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19 May 2022
UN Messages on Presidential Inauguration and Restoration of Independence Commemoration
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19 May 2022
O SECRETÁRIO-GERAL MENSAGEM VÍDEO POR OCASIÃO DO 20º ANIVERSÁRIO DA INDEPENDÊNCIA DE TIMOR-LESTE E DA TOMADA DE POSSE DO PRESIDENTE ELEITO RAMOS-HORTA
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17 May 2022
UN RESIDENT COORDINATOR AND COUNTRY TEAM WISH TIMOR-LESTE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF RESTORATION OF INDEPENDENCE
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The Sustainable Development Goals in Timor-Leste
The Sustainable Development Goals are a global call to action to end poverty, protect the earth’s environment and climate, and ensure that people everywhere can enjoy peace and prosperity. These are the goals the UN is working on in Timor-Leste:
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02 November 2021
Climate summit: Behind the scenes at COP26
Thousands of scientists, leaders, delegates and journalists from all over the world have converged on Glasgow for the next two weeks for COP26, the UN climate summit.
Their discussions on climate change and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions will take place behind closed doors in Glasgow's SEC Centre.
The BBC's Science Editor David Shukman went to take a look.
More on the climate summit:
The COP26 global climate summit in Glasgow in November is seen as crucial if climate change is to be brought under control. Almost 200 countries are being asked for their plans to cut emissions, and it could lead to major changes to our everyday lives.
Why the COP26 climate summit is important
Simple guide to climate change
What will climate change look like for you?
Will the UK meet its climate targets?
How extreme weather is linked to climate change
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29 October 2021
The Glasgow Climate Test
The climate crisis is a code red for humanity.
World leaders will soon be put to the test at the UN Climate Conference — known as COP26 — in Glasgow.
Their actions — or inactions — will show their seriousness about addressing this planetary emergency.
The warning signs are hard to miss: temperatures everywhere are reaching new highs; biodiversity is reaching new lows; oceans are warming, acidifying and choking with plastic waste. Increasing temperatures will make vast stretches of our planet dead zones for humanity by century’s end.
And the respected medical journal The Lancet just described climate change as the “defining narrative of human health” in the years to come — a crisis defined by widespread hunger, respiratory illness, deadly disasters and infectious disease outbreaks that could be even worse than COVID-19.
Despite these alarm bells ringing at fever pitch, we see new evidence in the latest UN reports that governments’ actions so far simply do not add up to what is so desperately needed.
Recent new announcements for climate action are welcome and critical — but even so, our world is on track for calamitous global temperature rises well above 2 degrees Celsius.
This is a far cry from the 1.5 degree Celsius target to which the world agreed under the Paris Agreement – a target that science tells us is the only sustainable pathway for our world.
This target is entirely achievable.
If we can reduce global emissions by 45 per cent compared to 2010 levels this decade.
If we can achieve global net-zero by 2050.
And if world leaders arrive in Glasgow with bold, ambitious and verifiable 2030 targets, and new, concrete policies to reverse this disaster.
G20 leaders — in particular — need to deliver.
The time has passed for diplomatic niceties.
If governments — especially G20 governments — do not stand up and lead this effort, we are headed for terrible human suffering.
But all countries need to realize that the old, carbon-burning model of development is a death sentence for their economies and our planet.
We need decarbonization now, across every sector in every country. We need to shift subsidies from fossil fuels to renewable energy, and tax pollution, not people. We need to put a price on carbon, and channel that back towards resilient infrastructures and jobs.
And we need to phase-out coal — by 2030 in OECD countries and 2040 in all others. Increasing numbers of governments have pledged to stop financing coal — and private finance needs to do the same, urgently.
People rightly expect their governments to lead. But we all have a responsibility to safeguard our collective future.
Businesses need to reduce their climate impact, and fully and credibly align their operations and financial flows to a net-zero future. No more excuses; no more greenwashing.
Investors — public and private alike — must do the same. They should join front runners like the net-zero asset owners alliance, and the UN’s own pension fund, which met its 2021 carbon reduction investment objectives ahead of time and above its target, with a 32 per cent reduction this year.
Individuals in every society need to make better, more responsible choices in what they eat, how they travel, and what they buy.
And young people — and climate activists — need to keep doing what they’re doing: demanding action from their leaders and keeping them accountable.
Throughout, we need global solidarity to help all countries make this shift. Developing countries are grappling with debt and liquidity crises. They need support.
Public and multilateral development banks must significantly increase their climate portfolios and intensify their efforts to help countries transition to net-zero, resilient economies. The developed world must urgently meet its commitment of at least $100 billion in annual climate finance for developing countries.
Donors and multilateral development banks to allocate at least half their climate finance towards adaptation and resilience.
The United Nations was founded 76 years ago to build consensus for action against the greatest threats facing humanity. But rarely have we faced a crisis like this one – a truly existential crisis that — if not addressed — threatens not only us, but future generations.
There is one path forward. A 1.5 degree future is the only viable future for humanity.
Leaders must get on with the job in Glasgow, before it’s too late.
António Guterres is Secretary-General of the United Nations
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11 October 2021
UNFPA supported midwives' training in Timor-Leste successful despite COVID-19 hiccups
-- successfully completed a 26-day comprehensive training on Emergency Obstetric and Newborn Care (EmONC) held at the National Hospital in Dili, Timor-Leste end of September.
The hands-on training, that started on February 17, was suspended indefinitely due to confirmed cases of COVID-19 among 10 participants and enforced public health protocols in Timor-Leste to control the spread of the pandemic in the South East Asian nation.
The course, facilitated by UNFPA, WHO, UNICEF, Australian Government through Project for Human Development (PHD), and HAI in partnership with Ministry of Health, Timor-Leste, resumed in September after the government of Timor-Leste eased restrictions on holding public meetings.
“I was one of those who tested positive in the middle of the training. We had just finished 18 days and the course had to be suspended following orders from health authorities,” said Filipa de Fatima de Jesus, a midwife from Lacluta Community Health Centre in Viqueque Municipality.
“I would like to recommend that more midwives from the municipalities be afforded the opportunity to attend such trainings to appropriately respond to life threatening conditions and other complications that may occur during childbirth,” added Filipa.
The comprehensive training is designed to improve the ability of midwives and doctors to identify mothers at risk and provide good management and their transfer to appropriate health facilities as a way of reducing mortality rates among newborn babies and mothers.
The training aims to improve skills in pregnancy-related care and knowledge to recognise and manage obstetric complications, enhance decision making and communication skills of health care service providers focusing on midwives and doctors.
Timor-Leste currently has one of the highest infant mortality rates and maternal mortality ratios in South East Asia.
The island nation has an infant mortality rate of 43.9 deaths per 1,000 live births and a maternal mortality ratio of 142 deaths per 100,000 live births.
Dr. Sidonio Amaral, a medical doctor from Cailaco Community Health Centre in Maliana, Bobonaro Municipality noted that the knowledge he received during the training enhanced his capacity to serve his community better.
“I supported and attended to three complicated cases during delivery after the course was stopped due to COVID-19, besides attending to numerous normal deliveries whenever I was needed. I successfully attended two of those cases and referred one to Bobonaro Referral Hospital.
“Because I was not fully trained, on the use of vacuum extraction [a type of assisted delivery used to remove a baby from the birth canal] during delivery, I was not confident enough to attend to the third case whose mother had previously undergone a cesarean operation.
“After successfully finishing this course, I am confident about identifying and attending to mothers with complications during delivery,” said Dr. Sidonio.
Since 2018, UNFPA in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and other partners has provided EmONC training to over 118 participants in ten batches with each batch of trainees having between 10 to 13 participants.
Such trainings can help increase quality of health care services, bring services close to newborn babies and mothers particularly among hard-to-reach communities while contributing to reduction in the number of deaths at birth.
“Before the training we referred pregnant mothers with complications to specialists but this training [EmONC] has equipped us with more knowledge to attend to pregnant mothers with complications.
