Subject: UCAN: State must collaborate with Catholic Church, says prez-Nobel
Prize winner
State must collaborate with Catholic Church, says prez-Nobel Prize winner
6/28/2007
UCANews (ucanews.com>www.ucanews.com)
DILI, Timor Leste (UCAN) As Timor Leste (East Timor) gears up for a
parliamentary election on June 30, President Jose Manuel Ramos-Horta has
called for the state to collaborate with the church to maintain peace and
national unity.
The president spoke to media after attending Mass at Sacred Heart of
Jesus Church in Becora, Dili, on June 15. "The state must collaborate
closely with the Catholic Church, because only the church and state together
will maintain peace and national unity in this country," he said.
Strong moral values endure in the violence-plagued country because the
Church has taught them for many centuries, he affirmed. If the nation is to
regain peace and stability, and prosper, he continued, the church must play
an important role today and in the future.
According to Ramos-Horta, co-winner of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize, young
Timor Leste needs the church's support in developing morality.
Catholics comprise 96 percent of Timor Leste's 1 million people, who have
faced decades of violence. Several centuries of Portuguese colonial rule
ended in 1975, but shortly after the Portuguese withdrew in 1975, Indonesia
sent in troops. In 1976, Indonesia annexed the territory.
Indonesian occupation continued until 1999, when a referendum resulted in
an overwhelming consensus for independence. Following the vote and violent
reprisals from pro-Jakarta militias, a United Nations administration took
charge until the country emerged as a fully independent nation in 2002.
Ramos-Horta emphasized that the state should not deny or forget the
church in pursuing development, because many nuns and priests were active in
the independence movement. Some even died in defending the rights of the
people.
The president promised he will ask the new government and parliament to
look to the church as a partner in both spiritual and material development.
He characterized last year's violent crisis as a consequence of disharmony
between the church and the state.
Communal violence erupted in May 2006, after former prime minister Mari
Alkatiri of the Fretilin-led government dismissed more than a third of the
army. The dismissed soldiers, from the western part of the country, had
protested alleged discrimination against them by easterners who considered
themselves the backbone of the resistance against Indonesian rule.
Clashes between groups claiming to represent easterners and westerners
resulted in at least 20 deaths and displaced 100,000. The displaced took
refuge in camps, many of which were set up at Catholic churches and centers.
After Alkatiri's resignation in June 2006, he accused the church of being
involved in a series of coup plots against his government. Ramos-Horta, then
foreign minister, took over as prime minister. He was elected president over
the Fretilin candidate in the presidential election on May 9 this year.
The church had bitterly opposed the Alkatiri administration's attempts to
establish a clear separation of church and state, and to restrict the role
of religious education in public schools.
Meanwhile, Bishop Alberto Ricardo da Silva of Dili urged political
leaders not to insult each other when presenting their election platforms
while campaigning. Speaking to media on June 15, the church leader urged
people to participate in the parliamentary election and respect one
another's choice.
Timor Leste's first parliamentary election was held under the United
Nations transitional administration. For the coming first parliamentary
election as an independent country, 12 parties are competing for 60 seats.
The law requires parliament to have between 52 and 65 seats, with members
elected by popular vote to five-year terms.
- - -
Republished by Catholic Online with permission of the Union of Catholic
Asian News (UCA News), the world's largest Asian church news agency (ucanews.com>www.ucanews.com).
Back to June menu
May
World Leaders Contact List
Main Postings Menu