| USAID Timor-Leste | Democracy
and Governance Program Highlights Archive |
| FEMALE
LAWYERS MAKE A MARK IN TIMOR-LESTE (November 13, 2007) |
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In response, USAID and TAF agreed to support completion scholarships for Timorese female law students who were forced to abandon their studies in Indonesian universities following the post-referendum violence. Two female law students were identified following discussions with the Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth and Sports for the scholarships: Isabel Perreira at the Law Faculty Universitas Widya Mataram in Yogjakarta, Indonesia; and Rozinda Tilman, at the Law Faculty of Universitas Wisnuwardana Malang, in Malang, Indonesia. Since returning to Timor-Leste as full-fledged lawyers in 2005, the two have worked in the non-profit sector, focusing on female clients. “Many women here recognize my presence now. They trust me and are confident in my abilities. In the area (where I work), I am known as a ‘women’s lawyer’,” says Ms. Perreira. Ms. Perreira began work in September 2005 with the women’s NGO Fokupers, helping women pursue their domestic violence cases through the court system. In 2006, she moved to Educasaun Communidade Matebian (ECM) in Baucau and has so far handled about 30 cases involving gender-based violence, civil cases involving women, and general criminal cases. “In Timor-Leste today,” she says, “women’s cases are diverse and complex, and are not limited to gender-based violence.” She also volunteers as a legal advisor to Baucau Buka Hatene, a committee
focusing on women’s issues in her area. She works closely with the
group and police investigators as they coordinate their efforts to solve
women’s problems and explore strategies for publicizing women’s
rights and the legal resources available to them in the district. Ms. Tilman says that she has come to admire her female clients in the course of her work. “When I tell my female clients about women’s rights, they say, ‘I have heard so much about women’s rights, but it’s only now that I feel I actually have them.’ They feel that rights only mean something when these provide a solution to their problems,” she says. Ms. Tilman is currently helping establish a mobile legal service team
in four villages in the subdistrict of Aileu. The team has been coordinating
with the various villages in the course of its work, to ensure that mediation
and litigation complement each other. Since joining URA, Ms. Tilman has
also helped forge a referral network among legal and women’s organizations.
The Timorese women whom the two lawyers have helped and served would
surely agree. |
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