By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | April
10, 2018
DILI, East Timor — East Timor's
political parties kicked off a month of campaigning Tuesday for new
parliamentary elections due in May with promises to boost development in one of
Asia's poorest nations.
It will be the second
parliamentary election in less than a year for East Timor's fledgling
democracy. A minority government formed after elections last July and led by
the Fretilin party collapsed in January after its policy program and budget
were defeated in parliament.
Independence hero Xanana Gusmao,
who is leading an alliance of three opposition parties including his National
Congress for Timorese Reconstruction, urged East Timorese to elect the grouping
to "strengthen and improve our country in order to bring development to
free people from poverty."
Fretilin Secretary-General Mari
Alkatiri also vowed development by creating more special economic zones.
"We promise to free society
from poverty," he told a crowd in Manatuto district.
East Timor, a former Portuguese
colony, was occupied by Indonesia for a quarter century. It gained independence
after a U.N.-sponsored referendum in 1999 but reprisals by the Indonesian
military devastated the East Timorese half of the island of Timor.
Today, the country of 1.3 million
people still faces grim poverty. Leaders have focused on big-ticket infrastructure
projects to develop the economy, funding them from a dwindling supply of former
oil riches, but progress is slow.
Parliamentary and presidential
elections held last year were the first without U.N. supervision since
peacekeepers left in 2012.
The campaigning that started
Tuesday ends on May 10 and voting is to take place on May 12.
Gusmao received a boost to his
popularity after leading negotiations that settled the sea border between East
Timor and Australia and provisionally agreed on formulas for division of oil
and gas riches beneath the sea bed.
Thousands of East Timorese lined
the road to the capital's international airport in early March to cheer a
returning Gusmao after the deal was signed at the U.N.
New York Times | 09 April
2018
**Exclusive collaboration for
Timor Agora: Mark
Lane
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