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Subject: TIMOR-LESTE: Challenge to shift youth from resistance to
development mentality
TIMOR-LESTE: Challenge to shift youth from resistance to development
mentality
DILI, 2 June 2009 (IRIN) - Disenchantment among young people who fought
for independence during Timor-Leste's resistance years could lead to
unrest if they are not included in the country's development process,
analysts warned.
"They feel their existence is not relevant any more in this
independence era," said Ozorio Leque, 28, leader of Colimau 2000 - a
youth group set up by activists during the Indonesian occupation of Timor-Leste.
A large number of disenfranchised youth are dissatisfied with high
unemployment, low wages and lack of access to education, with only 27
percent completing secondary school. The World Bank estimates that by next
year nearly 40 percent of the population will be between 15 and 29 years
old.
Many turn to martial arts groups, with as many as 20,000 registered and
90,000 unregistered members.
"There is an assumption that when you join a group, you will be
protected. The other reason is that most of the younger generation lack
skills and knowledge so they take whatever they can get," said Leque.
About half the 1.1 million population lives below the poverty line. In
Dili, unemployment is as high as 62 percent among those aged 15 to 19,
while eight out of 10 young people engage in subsistence activities.
Gang violence
Leque, who claims that Colimau 2000 has more than 20,000 members, is
due at Dili District Court on 22 June to be tried for crimes related to
events in 2006.
On 28 April 2006, he launched a verbal tirade against the government
before a mob attacked the government palace and destroyed state vehicles.
The government of Mari Alkatiri, the first prime minister of an
independent Timor-Leste, had been criticised after 600 mostly western
soldiers were fired from the national army for abandoning their posts in
protest against alleged discrimination.
There was widespread discontent as security forces were factionalised,
the police force was weak, the political opposition was destabilising the
government, and there were disputes over property, markets and trade
routes.
The violence between gangs, members of martial arts groups, the police
and the army that followed Leque's speech led to nearly 40 deaths and the
displacement of more than 100,000, many of whom sought protection in
makeshift camps.
"The wound that occurred in 2006 has not received proper treatment
yet," Leque said.
Extortion claims
However, gang specialist James Scambary, who released a report,
<http://www.timor-leste-violence.org/pdfs/Timor-Leste-Violence-IB2-ENGLISH.pdf>Groups,
Gangs and Armed Violence in Timor-Leste, in April, said: "Martial
arts groups are not necessarily gangs. Some gangs may have martial arts
group members, but martial arts groups are primarily sporting
associations, with good and bad elements."
According to the report, gambling dens and protection rackets are among
the primary sources of income for gangs in Timor-Leste.
In the Colmera shopping area in Dili, business owners told IRIN that
members of gangs extorted money during the crisis of 2006.
Although extortion has declined since then, part of the reason for this
could be that gang members have joined the security industry.
Aniceto Neves from the HAK Association, a human rights NGO, said
members of martial arts groups now comprise the bulk of employees on the
roster of Timor-Leste's legitimate security firms, while some business
owners employ security directly from martial arts groups.
"It's a way of finding employment for them," he said.
Scambary added: "Unfortunately, the line between security and
extortion is becoming increasingly blurred, with martial arts groups
involved in both. Such blending of formal and informal security is of
grave concern."
Meanwhile, Leque said the peace between martial arts group was only
occasionally disrupted by individual conflicts.
"I have suggested to the government many times that it would be
better to transform all the clandestine groups in the country into civil
society groups. We need to transform them from a resistance mentality to a
development-era mentality," he said.
In a <http://insideindonesia.org/content/view/1193/47/>recent
article for Inside Indonesia, Scambary wrote, "With little imminent
prospect of a land dispute settlement regime, and a barely functioning
justice system and police force, it is likely that people will continue to
seek vigilante justice to resolve their disputes and to use gangs and
martial arts groups as enforcers."
mc/ds/mw
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=84659
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