Papal Visit |
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What is affected |
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Type of violation |
Forced eviction Demolition/destruction |
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Date | 30 August 2024 | ||||||||||||
Region | A [ Asia ] | ||||||||||||
Country | East Timor | ||||||||||||
Location | Tasitolu, outside Dili | ||||||||||||
Affected persons |
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Proposed solution | |||||||||||||
Details |
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Development | |||||||||||||
Forced eviction | |||||||||||||
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Demolition/destruction | |||||||||||||
Land losses | |||||||||||||
- Land area (square meters) |
230000 | ||||||||||||
- Total value | |||||||||||||
Housing losses | |||||||||||||
- Number of homes | 1485 | ||||||||||||
- Total value € | |||||||||||||
Duty holder(s) /responsible party(ies) |
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Brief narrative |
Niniek Karmini, AP 9 September 2024
Activists criticize high cost of Pope Francis’ visit to East Timor, one of the poorest nations
DILI, East Timor (AP) — East Timor pulled out all stops for Pope Francis’ historic visit to one of the world’s youngest and poorest countries to the tune of $12 million, drawing rebuke from activists and human rights organizations in a nation where almost half the population lives in poverty.
The cost for the two-day visit starting Monday was approved by the government through the Council of Ministers in February, including $1 million to build an altar for a papal Mass.
Walls were still being dabbed with fresh paint and banners and billboards filled the streets of the seaside capital, Dili, to welcome the pontiff, who earlier visited Indonesia and Papua New Guinea.
About 42% of East Timor’s population of 1.3 million live below the poverty line, according to the U.N. Development Program. Unemployment is high, job opportunities in the formal sector are generally limited and most people are subsistence farmers with no steady income.
The country’s budget for 2023 was $3.16 billion. The government had earmarked only $4.7 million to increase food production, said Marino Fereira, a researcher at Timor Leste Institute for Development Monitoring and Analysis. He said the $12 million expense for the papal visit “was exaggerating.”
The non-governmental agency, known locally as Lao Hamutuk, has submitted several papers to the government and parliament asking to cut expenditures on ceremonies and prioritize issues that affect people, Fereira said.
“The governments have ignored the poor in the country,” he said.
East Timor has recently faced challenges of high inflation and weather changes that have reduced cereal production, pushing some 364,000 people, or 27% of the population, to experience acute food insecurity from May to September, according to the U.N.’s Food and Agricultural Organization.
East Timor’s Minister of State Administration Tomas Cabral, who heads the national organizing committee for the pope’s visit, said the $12 million was excessive but it was also being used for infrastructure development, such as road constructions, renovating churches and other public facilities.
“Don’t compare our country with neighboring nations that have proper facilities and infrastructure to host international events or high-ranking state guests,“ Cabral said. ”Here, we have to build it from the scratch.”
Cabral said that about $1.2 million has been allocated for transportation and logistics of people from across the country to welcome the pontiff and attend his Mass on Tuesday.
East Timor views the visit as a prime opportunity to put the world’s spotlight on the small nation with a turbulent path to independence. It’s the youngest country in Asia where 97% of the population identify as Catholic.
“The pope’s visit is the biggest, the best marketing anyone can aspire to promote the country, to put the country on the tourist map,” East Timor’s President Jose Ramos-Horta said in an interview with The Associated Press last week.
The highlight of Francis’ visit will be a Eucharistic celebration on Tuesday where more than 300,000 faithful are expected, including several thousands living from near the border of Indonesia’s West Timor, the western part of the island of Timor.
The papal Mass in Tasitolu, an open field on the coast some 8 kilometers (nearly 5 miles) from downtown Dili, is also causing displeasure. The government has bulldozed about 185 families and confiscated 23 hectares (57 acres) of land for the event. Rights groups accuse the government of not offering any alternatives to poor families.
“The lives of those families are uncertain at the moment, they don’t know where to go as they are still there waiting for compensation,” said Pedrito Vieira, coordinator of the Land Network, a coalition of NGOs advocating land rights. “Sudden eviction will only give them uncertainty to plan their life.”
Cabral said those were settlers and not traditional landowners who were squatting on state land. He said they were given advance notices and time to remove their structures and move out.
“There have been those who have politicized the situation there so that the illegal settlers have refused to move for unclear reasons,” Cabral said.
Several violent crackdowns on street vendors ostensibly to ensure order in Dili ahead of Francis’ trip also drew outcry among rights activists.
