Sunday, October 16, 2011

Timor-Leste's Revealing Road Show

Incorporating Luro-Lautem, Com, Baucau, Letefoho, Lospalos and Laga. 
Pictures by Barry Greville-Eyres

A dramatic hilltop depiction of the crucifixion at the small town of Letefoho

Treetop sunrise at Letefoho with mountain valleys blanketed by mist 


Letefoho's place of workship for countless surrounding rural communities

Daily chores begin early for willing and well-disciplined Timorese children always happy to share a bashful  smile

Baucau's life-blood - an abundant source of spring water which gushes out of the surrounding mountainside and turns the town, the second largest in Timor-Leste, into a verdant and vibrant paradise 

Remnants of colonial rule - a public recreational area within the heart of Baucau

Baucau's famous natural spring-fed swimming pool

Baucau's magnificent Portuguese colonial marketplace, worthy of restoration and natural heritage status, cuts a forlorn image at the centre of the town

Despite disrepair and dereliction, the Baucau Market remains a huge drawcard for vistors and adds to Baucau's stately charm and beauty

Baucau street scene

Damaged infrastructure as a result of the illegal Indonesian occupation provides a blank canvas that portraits a new and exciting reality for Timor-Leste

The Timorese are fiercely proud of the little that they have and the immense strides that the nation-state has made in recent years

Com at sunrise with its small, deep water harbour and beautiful beaches is fast becoming a retreat for people wishing to escape from the hustle and bustle of Dili 

Fallow rice paddies stretching almost to the coastline on the approaches to Baucau

Fish in a bucket

Undoubtedly an iconic depiction, in classic imagery, of this wonderful and promising country - enjoying centre stage internationally with the famous annual mountain bike Tour de Timor. The crocodile is a hugely significant reptile for the Timorese, culturally and traditionally, it is respected, revered and highly protected. 

The stunning vista from a WW2 Japanese pill-box located on the beach near Com

Presumably a Japanese defensive position about to be reclaimed by the sea near Com

Lospalos' main thoroughfare

Luro's church is, as always, at the centre point of community life

Roadside entrepreneurs eager to share their locally picked mangos

Derelict Portuguese-era homesteads near to Com

Proud proprietors of the Sina Guest House at Com where tourists are able to experience true Timorese hospitality

A roadside traditional sacred house en route to Lospalos


The community-owned and mined natural salt resource at the Bugira-Laga Salt Lake

Mountains of mined, natural evaporated salt packaged for passing trade

Sra Rosa's small business development at Com consisting of a Timorese guest house and craft shop trading in locally woven tais and other fashion accessories.

A seaside view of the Sina Guest House at Com - very affordable accommodation, great service and traditional Timorese cuisine

Room with a view - sunrise at Com's Sina Guest House filtered through the mesh of mosquito netting






Thursday, October 6, 2011

Poignant and life-changing markers in time


In recent travels around Timor-Leste I’ve been awestruck by sights, moods, anecdotes and intuition that reveal the prolonged agony and short-lived euphoria of this inspirational nation.  The litany of abuses perpetrated, under colonization and illegal occupations, against the Timorese people and their land appear to be never-ending and exceedingly difficult for the human condition to comprehend. Historical accounts suggest that the genocide carried out during the period of Indonesian occupation far surpassed, proportionately, that of Cambodia’s infamous Killing Fields enacted by Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge. The ebb and flow, over time, of dark subliminal forces and the consequences of an unresolved, traumatic past on human spirit and development are reflected upon particularly as Timor-Leste struggles to meet unrealistic international expectations as a robust and emerging democratic state. Views reflected here are entirely personal and do not represent those of any other person or organization.  