“I am now able to identify any complications and respond appropriately,” said Estela Amaral, a midwife at Maliana Referral Hospital in Bobonaro Municipality.
For more information contact:
Suleiman Okoth
Communications and Programme Support Specialist
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Timor-Leste UN House, Caicoli Street
Dili, Timor-Leste Mobile: +670 75169796
WhatsApp: +254 780534026 Email; okoth@unfpa.org
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Timor-Leste UN House, Caicoli Street
Dili, Timor-Leste Mobile: +670 75169796
WhatsApp: +254 780534026 Email; okoth@unfpa.org
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30 September 2021
Servisu Futuru no ‘nova normal’
No ninia ‘nova normal’ ba forsa-de-traballu, kondisaun sira servisu nian, no merkadu traballu. Ne’e iha implikasaun boot ba realizasaun Objetivus Dezenvolvimentu Sustentável.
Sub-Sekretáriu Jerál ONU ba Asuntus Ekonómiku no Sosiál, Liu Zhenmin, dala barak dehan katak ‘de faktu, servisu futuru mak mundu nia futuru’, ha’u hanoin fali ida-ne’e bainhira semana kotuk ha’u partisipa tiha iha webinar ida ne’ebé riku, fasinante no kle’an ne’ebé organiza tiha husi UNDESA no UNDP ne’ebé halibur hamutuk kolega sira husi família ONU inklui ILO no sira seluk hodi diskute Servisu Futuru/ FutureofWork nian.
Enkontru ne’e esplora tiha mekanizmu barak ne’ebé pandemia COVID-19 afeta tiha ona servisu iha nasaun oioin no setór ekonómiku sira iha mundu tomak. Ita rona ona kona-ba oinsá mak traballadór sira tokon ba tokon enfrenta nivel inseguransa aas ba servisu, tanba empreza barak la opera (taka) tiha ona, hodi hamosu dezorganizasaun ba merkadu no fatór sira seluk. Ita aprende ona kona-ba oinsá ‘ekonomia jigantesku’ ne’ebé moris tiha no agora halo parte importante ida ba ema sira-nia meius ba buka moris (subsisténsia), espesialmente hirak-ne’ebé servisu iha indústria sira determinadu. Ita rona ema dehan katak, ida-ne’e kria tiha ona oportunidade foun ba servisu (no dala barak ho maneira ne’ebé fleksível liu), maibé ba sira seluk, ne’e fó tiha impaktu ba sira-nia kapasidade hodi goza ‘traballu dignu’, estabilidade no protesaun ne’ebé efikás iha servisu-fatin.
Partisipante sira observa tiha katak la hanesan ona decade sira kotuk, agora ne’e dusar uitoan ba ema individuál sira atu servisu ba kompañia ida ka korporasaun ida durante sira-nia vida profisionál tomak. Ema barak liu mak sempre muda servisus/ empregu no kapasidade hodi adapta no aplika ema ida ninia abilidade ho maneira ne’ebé fleksível sai tiha ona parte ida ne’ebé presiza ba ‘nova normal’.
Karaterístika markante ida husi ‘nova normal’ iha tiha ona maneira ida ne’ebé servisu-fatin sira iha mundu tomak adota no insentiva tiha ‘traballu remotu’. Ida-ne’e hamosu tiha ona iha benefísiu balu ba traballadór sira (n.e., hamenus tempu dezlokamentu, permite ema atu iha liu fleksibilidade bainhira sira servisu no iha fatin balu, loke oportunudade servisu foun iha liur sidade boot sira-nian nst.). Maibé ne’e mós espoin ona dezafius ne’ebé bele konsidera (inklui nivel kreximentu ba ‘izolamentu servisu-fatin’, estrese mentál no difikuldades hodi proteje direitus traballadór sira-nian). Partisipante sira observa tiha oinsá iha fatin balu, pandemia ne’e afeta tiha ona ema ne’ebé servisu iha profisaun kuidadu saúde nian no destaka tiha importánsia ba polítika protesaun sosiál ne’ebé efikás. Ba ema grupu balu ne’ebé vulnerável liu, inklui hirak-ne’ebé dezempregadu, ‘traballadór la kualifikadu’, hirak-ne’ebé ho moras tempu naruk ona, ema ne’ebé servisu iha setór informál sira, idozu no ema ho defisiénsia sira, natureza servisu bele muda, dala barak asentua no hakle’an dezigualdade no vulnerabilidade sira. Partisipante sira mós asentua oinsá abilidade dijitál sai tiha rekizitu integrál ida iha tipu servisu/ empregu barak. Ami diskute oinsá automasaun no IA (intelijénsia artifisiál) nu’udar impaktu iha setór oioin, inklui husi oferesimentu oportunidade sira ‘ekonomia ba servisu’ iha indústria/ setór sira determinadu (n.e. indústria manufatureira balu) maibé mós dezloka tipu empregu tradisionál determinadu no indústria sira, inklui iha servisu agríkula no sazonál iha agrikultura.
Webinar ne’e mós konsentra ba impaktu sira krize klimátika no sustentabilidade ambientál iha normas servisu nian. Partisipante sira observa tiha impaktu imediatu barak, no mós mudansas ne’ebé mosu no potensiál ne’ebé sei sai to’o evidente liu iha futuru ba emprezas, empregadór no empregadu sira tanba mundu esforsa hodi avansa ba diresaun netralidade kabonu ida boot liu.
Aprezentadór sira enfatiza tiha katak impaktu husi mudansas iha leten la’ós uniformemente afeta ba indústria sira, setór, ekonómiku, país no individuál sira. Mudansas oioin akontese depende ba kontekstu diferente ba ema iha grupu diferente (mane/feto sira, hirak-ne’ebé servisu iha setór formál, hirak-ne’ebé servisu informalmente, profisionál sira, traballadór temporáriu sira nst..).
Lisaun ida husi diskusaun ne’e mak nesesidade ba governu ninia líder polítika, ONU no sira seluk atu halo servisu liutan hodi prioritiza no buka hetan mekanizmus ne’ebé efetivu hodi hametin baze abilidade, fleksibilidade no adaptabilidade iha forsa-traballu sira. Hadi’a kapasidade dijitál no investe tan rekursus agora hodi hametin kapasidade ema nian, importante tebes hodi prepara forsa-traballu futuru nian. Ne’e presiza atu komesa dezde dezenvolvimentu infánsia no tenke garante katak labarik sira hotu iha komesu ne’ebé di’ak iha sira-nia moris. País sira hanesan Timor-Leste, tenke uza tempu pós pandemia ne’e hodi hadi’a padraun nutrisionál para apoia aprendizajen ne’ebé di’ak liu, hasa’e kualidade edukasaun, hametin abilidade numerasia no literasia, investe tan iha formasaun profisionál, dijitalizasaun no dezenvolvimentu kapasidade agora. Ita tenke prepara ema foin-sa’e (joven) sira ba tipu sira oportunidade empregu future nian ne’ebé sei mosu durante decade tuirmai no liután. Ita tenke uza oportunidade hotu-hotu agora hodi hasa’e investimentu maka’as iha área hirak-ne’e.
Lisaun daruak ne’ebé enfatiza tiha mak nesesidade ba governu sira no sira seluk atu hadi’a medidas protesaun sosiál. Pandemia ne’e aumenta tiha dezigualdade iha mundu tomak. Iha estudu barak ne’ebé hatudu katak melloramentu sira iha protesaun sosiál prodús rezultadu pozitivu iha kontekstu kreximentu ekonómiku. Ida husi hirak-ne’ebé resente mak INVESTIMENTU SIRA IHA PROTESAUN SOSIÁL NO SIRA-NIA IMPAKTU BA KREXIMENTU EKONÓMIKU ne’ebé hala’o tiha husi InTouch Credit Union (ITUC).