Social media were flooded with angry comments after footage showed dozens of alleged plainclothes police officers with sticks, crowbars and spears destroying vendor stands and goods in one of the paths where the pope’s entourage will pass.
Suzana Cardoso, a veteran journalist who recorded the incident last week in Dili’s Fatuhada neighborhood, told The Associated Press that she received threats in an attempt to stop her from sharing the video.
“I have a moral obligation as a journalist to uphold justice for those weak and poor,” said Cardoso, who also covered the country’s darkest days when Indonesia responded to East Timor’s U.N.-backed vote seeking independence 25 years ago with a scorched-earth campaign that shocked the world. About 1,500 people were killed, more than 300,000 were displaced and over 80% of East Timor’s infrastructure was destroyed.
Photo: Photo: Bulldozers at work in Tasitolu. Source: Amito Araújo/BBC.
Timor-Leste: Mass Eviction, Homes Bulldozed for Pope’s Visit
Shweta Sharma, The Independent
30 August 2024 BBC News
Pope Francis’s East Timor visit marred by criticism over high cost and church abuse scandals One of world’s poorest nations spending over £9m on papal visit Homes bulldozed in Timor-Leste ahead of Pope visit
Families’ homes are being demolished near Dili, the capital of Timor-Leste, in the area where Pope Francis will celebrate mass next month.
Nearly 90 people have been told by the government that they must find somewhere new to live before he arrives, according to evicted residents who spoke to the BBC.
The Timor-Leste government denies the evictions are connected to the Pope’s visit, insisting that the residents are living there illegally.
Authorities have spent around $18m (£13.6m) on the pontiff’s three-day visit, which begins on 9 September.
“We are very sad, Zerita Correia, a local resident, told BBC News.
They even demolished our belongings inside the house. Now we have to rent nearby because my children are still in school in this area,” she added.
A spokesman for the residents said that 11 families will have been moved before Pope Francis arrives in Timor-Leste. The government has paid them between $7,000 and $10,000 for their homes.
The amount is not enough for each household to meet its needs, said Venancio Ximenes, speaking to the BBC.
The next phase of evictions will come after Pope Francis leaves and that will involve more than 1,300 families, he added.
The homes are located in Tasitolu, a wetland area just outside of Dili. Over the past decade, hundreds of people moved there from rural parts of the country.
Many came looking for work in the capital and built basic homes in the area. The government says they are squatting and have no right to live on the land.
The government has decided to clear the area
Speaking to the BBC, a government minister said that residents were made aware of plans to clear the area in September 2023.
It is time for the state to take back its property, said Germano Santa Brites Dias, Secretary of State for Toponymy and Urban Organisation.
Last year, we spoke heart-to-heart with the community and now they must leave and go back to their villages, he added.
An estimated 700,000 people are expected to attend Pope Francis’ open-air mass in Tasitolu, where an area of 23 hectares - equivalent to about 40 football pitches - is being prepared.
Aside from the government’s controversial plans to evict residents, critics have also questioned the decision to spend such large amounts of money on the visit - including $1m on a brand new altar for Pope Francis.
According to the UN, nearly half of the population of Timor Leste currently lives below the national poverty line.
The annual budget to increase food production in the country is only about $4.7m,” said Mariano Fereira, a researcher at the Timor-Leste Institute for Development Monitoring and Analysis, speaking to UCA News.
All this spending can hardly do any good to the availability of food, he added.
Next month will mark the first papal trip to Timor-Leste since Pope John Paul II visited in 1989, when the country was still under Indonesian occupation.
Timor-Leste, formerly known as East Timor, has a population of 1.3m - the vast majority of whom identify as Catholic.
When Indonesia invaded the former Portuguese colony in 1975, only around 20% of East Timorese people were Catholic. That figure now stands at 97%.
Enthusiasm for the pontiff’s upcoming visit is huge, but the Pope is being urged by campaigners to address a recent abuse scandal that tarnished the Church in the country.
In 2022, the Vatican acknowledged that the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Timorese independence hero Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo had sexually abused young boys.
A Vatican spokesman said the church had been aware of the case in 2019 and had imposed disciplinary measures in 2020, including restrictions on Belo’s movements and a ban on voluntary contact with minors.
It is unclear whether Pope Francis will apologise for the scandal, meet with victims or even whether Bishop Belo will appear alongside him in Dili.
Additional reporting by Amito Araújo in Dili
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Costs | € 0 | ||||||||||||