From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
José Manuel Ramos-Horta (Portuguese
pronunciation: [ʒuˈzɛ ˈʁɐmuz ˈoɾtɐ]), GCL (born 26 December 1949) is the
second President of East Timor since
independence from Indonesia, taking office on 20 May 2007. He
is a co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize and a former Prime Minister, having
served from 2006 until his inauguration as President after winning
the 2007 East
Timorese presidential election.[1] As a
founder and former member of the Revolutionary
Front for an Independent East Timor (FRETILIN), Ramos-Horta
served as the exiled spokesman for the East Timorese resistance during the years of
the Indonesian occupation
of East Timor (1975 to 1999). While he has continued to work
with FRETILIN, Ramos-Horta resigned from the party in 1988, and has
since remained an independent politician.[2]
After East Timor achieved independence in 2002, Ramos-Horta was
appointed as the country's first Foreign Minister.
He served in this position until his resignation on 25 June 2006,
amidst political
turmoil. On 26 June, following the resignation of Prime
Minister Mari
Alkatiri, Ramos-Horta was appointed acting Prime Minister by
the President, Xanana Gusmão.
Two weeks later, on 10 July 2006, he was officially sworn in as the
second Prime Minister of East Timor. On 11 February 2008,
Ramos-Horta was injured when he was shot during an assassination
attempt.
Early
history and family
Of mestiço
ethnicity,[3]
Ramos-Horta was born in Dili,
capital of East Timor, to a Timorese mother and a Portuguese
father who had been exiled to what was then Portuguese
Timor by the Salazar dictatorship. He
was educated in a Catholic
mission in the small village of Soibada, later chosen by FRETILIN
as headquarters after the Indonesian invasion.
Of his eleven brothers and sisters, four were killed by the Indonesian military.
Ramos-Horta studied Public International Law
at the Hague Academy of
International Law (1983) and at Antioch University where he
completed a Master of Arts degree in Peace Studies (1984).
He was trained in Human Rights Law
at the International
Institute of Human Rights in Strasbourg (1983). He attended Post-Graduate
courses in American
Foreign Policy at Columbia University in New York
(1983). He is a Senior Associate Member of the University of Oxford's St Antony's College
(1987).
He is divorced from Ana Pessoa Pinto, East Timor's
Minister for State and Internal Administration. They have a son,
Loro.
Political
career
He was actively involved in the development of political
awareness in Portuguese Timor which caused him to be exiled for two
years in 1970–71 to Portuguese East
Africa. His grandfather, before him, had also been exiled, from
Portugal to the Azores Islands, then Cape Verde, Portuguese Guinea
and finally to Portuguese Timor.
A moderate in the emerging Timorese nationalist leadership, he
was appointed Foreign Minister in the "Democratic
Republic of East Timor" government proclaimed by the
pro-independence parties in November 1975. When appointed minister,
Ramos-Horta was only 25 years old. Ramos-Horta left East Timor
three days before the Indonesian troops invaded to plead the
Timorese case before the United Nations.
Ramos-Horta arrived in New
York to address the UN Security Council and
urge them to take action in the face of the Indonesian occupation
during which an estimated 102,000 East Timorese would die.[4]
Ramos-Horta was the Permanent Representative of FRETILIN to the UN
for the next ten years. His friends at that time mentioned that he
arrived in the United States with a total of twenty-five
dollars in his pocket. His pecuniary situation was often straitened
in that period; he survived partly by grace of Americans who
admired his politics and his determination. Further, he was obliged
to travel worldwide to explain his party's position.
In 1993, the Rafto Prize was awarded to the people of
East Timor. Foreign-minister-in-exile José Ramos-Horta represented
his nation at the prize ceremony.
In December 1996, Ramos-Horta shared the Nobel Peace
Prize with his fellow countryman, Bishop Ximenes Belo. The
Nobel Committee chose to honour the two laureates for their
"sustained efforts to hinder the oppression of a small people",
hoping that "this award will spur efforts to find a diplomatic
solution to the conflict of East Timor based on the people's right
to self-determination". The Committee considered Ramos-Horta "the
leading international spokesman for East Timor's cause since
1975".[5]
Ramos-Horta played a leading role in negotiating the
institutional foundations for independence. He led the Timorese
delegation at an important joint workshop with UNTAET on 1 March
2000 to tease out a new strategy, and identify institutional needs.
The outcome was an agreed blueprint for a joint administration with
executive powers, including leaders of the National
Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT). Further details
were worked out in a conference in May 2000. The
Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General in East
Timor, Sérgio Vieira de Mello,
presented the new blueprint to a donor conference in Lisbon,[6] on 22
June 2000, and to the UN Security Council on 27 June 2000.[7] On 12
July 2000, the NCC adopted a regulation establishing a Transitional
Cabinet composed of four East Timorese and four UNTAET
representatives.[8] The
revamped joint administration successfully laid the institutional
foundations for independence, and on 27 September 2002, East Timor
joined the United Nations. Ramos-Horta was its first Foreign
Minister.