Relatóriu ITUC ne’e bazeia ba peskiza husi país 8 iha kontinente haat ne’ebé hatudu:
Investimentu sira iha protesaun sosiál pozitivamente afeta oportunidade sira empregu nian. Investimentu ida ho pursentu 1 husi PIB iha protesaun sosiál iha efeitu pozitivu ida hodi hamosu empregu, ho efeitu multipikadór ida entre 0.1 no 1.1 iha estudu kazu ualu. Iha kazu barak liu, benefísius empregu nian boot liu ba feto sira – ida-ne’ebé subliña papél pozitivu katak protesaun sosiál bele hala’o hodi hamenus dezigualdade jéneru iha merkadu traballu.
Análize ne’e mós hatudu katak investimentu sira protesaun sosiál hasa’e fornesimentu empregu tomak. Loos duni, evidénsia ezistente hatudu katak protesaun sosiál hala’o papél importante ida hodi ajuda, selae uma-kain (família) sira ho restrisaun likuidés para lida ho xokes adversus. Família sira iha kapasidade di’ak liu ba konsumu, no nune’e, dependénsia menus ba estratéjia negativu, mak hanesan fa’an ativu/propriedades no hasai labarik husi eskola. Ida-ne’e signifika katak família sira bele, pur ezemplu, envolve iha risku liu iha kontekstu inovasaun no investe tan iha kapitál umanu, fasilita liután atividades buka servisu/empregu.
Simulasaun sira-ne’e hatudu katak investimentu protesaun sosiál hamosu aumentu ida ba demande traballu, espesialmente iha ekonomia sira intensive ba traballu, no normalmente, iha ekonomia sira, ne’ebé agrikultura nu’udar setór importante liu no bainhira setór doméstiku interligadu liu. Totál rendimentu impostu aumenta ho investimentu sira iha protesaun sosiál. Análize ne’e hatudu katak liuhusi halo investimentu iha protesaun sosiál, rendimentu fiskál aumenta, halo finansiamentu protesaun sosiál menus dependente ba fontes esteriór. Investimentu ho pursentu 1 husi PIB iha protesaun sosiál iha efeitu pozitivu ida ba totál rendimentu impostu governu: entre pursentu 0.6 no pursentu 3.5 iha estudu kazu ualu.
Ne’eduni, iha evidénsia forte ba governu no sira seluk atu servisu hamutuk hodi hasa’e protesaun sosiál. Tanba mundu ne’e rekupera husi pandemia, ita tenke kaer oportunidade sira hodi hametin medidas protesaun sosiál.
Lisaun importante ida terseiru ne’ebé ha’u foti husi ami-nia diskusaun mak ba ita hotu (governu, setór privadu, instituisaun no individuál sira) atu buka mekanizmu ne’ebé efetivu hodi hamenus, re-utiliza, rekupera no halo resiklajen ba produtu sira. Barak husi ita, muda padraun konsumu no produsaun nu’udar kontribuisaun ida esensiál no vitál ba maneira moris ne’ebé sustentável liu – mudansa ida ne’ebé bele hadi’a futuru ba ema hotu-hotu. Mai, ita labele lakon oportunidade ne’e hodi halo ona mudansa ne’ebé presiza agora!
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21 September 2021
Clean water flows to school in rural Timor-Leste for the first time in ten years
is helping bring water to rural schools in Timor-Leste and helping keep students safe from COVID-19
Eskola Basic Filial or EBF Zona Golgota-Baucau school has 211 students, 99 girls and 112 boys. It sits on a plateau, offering stunning views of the beaches and crystal-clear waters of the ocean in Baucau Municipality, east of the capital Dili. However, for close to a decade since it opened, the school had difficulties accessing water.
Students and teachers had to use the lunch break to walk to a communal water pipeline a kilometre away, and then carry heavy buckets of water along the rocky paths back to the school. The water was used for handwashing, cleaning of the school, and even to stop the dust from blowing around during the dry season.
“It is a tough choice, as staff, children and I used almost the entire break to fetch water instead of giving children time to play. But there was no choice, as water was critical to help with handwashing, sanitation, and cleanliness, and keep children safe from disease,” says Ana Floriana dos Santos Marques, the Principal of EBF Zona Golgota school.
A small-grant scheme called ‘Fundu Ki’ik’ (Small Grant), launched in March 2021 by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports, with funding from the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) and support from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is helping at least 240 schools in the 12 municipalities and special Region of Oecussi enclave improve access to clean water and help them protect children against COVID-19 and other diseases like diarrhoea.
“The lack of clean water results in children falling ill and missing out on studies, and has a big impact on girls’ education when they skip classes owing to the lack of adequate facilities for menstrual hygiene management.” says H.E. Dr. António Guterres, Vice Minister of Education Youth and Sport. “This scheme will help make schools safer and provide the facilities needed in schools, and enable children to continue learning during the pandemic.”
Under the scheme, selected schools are provided a maximum of USD 1,000 each to help them improve access to water, sanitation and hygiene facilities and promote a safe and secure environment for learning, including preventing the spread of COVID-19 and other diseases. To date, 74 schools have benefitted from the scheme in all municipalities.
“For the first time in a decade, our school has running water and students can now have more time to play, instead of having to go and fetch water for their basic needs,” adds Principal dos Santos Marques. “Teachers also have more time to prepare lessons and support students.”
Initially, people thought that it would require highly sophisticated equipment and support from engineers to install the plumbing works. However, a team effort by parents, school staff and community members has helped ensure the school now has clean running water. They purchased plumbing materials, dug a channel to divert water, installed and connected the pipeline to the main water source, the water tank and handwashing and other facilities.
“The spirit of volunteerism, participation and collaboration among parents has helped make the school safer, and make our community stronger,” says Mr Francisco da Costa, one of the community members.
“I am extremely happy we have water, and more importantly, can use the break to play, catch up with friends, and not have to worry about having to get water for use in the school,” says Ines Ximenes, a 12 years old child at the school.
“Thanks to the Global Partnership for Education and UNICEF initiative, we can now be happy that schools such as these that did not have direct access to water can now be safer learning environments for children,” says Apolinário Serpa Rosa, Director General for Basic Education, Pre-school, and Recurrent Education.
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18 May 2022
UN Messages on Presidential Inauguration and Restoration of Independence Commemoration
O SECRETÁRIO-GERAL
MENSAGEM VÍDEO POR OCASIÃO DO 20º ANIVERSÁRIO DA INDEPENDÊNCIA DE TIMOR-LESTE E DA TOMADA DE POSSE DO PRESIDENTE ELEITO RAMOS-HORTA
20 de maio de 2022
É com muita honra e com o maior gosto que me associo ao povo timorense na celebração do 20º aniversário da restauração da independência da República Democrática de Timor Leste.
Como é sabido, sinto um especial apego por Timor Leste e nutro uma grande admiração pelo povo timorense e pelo caminho que trilhou para ver realizadas as suas legitimas aspirações.
Nunca esquecerei o imenso sentimento de alegria e júbilo que partilhámos há vinte anos, quando a bandeira timorense foi finalmente hasteada em Díli e o país reconquistou a sua independência e se tornou no primeiro novo Estado soberano do século XXI.
O vosso exemplo foi e permanece uma inspiração para o mundo.
As Nações Unidas orgulham-se do papel que desempenharam e do contributo que deram para que se concretizasse o direito do povo timorense à liberdade e à autodeterminação.
E hoje continuam ao lado de Timor-Leste na sua jornada de consolidação da democracia, de aprofundamento dos direitos humanos e das liberdades fundamentais e de promoção do desenvolvimento e do bem-estar do seu povo.
Ao novo Presidente de Timor Leste que hoje toma possse, Dr. José Ramos-Horta, dirijo calorosas felicitações em nome da ONU e uma especial e amiga saudação pessoal.
Poderá Vossa Excelência contar sempre com o apoio inequívoco de toda a família das Nações Unidas – e com o meu empenho e solidariedade pessoais – nos esforços que desenvolverá para assegurar prosperidade, estabilidade e paz para o povo timorense.
Viva Timor-Leste!
