The young country’s amazing marine life has
created hope that visitors could uplift its urgently poor economy. But preservation concerns
remain.
COM, East Timor — On a rainy
spring morning, Fizzy Moslim strapped on her weathered-chrome diving tank and
slipped into the warm water.
Few visitors make it out to the
sleepy fishing village of Com, a backbreaking seven-hour drive from the
capital, and usually no one except the locals ever dives into its waters.
Below she found an underwater
metropolis. Sea turtles swam beside hundreds of reef fish, feeding on the rich
coral below. Two young dugong, a manatee-like sea mammal, sped away, and a
blacktip reef shark swam along the ocean floor.
“This isn’t even nearly the best
of what I’ve seen,” said Ms. Moslim, an instructor for Compass Diving tours, as
she came up from the depths.
In March, Ms. Moslim and a team
of divers and conservationists set out on a mission to chart these sea
sanctuaries in hopes of bringing in a new kind of species here: tourists.
“If these corals will stay
strong, the people around them will need the money to keep them safe,” said
Trudiann Dale, the East Timor country director for Conservation International.
“Eco-tourism, if done right, could provide that.”
The tiny country of East Timor is
surrounded by some of the most magnificent and untouched marine life in the
world. Off the island of Atauro alone, researchers have discovered 253 reef
fish species, surpassing the world record.
But 16 years after gaining its
independence after decades of bloody occupation, East Timor remains the poorest
country in Southeast Asia. As politicians struggle to find new economic streams
like oil pumping and coffee exports, none have proved powerful enough to raise
the country out of poverty.
The question for conservationists
and government officials is clear: How can the country both develop tourism and
keep its pristine beauty?
“It’s a hard thing,” said Manuel
Mendes, head of the Department of Protected Areas and National Parks for East
Timor, noting his country’s susceptibility to climate change and drought. “We
know that if we just leave it all alone, it will soon be gone.”
Around the world, coral is being
wiped out. According to the conservation group W.W.F., almost a
quarter
of coral reefs worldwide are damaged beyond repair. The rest are under
threat from rising sea temperatures, harmful fishing practices and vicious
tourism.
We don’t want to end up like
Bali,” said Ms. Dale, referring to the nearby tourist center’s “garbage
emergency” last year, when nearly 100 tons of garbage washed up on the island’s
beaches.
Since declaring independence in
2002, after suffering years of harsh occupation by the Indonesian military,
East Timor has been struggling to find its feet.
“During the Indonesian time,
soldiers would throw grenades in the reef to fish,” said Zanuari Marteans, a
60-year-old fisherman from Atauro Island. “We hid in the villages and watched
them destroy. We could do nothing.”
In the years after independence,
the country had one of the highest fertility rates in the region, with almost
seven births per mother. Sixteen years later, most of the population is younger
than 25, with unemployment on the rise.
Since 2004, almost 80 percent of
East Timor’s gross domestic product has come from the oil field in the Timor
Sea, where reserves are projected to run dry by 2023. In March, the ex-rebel
leader and independence hero Xanana Gusmão led negotiations with Australia,
expanding East Timor’s sea border and giving hopes for an extended deal worth
billions more. But discussions on where the oil will be pumped continue, and
East Timor is struggling to find jobs for the growing population.
The reef development here is no
accident. For generations, local fishermen have safeguarded their supplies of
fish by creating marine protected areas. Communities would agree on the
boundaries, mark them off and ban fishing there: no nets being dragged around,
no rumbling boat motors. In these areas, fish and coral develop untouched, so
future generations have a chance to fish them.
In 2016, the East Timorese
government started putting these practices into law. It created a budget and started
paying rangers to help out. But the budget is minuscule and barely covers the
enforcers’ salaries.
Accordingly, much of the
day-to-day work around the reefs has remained with the fishing communities.
Inside a concrete shack to
protect from the hot midday sun, Ms. Dale gathered a group of local fishermen
and hotel owners together with Compass Diving, based in Dili, to share ideas
for eco-tourism.
Their pristine reef, she
explained, could bring in divers from around the world who would pay good money
to explore them. The fishermen sat smoking cigarettes with their arms guardedly
crossed.
“We don’t know where to start,”
said Lucas Monteioro, 32, a jobless resident of Com. “The community is
interested in tourism and making new money, but people here only have the sea.”
The truth is that tourism has
remained starkly low, with the Asia Foundation estimating that only about 5,000
tourists a year make it to East Timor. Roads are rocky and inaccessible, and
flights to get in the country are sparse and expensive.
Given that, eco-tourism is still
not a realistic priority for governmental leaders, though there is hope it will
improve.
In parts of the country,
big-money hotels have already started contracting developments. Government
proposals have included turning East Timor into a Macau-like tax haven and
casino destination.
But for the fishermen here, the
weight of the preservation will remain a central part of their lives.
“These fish are our life, and the
reef is their house,” said Mr. Marteans, sitting up from an afternoon nap in
the warm sand and getting ready for an evening fishing run. “If someone has no
house, how can they live?”
Correction: April 10, 2018
An earlier version of this
article referred imprecisely to the tank used by Fizzy Moslim, a diving
instructor. It was a scuba tank, or diving tank — not an oxygen tank. Such
tanks typically contain compressed air, not solely oxygen.
**Exclusive collaboration for Timor Agora: Mark Lane