President: Jose Ramos-Horta
Jose Ramos-Horta, a Nobel Peace Prize winner and former prime minister, won presidential elections in April 2007 with nearly 70% of the vote. His rival, parliament speaker and Fretilin movement candidate Francisco Guterres, conceded defeat.
Jose Ramos-Horta, seriously wounded in a 2008 shooting |
He succeeded independence leader Xanana Gusmao in the largely ceremonial post. Mr Ramos-Horta spent two decades in exile and was a key figure in East Timor's campaign for independence, first in the Fretilin movement that he helped to found, and later as an independent politician.
He served as foreign minister and prime minister under President Gusmao.
In early 2008 he was shot by rebel soldiers in what the government described as an attempted coup. He was taken to hospital in Australia in a serious but stable condition, and resumed his duties in April.
Prime minister: Xanana Gusmao
President Ramos-Horta appointed former President Gusmao as prime minister in August 2007, breaking a political impasse following inconclusive parliamentary polls in June.
The appointment of Mr Gusmao, the leader of armed resistance to Indonesian rule, sparked violent protests from supporters of the former ruling Fretilin party.
Xanana Gusmao |
Fretilin won 21 seats in the 65-member Parliament, well short of a majority. Mr Gusmao's party won 18 but formed a coalition comprising 37 seats.
Mr Gusamao had set up the National Congress of East Timor's Reconstruction (CNRT) in 2007 to wrest power from Fretilin.
Media
Radio is the most popular medium. State-run Radio Television Timor-Leste launched in 2002. Public radio is said to reach some 90% of the population; public TV has a smaller coverage.
Many community radio stations are on air, often with funding from international agencies and NGOs.
East Timor has a handful of daily and weekly press titles. Economic and physical factors, as well as high rates of illiteracy, limit readership.
"Journalists often feel intimidated and practice self-censorship," US-based Freedom House reported in 2010.
BBC World Service is available in Dili via BBC 105.9 FM. There are FM relays of Portuguese and Australian radio.
East Timor had around 1,800 internet users by September 2009 (InternetWorldStats.com).
The press/internet
- Suara Timor Lorosae - daily
- Diario Nacional - daily
- Timor Post - daily
- Jornal Nacional Semanario - weekly
- East Timor Centre for Investigative Journalism - news website
- Timor Today - news website
- Televisao de Timor-Leste (TVTL) - public
- Radio Nacional de Timor-Leste (RTL) - public
- Radio Falintil/Voz da Esperanca - community station which began life as a clandestine station operated by East Timor rebels
- Radio Timor Kmanek (RTK) - Catholic Church radio
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