Muito Obrigado.
***
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17 May 2022
UN RESIDENT COORDINATOR AND COUNTRY TEAM WISH TIMOR-LESTE 20TH ANNIVERSARY OF RESTORATION OF INDEPENDENCE
On behalf of the UN Country Team, I offer the warmest wishes on this momentous occasion.
Today’s anniversary marks another landmark in the productive and exemplary partnership between Timor-Leste and the United Nations. For more than two decades, the United Nations has worked side-by-side with the people of Timor-Leste, supporting the country’s efforts to build a strong and resilient State and promote sustainable peace and prosperity.
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10 May 2022
Solidarity to End Violence
Viqueque, Timor-Leste.
The two-day ‘Do No Harm’ workshop on ethical and safe approach when responding to cases of gender-based violence (GBV) was held on March 30, 31 in Viqueque, Timor-Leste. The ‘Do No Harm’ workshop aims to promote better understanding of the nature of Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) which interlinks with mental health of the survivors, and supports local communities to adopt ‘Do No Harm’ approach, namely ethical and safe method when respond to cases of VAWG. The workshop has been conducted in three municipalities, Bobonaro, Ermera and Viqueque, lectured by Civil Society Organizations (CSOs), local authorities and Justice Institutions that work closely on VAWG and GBV. At the seminar, the participants including school teachers and students are encouraged to share their experiences when dealing with GBV cases and survivors, and discuss about how they can improve local community to response and prevent the VAWG.
Irene Kobesi works as the PNTL (Policia National Timor-Leste) First Sergeant in Vulnerable Person Unit (VPU), supporting survivors of Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG). She said “I participated in the ‘Do No Harm’ workshop, because, as a VPU officer, my duty is to protect women and girls.” At the workshop, interconnections between VAWG and mental health of the survivors were underlined to understand the wider perspective of VAWG: survivors are harmed not only when they received violence, but also when they receive indiscreet questions about the sexual violence during the judicial process.
https://youtu.be/ilSYHxHS7Cc
During the seminar, it was emphasized that people’s better understandings of VAWG and cooperation from local authorities are necessary to eliminate VAWG at the community level. Maria Odete do Amaral, a Chief of Village in Viqueque, stated “I really wanted to join this seminar because this is essential for me as a community leader. I can share what I learned in this seminar with my community, and those who experienced violence, mostly women and girls.” While “Prevention of domestic violence can start from family. If we have knowledge in VAWG, domestic violence can be prevented in the early stage. If we solve family issue with violence, our children never learn how to solve problem without violence” addressed by Jose Delima, a Coordinator of Public Defender.
In Timor-Leste, climate change also exacerbates cases of VAWG. In the interview, Irene shared her experience in the flash floods during March 29th -April 4th 2021, resulted in disastrous landslide that produced more than 15,000 internally displaced people right after the disaster. “Last year, we experienced the catastrophic flood. Some people were traumatized, because they didn’t have place to live, and experienced violence from their partners. We provided support to those who suffered from both flood and violence. If their houses are not safe to live, we contacted local authorities to provide them an emergency shelter.”
To respond and prevent VAWG, a bottom-up approach to adopt ‘Do No Harm’ at the community level is essential, because the causes of the violence are deeply connected to the social context of Timor-Leste. “Together, we can end violence against women and girls” concluded Irene.
By Fidelia Mendonca, Ayumi Kimura
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18 April 2022
Historical insights, sustainable and inclusive development: What they might mean for us now and for the future
An essential first step is perhaps to help people clearly define what type of national development people of Timor-Leste would like to see in their country
The United Nations is here to support the government and the people of Timor-Leste. The SDGs and 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development offer evidenced-based and solution-based directions for an inclusive, prosperous and sustainable future for all.
With the second round of the Presidential Elections imminent, it has been an interesting and exciting past week, thinking about now as well as the future of the country. Irrespective of the people’s decision for either of the candidates, the President’s ‘father-of-the-nation’ role entails a key guiding role that contributes to strengthening the economy, political systems, collaborations, and reconciliation in the wake of the COVID-19 fallout and critical development challenges facing the country.
In the past week, I had the privilege of joining an exciting and insightful online webinar featuring an interview with Professor Jeffrey Sachs on Accelerating Progress on SDGs in Malaysia . The interview –skillfully moderated by my friend and colleague UN Resident Coordinator for Malaysia and Singapore, Ms Karima El Korri – was organised by the Sunway University and the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), part of a global network of universities and institutions promoting sustainable development practices. Incidentally, we (the UN) are assisting the University of Timor-Leste to join this Network soon. As always, Professor Sachs covers a lot of historical ground and makes fascinating connections between social and economic progress and many global challenges that the world faces today. He starts by drawing attention to the combination of events that contributed to global economic growth in the period after 1776 (imperialism, the industrial revolution, the role of fossil fuels, self-interest, the dominance of market economies and many other factors).
Professor Sachs points out that “…one of the reasons the world is struggling to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels is that we have had 200+ years of economic growth based on a reliance on fossil fuels and market economies. The powerful forces behind fossil fuels are pervasive and shape almost every aspect of our lives. So, breaking that dependence and reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and shifting towards carbon-neutral growth may take years, possibly decades.” This is why governments and development institutions need to prepare long-term plans now and to ensure that these are practically progressed annually for this critical global transition. He notes that sadly even after the past decade of rising global temperatures and changing global weather patterns contributing to more frequent and devastating environmental disasters, as well as the loss of biodiversity and the COVID-19 pandemic, we have yet to see many governments, industries and international institutions develop and implement robust long-term (20-year plus) plans for zero carbon growth. As the IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change) has said on many occasions (see: https://www.nature.org/en-us/what-we-do/our-insights/perspectives/ipcc-report-climate-change/) ‘time is running out’! “…one of the reasons the world is struggling to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels is that we have had 200+ years of economic growth based on a reliance on fossil fuels and market economies. The powerful forces behind fossil fuels are pervasive and shape almost every aspect of our lives. So, breaking that dependence and reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and shifting towards carbon-neutral growth may take years, possibly decades.” By making a powerful case for the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) as the guiding principles for a better, more sustainable world for all, he advocates for “six big transformations” that he believes are essential for nations in the Asia-Pacific region (all of whom, according to data from ESCAP, are ‘off-track in terms of progress against the SDGs’ (see: https://data.unescap.org/data-analysis/sdg-progress.) The Asia-Pacific region is home to 60% of the global population, so if the world is to achieve the SDGs by 2030, it is vital that this region achieves the progress that is needed. The six transformations that Professor Sachs’ identifies are: (i) Quality Education for all; (ii) Health for all; (iii) Energy and industrial transformation; (iv) Sustainable land use (and one might add, especially for small island states and many others sustainable use of oceans); (v) sustainable cities; (vi) Digital transformation. While also emphasising the vital importance of gender equality and inclusion, Professor Sachs’ makes a personal plea for increased women’s leadership globally and in all spheres to accompany and accelerate the transformations needed to create a better world for all. This presentation made me reflect on the work that the UN is supporting in Timor-Leste and elsewhere. How can we better support political leaders, governments and key institutions in the countries we serve to develop serious, long-term, inclusive, and sustainable plans for climate action and carbon-neutral growth? And more importantly, how can we more effectively support the development and implementation of long-term plans for such transformations? An essential first step is perhaps helping people clearly define what type of national development they would like to see in their country. In my conversations with some Timorese citizens, I have heard friends and colleagues say that they would like Timor-Leste to be more like Singapore. I wonder, however, which aspects of Singapore’s development people in Timor really value. If that is a ‘model’ that Timorese citizens want to emulate, how can we start to chart a path to move from where we are now to foster a model of development that benefits and creates a better, more sustainable future for all? And critically, how can we ensure that progress is measured year-on-year to safeguard a better future for all?