Relatively little is known or recorded of the mark that Portuguese colonization, over 400 years of it, left on Timor-Leste. The most obvious are the ‘enlightenment’ and wholesale ‘conversion’ of Timorese to Catholicism; remnants of an antiquated and often conflicting ‘continental’ bureaucracy largely misplaced within the Asian context; and an ‘enduring’ commitment to the colonial lingua franca to the extent that it is still recognized as an official language although spoken by few locally and most definitely, fewer, in the broader geographical region. Indications are that life under Portuguese reign was relaxed and not too different from pre-colonial times. Theirs was largely a benign and ‘hands-off’ rule reinforced by the colony’s vast distance from the homeland and the ‘hardship posting’ label that soon became associated with Timor. There are historical accounts of periodic uprisings by tenacious, district-based Chieftains which required ‘pacifying’ but even in those times Timor appeared to be ‘two countries in one’ with a developing urban-rural divide. Portuguese rule and administration rarely went beyond the major towns, villages and military outposts. One can be sure that Timorese were repeatedly press-ganged into various ‘public works’ projects (agricultural, road, fort, irrigation, drainage, bridge building) over the centuries and examples of their handiwork, especially masonry work, can be found throughout the country. This backbreaking work obviously exacted its toil upon successive generations of Timorese but also succeeded in opening up the country and benefitting all.    

Opposing eras of collective colonization and illegal occupation - ancient remnants of a Portuguese fort (left) with a more recent WWII Japanese garrison (right) located at Aipelo, Liquica
The advent of the Second World War ‘shocked’ Portuguese Timor out of its geo-political isolation and ushered in what was to become a period of unprecedented change. Whereas Portugal stepped aside from hostilities declaring its neutrality status they ‘permitted’ (against the wishes of the Portuguese administrators and without consulting with the Timorese), in anticipation of a Japanese invasion, a combined Australian-Dutch commando force of between 400 - 700 troops to land on the island in December 1941. Barely two months later Darwin was heavily bombed and the Japanese invaded Timor.      

The Australians and their Timorese allies waged a year-long guerrilla campaign against a far superior Japanese force (numbering between 12,000 – 16,000 troops) until the commandos were ‘strategically’ evacuated in February 1943. Timorese resistance fighters continued to harass the Japanese invaders offering little or no collaboration, often to the detriment of the civilian population. Many villages were raised to the ground; food seized; and numerous other atrocities perpetrated. Timorese young girls and women experienced severe deprivation and sexual violence when forced into ‘comfort work’ by their Japanese masters.  It is estimated that 40,000–60,000 Timorese died during the 1942–1945 occupation. Whereas the ‘heroics’ of the Australian commando force and the bombing of Darwin were widely reported and have been commemorated (partly) ever since, the suffering endured by the Timorese resistance fighters and civilian population have largely gone untold or acknowledged.  

Contrast this with another threat posed, on a second front, to Australia by an ‘imminent’ Japanese invasion of Papua New Guinea at the same time. Perceived as more dire than real, the Kokoda campaign is recorded in history as Australia’s last stand against amassing hoards of imperial invaders. Ironically, the seeds of this were sown decades earlier by Australia itself and fellow League of Nation members’ abysmal treatment of the Japanese after the First World War at the Paris Peace Conference.

Some will argue that the Kokoda campaign was, perhaps, the equivalent of the Gunfight at O.K. Corral – a relatively insignificant one in relation to other more costly and fiercely contested WW2 campaigns. In recent years it has filled the psyche of many Australians and together with Gallipoli has been immortalized and glamorized by prime ministers, politicians and the media to the extent that those wanting to experience a rite of passage, conceivably for the only time in their lives, have flocked to labour over the Kokoda Track. Images of benevolent fuzzy wuzzies and fuzzy wuzzy angels; deep dark tropical jungle; unrelenting natural elements and an omnipresent enemy only serve to reinforce the frenetic appeal for this ‘canned’ experience. Suffice to say, much less has been said and written from the perspective of the other protagonists – Japanese and Papua New Guineans.

 
The African Connection - a shared struggle and hopefully a common destiny
Original Tetun-Timorese version

Mai ita hamrik hamutuk;                                     Let us stand together;
Halo ita nia mundu sai nudar we matan;              Transforming our world into a water spring;        
Ne’ebe bele tonka tane ita nia futuru;                  That will sustain our future;
Nudar ema iha planeta ida ne’e.                          As human beings on this planet.

NELSON MANDELA

 Inevitably, there is always an African link whether its casual interactions one has with African peacekeepers as part of the UN Integrated Mission to Timor-Leste; other chance connections or associations or the fact that, subconsciously, one is always trying to ‘conjure’ up one because of a proudly, African heritage. In this case the link was tangible and inscribed upon an impressive monument, located at the approaches to the largely symbolic Mt. Ramelau, commemorating the Timorese struggle for independence. Both Mandela and Ramos-Horta were awarded Nobel Peace Prizes for their respective liberation struggles and nation-building efforts and there is clearly a well-defined sense of solidarity between the famous statesmen and their countries.


