menderita kekurangan gizi yang kronis.
Kata kepala eksekutif Oxfam di Australia, Andrew Hewitt, krisis pangan itu disebabkan berubahnya iklim setempat dan bertambahnya tanaman yang digunakan untuk membuat bahan bakar.
Pejabat bantuan mengatakan, krisis keuangan global telah mempersulit keadaan karena banyak orang kehilangan pekerjaan dan sejumlah negara donor mengurangi bantuan mereka.
Perkiraan badan bantuan mengatakan 100 juta lagi penduduk di Asia, Afrika dan kawasan Pasifik semakin dekat pada bencana kelaparan. (VOANEWS)

Thursday, October 16, 2008

QUIET CONFIDENCE AHEAD OF AFF SUZUKI CUP QUALIFIERS KICK-OFF

PHNOM PENH (16 Oct 2008) – There was an air of quiet confidence and subtle trepidations at the pre-match Press Conference this morning at the Nagaworld Hotel ahead of the official kick-off for the AFF Suzuki Cup 2008 qualifiers tomorrow afternoon.

The conference was held immediately after the team managers’ meeting and was attended by more than 25 members of the local press corps and two journalists from abroad.

Philippines will open their campaign against Timor Leste tomorrow while hosts Cambodia will be up against Laos.

Brunei will have the day off.

None of the teams were willing to assess their opponents’ strength or weaknesses preferring instead to focus on their own game plan and their need to have a positive start to the tournament.

All the teams taking part are of almost equal strength with several making their preparations for this qualifier abroad – signaling their seriousness and their desire to win.

At stake would be the only two available slots for the tournament proper which will be held in December in Indonesia and Thailand.


QUOTES

“On behalf of the local football family and also the government of Cambodia, I welcome everyone to Phnom Penh. I hope for a successful tournament in very friendly atmosphere. Cambodia is a very young country and we are trying to learn more in hosting big international events. With that, I would like to thank the Asean football family and WSG (World Sport Group) for all their support.” - His Excellency General Sao Sokha, President of the Football Federation of Cambodia (FFC)“

I know that the all the teams here are well-prepared and they want to win the two available slots to the next round (of the AFF Suzuki Cup 2008). But I hope that while they will play hard, they should also uphold ‘Fair Play’ above all else.” - Nugraha Besoes, Head of Delegation, Asean Football Federation (AFF)

“We played two games in Bangkok before coming here where we also had several days of training. We won one match and lost once – both games were against professional club sides. Although we have a few players playing abroad, I don’t think that it will be a big advantage against Timor Leste.” - Alberto Honasan, technical consultant of the Philippines FA

“We have been in training for the last two months. Some players are new but we hope that we can do well in this tournament. We played against Philippines in 2004 and I know that there have been a lot of changes to both teams. I am looking for a positive start so we will see what happens at the end of the game (as far as the results are concerned).” - Pedro Almeida, head coach of Timor Leste

“We have had some three months of preparation and before this tournament, we went to South Korea to play eight matches. We played against mostly university teams where we won one match, draw one game and lost six times. I know that the results have not been very good but the mentality of the players have been positive and we will look to win our first game.” - Dary Bouy, assistant coach of Cambodia

“Before coming to Phnom Penh, we were training at one of the professional clubs in Vietnam (at Hong An Gia Lai). This team is being prepared for the SEA Games which Laos will be hosting next year. The team may be young but I think that they have been shaping up very well. We need more exposure for sure but I think that we can be strong for this meet.” Niwat Klaysang, team manager of Laos

“I am very happy to join this tournament. I took over this team two months ago. We did not go anywhere for matches or training where we have been at home in Bandar Seri Begawan. But I’m looking forward to the matches. And not playing tomorrow will give me chance to look at the other teams and how we can prepare ourselves.” -Vjeran Simunic, head coach of Brunei Darussalam


TOURNAMENT FIXTURES
(All matches at the National Olympic Stadium)

