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Subject: Fishing For Tourist Dollars
<http://newmatilda.com/2010/04/13/fishing-tourist-dollars>
http://newmatilda.com/2010/04/13/fishing-tourist-dollars
EAST TIMOR
13 Apr 2010
Fishing For Tourist Dollars
By Nigel O'Connor
Tourism initiatives in East Timor are attracting a new generation of
foreign visitors to the tiny nation and creating avenues for economic
development, writes Nigel O'Connor
Atauro Island is visible from the beaches of Dili, a barren stretch of
hills rising out of the Wetar Straight. The interior is harsh terrain,
inhabited by impoverished villagers who eke out a living farming goats and
chickens, and harvesting yams and pineapples. The majority of Atauro’s
10,000 residents cling to the coast, fishing the island’s reefs.
I’m walking along the only road on Atauro, away from Vila, the island’s
largest town and administrative centre. Half constructed, it is only
passable for vehicles tough enough to tackle its rugged surface. In the
dusty heat, a father approaches with his two young sons.
It is November 2009. Like me, and the rest of the town’s population,
the trio have just attended celebrations marking the anniversary of East
Timor’s independence from Portuguese colonial rule. The Portuguese
started using Atauro as a prison island in the late 16th century and it
was to Atauro that the Portuguese governor and his administration fled in
1975 on the outbreak of civil war. The island was used as a prison by the
Indonesians too.
The children smile as they make their way toward us. They both hold
miniature replicas of the traditional outrigger boats common to the region’s
fishing communities, intricately constructed from bamboo and rattan. The
father carries more boats in a large black bag and I ask him if they are
for sale. Looking me up and down he says they cost US$10.
In broken Indonesian I tell him to travel the six kilometres to Beloi,
further along the island’s coast, where he could sell the boats for more
money to the many foreigners camping there. "Really?" he asks.
Enlisting the help of passing children, the man and his salesmen stand
with their armada until a passing vehicle stops. They pile into the back:
arms, heads and boats sticking out everywhere.
When I returned to Beloi later that day I noticed a number of tourists
carrying the boats. I asked one how much he had paid for it. "Thirty
dollars," he said a good result in a country where the average
weekly income is US$10 a week.
This was no ordinary weekend on Atauro. 250 anglers, United Nations
troops, members of the Portuguese Republican Guard, media, representatives
from the country’s 13 districts, and the President himself, Jose
Ramos-Horta, had descended on the island for East Timor’s first
<http://www.ntnews.com.au/article/2009/10/19/93711_ntnews.html>International
Sport Fishing Competition.
Lured by a sense of adventure, the game fish, and the prize money on
offer, many competitors had flown in from Darwin to attend. It ran like a
military operation: tents, marquees and toilet blocks were erected for the
crowds. Food and drinking water were shipped from Dili and UN vehicles
travelled up and down the island’s road, ferrying people and equipment.
This was just one of a series of major events that Ramos-Horta hopes
will showcase East Timor to the world. In August 2009, cyclists covered
the 450-kilometre course of the inaugural
<http://www.tourdetimor.com/>Tour de Timor, a mountain bike race
around the island. It was so successful that planning for a 2010 follow-up
event is underway.
Events like these are an opportunity not only to display the beauty of
the nation, but to demonstrate its ability to host international guests. I
travelled to Timor for the fishing and because I thought it would make
a good story. When I explained my interest in Atauro, Ramos-Horta agreed
to an interview.
"These events are designed to place Timor on the map because
tourism is vital to our future," the President told me as we sat
drinking local coffee in the shade offered by a beach bungalow. "It
could employ thousands of people across a range of industries."
Importantly these people would be employed outside the UN and NGO inflated
economy of Dili.
Coffee production has been the staple of Timor’s economy since
colonial times. Even though revenue has begun to flow from offshore energy
projects, there remains a desperate need for economic development in order
to provide employment and opportunity.
The President plans to continue raising Timor’s profile by hosting
these events. "In addition to continuing the Tour and the fishing in
2010, we will be hosting the first <http://dilimarathon.com/en/>Dili
International Marathon as well as beginning filming of a Survivor-style
reality TVprogram," he said.
While Ramos-Horta’s promotion of East Timor as a tourist destination
might look like it’s starting from scratch, before the Indonesian
invasion of 1975 the country enjoyed a good reputation with intrepid
vacationers from Australia. In the 1960s, Europeans travelling the hippy
trail ended the Asian leg of their journey in East Timor and Australians
travelling in the opposite direction began there.
Sandra Lew Fatt runs a travel agency in Darwin and specialises in
organising Northern Territory Government trips to the country. She has
strong connections to East Timor, having lived there in the 1960s. She
holidayed there frequently and organised cross-cultural exchanges when it
was still a Portuguese colony. "In those days Bali wasn’t on the
map and people from Darwin would travel to Timor," she said.
"They were wonderful days and I made incredible friendships. The
place was just starting to gear up for tourism before the civil war began
in 1975 and Indonesia invaded shortly after."
Watching events unfold from Darwin, Sandra said her thoughts often
wandered to her friends across the Timor Sea. She assisted refugees
fleeing the civil war as they arrived in Darwin. Even though East Timor
has been relatively peaceful in recent years she has still not travelled
back, fearing her happy recollections of the past will be altered by the
reality of the present. "I will go back when the time is right,"
she said. "But after everything that has happened I don’t want to
go back to a place I once loved so much and see it destroyed."
Revenue from Timor Sea gas projects is helping to pay for some of the
investment needed to develop the infrastructure seen as necessary to
attract more tourists. "We are constructing luxury resorts, five star
hotels and golf courses," Ramos-Horta told me. "We want people
from around the world to look at Timor but particularly Australians. You
travel all around the world to places in Europe, Asia, the Americas, so
why not Timor? We are so close."
Ramos-Horta said he hopes his country does not end up like Cambodia,
earning foreign dollars by selling its traumatic past to tourists hoping
to see blood-splattered sites of mass murder and torture. "If I’m a
tourist I don’t want to visit places that will give me nightmares,"
he said.
Having seen the success of Papua New Guinea in marketing the Kokoda
Trail to Australian war history enthusiasts, however, the President
believes there could be similar opportunities for East Timor. "This
is ancient history to the Timorese," he observed. "This period
was an epic struggle for the East Timorese and Australian people against
the invading Japanese. While we don’t have anything on the scale of
Kokoda, we could develop something to a smaller degree with historical
tours."
These events promote Timor as a country of beauty and give visitors an
appreciation of the Timorese people’s seemingly boundless hospitality
and resilience. Ramos-Horta does recognise the problems that may arise
from increases in affluent visitors. In a poor country with limited
natural resources and an environment relatively untouched by heavy
industry, increased pollution is a real possibility, as is an influx of
sex tourists.
Having observed the experience of other South East Asian nations in
managing tourism growth he sees the potential environmental and social
problems arising as needing careful management. "When you look at
other countries in our region there are potential social problems from
increased numbers of tourists," he said. "East Timor is a very
socially conservative country so social problems will create political
problems."
On Atauro, even though the foreign competitors didn’t catch many
fish, and despite an outbreak of food poisoning, the organiser of the
fishing competition, Sean Borrell, declared the event a success
especially given the practical and logistical challenges it posed.
And when you take into account the fact that the tournament brought
over US$30,000 to the island’s communities it is hard to argue
otherwise. "For Atauro this is a massive cash injection that will
circulate long after everyone packs up and goes home," Borrell said.
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