With the second round of the Presidential Elections imminent, it has been an interesting and exciting past week, thinking about now as well as the future of the country. Irrespective of the people’s decision for either of the candidates, the President’s ‘father-of-the-nation’ role entails a key guiding role that contributes to strengthening the economy, political systems, collaborations, and reconciliation in the wake of the COVID-19 fallout and critical development challenges facing the country.
In the past week, I had the privilege of joining an exciting and insightful online webinar featuring an interview with Professor Jeffrey Sachs on Accelerating Progress on SDGs in Malaysia . The interview –skillfully moderated by my friend and colleague UN Resident Coordinator for Malaysia and Singapore, Ms Karima El Korri – was organised by the Sunway University and the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN), part of a global network of universities and institutions promoting sustainable development practices. Incidentally, we (the UN) are assisting the University of Timor-Leste to join this Network soon. As always, Professor Sachs covers a lot of historical ground and makes fascinating connections between social and economic progress and many global challenges that the world faces today. He starts by drawing attention to the combination of events that contributed to global economic growth in the period after 1776 (imperialism, the industrial revolution, the role of fossil fuels, self-interest, the dominance of market economies and many other factors).
Professor Sachs points out that “…one of the reasons the world is struggling to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels is that we have had 200+ years of economic growth based on a reliance on fossil fuels and market economies. The powerful forces behind fossil fuels are pervasive and shape almost every aspect of our lives. So, breaking that dependence and reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and shifting towards carbon-neutral growth may take years, possibly decades.” This is why governments and development institutions need to prepare long-term plans now and to ensure that these are practically progressed annually for this critical global transition. He notes that sadly even after the past decade of rising global temperatures and changing global weather patterns contributing to more frequent and devastating environmental disasters, as well as the loss of biodiversity and the COVID-19 pandemic, we have yet to see many governments, industries and international institutions develop and implement robust long-term (20-year plus) plans for zero carbon growth. As the IPCC (International Panel on Climate Change) has said on many occasions (see: https://www.nature.org/en-us/what-we-do/our-insights/perspectives/ipcc-report-climate-change/) ‘time is running out’! “…one of the reasons the world is struggling to reduce its dependence on fossil fuels is that we have had 200+ years of economic growth based on a reliance on fossil fuels and market economies. The powerful forces behind fossil fuels are pervasive and shape almost every aspect of our lives. So, breaking that dependence and reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and shifting towards carbon-neutral growth may take years, possibly decades.” By making a powerful case for the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) as the guiding principles for a better, more sustainable world for all, he advocates for “six big transformations” that he believes are essential for nations in the Asia-Pacific region (all of whom, according to data from ESCAP, are ‘off-track in terms of progress against the SDGs’ (see: https://data.unescap.org/data-analysis/sdg-progress.) The Asia-Pacific region is home to 60% of the global population, so if the world is to achieve the SDGs by 2030, it is vital that this region achieves the progress that is needed. The six transformations that Professor Sachs’ identifies are: (i) Quality Education for all; (ii) Health for all; (iii) Energy and industrial transformation; (iv) Sustainable land use (and one might add, especially for small island states and many others sustainable use of oceans); (v) sustainable cities; (vi) Digital transformation. While also emphasising the vital importance of gender equality and inclusion, Professor Sachs’ makes a personal plea for increased women’s leadership globally and in all spheres to accompany and accelerate the transformations needed to create a better world for all. This presentation made me reflect on the work that the UN is supporting in Timor-Leste and elsewhere. How can we better support political leaders, governments and key institutions in the countries we serve to develop serious, long-term, inclusive, and sustainable plans for climate action and carbon-neutral growth? And more importantly, how can we more effectively support the development and implementation of long-term plans for such transformations? An essential first step is perhaps helping people clearly define what type of national development they would like to see in their country. In my conversations with some Timorese citizens, I have heard friends and colleagues say that they would like Timor-Leste to be more like Singapore. I wonder, however, which aspects of Singapore’s development people in Timor really value. If that is a ‘model’ that Timorese citizens want to emulate, how can we start to chart a path to move from where we are now to foster a model of development that benefits and creates a better, more sustainable future for all? And critically, how can we ensure that progress is measured year-on-year to safeguard a better future for all?
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Story
15 March 2022
Children in Grade 1 inspired to learn by peer mentors in Timor-Leste
Around forty children between the ages of five to seven sit in small groups on a large verandah and in classrooms at the Eskola Basic Filial (EBF) Matata school in Ermera Municipality. All of them are completely engrossed in books that they occasionally point to as they emphasize a detail or show each other some of the illustrations.
The setting is a school in the Ermera Municipality, where the UNICEF supported ‘Ready to LEAP’ (Learn, Engage, Achieve, Progress) programme, introduced in 2019 with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports, is helping children have a smooth transition from home to formal schooling. Similar activity is being conducted at ten other basic education schools in Ermera and Liquica municipalities.
The initiative helps children who enrolled in grade 1 or those repeating grade 1 to get additional support from the school, their parents, families and other students (peer mentors) to build up their confidence and prepare to continue learning in a school-based setting. Trained peer mentors play a key role in inspiring younger children to learn.
UNICEF Timor-Leste/2020/Dmaia
Grade 3 students involved as young mentors to Grade 1 students in EBF Matata, Ermera municipality.
In a country where only 27 per cent of children are enrolled in preschools, and where the grade 1 repetition rate is 19 per cent, initiatives such as these make a big difference in inspiring younger children to transition smoothly into school-based learning. To date, the school readiness programme has benefitted 1,314 students in grade 1 classes and enabled 439 students between 10 -11 years old from eleven basic education schools to take part in this initiative as peer mentors. So as not to interrupt learning for peer mentors, these sessions take place every Saturday.
The training for teachers and peer mentors at the school in Ermera was initially conducted in 2019 in collaboration with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports. However, the rollout of the programme was interrupted by COVID-19 related school closures. Most of the trained peer mentors from Grade 5 and Grade 6, who usually take part in this initiative, had also already graduated or were busy preparing for their final examinations.
However, the EBF Matata basic school introduced new ideas to keep the programme running. Teachers from EBF Matata school started engaging with Grade 2 and Grade 3 students who were once beneficiaries of the programme in 2019, to train and help them become peer mentors themselves and help inspire younger children to learn.
“I feel so happy and proud when the teacher asked me to be a young facilitator. Since joining this programme, I have become much closer to grade 1 students and have become friends with them” said 10-year-old Davio Bosco Cardoso
UNICEF Timor-Leste/2022/LRangel
A peer mentor takes part in an interview through phone call to help other children continue to learn.
Nine-year-old Merelia de Francia Mali Goncalves expressed her excitement at being part of the programme “I feel so proud because I am like a teacher for them, I make them feel happy, to be diligent, and they come to the school every day. So it is a great feeling,” she says.
At the beginning of the programme, teachers accompanied the peer mentors and supported them until the mentors were capable of running the activities on their own. As the programme progressed, teachers say the peer mentors got over their initial shyness and became more confident to speak up and lead the sessions.
“This is not only benefitting the Grade 1 students. After taking a role as peer mentors, the literacy and numeracy skills of the mentors also improved, and so did their social skills, for example, understanding ways to solve problems, or how to communicate with friends and manage time,” said Lurdes Rangel Goncalves, a teacher at the EBF Matata School in Ermera.
With additional funding from UNICEF Australia, the ‘Ready to LEAP’ programme will continue in 2022 and 2023 in 30 more schools in five municipalities. These would incorporate additional inclusive and sustainable approaches, including supporting the participation of children with disabilities.
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Press Release
05 May 2022
Statement by UN Resident Coordinator Roy Trivedy
On behalf of the United Nations Country Team in Timor-Leste, I congratulate the Government for today’s approval of a draft resolution to be submitted to Parliament for Timor-Leste to become a State party to the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, as well as the Optional Protocol to this Convention. Following Parliament’s approval of the ratification and its deposition to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Timor-Leste will join the current 185 States Parties to the Convention and the 100 State Parties to the Optional Protocol.