17 OCT 2008: Philippines vs Timor Leste (1400hrs) / Cambodia vs Laos (1600hrs)

19 OCT 2008: Timor Leste vs Cambodia (1400hrs) / Brunei vs Philippines (1600hrs)

21 OCT 2008: Philippines vs Laos (1400hrs) / Timor Leste vs Brunei (1600hrs)

23 OCT 2008: Laos vs Brunei (1400hrs) / Cambodia vs Philippines (1600hrs)

25 OCT 2008: Brunei vs Cambodia (1400hrs)/ Laos vs Timor Leste (1600hrs)


PIC: The team representatives from Timor Leste, the Philippines, Laos and Brunei at the pre-match Press Conference this morning at the Nagaworld. (aseanfootball)

East Timor sells off its artefacts, history - Feature

window.google_render_ad();


window.google_render_ad();
Dili -Last week on eBay a search for East Timor would have come up with a black, wooden, hand-carved statue of a male, not quite a metre high. At 150 US dollars it was by far the most expensive object from East Timor, and one might have wondered why. Perhaps it was only a replica of a centuries-old sacred clan totem believed to represent ancestors. Or, maybe it was the real thing.
Either way, it's gone now.
In East Timor, one of the poorest countries in Asia, everything -even the sacred - has a dollar value. With poorly enforced protection laws foreign sales of Timorese artefacts are not rare on eBay. Though eBay isn't the only way Timor loses its history.
Peter Lape, the curator of archaeology of the Burke Museum at the University of Washington in Seattle, has been making trips back and forth to Timor since 2002. Through his field work studying early rock art and fortified settlements and the work of a handful of others it has been established that East Timor has been peopled for at least 40,000 years and likely well before then.
Today, a number of archaeologists believe that the first Australians, Timor's southern neighbour, were in fact Timorese.
"I was drawn to Timor-Leste because it is historically important to the region and the world," Lape said. "It was a place of earliest human migrations from Africa to Australia and New Guinea."
As the centre of this Asia-Pacific crossroads, Timor is an important key in the history of human migration, "when we know more about these early Timorese then we will know more about the early settlers of Australia."
Lape has been questioning: Why is Timor-Leste so different from Indonesia, and especially Maluku? How have people adapted to Timor-Leste's unique climate and geography?
But to answer these questions is a race against time and progress. In 1999 East Timor broke free after 24 years of Indonesian occupation. It was an occupation known for its secrecy. Westerners, feared to be spies, journalists or pro-Timorese activists, were not especially welcome in the province. Much archaeological work was put on pause during those years.
Now, trying to catch up, Lape says he can see valuable sites disappear as the country opens up to the world and readjusts itself after 24 years of conflict.
"Sites are everywhere, but people often don't recognize them when they are building things - or if they do, only after it is too late to save them," he said.
Since 2005 Lape has been studying the ruins of a 5,000-year-old village at the eastern tip of the island. The site is as far from Dili, East Timor's capital, as one can get - there is no phone service, electricity or internet, but only jungle and sea, fishing villages and farmland.
In these parts the biggest threat to preservation is not eBay - it's the locals.
"The site I worked on in Ira Ara, for example, was already half destroyed because people had been digging away at it to get stones and soil to build a small chapel," he said.
The Timorese government is responding to these threats. In August most of the districts in which Lape works were dedicated as the Nino Konis Santana National Park - East Timor's first.
Pedro Pinto, the director of the park, said the government is making an effort to protect everything it can through better local awareness and management.
"We are preparing a plan for management of the [archaeological] sites," Pinto said. "This will be a guide to preserving the sites for future managers."
In August Pinto hired Adelino Rogario to conduct awareness trainings for the 10,000 estimated Timorese living within the national park.
Unlike national parks in many developed countries which are empty of villages, East Timor's national park is speckled throughout with isolated collections of thatched huts. Rogario said those communities, scattered across mountain, marsh and jungle, are needed.
The park is 126,000 hectares big and is currently overseen by only a handful of forest guards. So Rogario conducts his trainings to get communities on board as a vital first line of protection.
"These sites are something valuable to the Timorese, something which is ours," said Rogario. "But first we must protect, then conserve and then promote."
That is, once the sites are found. Rogario said that he estimated there are many archaeologically important sites still nestled in mountain crags or smothered by the virgin lowland rainforest.
Even as Timor seeks to protect these wild, historically vital areas, the country is eager to develop.
In the middle of the district is a large lake that has been picked as the site for a hydroelectric power plant and each year the nation spends more on roads and bridges which bring jobs to impoverished local economies and perhaps later, hundreds of tourists.
Preserving the past is a race against the future, Lape said. Tourists can bring poorly planned development schemes and, too often, looters of archeological sites.
"Looting of objects for sale has been a growing problem in South-East Asia, during Indonesian times and even now, many cultural objects were stolen and sold on the global antiquities market," said Lape.
Nuno Oliveira, an advisor to the secretary of state for culture, is leading a team of Timorese across the country armed with GPS devices with which he says they will collect data on sites of historical and cultural significance and store it online.
The locations of the oldest, most sacred places in Timor will be recorded and then the sites will be assessed in terms of importance to the community and antiquity, among other criteria.
But Oliveira is a realist and he said despite his work change is slow and in coming years even more sites could be destroyed or badly damaged. It gives his work urgency.
"At least we'll have some information out there, before this stuff is destroyed forever," he said. (earthtimes)

