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Subject: Pires left in limbo despite being free
also Caught in a political web of intrigue
Northern Territory News
Pires left in limbo despite being free
SALLY McDONALD
February 19th, 2009
FORMER Darwin resident Angelita Pires remains in legal and personal
limbo in East Timor one year after being named as a suspect in attacks on
the country's president.
Ms Pires was first arrested six days after her boyfriend, rebel East
Timorese military officer Alfredo Reinado, was killed, and President Jose
Ramos Horta was wounded on February 11, 2008.
Twelve months on, she has yet to be formally charged and is nominally
free awaiting the end of investigations.
But she is still unable to come home to visit her family in Darwin as
her Australian and Timorese passports have been confiscated.
"I was not involved in the events of 11 February 2008," she
said.
I just want my life back. I want the right to live with my family.
"I want my honour reinstated. I was insulted internationally and
it has caused me suffering."
Ms Pires's mother is waiting for her return to Darwin.
"I'm very sad and very upset that nothing has happened. Why
doesn't the East Timor Government let her go, and let her come home?"
Maria Pires, 70, said.
"I want to appeal to the Australian Government as she is
suffering. She lost her baby and she lost her boyfriend. They haven't
found anything really in over a year."
As the investigation drags on, the Australian Government is starting to
raise the Pires issue with authorities in East Timor.
A Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokesperson released the
following statement on the matter.
"While the government fully respects the sovereign authority of
the government of East Timor and appreciates and acknowledges the
seriousness of the events of 11 February 2008, we are concerned at the
length of time the investigation into those events is taking and the
impact this is having on Ms Pires' welfare."
---
Northern Territory News (Australia)
February 21, 2009 Saturday
Caught in a political web of intrigue
By SALLY McDONALD
`I am a scapegoat', says lover of
THE Australian Embassy in Dili is ``raising concerns'' with East
Timorese authorities about the legal limbo of former Darwin resident
Angelita Pires, according to documents obtained by the Northern Territory
News.
Investigations into the shooting of President Jose Ramos Horta on
February 11, 2008 have dragged on for over a year, with Ms Pires, 42,
forced to stay in the country as a named suspect in the case.
According to Australian government correspondence, East Timor's
Prosecutor-General originally said investigations would be submitted to
the courts by the end of January this year -- but the latest news from his
office is that it will be concluded early in March.
Meanwhile, Ms Pires protests her innocence and wants the matter
finalised immediately.
She has been given full briefings after a January 9 meeting between the
Australian ambassador in Dili and East Timor authorities and a meeting
held one month later between Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and
East Timorese Foreign Minister Zacarias da Costa.
``They [the Prosecutor-General's office] said I'm not the big person
they're after but I may be accused of low-level conspiracy,'' she said.
``I don't know what that means -- I've gone from being a terrible,
terrible person to not being that deeply involved. Everyone knows there
isn't any evidence and so they're just using me as a scapegoat.''
Irrespective of the outcome of investigations, Ms Pires has had a
terrible year.
Her lover was killed, she lost her unborn child, she was arrested and
released twice, she has had her passport confiscated and she's been
relying on donations from her family back in Australia and neighbours in
Dili as she cannot find paid work.
``When it is the President who is speaking ill of me, who is going to
give me a job?''
For the past year, Ms Pires has pined for her home in Australia and
desperately wants to visit her family in Darwin.
``I grew up in Australia where the rule of law and respect for human
rights is normal, so once you lose all of that you realise what a lucky
country we come from.''
Her mother, Maria Pires, 70, tirelessly protests on her behalf and even
tried to speak directly to East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta when he
was in Darwin.
She is worried about her daughter's health and welfare as
investigations drag on.
``I'm very sad and very upset as until now nothing has happened,'' she
said. ``Why doesn't the East Timorese government let her go, let her come
home.''
Ms Pires' brother, Antonio, is gunned-down East Timorese rebel leader
scathing about what he sees as a lack of support by the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT).
``Up until this point, DFAT has ignored our requests and not even kept
the family updated,'' he said.
``But I guess one year on, they finally realised they have to do
something.''
If delays continue beyond the Prosecutor-General's March 4 deadline,
the Australian Embassy in Dili has said it would ask if Ms Pires could
come back to Australia to visit her family under the proviso that she'd
return to East Timor for court hearings at a later date.
Having waited on deadlines before, Ms Pires is not too optimistic about
resolving her legal limbo situation. ``I don't know,'' she said. ``They
may extend the date again as the legal system here is very
dysfunctional.''
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