Continued International Support For Timor-Leste
Un Envoy Appeals For Continued International Support For
Timor-Leste
The top United Nations envoy in
Timor-Leste today appealed for continued international
support for the infant nation, stressing that global backing
is particularly important for the development and stability
of public administration institutions.
Kamalesh Sharma, the head of the UN Mission of Support in East Timor (UNMISET), told the Security Council in an open briefing that the UN is concentrating its attention on helping Timor-Leste, as the country is now known, to become a viable and growing nation.
Challenges ahead include establishing the rule of law, creating jobs, fostering national development, installing a democratic culture, building institutions and absorbing aid, he said.
The envoy stressed the Mission's main role as "enabler and facilitator" of meeting larger political, social and economic goals, as well as implementing the precise Council mandate in external and internal security for Timor-Leste, and support to various branches of public administration.
"The goal of UNMISET at the end of its mission, is to enable Timor-Leste to emerge as a State in full possession of all attributes of sovereignty, stable and increasingly prosperous, making steady advances in continuing partnership with external institutions, friendly governments and civil society," Mr. Sharma said.
He noted that the timetable to hand over complete responsibility for internal security to the Timor-Leste police service by January 2004 is on schedule, and that the country's defence forces are expected to complete their take over of external security from UN peacekeepers by mid-2004.
Meanwhile, Timor-Leste has been making steady progress in developing friendly relations with Indonesia, Mr. Sharma said, particularly on the issue of the return of refugees from West Timor.
The prospects of the new State should be looked at with "positive expectation and optimism," Mr. Sharma told the Council meeting, which had some 30 countries set to participate in the ensuing discussion.
The contribution and constructive engagement
of various international actors in Timor-Leste generate
confidence that the third successive UN mission "can
anticipate the successful termination of its mandate in
mid-2004 with the confidence that the country will advance
surely on its own towards an increasingly prosperous and
stable future," he added.