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Kids back Timor youth

FOUR dedicated young local girls are trying to make life easier for kids in East Timor.Twins Ellie and Mollie Travica of Emerald, Kallista’s Elly Robertson and Emma Falconberg of Berwick are raising awareness and cash for better education in the small province of Ermera.For most 11-year-olds a task of such mammoth proportions would be daunting, but not for these girls.The Beaconhills College students formed a group called YES (Youth for East Timor Squad) to help raise awareness and cash for school 20 De Septembro.The girls have raised more than $4000 this year and are putting together a scrapbook of photographs for the students of 20 De Septembro.In the last year of the East Timor guerrilla war, on 20 September 1999, the small school was burnt down.It was re-opened a short time later but struggled under poor conditions with little shelter.In 2003, through the Alola Foundation, Beaconhills College in Berwick became its sister school.Through the school’s fundraising, 20 De Septembro was able to open the first of its classrooms in 2006.The girls became involved in the school while in Grade One and decided to do something more to make a difference.Teacher Carmel Byrne said when the girls started middle school they discovered there was no connection with 20 De Septembro and wanted to change that.“They wanted to pull the school together to support East Timor,” she said.YES was also formed as part of a futures learning and problem solving project. But, for the girls it was about more than just another school project – they wanted to make a difference.The girls have now been nominated as one of five state finalists in the Macquarie Bank Future Problem Solving Program with the winners announced on 19 October.Ellie said they had not only raised cash but spoken about the school’s plight on many occasions.She said the most important part of the project was raising awareness.Mollie said they were also trying to set up a pen pal system with the school but had encountered a few snags.Elly said that so far two school buildings had been rebuilt, but there was still so much more to be done.She said that at least three more buildings needed to be built.The girls said apart from raising cash and awareness, they were hoping to build lasting friendships with 20 De Septembro. (RangesTraderMail)

