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Assembly nearly finishes constitution's 151 articles

Source
UNTAET Daily Briefing - January 28, 2002

Dili – The Constituent Assembly has nearly completed its two-month debate on the 151 articles of East Timor's first Constitution, keeping the popularly elected body on schedule to promulgate the historic document in early March.

Only four articles remain to be passed before the entire text is harmonized and approved in early February. The Portuguese-language document must then be translated into Tetum and distributed among civil society for review. Any public concerns or suggestions will be considered by the Assembly before a formal promulgation vote and ceremony are held on 9 March. Articles passed since late Wednesday include:

Article 143, which states that amendments to the Constitution must respect East Timor's independence, unity, republican form of government, multiparty system, separation of powers, judicial independence and the rights and freedoms guaranteed to its citizens. Amendments must also respect the rights of a democratic opposition, universal suffrage, the separation of church and state, the principle of a decentralised administration, the national flag and the date of the proclamation of national independence. Changes to the form of government, the separation of church and state and the national flag can only be made by a national referendum.

Article 144, which states that no action may be taken to revise the Constitution during a state of siege or a state of emergency.

Article 146, which states that the ratification of conventions, treaties, accords or alliances – bilateral or multilateral – will be decided by the competent authority on a case-by-case basis. All treaties, agreements, conventions or accords must comply with national laws.

Article 147, which states that Indonesian and English shall be working languages within the civil service side-by-side with official languages (Tetum and Portuguese) when necessary.

Debate on Article 145 – which calls for special recognition of the nation's veteran freedom fighters – was suspended and referred to committee. The other four articles were passed with significant majorities.

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