On 3 June 2006, Ramos-Horta added the post of Interim Minister
of Defense to his portfolio as Foreign Minister, in the wake of the
resignations of the previous minister.[9] He
resigned as both Foreign and Defence Minister on 25 June 2006,
announcing, "I do not wish to be associated with the present
government or with any government involving Alkatiri."[10] Prime
Minister Alkatiri had been under pressure to resign his position in
place of President Xanana Gusmão, but in a June 25 meeting,
leaders of the FRETILIN party agreed to keep Alkatiri as Prime
Minister; Ramos-Horta resigned immediately following this
decision.[11] Foreign
Minister of Australia Alexander Downer expressed his
personal disappointment at Ramos-Horta's resignation.[12]
Following Alkatiri's resignation on 26 June, Ramos-Horta withdrew
his resignation to contest the prime ministership and served in the
position on a temporary basis until a successor to Alkatiri was
named.[13] On 8
July 2006, Ramos-Horta himself was appointed Prime Minister by
President Gusmão.[14] He
was sworn in on 10 July.
Before his appointment as Prime Minister, Ramos-Horta was
considered a possible candidate to succeed Kofi Annan as United
Nations Secretary-General.[15] He
dropped out of the race in order to serve as East Timor's Prime
Minister, but he has indicated that he might run for the UN
position at some time in the future: "I can wait five years if I am
really interested in the job in 2012. I would be interested in
that."[16]
In an interview with Al
Jazeera broadcast on 22 February 2007, Ramos-Horta said that he
would run for president in the April 2007
election.[17] On 25
February 2007, Ramos-Horta formally announced his candidacy. He
received the support of Gusmão, who was not running for
re-election.[18]
In the first round of the election, held on 9 April, Ramos-Horta
took second place with 21.81% of the vote; he and FRETILIN
candidate Francisco Guterres, who took first
place, then participated in the second round of the election in
May.[19] The
full results of the runoff elections were made public by East
Timor's National Electorial Committee spokeswoman, Maria Angelina
Sarmento, on 11 May, and Ramos-Horta won with 69% of the vote.[20]
Presidency
He was inaugurated as President of East Timor in a ceremony
at the parliament house in Dili on
20 May 2007.[21] He
had resigned as Prime Minister the day
before and was succeeded by Estanislau da Silva.
Assassination attempt
On 11 February 2008, José Ramos-Horta was shot in an
assassination attempt. In the gun skirmish, one of Ramos-Horta's
guards was wounded, and two rebel soldiers, including rebel leader
Alfredo
Reinado, were killed.[22][23]
Ramos-Horta was treated at Dili Australian military base before being
transferred to the Royal Darwin Hospital in Australia for further
treatment. Doctors thought that he had been shot two or three times
with the most serious injury being to his right lung.[24] His
condition was listed as critical but stable.[25] He
was placed in an induced coma on full life support,[26] and
regained consciousness on 21 February.[27] A
message from Ramos-Horta, still recovering in Darwin, was broadcast
on March 12. In this message, he thanked his supporters and
Australia and said that he had "been very well looked after". A
spokesman said that his condition was improving and that he had
started taking short daily walks for exercise.[28]
Ramos-Horta was released from the Royal Darwin Hospital on 19
March, although he said that he would stay in Australia for physical
therapy for "a few more weeks". He also said on this occasion
that he had remained conscious following the shooting and
"remember[ed] every detail", describing how he was taken for
treatment.[29] On
April 17, Ramos-Horta returned to Dili from Darwin. He gave a press
conference at the airport in which he urged the remaining rebels in
the mountains to surrender.[30]
Other
activities
Ramos-Horta is a frequent speaker, along with other Nobel Peace
Prize Laureates, at Peacejam conferences.
He has served as Chairman of the Advisory Board for TheCommunity.com, a web site for peace
and human rights, since 2000. In 2001 he gathered the post 9/11
statements of 28 Nobel Peace Prize Laureates on the web site[31], and
has spearheaded other peace initiatives with his fellow Nobel
Laureates.
Ramos-Horta supported the US invasion and occupation of Iraq,
and condemned the anti-American tone of its detractors as
"hypocritical"[32]. In
the 1990s he had supported the cause of Kurdish people in Iraq [33]
In May 2009 Ramos-Horta stated that he would ask the
International Criminal Court to investigate the ruling junta of
Burma (Myanmar) if they continue to detain fellow Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu
Kyi.[34]
On August 5, 2009, he attended the funeral of the late former
president of the Philippines Corazon Aquino. He was the only foreign
head of state to attend.
On September 29, 2009, he delivered the prestigious Legatum
Pericles Lecture at the Legatum Center for Development and
Entrepreneurship at Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.[35]
Depictions
The 2000 documentary The Diplomat, directed by Tom
Zubrycki, follows Ramos-Horta in the period from 1998 to his return
to East Timor in 2000.[36][37]
Ramos-Horta is played by Oscar Isaac in the 2009 film Balibo.[38] The
film tells the story of the Balibo Five and the events preceding the Indonesian occupation
of East Timor.[39]
References
- ^
Donald Greenlees, "East Timor hopes new leader
will heal divisions", International Herald Tribune, 11
May 2007.