I am reminded of the words of our Secretary-General Antonio Guterres here. He said, “We need everyone, including persons with disabilities, onboard to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Around the world, persons with disabilities and their representative organisations are taking action to realise the call: ‘Nothing about us, without us’”.
It was due time for the Government to take such an important decision. The Convention underlines the universality of all human rights and fundamental freedoms and the right of persons with disabilities to the equal effective enjoyment of these legal guarantees in a way that is respectful and accommodating of their differences.
The ratification will bring about lasting and transformative change in Timor-Leste’s standing on disability inclusion across its policies, programmes and operations. It will help ensure that people (men, women and children) with disabilities have access to education, healthcare, and employment opportunities, as well as to participate and be involved in all aspects of society.
I hope that the ratification of the Convention and its Optional Protocol will provide a strong legal basis for the guarantee of equal opportunities for persons with disabilities in Timor-Leste through the elimination of all those barriers which exclude or restrict their full participation.
United Nations stands with the people and Government of Timor-Leste, civil society, also including the organisations of persons with disabilities, the private sector, and the media, to assist in effectively implementing the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and its Optional Protocol to tackle the obstacles, the injustices and the discrimination that persons with disabilities experience.
Realising the rights of persons with disabilities is crucial to fulfilling the core promise of the 2030 Agenda: to leave no one behind. That is our goal.
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Atu garante direitu ema ho defisiénsia sira-nian presiza atu defende valór no prinsípiu sira karta Nasoins Unidas nian.
Lori ekipa Nasoins Unidas nia naran iha Timor-Leste, ha'u hato'o parabéns ba Governu nebe aprova ona ohin proposta rezolusaun ne'ebé sei entrega ba Parlamentu Nasionál, atu Timor-Leste sai nu'udar Estadu parte ba Konvensaun kona-ba direitu ema ho defisiénsia sira-nian no mós protokolu opsional ba Konvensaun ida-ne'e. Hafoin aprovasaun husi Parlamentu Nasionál ba ratifikasaun no ninia depozisaun ba Sekretariu-Jeral Nasoins Unidas nian Timor-Leste sei hola parte iha Estadu parte atuál sira hamutuk 185 no Estadu parte 100 ba Konvensaun no protokolu opsional.
Ha'u hanoin fali ba ita-nia Sekretáriu Jerál António Guterres nia liafuan nebeé. Nia dehan "Ita presiza ema hotu-hotu inklui ema ho defisiénsia sira atu alkansa objetivu sira husi dezenvolvimentu sustentavel." Iha mundu tomak ema ho defisiénsia sira no sira-nia organizasaun sira-ne'e foti asaun atu realiza apelu ne'e “ la iha buat ida kona ba ita, se la ho ita”.
Tempu opurtunu duni ba Governu atu foti desizaun importante ne'e. Konvensaun ne'e subliña universalidade direitu umanu no liberdade fundamentál hotu-hotu no direitu ema ho defisiénsia sira-nian ba goza efetivu husi garantia legál sira-ne'e ho maneira ne'ebé respeita no akomoda sira-nia diferensa.
Ratifikasaun sei lori mudansa ba tempu naruk no transformativu iha Timor-Leste nia relasaun ho Inkluzaun defisiénsia iha ninia programa no operasaun polítika sira. Ida ne'e sei ajuda garante katak ema sira (mane sira feto no labarik sira) ho defisiénsia iha asesu ba Edukasaun, saúde no oportunidade sira empregu no mós atu partisipa no envolve iha aspetu hotu-hotu sosiedade nian.
Ha'u hein katak ratifikasaun Konvensaun no protokolu opsional ne'e nian sei fó baze legál ida-ne'ebé forte atu garante oportunidade ne'ebé hanesan ba ema ho defisiénsia sira iha Timor-Leste liuhusi halakon tiha bareira sira-ne'e hotu ne'ebé esklui ka limita sira-nia partisipasaun tomak.
Nasoins Unidas hamriik hamutuk ho povu no Governu Timor-Leste, sosiedade sivíl inklui mós organizasaun ema ho defisiénsia sira, setór privadu no média sira, atu tulun hodi implementa ho efetivu Konvensaun kona-ba direitu ema ho defisiénsia sira-nian no protokolu opsional atu hatán ba obstákulu sira ne'ebé hasoru injustisa no diskriminasaun ne'ebé ema ho defisiénsia sira hasoru.
Realiza duni direitu ema ho defisiénsia sira-nian ne'e importante atu kumpre promesa fundamentál husi ajenda 2030 ne'ebé koko atu la husik ema ida iha kotuk. Ne'e mak ita-nia planu.
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Press Release
23 November 2021
More than 357,000 people have benefited from the EU-UN Spotlight Initiative in two years, concludes National Steering Committee
DILI, 23 November 2021: The Government of Timor-Leste, the European Union (EU), United Nations (UN), and Civil Society representatives met today to reflect on the achievements of the Spotlight Initiative. They reviewed progress and discussed future actions to address the increased risk of violence against women and girls in the wake of recovery from COVID-19 pandemic. The fourth meeting of the National Steering Committee was organised by the Secretariat of State for Equality and Inclusion and the UN Resident Coordinator's Office. The meeting brought together representatives from different Ministries, Municipalities, the EU, UN agencies, and Civil Society representatives.
The Spotlight Initiative, which started in January 2020 and which is financed by the EU, has substantially contributed to preventing and responding to violence against women and girls. Over 357,336 women and girls, or 27% of the total population of Timor-Leste, have benefitted directly from the programme over the past two years. More than 700,000 people were also reached through social media. Spotlight is aligned with the National Action Plan on Gender Based Violence (NAP GBV) and supports the implementation of the NAP GBV at national and municipal levels. The Secretary of State for Equality and Inclusion is a key government partner and Co-Chair of the National Steering Committee.
"I would like to convey my sincere appreciation for all the efforts you all have carried out. While all of us have faced various challenges due to limited movement because of COVID-19, sanitary health fence and the recent floods, but we have made significant progress, as seen in the results presented earlier. I believe together with the UN and European Union, we will improve implementation performance in the coming period," stated Secretary of State for Equality and Inclusion, Maria José da Fonseca Monteiro de Jesus.
In Timor-Leste, the Initiative is being implemented by five UN agencies (ILO, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, and UN Women) in collaboration with civil society and Government partners through technical and financial support. The programme currently supports 22 civil society projects representing 33 partner organisations at national level and locally in three municipalities (Bobonaro, Ermera and Viqueque). In Phase 1, Spotlight will spend USD 4 million through implementing partners.
The European Union Ambassador stated, “Ending violence against woman and girls is a priority for the European Union, both in Europe and around the world. Gender-based violence is criminal. It’s a brutal form of discrimination and a violation of women's fundamental rights. There can be no excuses for it. The Spotlight Initiative is a practical manifestation of the EU’s political commitment to ending the violence. In Timor-Leste such violence is a major problem, and we are pleased to work with the Government and civil society to help eliminate it.”
Spotlight Initiative in Timor-Leste has worked with the Government and partners, including National Police (PNTL), Ministry of Education, Ministry of Social Solidarity and Inclusion, Ministry of Health, Trade Union Confederation, Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Associação Empresarial das Mulheres de Timor-Leste (Timor-Leste Women’s Business Association), and Secretariat of State for Vocational Training and Employment (SEFOPE) to prevent and respond to all forms of violence against women and girls. Over 800 Public Sector representatives were trained, and 33 partnerships developed with organisations working with marginalised groups, particularly people from the LGBT community and people with disabilities, to improve their access to services.
As a result of community mobilisation, advocacy, system strengthening, and improved awareness, violence against women and girls (VAWG) reporting and response have increased considerably. The Spotlight Initiative partners provided over 7,000 support actions to women and girls in municipalities of focus who reported physical/sexual violence and sought legal help. More than 1,319 cases of VAWG were reported to justice officials – almost twice the number of cases compared to the previous year in these municipalities. In addition, the Spotlight Initiative supported 435 women and girl survivors of violence and their families through knowledge, information, and capacity building. Training and information for parents is contributing to healthy and respectful relationships at home and in schools.
