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POST TIME: 16 September, 2017 00:00 00 AM
East Timor swears in new prime minister
AFP

East Timor swears in new prime minister

East Timor's Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri (L) stands with former prime minister Jose Manuel Horta before his swearing-in ceremony at the presidential palace in Dili yesterday. AFP photo

East Timor swore in a new government yesterday, led by a returning prime minister who experts say will need to wean the country off its reliance on oil revenues and diversify the economy, reports AFP from Dili.

Mari Alkatiri, secretary general of the Fretilin party, was inaugurated with 10 members of his 30-person administration at a ceremony in the capital Dili.

Speaking to hundreds of party faithful, the 68-year-old pledged to maintain good ties with neighbours Australia and Indonesia and improve public services.

“I will create a better economy, education and health in Timor-Leste,” said Alkatiri, using the official name for the country.

Impoverished East Timor, Asia’s youngest democracy, is heavily dependent on dwindling oil reserves.

Reining in government expenditure on large infrastructure projects and ensuring the long-term sustainability of its national petroleum fund will be key tasks for the new government, said Professor Michael Leach, from Australia’s Swinburne University of Technology.

“To avoid the resource curse it will have to diversify the economy, especially to provide jobs for the enormous number of young people it has,” he told AFP.

About 60 percent of East Timor’s 1.2 million people are aged under 25, according to the World Bank, and half the population live in poverty.

Fretilin, which won the July election by a narrow margin, did not receive enough votes to govern alone and has formed a minority coalition government with the Democratic Party.