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Subject: ET President Jose Ramos-Horta defends PM over rice contract
also 7:30 Report: Gusmao to face calls of corruption
www.radioaustralianews.net.au/stories/200906/2612991.htm?desktop
East Timor President defends PM amid rice contract furor
AUDIO
<http://www.radioaustralianews.net.au/stories/200906/2612991.htm?desktop>East
Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta defends PM over rice contract
Created: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 09:05:27 GMT-0400
Steve Holland and Stephanie March
Last Updated: 15 hours 42 minutes ago
East Timor President Jose Ramo Horta is defending Prime Minister Xanana
Gusmao's approval of a multimillion dollar government contract to a
company linked to the PM's daughter.
Mr Gusmao has not been available to respond to revelations he approved
a multi-million dollar contract to a company linked to his daughter and
three other contracts to companies part-owned by the wife of another
minister.
But Mr Ramos-Horta says he fully supports Mr Gusmao.
"Just because someone became president, became prime minister,
became a minister, does not mean his family all have to go into
unemployment, all have to sell their business and stop," Mr Ramos-Horta
said.
Contract Questions
Last week, Radio Australia revealed that Zenilda Gusmao, the prime
minister's daughter, is listed in East Timor's 2008 business registry as a
shareholder in Prima Food.
Prima Food last year won a government contract to supply rice worth
$US3.5 million.
Kathleen Gonsalves, the wife of Minister of Economic Development Joao
Goncalves, also has profited from government tenders signed-off by Mr
Gusmao.
Mr Ramos-Horta says the prime minister deserves the benefit of the
doubt.
"Allegations are allegations until they are proved by
investigation and in court. Until such a time I have full
confidence," he said
Deputy Prime Minister Mario Carrascalao says the prime minister is
required to sign off on all government contracts exceeding $US1 million,
but that doesn't Mr Gusmao responsible for the whole process of awarding
government contracts.
"So he had to sign it. He doesn't have to look after the process,
whether there are some of his relatives is included there or not," Mr
Carrascalao said.
Mr Carrascalao says he is looking into the circumstances surrounding
Prima Food's multi-million dollar government tender.
The opposition Fretilin Party says it has not yet been able to voice
its concerns in Parliament regarding the rice contract scandal. Tuesday's
debating period was cancelled.
The Opposition plans to voice its concerns in Parliament on Monday.
---
http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2009/s2612267.htm
ABC 7.30 Report
Gusmao to face calls of corruption
Video
Windows Media <http://www.abc.net.au/reslib/200906/r391987_1833411.asx>Broadband
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Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 30/06/2009
Reporter: Alison Caldwell
The ABC has obtained documents which suggest East Timorese President
Xanana Gusmao signed lucrative contracts with companies owned by his
daughter and daughter-in-law worth nearly nine million dollars to import
rice. Tomorrow in parliament the opposition will accuse him of corruption,
nepotism and collusion.
Transcript
KERRY O'BRIEN, PRESENTER: Later this year, East Timor will celebrate
its 10th anniversary of independence. The question is: will the Prime
Minister Xanana Gusmao still be around as PM to celebrate the anniversary?
Mr Gusmao emerged in the early days of independence as a revolutionary
hero in the mould of Nelson Mandela. Tomorrow, in Parliament, the
Opposition will accuse him of corruption, nepotism and collusion.
The ABC has obtained documents that suggest Xanana Gusmao signed
lucrative contracts worth nearly $9 million to import rice with companies
in which his daughter and daughter-in-law have a financial interest.
A Government spokesman says the Prime Minister is acting within the
law, but the Opposition says he must resign. Alison Caldwell reports.
ALISON CALDWELL, REPORTER: On the eve of its 10th anniversary as an
independent nation, East Timor is still one of the poorest countries in
the world. Almost half the population lives on less than 55 cents a day.
Their Prime Minister, Xanana Gusmao, is seen by many as the father of
the nation, the guerrilla fighter who went on to lead the former
Portuguese colony to independence after 25 years of Indonesian occupation.
Now, Xanana Gusmao is under fierce political attack from his own former
party, Fretilin.
ARSENIO BANO, EAST TIMOR OPPOSITION LEADER: It is corruption, nepotism,
it is a collusion.
ALISON CALDWELL: The ABC has obtained documents which suggest that the
Prime Minister personally signed off on lucrative contracts with companies
part-owned by his daughter and his daughter-in-law.