It has been globally recognised that violence is often exacerbated in emergencies and natural disasters due to disruption of services, destruction of infrastructure, displacement, and limited access to referral services. Despite the shutdowns and restrictions in response to COVID-19 and recent floods, action against VAWG remains one of the highest priorities for the Government, United Nations, EU and partners in Timor-Leste.
"Women and girls in Timor-Leste are under greater risk of violence as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the recent the floods caused by Cyclone Seroja, making them more vulnerable. We are proud of the work done by the Government, the UN Agencies, Civil Society Organisations and the media during the past two years of the Spotlight Initiative. Despite difficult times, the Initiative reached many women, girls, boys, men and minority groups with information, training, and services. The UN in Timor-Leste will continue working with communities, the Government, and partners to eliminate all kinds of violence against women and girls and ensure that all people are safe, well supported and that peoples fundamental rights are effectively protected ", noted United Nations Resident Coordinator Roy Trivedy.
Timor-Leste is one of the countries that benefits from the EU-UN Spotlight Initiative with the support of the Government, civil society, and partners in the eradication of violence against women and girls. After achieving significant progress in the last 20 years since its historic independence vote, Timor-Leste has demonstrated its commitment to ending violence against women and girls (EVAWG) and intimate partner violence. Despite the vision for equality, violence against women and girls remains a challenge, with estimates from 38% to 59% of women and girls experiencing violence in their lifetime.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
The Spotlight Initiative, launched in September 2017, is a multi-year global partnership between the European Union and the United Nations to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls. It represents an unprecedented global effort to invest in gender equality and women's empowerment as a precondition and driver for achieving sustainable development goals.
In the Pacific, the situation is particularly worrying. In some countries in the region, 76 per cent of women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence in their lifetime. Most affected are marginalised women and girls facing multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination.
In Timor-Leste, the Spotlight Initiative was launched on 5 March 2020. It is being implemented through five UN agencies (ILO, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, and UN Women), in support of the Government, and in close collaboration with the civil society, the World Health Organization (WHO), International Organization for Migration (IOM), and the UN Human Rights Advisor's Unit (HRAU).
The overall vision of the Spotlight Initiative in Timor-Leste is that women and girls enjoy their right to a life free of violence, within an inclusive and gender equitable Timor-Leste. The programme is aligned to the Timor-Leste "National Action Plan on Gender based Violence (NAP GBV) (2017-2021)" and National SDG Roadmap. It contributes to the elimination of domestic violence/ intimate partner violence (DV/IPV) by responding to the needs of women and girls and addressing the underlying causes of violence against women and girls, using a multi-sectoral and intersectional approach across the ecological model.
This involves strengthening and widening partnerships and solidarity across civil society, Government, media, private sector and development partners. The Initiative empowers individuals, equip institutions at national, sub-national and community levels with the policies, systems and mechanisms to prevent and respond to VAWG, and encourage the public to challenge harmful gender norms. Using innovative approaches, the Spotlight Initiative builds a social movement of diverse advocates and agents of change for gender equality and social inclusion.
The Spotlight initiative deploys targeted, large-scale investments to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Latin America and the Pacific. For more information about the Spotlight Initiative, visit https://spotlightinitiative.org
For media inquiries, please contact:
Marino Mouzinho, Media Adviser, Office of the Secretary of State for Equality and Inclusion. Email: marinosmouzinho@gmail.com
Stella D'Assis, Communication and Visibility Officer, EU Delegation to Timor-Leste. Email: stelladassis@outlook.com
Ahmed Saleem, Communications Officer, UN Resident Coordinator's Office. Email: mohammed.saleem@un.org
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Press Release
09 November 2021
Government and United Nations in Timor-Leste launch Socio-Economic Impact Assessment Round-2 to contribute to the COVID-19 response and recovery
The study identifies the continuous impact of COVID-19 on households and businesses, with a specific focus on coping strategies adopted by vulnerable families, the informal sector and micro, small and medium enterprises.
While speaking at the launch, His Excellency Joaquim Amaral, Coordinating Minister of Economic Affairs, noted, "With the sense of duty fulfilled at this stage of the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, the Government of Timor-Leste assures of its commitment to continue supporting those in need including families, communities, companies and businesses. I am convinced that the SEIA-2 report will provide the Government and other partners with relevant information and evidence on the COVID-19 impacts to guide the new policy formulation."
SEIA-2 highlights how COVID-19 has magnified many of the underlying vulnerabilities within the country, including lack of basic infrastructure, reliance on imports, limited productive activities in the country, limited access to government services and limited technological capabilities. COVID-19 has negatively impacted many poorer households throughout the country. It has also affected formal and informal MSMEs in urban and remote areas that have exacerbated the impact of the pandemic. Many employees of MSMEs have lost employment during this period. Women employees, in particular, have been badly affected.
UN Resident Coordinator Mr Roy Trivedy said, "The pandemic has presented unprecedented challenges, but it also offers opportunities for us to build back and recover better. While we are at an important juncture of COVID19 recovery, it is worth reviewing the latest evidence presented by SEIA-2 and reconsidering the medium and long-term policies aligned with Timor-Leste's commitment toward the SDGs and leaving no one behind."
The global economic downturn due to the COVID-19 pandemic is having a disproportionate impact on low-income and emerging economies. Timor-Leste experienced the largest GDP contraction since its independence. In March 2021, the Government of Timor-Leste (GoTL) introduced lockdowns and other restriction measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19. These restrictions along with the global economic slowdown and oil price uncertainty, plunged the local economy into severe contraction, with expected real GDP per capita to slip down to the 2009 level. Timor-Leste's non-oil businesses, represented mainly through micro and small enterprises, continue to be squeezed by the fallout of the COVID-19 crisis with looming long-lasting adverse outcomes for many of the most vulnerable groups of people.
"While the COVID-19 crisis has exposed stark inequities, SEIA-2 offers the Government of Timor-Leste to reconsider and prioritise resilience to climate, health, and economic shocks in the framework of the economic recovery plan. The worst effects of COVID-19 can be minimised if the country's leadership continues committing to a new social contract and implements forward-looking and comprehensive programmes to tackle critical tipping points to lift the population from multi-dimensional poverty traps", said UNDP Resident Representative Munhktuya Altangerel.
The assessment is guided by the UN Secretary General's Framework for the Immediate Socio-Economic Response to COVID-19 (https://unsdg.un.org/resources/un-framework-immediate-socio-economic-response-covid-19 ), which set out the framework for the UN's urgent socio-economic support to countries and societies in the face of COVID-19, putting in practice the UN Secretary-General's Shared Responsibility, Global Solidarity report on the same subject (https://unsdg.un.org/resources/shared-responsibility-global-solidarity-responding-socio-economic-impacts-covid-19).
It is one of three critical components of the UN's efforts to save lives, protect people, and rebuild better, alongside the health response. The assessment has focused on a series of in-depth evaluations guided by the Framework for the Immediate Socio-Economic Response to COVID-19, analysing actual and potential losses for Timor-Leste's economy and vulnerable groups due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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BACKGROUND NOTE FOR EDITOR
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have devastating impacts on health, social, economic and environmental systems. Against this backdrop, decision-makers require flexible, rapid and evidence-based diagnostic tools to inform crucial interventions and policy decisions. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has developed the Digital Socio-economic Impact Assessment (SEIA) to provide governments with comprehensive and timely information for evidence-based decision-making in responding to the needs of affected populations and enterprises in the immediate, medium and long term.
The UN's Framework for the Immediate Socio-Economic Response to the COVID 19 Crisis warns that "The COVID-19 pandemic is far more than a health crisis: it is affecting societies and economies at their core. While the impact of the pandemic will vary from country to country, it will most likely increase poverty and inequalities at a global scale, making the achievement of SDGs even more urgent.