Monday, October 13, 2008

PBB Diminta Hentikan Penyelidikan Kerusuhan 1999

SOIBADA (Suara Karya): Presiden Timor Leste Ramos Horta , Senin mengatakan ia ingin PBB menghentikan penyelidikannya atas pertumpahan darah yang terjadi menyangkut keputusan kemerdekaan dari Indonesia tahun 1999.
Para pemimpin Timor Leste dan Indonesia Juli mengatakan masalah itu sudah ditutup setelah menyatakan penyesalan dengan kesimpulan-kesimpulan satu komisi kepercayaan gabungan yang menyalahkan pasukan keamanan dan sipil Indonesia karena melakukan "pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia."
Tetapi PBB, yang memboikot komisi kebenaran itu, mengatakan pihaknya akan terus mendukung pengusutan melalui Unit Kejahatan Serius, yang dibentuknya untuk membantu kantor kejaksaan Timor Leste menyelidiki aksi kekerasan di mana PBB mengatakan 1.000 warga Timor Leste tewas.
"Sebagai kepala negara, saya tidak mengesahkan atau mengizinkan penyelidikan PBB atas kejahatan tahun 1999. Sikap kami adalah memelihara hubungan baik dengan Indonesia," kata Ramos Horta kepada Reuters ketika mengunjungi distrik Soibada, sekitar 100km dari ibukota Dili.
Beberapa pejabat militer Indonesia telah diadili oleh pengadilan hak asasi manusia Indonesia setelah kerusuhan tahun 1999 itu.
Timor Leste, bekas koloni Portugal yang kemudian bergabung dengan Indonesia tahun 1975, meraih kemerdekaan setelah satu pemungutan suara yang diselenggarakan PBB tahun 1999. Wilayah itu memperoleh kemerdekaan penuh tahun 2002.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Fears of unrest in E Timor

Dili - An opposition plan for a massive march on East Timor's capital and rumours of tension in the police force are raising concerns of a return to instability in the tiny Southeast Asian nation.
An unsigned pamphlet has been circulated in Dili complaining of official discrimination against Timorese from the impoverished country's western region in favour of those from the east.
The pamphlet also threatened protests against the government if an easterner is appointed the new police commander when the post becomes vacant in November.
Such claims of regional discrimination sparked a mass desertion by members of the armed forces, leading to fighting in 2006 between military, police factions and gangs in street violence that killed at least 37 people.(iol.co.za)

East Timor Honors Cuban Independence Day

Dili, Oct 10 (Prensa Latina) East Timor celebrated Cuba’s Independence deed within the World Drive Against the Blockade with a new telephone line (roaming) joining both countries.

Engineer Jose Brandao, manager of Timor Telecom, said October 10 means freedom for Cuba and Ambassador Ramon Hernandez helped boost it through bilateral communications with a call to the main offices of ETECSA telephone company.

Ambassador Hernandez called the roaming contribution from the field of communications, within the World Drive, to breach the near 50-year unfair and failed US Blockade of Cuba.

The diplomat reminded that Cuba will address late this month for the 17th time the UN General Assembly on the Cuban resolution stressing on the need to end this unilateral measure.

The roaming Timor Leste-Cuba inauguration also involved local officials from communications, social and state-run institutions, relatives of Timorans studying in Cuba and Cuban collaborators. (plenglish)

When words are not enough


TROUBLE appears to be brewing in East Timor again as security forces step up roadblocks and increase security around government buildings

Fretilin, the largest political party, is organising an anti-Government protest march across the country, prompting threats by the Prime Minister, Xanana Gusmao, to jail participants

But on the streets of Dili, the capital, children do not know or care about the bickering and plotting by the country's political elite who have been antagonists for decades.

Twenty-one vulnerable teenagers and young people were given disposable cameras to capture their lives.

Their images are remarkable.

A girl cuddles her toy bear; three naked children sit above a waterhole; a bride adjusts her husband's tie; a cockatoo rests on a perch; children play beachfront soccer; youths tender goats; children frolic in the surf.

One of the youths, Remegito da Costa, wants to become a full-time photographer. "The pictures are my eyes, mouth, ears and feelings," he says.

Rose Magno, a freelance photographer who supervised the project for the non-government organisation Ba Futuru ("For the Future") said it was often difficult and inadequate for young people to express their traumatic experiences through words.

"Giving them an opportunity for creative outlet through the camera lens and visual narrative enables them to transform their negative feelings into seeing positive changes in their personal development and environment," Ms Magno said.

