East
Timor's Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao has offered his resignation to the
country's president. The move comes ahead of an expected government overhaul
next week.
Deutsche Welle, 6 Feb 2015
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| Prime Minister of East Timor Xanana Gusmao, Photo:Rob Griffith, Pool/AP/dapd |
"The
government confirms that the prime minister of Timor-Leste, H.E. Kay Rala
Xanana Gusmao, has sent his letter of resignation from the post of prime
minister to the president of the republic, H.E. Taur Matan Ruak," an East
Timorese government spokesman said on Friday in a statement on an official
website.
"It is
now for the president of the republic to respond to the letter of
resignation," the statement added.
Gusmao, 68,
a former guerilla leader, became prime minister in 2007 after five years as the
country's first president after it gained independence from Indonesia in 2002.
For more than a year, he has been hinting that he would step down to pass the
responsibility of governing to a younger generation.
His letter
of resignation came shortly after he started talks with the president on a
government restructuring.
A
government statement issued earlier said authorities wanted to "reduce the
size of the executive to create a more efficient and functional body focused on
results, and allow opportunities for a younger generation of leaders to make a
contribution to the nation."
Young
nation
East Timor
was invaded and occupied by Indonesia in 1975 shortly after declaring its
independence from Portugal, which ruled the country for centuries.
The
Timorese voted overwhelmingly for independence from Jakarta in a UN-backed
referendum in 1999 after 24 years of brutal occupation that left more than
170,000 dead.
Gusmao led
the military wing of the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor
(FRETILIN), which fought against Indonesian rule. He was imprisoned in Jakarta
toward the end of the Indonesian occupation, but continued to spearhead the
struggle for independence from jail, returning to his homeland as a hero after
the referendum.
Since
attaining independence, the country of 1.2 million has struggled to establish
itself economically, despite possessing abundant gas resources, and around half
of its population live in poverty.

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