Assessing the impacts of the COVID-19 crisis on societies, economies, and vulnerable groups is fundamental to inform and tailor the responses of governments and partners to recover from the crisis and ensure that no one is left behind in this effort.
Globally, Governments sought to contain the spread of the disease by the oldest known method: quarantine and confinement. As a result of confinement methods, economic activity experienced the sharpest and most violent contraction on record. In Timor-Leste, the data point to a historical value of 8.7% in the contraction of our economy. In other words, a public health crisis has quickly turned into an economic and social crisis with the disruption of supply chains at local and global levels.
The Government of Timor-Leste used unprecedented resources to strengthen the nation's responsiveness in the face of the pandemic adopting and implementing the Economic Recovery Plan with short term measures to be implemented in 2020 and 2021. Massive support was released to strengthen the health system, help companies and preserve employment. New measures were used to protect the income of those who found themselves deprived of work or business activities.
Among those short-term measures, we highlight the emergency food basket, Cesta Basica, conceived as a universal measure to provide each Timorese citizen with a basket of food and hygiene products worth up to fifty ($50) dollars. With this programme, the Government intended, among others, to stimulate national production, increase the income of local farmers and traders and support the food and nutritional diet of ordinary Timorese families.
Today, when the programme is completed, more than one million, four hundred fifty-two thousand distributed baskets and almost eighty-three million dollars were injected to the economy. The dynamics introduced along to suppliers of goods and services and local producer is visible. The forecast for 2021 of 1.6% in economic growth reflects this impact that the Cesta Basica and other short term economic measures made to commerce, agriculture, the labour market and other sectors.
The Government's economic interventions helped create the opportunity for companies to continue their activities, despite the serious threats of closure or reduction in business volume, which hovered over them. The employment of many workers is secured and protected with the continuation of business activities. Many short term jobs were created through participation in the different stages of implementation of the Cesta Basica.
The COVID-19 pandemic is far more than a health crisis: it is affecting societies and economies at their core. The impact of the pandemic has varied from region to region. The pandemic has been exacerbated by the pre-existing conditions of poverty and inequalities in Timor-Leste, a small island developing state (SIDS), making the achievement of SDGs even more urgent. The recent Easter Flood deepened the crisis by affecting the most vulnerable population.
Therefore, it was important for Timor-Leste, as the first key step, to gather essential data documenting the nation's economic, and social indicators to accurately and efficiently support the Government in policy-making and response measures. UNDP and UNFPA in close collaboration with other UN agencies, the Coordinating Ministry of Economic Affairs (MCAE), and General Directorate of Statistics (GDS) under the Ministry of Finance, assessed the socio-economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The result of the collaboration was the second Socio-Economic Impact Assessment-2 (SEIA-2) Report, launched today by the Government of Timor-Leste and the United Nations.
SEIA-2 was a nationwide survey of 4,292 households and 1,086 micro, small and medium enterprises which aimed to understand how COVID-19, the easter flood, government sanitary fences, and government economic recovery measures had impacted Timorese household and micro, small and medium business across the country.
In a country with 46% of the population already suffering from multi-dimensional poverty and 75% primarily reliant on subsistence agriculture for their livelihoods, determining who counted among Timor-Leste's most vulnerable required a nuanced approach. SEIA-2 developed detailed social and economic matrices that allowed for data to be disaggregated across categories, including gender, age, location, disability status, and employment type. To isolate the impacts of the pandemic from the easter flood that Timor-Leste faced in the past 12 months, SEIA-2 covered changes felt between April 2020 and April 2021.
In addition to data on economic impacts, SEIA-2 also established key indicators on how health, education, community resilience, and social cohesion had been affected throughout the first year of the pandemic. Promising findings in the survey included over 70% of Timorese saying community trust increased during the State of Emergency. The results of the study show that youth most hit by job loss and unemployment - the young adult's age group 25-39 were most affected --- 43.3% of them lost their jobs in 2020-2021.
Although the Government fiscal response was strong, the most vulnerable household received the least benefits. Poorest households had used more severe livelihood coping strategies, such as borrowing money, selling livestock, and reducing education & health costs, and in most severe cases reducing the meal intake.
Gender disaggregation showed that women spent more time on domestic chores, particularly adult women. Women spent more time cooking and cleaning, water collection and family care.
FOR MEDIA INQUIRIES
Antero Veiga, Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs (MCAE). Email: anteroveiga@gmail.com
Ahmed Saleem, Communications Officer, UN Resident Coordinator's Office. Email: mohammed.saleem@un.org
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Press Release
24 October 2021
Government of Timor-Leste, UN System, and partners jointly celebrate UN Day 2021
BACKGROUND NOTE FOR EDITOR
The United Nations played a vital role in Timor-Leste’s restoration of independence and democratic transition by helping organise the Popular Consultation in 1999. Since 2012, the UN in Timor-Leste has shifted its mandate from peacekeeping to strengthening stability and prosperity through sustainable development. The UN is an impartial, strategic partner supporting the Government of Timor-Leste as a Member State to fulfil international commitments and meet national aspirations to advance the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Almost 20 years since the restoration of independence, Timor-Leste has emerged as a democratic and peaceful country focused on state-building and accelerating progress on sustainable development for all, regardless of gender, age, ability or other characteristics.
UN Day marks the anniversary of the entry into force in 1945 of the UN Charter. With the ratification of this founding document by the majority of its signatories, including the five permanent members of the Security Council, the United Nations officially came into being. The United Nations officially came into existence on 24 October 1945, when the Charter had been ratified by China, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, the United States and by a majority of other signatories.
The UN System in Timor-Leste is led by the UN Resident Coordinator Roy Trivedy, who is the designated representative of the UN Secretary-General to Timor-Leste and is responsible for the coordination of development activities in the country.
All UN agencies come together with the Government of Timor-Leste and other development partners under the leadership of the Resident Coordinator to support the achievement of Timor-Leste’s national development priorities.
FOR MEDIA INQUIRIES
Joanico Sarmento, Chief of Social Communications, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation. Email: cdcs01mnectimorleste@gmail.com
Ahmed Saleem, Communications Officer, UN Resident Coordinator’s Office. Email: mohammed.saleem@un.org
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Press Release
19 October 2021
"Launch of human rights manual for the National Police of Timor-Leste"
TETUM
“Lansamentu Manual Direitus Umanus ba Polisia Nasional Timor-Leste”
Iha 15 Outubru 2021, Provedoria ba Direitus Umanus no Justisa (PDHJ), polísia Nasionál Timor-Leste PNTL) no Unidade asesória Direitus umanus ONU nian iha Timor-Leste lansa ona manuál formasaun Direitus umanus ba PNTL. Manuál foun ne'e halo ona revizaun substansial ba manuál uluk, ne'ebé lansa tiha ona iha tinan 2014 no ne'ebé fó ona apoiu ba programa kapasitasaun konjunta husi instituisaun hirak ne'e ba membru PNTL sira. Revizaun ne'e rezulta husi nesesidade atu inkorpora lisaun balun ne'ebé aprende ona durante tinan barak nia laran ba implementasaun programa formasaun, no mós dezenvolvimentu dadaun ne’e nian iha kuadru legál nasaun nian. Ida ne'e mós inklui seksaun foun, hanesan Estadu emerjénsia, no foka kle'an liu ba PNTL nia papél hodi vis a vis dezafiu ne’ebe grupu sira hasoru iha nasaun ne’e.
Manuál foun ne'e, agora atualiza ba nesesidade no dezafiu ne'ebé durante polisia hala’o atividade iha Timor-Leste, sei hahú uza iha semana ida-ne'e, iha treinamentu ne'ebé hala'o husi loron 18-22 Outubru, iha Lospalos (munsipiu Lautem) ba funsionáriu PNTL na'in 23 (inklui feto 10). Formasaun seluk hanesan ne'e sei hala'o iha semana oin (25-29 Outubru) ba funsionáriu PNTL sira iha munisipiu Viqueque.
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