- ^
The Age (2006). Ramos Horta vows to rebuild
Timor. Retrieved 27 September 2006.
- ^
Dr. José Ramos-Horta
- ^ A
detailed statistical report prepared for the
Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East
Timor cited a lower range of 102,800 conflict-related deaths in
the period 1974-1999, namely, approximately 18,600 killings and
84,200 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness. (Benetech Human Rights Data Analysis Group (9
February 2006). "The Profile of Human Rights
Violations in Timor-Leste, 1974-1999". A Report to the
Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation of
Timor-Leste. Human Rights Data Analysis Group (HRDAG). http://www.hrdag.org/resources/timor_chapter_graphs/timor_chapter_page_02.shtml.
- ^
The Norwegian Nobel Committee (2006). The Nobel Peace Prize
1996. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
- ^
Dili, 21 June 2000
- ^
[27 Jun 2000] SC/6882 :
SECURITY COUNCIL BRIEFED BY SERGIO VIEIRA DE MELLO, SPECIAL
REPRESENTATIVE FOR EAST TIMOR
- ^
http://www.unmit.org/UNMISETWebSite.nsf/TimeLineofUNMISET.htm?OpenPage
- ^
Seattle Times (3 June 2003). Nobel laureate takes security
posts.
- ^
Australian Associated Press (2006). Timor's foreign minister
resigns. Retrieved 25 June 2006.
- ^
Associated Press (2006). Alkatiri to remain as PM.
Retrieved 25 June 2006.
- ^
AM (2006). Downer disappointed by Horta
resignation. Retrieved 26 June 2006.
- ^
Reuters (2006). Jose Ramos-Horta to be East
Timor prime minister. Retrieved 8 July 2006.
- ^
Associated Press (2006). Ramos-Horta named E Timor's
new PM. Retrieved 8 July 2006.
- ^
UNSG.org (2006). Spec growing on
Ramos-Horta. Retrieved 27 September 2006.
- ^
The Courier Mail (2006). Ramos Horta ‘on PM
shortlist’. Retrieved 27 September 2006.
- ^
"East Timor PM to run for
president", Al Jazeera, 22 February 2007.
- ^
"Nobel laureate Jose
Ramos-Horta to run for president in East Timor", Associated
Press (International Herald Tribune), 24 February
2007.
- ^
"Two set to square off for
presidency", AAP (news.com.au), 18 April 2007.
- ^
"Guterres congratulates Horta
as new president of Timor-Leste", Xinhua (People's Daily
Online), 11 May 2007.
- ^
"Ramos-Horta sworn in as E
Timor president", 20 May 2007.
- ^ "Ramos-Horta wounded".
The Sydney Morning
Herald. 2008-02-11. http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/ramoshorta-wounded/2008/02/11/1202578639815.html. Retrieved
2008-02-11.
- ^ "Ramos Horta wounded, Reinado
dead in Timor attack". Australian Broadcasting
Corporation. 2008-02-11. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/11/2159179.htm. Retrieved
2008-02-11.
- ^
Australian troops arrive in
East Timor. AP, 12 February 2008.
- ^
news.com.au/story, Ramos-Horta
on way to Darwin
- ^
"East Timor leader 'in induced
coma'". BBC News Online. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7238142.stm. Retrieved
2008-02-11.
- ^
"Ramos-Horta regains
consciousness". 2008-02-21. http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/21/2168775.htm. Retrieved
2008-02-21.
- ^
Ed Johnson, "East Timor's Ramos-Horta
Thanks Supporters From Hospital Bed", Bloomberg.com, 12 March
2008.
- ^
"Timorese president leaves
Australian hospital after treatment following Feb. attack",
Associated Press (International Herald Tribune), 19 March
2008.
- ^
Lindsay Murdoch, "Emotional homecoming for
Ramos Horta", theage.com.au, 17 April 2008.
- ^
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0110/05/ltm.17.html
- ^
U.S. Soldiers Are The Real
Heroes In Iraq Wall Street Journal 17 October 2005
- ^
Jose Ramos Horta, Nobel Peace
Laureate, Speaks for Leyla Zana May 28, 1997
- ^
http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=15688
- ^
http://legatum.mit.edu/RamosHorta
- ^
"The Diplomat (2000)". IMDB. http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0258526/. Retrieved
2010-01-16.
- ^
"A Place to Think: The
Diplomat (2000)". ABC. http://www.abc.net.au/aplacetothink/html/diplomat.htm. Retrieved
2010-01-16.
- ^
"Balibo (2009)". IMDB.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1111876/. Retrieved
2009-08-22.
- ^
Davies, Luke (August 2009). Robert Connolly's 'Balibo'. The
Monthly. http://www.themonthly.com.au/node/1846. Retrieved
2009-08-22.
External
links