Best of mates!
How things have changed since then – I can’t but compare the countries respective struggles (although there are no real grounds for comparison) likening South Africa’s to a half-marathon and Timor-Leste’s to an ultra-marathon – the Comrades or even a triathlon.  The internecine nonsense happening currently in South Africa with the young lions pitched in battle against the old foxes seems so pathetic and tarnishes the legacy of ANC stalwarts from a bygone era. The offending young lions should be shipped off to Timor-Leste to experience hardship and struggle firsthand – perhaps as crash-test dummies - on an ‘accelerated development’ course in humility all wrapped into a form of compulsory boot camp. They will soon lose their luxurious lustre and excess adipose tissue when deprived of copious amounts of quality inyama and vitamin B as a result of slightly inferior, mid-strength Asian beer substitutes as opposed to their customary full strength, Guess-the-Colour-of-the-Label. On second thoughts, one suspects that many of the fat cats have ‘graduated’ from beer to Chivas and other more expensive whiskies (rainbow coloured labels under the JW brand) and cognacs.


Timorese-styled Boot Camp for SA's 'young' ANC Turks


Recently, in search of my own favourite tipple I wandered into one of the many beachfront Timorese restaurants and was taken aback when I found, amongst many other national flags adorning the establishment’s walls, the old South African flag beaming down, sheepishly, on dining patrons. Many of them could not care a ‘F’ and that’s the beauty of this country – anything goes and it’s not at all big on political correctness. I was quick to point out, an almost automatic and duty bound response, to the proprietor that many of his ‘international customers’ would find this display somewhat offensive and disrespectful.  

It’s amazing to find in such a distant place an equally innocuous fruit that so aptly describes and symbolises the emerging leadership in SA – clearly green on the outside and wannabe white on the inside.  Of course, there is another far more fitting Asian fruit to best describe the situation on the home front – for those familiar with the durian will immediately appreciate the analogy (prickly on the outside and generally foul-smelling once opened yet deliciously sweet once you can get your nose beyond the overpowering aroma). Back to my favourite tipple and coconuts. I’ve only recently discovered that fresh, green chilled coconut juice / milk is the most amazing and refreshing re-hydration fluid one can find and beats all other substitutes hands down.  

In an article penned by John Pilger (February 1994) entitled ‘The West’s Dirty Wink’ he relates to the ‘developed’ world’s own but not dissimilar ‘brand’ of KKN – a widely used Bahasa-Indonesian three-letter acronym to denote corruption, collusion and nepotism  describing the ‘collective betrayal’ of East Timor by the West during the 1975-1999 period. It’s ironic that the unwilling trio then, consisting of US, Britain and Australia, would later became the Coalition of the Very Willing running interference in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Based on first-hand accounts, Pilger describes countless crosses littering the entire mountainous area of Matabian and subsequently turned into ‘dead earth’ by aerial bombing with incendiary ordnance by the Indonesian air force. Other sources suggest the widespread use of chemical defoliants and napalm, reminiscent of another failed war, poisoning the soil and food chain. Furthermore, Pilger refers to the ‘extinction of the Timorese civilian population – whole families, wiped out in the space of a year, a month, a day.’


Skeletal remains of Timor mountain gum forest on the lower slopes of Mt. Ramelau either clear felled or ring barked during Indonesian occupation


 Britain ‘profited’ considerably from defence contracts with Indonesia running into hundreds of millions of pounds and it was their low flying, ground attack Hawk aircraft that decimated concentrations of civilian and guerrilla populations around the Matabian mountain range and the lowland coastal plain of Natabora. In the initial of part of this campaign the Fretilin guerrillas held their own and inflicted considerable losses on the aggressors through hit and run tactics. This soon changed with a substantial Indonesian troop surge and particularly when they unleashed their superior firepower as part of a conventional warfare strategy which included a sustained campaign of air and sea bombardment. Bronco OV-10 anti-insurgency (US) and Nomad Search Master (Australian) aircraft, piloted by Indonesians, flew many sorties in this and other campaigns. The US A4 Skyhawk, one of their workhorses in Vietnam, was used extensively and to very good effect with the ability to saturate wide areas with accurate cannon fire and high explosive bombs.

