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Launched
in 2004, the Government Information Office (GIO) is helping Government
workers deliver accurate information to the public through press
releases, fact sheets, multimedia presentations, and Government
websites.
As displaced residents struggled to recover from an outbreak
of violence that swept across Timor-Leste in April 2006, agencies
such as the Ministry for Labor and Community Reinsertion were
doing as much as they could to bring life back to normal. The
Ministry delivered information to several local newspapers explaining
how it was
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helping displaced
residents return home and later launched a “Simu Malu”
(mutual acceptance) campaign to prevent youth gang violence in
dangerous villages. The efforts were spearheaded by graduates
of the Government Information Office (GIO). Created in 2004 with
USAID support, the office is teaching a new class of information
officers how to empower citizens one fact at a time.
The difficulty of reaching people scattered across Timor-Leste’s
rugged terrain, combined with a relatively inexperienced media,
means the Government must play a crucial role in keeping citizens
informed. “I think communication is a new thing in Timor-Leste,”
says Joaquin Santos, the lead trainer at the GIO. “This
is one of our problems. We need to create a culture of communication.”
The GIO is helping the Government meet this need by working with
a number of different ministries and offices to develop their
multimedia communications skills. Recent support from USAID’s
Small Grants Program sponsored training for more than 40 public
information officers, including 11 women, from 10 ministries and
other Government offices. Materials produced by trainees range
from explanations of the police’s 72-hour detention policy
to steps for obtaining a national passport. Other materials have
helped explain the national tax system, the importance of clean
water and water source preservation, and the public health risks
of avian flu.
Hanging on the walls of the GIO training center at the Palácio
do Governo are published news stories inspired by GIO press releases
and a front-page photo taken by a trainee. Here, information officers
have access to the latest software tools available for editing
videos, designing websites, publishing flyers, and creating presentations.
Teresita Ximenes, a staff member at the Provedor’s Office,
which handles anti-corruption and human rights issues, is reaching
the end of her nine-month training and putting the finishing touches
on an office fact sheet. “This will help the people understand
about what our office is doing,” she says.
The office has been able to demonstrate in a short time that it
is meeting a vital need. The President’s office recruited
one graduate of the program to manage communications. The GIO
has also worked with Ministers and other high-level Government
officials on the importance of communications, providing pointers
on such issues as fielding tough questions from the media. The
government of Timor-Leste has committed to fully funding the GIO
under the new budget in January 2008. The move would help ensure
that the office’s training services are available for generations
to come.

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