TIMOR-LESTE Falling short on MDGs*

Tuesday, February 21, 2012
By IRIN 

The Southeast Asian half-island nation of Timor-Leste is falling short on most 
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), experts warn. 

“The areas that remain challenging or off-track compared to the 2015 targets 
include poverty, underweight children, maternal mortality and sanitation,” 
Felix Piedade, the national adviser of Timor Leste’s MDG Secretariat, told 
IRIN. 

Timor-Leste gained independence from Indonesia to become one of the world’s 
youngest nations in 2002 after a 25-year civil war. Six years of instability 
followed. 

Due to Timor-Leste’s recent violence, which included attacks on the president 
and prime minister in 2008  and a military uprising in 2006, the UN chose it as 
one of nine countries worldwide to receive extra support in meeting the MDGs. 

While Goal 1 includes halving the proportion of people living on less than US$1 
a day, in Timor-Leste that population actually grew from 36 percent in 2001 to 
50 percent in 2007, according to Piedade. 

As of 2009, the rate dropped to 41 percent, still not close to meeting the goal 
of 14 percent set in 2004. 

But there have been some improvements. 

“Timor-Leste has surpassed the MDG target for 2015 for both under-five 
mortality rate [96/1,000 live births] and infant mortality rate [53/1,000 live 
births] based on targets set in 2004,” Piedade said. 

The country is on track for only two of the other eight MDGs: achieving 
universal primary education, and promoting gender equality and empowering 
women, according to the UN Development Programme. 

Gender 

But measuring progress can be tricky. 

“When you talk about gender here, there are different indicators,” said Silvia 
Cormaci, a gender expert in Timor-Leste. 

Cormaci noted advances have been made in improving the political participation 
of women, who now comprise 29 percent of parliamentarians - among the highest 
proportion in Asia. 

A new law has been passed requiring that one in three candidates in the 
June-July 2012 parliamentary election must be a woman. 

“But 70 percent of women work in unpaid work in agriculture. And there’s big 
issues on domestic violence, one of the highest rates in Asia,” said Cormaci. 

Nationally, 38 percent of women aged 15-49 reported experiencing violence since 
age 15, according to the government’s most recent demographic health survey. 

Thirty-six percent of the women who were, or had been, married reported 
violence - physical, sexual, or emotional - by a husband or partner. 

Widespread rape and sexual assault of women and children went largely 
unpunished during the military occupation. 

Domestic violence has technically been a crime since 2009 under the penal code, 
but it was not until 2010 that a law clearly defined the crime and mandated 
victim support services. 

“A lot of work has been done to train police on the law,” Cormaci added. “The 
problem is that many people still turn to traditional justice as a means of 
settling their disputes. So you have [a] good domestic violence law there, but 
implementation is much harder.” 

ms/pt/cb 

*This is an edited version of the original posting from 15 February
http://www.speroforum.com/a/UPESWAVCAX5 ... ro+News%29

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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