This poster found, partly obscured, on the wall of a rural Timorese home may have faded but have the memories, anguish and trauma?



Fretilin resistance soon crumbled with surviving fighters heading deeper into the mountains and civilian populations retreating into lowland concentrated areas under the control of the Indonesian military. The Indonesian counter-insurgency strategy was in a sense a two-pronged one. The divide and conquer aspect entailed cutting Fretilin’s links with the civilian population denying them intelligence, food, shelter and supplies. The other part of the strategy was a scorched earth one where infrastructure, food crops, and livestock were eradicated indiscriminately and natural mountain/forest habitat, providing valuable cover, was modified through systematic clear felling of trees and aerial bombing. Some of the more sinister yet highly effective tactics employed included large-scale forced removals of civilian populations (often away for highly productive agricultural areas to areas less so and often undesirable for human habitation); creation of local-area Timorese militia exploiting political, social, regional and tribal factions; and the ‘blanketing’ of urban and rural areas with a heavy Indonesian troop and/or militia presence severely curtailing freedom of movement and access to the populace.


Clear-felled Timor mountain gum transformed from thriving montane forest to open grassland


When the Indonesian military finally withdrew after the August 1999 referendum they left a trail of destruction in their wake. Besides general wanton destruction to property and infrastructure, they ‘cannibalised’ whatever they could and shipped or trucked it out of the country. Occupation-related fatalities range from 100,000-200,000 with little hope of accurately verifying the figures. Even to this day, thousands of Timorese remain displaced across both the western and eastern parts of the land mass.

Findings of a recent World Bank Country Program Evaluation for Timor-Leste (2000–2010) revealed that there has been progress in many health indicators, particularly at improving the population’s access to basic health services. Health centres were built; mobile clinics increased and operationalized, hospitals rehabilitated and reconstructed and the supply of medical equipment and drugs was improved.


Oscar (left) and Nuno on the summit of Mt. Ramelau where they honor and celebrate the life of his departed son, Israelito Levi and his recently born sister, Andreia. 


In spite of these medical advances, Israelito Levi the first born child of proud parents Oscar and Paula contracted what was suspected to be cerebral malaria at the age of 16 months. In order to confirm this diagnosis Israelito was required to undergo a CT scan. The only machine available in Dili at the time happened to be out of service posing a terrible dilemma for his attending doctor and parents. Whilst considering a mercy flight to either Bali or Darwin for emergency treatment, Israelito slipped into a coma from which he never recovered. Israelito passed away on 23rd March 2011. Barely three weeks later, in a bitter sweet but miraculous occasion Oscar and Paula celebrated the birth of their precious daughter, Andreia.  As friends we commiserate and celebrate with Oscar and Paula over their mixed blessings. This is a very real story which will be played out by countless other Timorese families (re-lived and re-told) for some years to come. We share, together with Oscar and Paula, in the life and memory of Israelito.    

 
Israelito Levi cherished, loved and remembered forever by Oscar, Paula and Andreia


All too soon the UN and countless other agencies that make up the international donor community will pack up their kit-bags and head off to the next emerging crises – the Sudan, Libya or Egypt confident with a job well done. Boxes ticked, budgets blown, buildings built, systems in place, capacity developed, skills transferred to be farewelled, to be sure, by a more than audible sigh of collective relief from the Timorese. Given Timor’s turbulent history (especially the accumulation of deprivation, suppression, violence, and trauma across successive generations ….. on the spirit, soul and the psyche of this nation) and the recent unprecedented change that has engulfed this country, I cannot but wonder whether there is still some very, important unfinished business at hand. Some aid initiatives, particularly through the non-governmental and community-based organisations, have directly provided psychosocial, coping or change management support to marginalised groups such as War veterans, disabled and displaced people and victims of conflict or domestic violence. Despite this, there is a lingering sense that mainstream Timorese society, as resilient as it may appear, is still haunted and indelibly affected by the more and less recent past. This begs the question: has the development community done enough to support the emotional and psychological needs of the Timorese? 


