1 Apr 2009

Loro Horta: The curse of commodities

Loro Horta


Oil-fuelled growth with child prostitution in Timor-Leste.

26 - 03 - 2009

The small south-east Asian nation of East Timor, also known as Timor-Leste, is no stranger to suffering and dashed hopes. This is a rich land whose people are poor - desperately poor. After 24 years of brutal occupation by its large neighbour Indonesia, independence brought with it many hopes and dreams. The island's substantial mineral wealth further increased these expectations.

In the past two years the country has received an average of $1.1 billion a year in oil and gas revenues. A substantial amount if one takes into account its tiny population of just one million.

However, the long-suffering people have seen very little of this wealth come their way. Unemployment remains high, reaching 80 percent in the capital city, and the countryside left in a state of abandonment. While poverty has been part of daily life for the majority, it now exists side by side with small pockets of scandalous affluence resulting from the oil bonanza.

While most people live on less than a dollar a day, the 350 foreign advisors hired by the Timorese government have salaries as high as $20,000 a month, while government officials drive Lexus, Mercedes and luxury four-by-four vehicles along the potholed streets of Dili. Power cuts are frequent, with a dozen cuts a day a common occurrence.

These pockets of wealth in the middle of extreme poverty are fast breeding prostitution and drug addiction. 

Near schools men wait in their cars for young girls to approach them. A young school girl relates her story, "we approach them and tell them we need a new pair of shoes to go to a party. We go with them and then do it and get our shoes". Girls are reported to have sold their bodies for as little as $5. In the countryside local journalists have reported various cases of girls as young as 10 prostituting themselves for $1.

As described by a local reporter: "In the districts the parents receive the money and sit on their veranda while their daughters are used inside their own house. This is how bad poverty is in our country."

Traffic in young girls is becoming a serious problem. A group of 18 young girls were rescued from foreign traffickers near the border with Indonesia early this year. In a devotedly Catholic country the issue of prostitution is often ignored. Many of the women are being abused and raped by the police. Fear of reporting and social hypocrisy aggravates the problem even further.

The condition of women in Timor is, by any measure, dreadful. The country has one of the highest rates of violence against women in the world with 70 percent of the country's prison population made up of individuals convicted of rape and domestic violence.

The fact that many prominent figures in society are rumoured to visit prostitutes makes the issue even harder to address. There are persistent rumours of high-ranking government officials frequenting brothels that host young Timorese girls in addition to Indonesian, Thai, Chinese and Philippino prostitutes. A Timorese policemen from the elite CSP unit charged with VIP protection tells me with a naughty smile:

"I went to pick up Chinese girls many times for a mao bot (big brother)"
How big I ask him. A minister? "Bot diak" "bigger" he replies.

The nocturnal habits of the Timorese leadership further undermine any attempt at helping the daughters of Timor, who, after 24 years of rape and humiliation under the Indonesian military, now see their own leaders and self-proclaimed liberators turn their backs on them. Many women are being lost while their leaders pretend to be rich.

The country is also attracting a growing number of foreign sex workers brought into the country by Chinese and south-east Asian crime syndicates. According to The Alola Foundation, an NGO headed by Prime Minister Gusmao's Australian wife, more than 200 foreign sex workers are believed to be in Timor - many against their will. Alola is one of the very few organisations that has paid any attention to the plight of the many Timorese and foreign girls.

As I walked out of a Dili night club I saw a young girl not more than eight years old holding her little brother, who was about four, by the hand. I asked them what they are doing here at three o'clock in the morning, "You should be at home", I say. She says "need money to buy food". I press them further, after a few more questions the girl, with innocence still in her eyes, tells me. "My older brother sends me, he is at the end of the road, if I don't get money he beats me". I give her $5 and walk away still wondering if I did the right thing. Children don't belong on the street and certainly not in an oil-rich nation.

http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/email/timor-leste-tales-of-growth

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

i think we really need the person likes you, who always put the importance and care about our people's lives and dignity, so here i can say that you are not far from your father's vission and mission, or we can say that you are the second RAMOS HORTA.

don't worry, i will always behind you and give you support to do the right things to the our people's lives....

VIVA LORO...

Anonymous said...

think we really need the person likes you, who always put the importance and care about our people's lives and dignity, so here i can say that you are not far from your father's vission and mission, or we can say that you are the second RAMOS HORTA.

don't worry, i will always behind you and give you support to do the right things to the our people's lives....

VIVA LORO...

ur worst nightmare said...

ya bener tuh .. muka 2 kaya dia ini ... pertama jilat2 kaki mari alkatiri .. truss sekarang liat bapanya jadi presiden ... mulai deh dasar muka dua lo KONTOL kayak loe tuh gak tau menau ttg timor leste 24 tahun d mana .. injak timor pun gak ... sekarang mau sok2 bantu .. dasar babi

Anonymous said...

Biarpun dia baru datang tapi kalau kemauan dan ambisinya untuk membangun dan prihatin atas kehidupan sesamanya, kenapa tidak?!, memangnya sesama kita yg didalam pemerintahan sekarang semuanya orang2 yg dulunya menginginkan kemerdekaan atau....?!, jangan berpikiran seperti orang yg lagi mabuk, orang2 yg berpikiran seperti anda memang contoh2 orang yg selalu menginginkan negara ini dalam keadaan yg tidak pasti, dan kalau anda tidak menerima apa yg aku ucapkan ini, anda juga bisa dikategorikan sebagai orang bodoh!!!

Berubalah anda, jangan selalu berpikiran dan berkemauan yg bukan2...

Anonymous said...

Dear Loro,there have been three commentators above whose praised you because of your article. I maybe also like to think so however unfortunately I am not. Dear Loro you are most fortuna because you born from a pair parents who are now working at government high level. all your concern on Timor-Leste may directly inform to your parents and I belive that it can be solved by them without having time to write article like this.


Lero Uatumissa

Anonymous said...

Biasa orang-orang dari luar, pertama begitu sudah dapat yang mereka incar mulai sepak kite-kite ini.biasalah