"These children and youth, most of whom have never taken a picture before, ventured out and brought back compelling interpretations on themes such as love, identity, community, peace, conflict transformation and hopes and dreams for their futures." (smh.com.au)

Fancy handwork... a photograph from the exhibition showing young people in a carefree moment at the beach.

DEMI MERAH PUTIH

Sosok yang satu ini memang unik. Kecintaannya kepada Negara Republik Indonesia tidak bisa diragukan lagi. Betapa tidak, demi membela Indonesia dan merah putih ia tidak hanya rela dijebloskan ke penjara Cipinang, Jakarta. Pria asal Timor Timur itu juga harus berpisah dengan anak dan istrinya yang memilih menjadi warga Negara Timor Leste ketika peristiwa jajak pendapat lalu.
Nama Eurico Guterres mulai dikenal ketika terjadi peristiwa pasca jajak pendapat Timor Timur pada 1999 lalu. Kala itu warga Timor Timur terpecah menjadi dua. Mereka dihadapkan pada dua pilihan, antara menjadi warga Negara Timor Timur atau bergabung dengan Republik Indonesia. Konflik horisontal pun tidak terelakan lagi. Maka terjadilah peristiwa kerusuhan yang sangat memalukan di mata dunia internasional. Menurut data dari berbagai sumber, kala itu ratusan nyawa melayang dan ribuan warga kehilangan tempat tinggal.


Dunia internasional, terutama Amerika Serikat dan Australia menekan Indonesia melalui PBB untuk mengusut tuntas dalang pelaku kerusuhan itu. Bahkan negara adidaya itu mengancam akan membawa ke mahkamah internasional mereka yang terlibat kasus pelanggaran hak asasi manusia itu. Indonesia yang serba salah, akhirnya menjadikan Eurico Guterres, yang kala itu menyandang gelar Wakil Penglima pejuang pro Integrasi sebagai tersangka kerusuhan pasca jajak pendapat itu.


Banyak kalangan menilai, bahwa pemuda gondrong kelahiran Uatolari, Timor Timur, 4 Juli 1969 itu dikorbankan demi tekanan dunia internasional. Di tengah pro dan kontra waktu itu, Eurico Guterres dengan lantang dan jantan menyatakan siap dihadapkan ke pengadilan jika bersalah. Dan yang membuat banyak kalangan kagum adalah, sikap Guterres yang datang sendiri ke pihak berwajib. Tidak berbelit-belit, apalagi bersembunyi dan mengaku sakit ketika menjadi tersangka kasus korupsi seperti para tersangka yang akan ditangkap KPK baru-baru ini.


Melalui sidang pengadilan, Eurico Guterres akhirnya diganjar hukuman 10 tahun penjara. Dan ia manjalani hukuman itu di penjara Cipinang Jakarta hanya dua tahun. Guterres berhasil mengajukan Peninjauan Kembali ke Mahkamah Agung, dan dalam prosesnya ditemukan bukti baru yang meringankan. Walau kini ia telah bebas, Guterres masih tidak mengerti mengapa ia sampai dijebloskan ke dalam penjara. Menurutnya, ia yang memihak negara yang dicintainya justru dijebloskan ke penjara. “Seandainya waktu itu saya memilih bergabung dengan Timtim mungkin saya sudah menjadi menteri” ujarnya sambil menerawang.


Pasca menjalani hukuman, Eurico Guterres kini mengisi kehidupannya dengan kuliah hukum di LP Cipinang yang diselenggarakan Universitas Bung Karno. Ia memilih kuliah hukum selain mengaku tidak mengerti hukum di Indonesia, juga karena cita-citanya yang ingin menjadi pengacara. Selain itu, Guterres yang kini memilih tinggal di Kupang, Nusa Tenggara Timur juga terjun ke dunia politik. Ia kini bersiap-siap menjadi calon legislatif dari Partai Amanat Nasional. Salah satu perjuangannya adalah memperjuangkan pengungsi Timor Timur yang hingga kini masih banyak yang telantar pasca peristiwa jajak pendapat dulu. (KickAndy)


http://www.metrotvnews.com/