MARIO CARRASCALAO, EAST TIMOR DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER: People that make
corruption, they like to travel, they like to enjoy five star hotels, they
like to enjoy first class plane, they like to enjoy overseas playing in
casinos. This is not Xanana.
ALISON CALDWELL: Three years ago, drought and global food shortages saw
hungry East Timorese loot rice warehouses. In response, the East Timorese
Government began diverting money from the nation's biggest revenue earner,
its share of the lucrative Timor Gap oil and gas fields to pay private
companies to import rice. Close to $100 million has already been spent.
EMILIA PIRES, EAST TIMOR FINANCE MINISTER: There was a crisis. You
don't need to advertise anymore. It's not a matter of advertise - there
was a crisis. You can't just close the doors. Nobody was selling rice to
any other country. We didn't want to do that. We didn't want to kill our
private sector. Even though they did not have the capacity, our policy,
the government's policy, is to make sure that we help the private sector,
we empower them.
ALISON CALDWELL: Documents obtained by the ABC show a company called
Prima Food was paid US$3.5 million to import over 7,000 tonnes of rice to
East Timor. Xanana Gusmao's daughter Zenilda is a major shareholder of
Prima Food.
While Xanana Gusmao is yet to respond to the ABC's requests for an
interview, his deputy Mario Carrascalao rejects any suggestion of
impropriety.
MARIO CARRASCALAO: The first time I hear about the name of the Prime
Minister's daughter, and according to my knowledge on Mr Xanana Gusmao, he
is not the kind of man to favour his family directly. Maybe someone want
to please him and they perhaps help some of his relatives.
ALISON CALDWELL: The Prima Food contract isn't the only rice import
contract raising concerns. Among the owners of other companies awarded
lucrative contracts is the Prime Minister's daughter-in-law Carminda
Carlota. Married to the Prime Minister's son, Carminda Carlota is the
director and major shareholder of Olifante, a company which was paid
US$3.5 million to import rice.
ARSENIO BANO: I think he should resign. It is very, very serious. I
mean, I can't believe that someone can sign a contract, multi-millions
contract with a company that his daughters or daughter-in-law are a part
of.
EMILIA PIRES: So, the Prime Minister, when he signs off, he doesn't
even know which company, A, B, C. It's been cleared by the process.
ALISON CALDWELL: Under East Timorese law, the Prime Minister signs off
on contracts worth over $1 million, while the Finance Minister signs off
on contracts worth less than that. Article 32 of East Timor's procurement
law states that a public body can't grant a contract to a relative up to
the second degree of kinship, including direct relatives such as son or
daughter, and beyond that, nephews, nieces and cousins.
East Timor's Finance Minister Emilia Pires has been touted as a future
Prime Minister. She has a different interpretation of the law.
EMILIA PIRES: We don't discriminate people just because they happen to
be the Prime Minister's daughter or the brother of so and so. If they are
eligible, they apply. And so, I don't have any problems with that.
ALISON CALDWELL: A spokesman for the East Timorese Government says the
Prime Minister isn't legally considered a public body and therefore isn't
constrained by Article 32 of the procurement law. He says the allegations
are part of a campaign by the Opposition to discredit the Government the
day before Xanana Gusmao's Anti-Corruption Commission is due to be
approved by Parliament.
EMILIA PIRES: Opposition claims a lot of things. If you accompany our
processes, Opposition has been screaming, allegating left, right and
centre, calling everybody a corruptive person, et cetera, but so far have
not taken the cases to the tribunal, to the places where they should be
actually doing it.
ALISON CALDWELL: Speaking at a conference in Dili last year, the Prime
Minister said stamping out corruption was at the forefront of his
administration's priorities.
XANANA GUSMAO, EAST TIMORESE PRIME MINISTER (subtitle translation, May,
2008): We must make sure that corruption does not pay in Timor-Leste, that
the risks of engaging in corrupt behaviour are real and substantial.
ALISON CALDWELL: As Prime Minister, Xanana Gusmao leads a fragile
coalition of parties. With more government contracts now under
examination, the Prime Minister and his coalition could come under greater
pressure in the weeks ahead, leaving the fledgling nation on the verge of
another potential political crisis.
KERRY O'BRIEN: Alison Caldwell with that report.
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