Love, hope and charity springs eternal for the people of Timor-Leste
    








































Wednesday, October 5, 2011

A Shutterbug's Take on Exploring Australia's Top End - Northern Territory


Incorporating Berry Springs, Litchfield National Park (Batchelor), Nitmiluk National Park (Katherine), Kakadu National Park, World Natural Heritage Site and RAMSAR Wetlands (Jabiru) and the Darwin environs.
 Pics by Barry Greville-Eyres



View of the Nitmiluk Gorge, a major attraction within the Nitmiluk National Park outside Katherine. The park provides excellent outdoor recreational opportunities including canoeing, boating, fishing and hiking. 




A feature of the Litchfield National Park outside Batchelor is the enormous termite mounds, in this a case cathedral-shaped mound.


A saltie - estuarine or saltwater crocodile sunning itself on a causeway between Arnhem Land and the Kakadu National Park near Jabiru.



Walker Creek within the Litchfield National Park provides ample swimming opportunities for hikers and campers alike.



Rare and endangered cycads found only in the Litchfield National Park (Batchelor) displaying their resiliance and fire survival adaptation.

Darwin's beaches are no-go areas for significant parts of the year due to dangers posed by salties, box jelly fish and other creepy crawlies. Locals and tourists alike enjoy Darwin's waterfront wave pool located at the entertainment and conference precinct.



A large saltie captured in the reflection of a paper bark tree



Incredible land forms are a feature of Arnhem Land which is seperated from the Kakadu National  Park by the perennial East Alligator River

The pristine East Alligator River - freshwater in upper reaches and saltwater in the lower supporting a healthy population of crocodiles. 


Batchelor's resident birdlife enjoying a feed.

Adelaide River at the heart of the Top End provides interesting historical insights into the development of the region as well as a welcome leg stretch. 

The floodplains of Kakadu which explode into life with the arrival of the Big Wet. Smoke from runaway bushfires drifts across the evening sky.

Florence Falls in the Litchfield National Park provide welcome respite from the energy-sapping heat.

No worries for this sizable Golden Orb Spider as she waits patiently for her next meal.

Winging my way back to Dili, Timor-Leste on the first local carrier - Timor Air

Jabiru's green and blue open space contrasts with the parched surroundings struggling at the peak of the dry season. 


A visit to Erwin's Kakadu Bakery located in the hamlet of Jabiru is an absolute MUST where one can feast on his famous hamburgers, deliciously fresh salads, meat pies, wraps and mouthwatering pastries.

Lotus flowers - Yellow River - Kakadu National Park

The reward at the end of the Butterfly Gorge Walk - cooling off in the Nitmiluk Gorge in stunning and pristine surroundings



An interesting roadside sign courtesy of the Northern Territory / Australian Government Initiative  

A freshwater mangrove on the shoreline dwarfed by magnificent paperbark trees.

A muted yet still impressive Sea Eagle - Australia's second largest raptor perches on a paperbark branch above the Yellow River (Kakadu National Park). This sighting immediately brought back nostalgic memories of Africa's iconic bird call - the Fish Eagle.  

Neville - Aboriginal Elder, Tour Guide and Ranger demonstrates his spearthrowing technique as part of the Guluyambi Cruise experience on the East Alligator River - Kakadu National Park


Arguably the most scenic and popular swimming spot in Litchfield's National Park - Wangi Falls 

The towering Tolmer Falls accessed via a short, circular walking trail in the Litchfield National Park (Batchelor) 

Waterways and wetlands - Yellow River Kakadu National Park

Extensive freshwater wetlands that make up the Kakadu National Park consisting of  pandanus in the foreground and towering paperbark trees in the background.


Dawn cruise on the Yellow River - Kakadu National Park, World Natural Heritage Site and RAMSAR Wetland is another one of those MUSTS when visiting this area.

 
Motorised cruises in the Nitmiluk Gorge (Katherine) for the couch-potatoes and less adventurous tourists. The canoeing option is highly recommended.

 
Berry Springs - less than an hour out of Darwin is a fresh water paradise with shady forest remnants and a series of natural, refreshingly cool swimming holes.
On the trail ... hiking the Butterfly Gorge in the Nitmiluk National Park (Katherine) is not for the fainthearted especially at the height of the dry season where temperatures can reach the high 30s / low 40s 


 
For the uninitiated this is what a true, blue Aussie billabong looks like!

 
High intensity tourism with low environmental impact is a feature of the Nitmiluk Gorge within the Nitmiluk National Park. During the Wet most of the Gorge is out of bounds to tourists due to dangerously high water levels and wandering crocodiles.