Asia: Timor govt runs out of money to feed refugees
By Stephanie March
DILI, March 31 AAP – Jose Sarmento lines up on a basketball court
with 3,000 other displaced people to collect his rice and cooking oil
for the month.
He stands with an empty rice sack and an old water bottle.
These men, women and children wait in line for up to six hours for
their four kilograms of rice and a half litre of oil, given out at
the Don Bosco Church compound in Dili, their home for the past two years.
As parents wait in line, small children run about screaming and
playing basketball.
Some children are too young to remember life before their families
were forced to take shelter in internally displaced persons (IDP)
camps. For them food ration lines are a normal part of life.
“We live here because we are afraid of the others,” Jose says.
For Jose, “the others” are people who burnt down his home during East
Timor’s 2006 crisis that left 37 people dead, and forced 150,000 to
flee their homes.
In 2006, tensions between the country’s armed forces paved the way
for an east versus west ethnic conflict which led to over 8,000 homes
being destroyed and thousands more damaged.
Many homes in Dili were burnt down by rival groups within
neighbourhoods, forcing residents to flee to IDP camps that emerged
across the country.
About 70,000 people still live like Jose, in tents across the
country, dependant upon food giveaways, too scared to move back next
to neighbours who only two years ago attacked them.
But at the end of April, Jose’s food handouts end.
In February, the World Food Program (WFP) cut rice rations from eight
kilograms to four, and as of April they will stop them altogether.
“It was already in the pipeline because we know that not all IDPs
need food handouts, and we don’t want to make people dependant,” says
Joan Fleuren, country director of the WFP in East Timor.
Despite the WFP’s long-planned exit strategy, East Timor’s State
Secretary for Social Assistance Jacinto De Deus says his government
was under the impression the WFP would continue its support
throughout 2008, which is why it failed to allocate any money in this
year’s budget to pay for food for the people living in camps.
“This year, the government allocated $US15 million ($A16.38 million)
for the IDPs, and mainly that money is only to be used for the
recovery effort, and none of the amount is allocated for the
humanitarian assistance,” he says.
“For two years already, all the food has been provided from the
international community through WFP,” he said.
“It’s something that the government must take over but unfortunately
we didn’t anticipate it during the budget discussion for 2008.”
That lack of foresight has forced East Timor’s government to launch
its own appeal to donors and bilateral partners to help provide the
$US700,000 ($A764,442) it says it needs each month to feed the IDPs.
And at a donor meeting on Saturday, East Timor’s vice Prime Minister
Jose Luis Gutteres appealed to 27 donor countries for $US33.5 million
($A36.58 million) in aid assistance to help the government through 2008.
Part of that funding would be used to buy food for IDPs, he said.
But raising that money may prove difficult, as donor fatigue towards
the IDP problem is already showing.
“Even last June there was always this uneasiness from donors,” Fleuren says.
“They were asking ‘how long, how much longer do we continue with
IDPs?’, but that was just after the elections and there was good
reason to not completely cut it because there was a new government,
but clearly the donors wanted an exit strategy.”
There are good reasons for donors to question why they are being
asked to give so much money to IDPs.
According to an assessment in September last year, only half of the
country’s 70,000 displaced people actually need food supplied to them.
The other half have access to income-generating activities, or have
other means of growing or getting food.
Finn Reske-Nielsen, the United Nations Mission in Timor-Leste
humanitarian coordinator, said Timor wasn’t Darfur, where people live
in camps and they have no other options.
“Many of the people in the camps (in Timor) are working, and many of
them have set up little businesses, and therefore they do have
alternatives to food handouts,” Reske-Nielsen said.
But Fleuren says the assessment also showed that around 35,000 of
non-IDPs in East Timor are in desperate need of food assistance.
“What we are trying to do now, is to stop [IDP] food distribution
altogether, and we are trying to identify people who are chronically
vulnerable, who need continued assistance maybe in the form of food,
or food coupons, not only IDPs but also the rest of the population,”
Fleuren said.
Since the February attacks on East Timor’s leaders that left
President Jose Ramos Horta severely wounded and rebel leader Alfredo
Reinado dead, several hundred displaced people have felt safe enough
to move home.
While this initial movement is a good sign, the UN doesn’t expect the
displacement problem will resolve itself anytime soon, and predicts
only one third of displaced people will have returned home by the end
of this year.
Jose Sarmento hopes to move home as soon as he gets a relocation
grant from the government, but he is worried about what could happen
if the government chooses to – or is forced to – stop giving food aid
to people in camps.
“Of course there will be trouble because the people who live in camps
need to eat three times a day. Where do they get this food? Of course
they steal from the others.
“Why should the government stop? If the government is not responsible
for this, then who is?”
——————————————
Joyo Indonesia News Service
No comments yet.
Leave a comment
-
Recent
- UNMIT MEDIA MONITORING
- Job – Peace Dividend Marketplace Project Manager
- ormer ETimor Refugees Demand Govt Attention as Thousands Protest in Atambua
- Job: Chief of Party – (Contigent on funding)
- UNV Radio Broadcast Equipment Trainer, Dili
- WB: East Asia Update – TIMOR-LESTE
- Guyoon-Yuk
- Job – Planning and Financial Management Capacity Building Programme – TimorLeste
- Kisah pegawai sapu ijuk
- UN News Service
- Asia: Timor govt runs out of money to feed refugees
- Job Vacancy IT Support- World Vision International – Timor Leste
-
Links
-
Archives
- April 2008 (12)
- March 2008 (13)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS