Showing posts with label Personal Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Personal Stories. Show all posts

My Team in Planning Arena


After several years of being outside of the spatial planning arena, I now come back to it again. Even though planning in this country (Timor-Leste) is still extremely challenging, through the institution where I am working right now, with the Team, we would like to try something that we could from our end. From small and trivial things, take time, but the effects will deep rooted, and then materialize later.  

I was recently given a responsibility to lead the Team to plan land use surveys in Dili. This is a regular activity that the Ministry of Planning and Territory (MPT) has put in its portfolio to be done regularly every year. This year, the MPT tried to pilot the activity. The urban land use surveys are important because it is necessary for the institution to understand the baseline situations, and to compile and create an organized data base for any future’s land use policies.

Our team conducted a three day training to surveyors.  The surveyors are students from the National University of Timor-Leste. We conducted the training from 18 – 20 August 2021.  I just started now to work with new people whom I have never met before.  This is a new beginning. I found out that even though we are still facing managerial, and office facility challenges, but by working together we can achieve our objectives.

We did our training well. Everyone contributed by playing their respective roles. The Team Members are young and energetic. They are fresh professionals in planning, architecture, and economics. Something that I found interesting here is young people are excited when it comes to professional works. They are interested to involve when there are clear objectives, directions, and tendency of good team management.  All would involve fully, and feel own the activity.

*I hope this gives you an inspiration.


Connection with my Undergraduate University (UNIKOM) Bandung

Source of the photo

Yesterday, on 30 May 2021, around 11:30am, I attended a webinar meeting organized by the Department of Urban and Regional Planning, UNIKOM Bandung, the university from which I obtained my bachelor degree in Urban and Regional Planning. UNIKOM is one of the emerging private universities in Indonesia. It was established in 2000, in the millennium era. The university believes that the information technology (IT) will be the motor for transforming the way we live. The importance of IT has been in fact proven today that we can’t live without technology. Without going to Bandung, I could see my old friends, and see them talk like on this webinar.

That is the simple rational why the university sets out IT as the foundation for every field of study. Applied IT programs are the basic subjects required for all the first year students. Frankly, prior my departure from Dili to Bandung I barely even touched computer and had no much experience of using Internet. In 2003, my first year, I was faced with software applications such as Microsoft office, web-based applications (now known as coding?). From this beginning I learned how to create email accounts, and started using urban planning related professional software such as AutoCAD, Arch Map, and some other. I created this blog back in 2009 with the purpose of communicating my thoughts with wider audience. The knowledge gained from UNIKOM equipped me to create this blog because I used to study HTML in the website making class, I’ve forgot the exact name of the subject. I prefer to communicate my ideas and thoughts to friends via this blog instead of Facebook or Twitter.

Back to the webinar thing. I was not contacted officially by the department though, but a friend via whatsup chat. Even so I could not refuse to attend because I have been feeling nostalgic with the campus, the lecturers, and old friends. I was thinking the timing would come for me to visit my campus, not only that but seeing old friends attending so that we could tell old stories, and even share future predictions for our professional lives. I understand that everyone is now busy with life and has scattered all around islands. It might be difficult, but again IT makes it possible to realize this kind of reunion, and finally it happened yesterday.

Progress by progress has been made since I left the university. What made me so proud of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning is that almost all the old lecturers are still maintaining. The university is growing, and is getting competitive in the higher education arena; therefore it is legit for them to stay. Ibu Romeiza, the then Chair of the Department of Urban Planning, one tough career woman who I have ever met, came back onboard leading the department after she finished her doctorate studies at Bandung Institute of Technology, one of the top universities in Indonesia. Another, my dearest supervisor for my undergraduate thesis study, and my always-be-there-mentor during my endeavor to pursue master’s study in the USA, Ibu Lia, is now the Dean of Faculty of Design. I did not know if the other best old lecturers were present in the webinar, but of course I could not be prouder by having all of them crossed my path during my time at UNIKOM.

The webinar was meant to greet alumni members, but also to share planners’ tips among each other. One topic that caught my interest is about the tips to get a job quickly after graduating. For me, even though IT is so advanced that anybody could get information anywhere, go out and meet people is still very important. Some jobs are not posted on websites, instead they are told from mouth to mouth in a small circle of people. Therefore, if you happen to be in that circle, the chance is you can get the job vacancy information quickly because you could be told directly. If you wait for the vacancy announcement on a website, you would be waiting forever. Also, as planners, we work with multiple professions. Expanding your network with different professions is very important. Somebody from another profession may need an integrated planner for, not necessarily a spatial planning project, but maybe a feasibility study, or environmental impact study which planners are trained to do as well. So, go out there, meet people, and share your contacts to them.

Also another thing that I think planners, particularly UNIKOM graduates should keep in mind is that the current global movement has changed. I understand that Indonesian language could be the ASEAN working language given the percentage of the speakers is huge compared with other languages. Let’s say Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Brunei combined, and of course Timor-Leste as well, it will represent the biggest portion. However, learning English language is not less important. ASEAN free movement will require professionals to move across countries. Urban population is growing, ASEAN represents the trend. It means there is a huge challenge for the ASEAN countries to think on how to make cities a better place to live in. Eventually more planners needed to work on that.

Well, all in all, the webinar held by the Department of Urban Planning, particularly when the Rector attended, is a good opportunity for alumni to share tips. I am proud to be part of UNIKOM’s alumni community. Thus, we would like to hear sometimes about how the university is doing. If alumni lose contact about the development of the university, and the Department of Urban and Regional Planning itself, it would lead people to make some uninformed conclusion whether the university is doing fine or struggling. The university is in fact progressing so much; I could see the Urban and Regional Planning Department has got the best and upgraded faculty members. Thus, the planning graduates are going to be more prepared than the alumni like us. Future planners are not going to be for Indonesia only, but for ASEAN. This is a heavy standard but possible.

 

**Hope this gives you an inspiration.

Price of Banana Skyrockets in Dili

The government started locking down the Dili city two weeks ago (early March 2021) after finding out the first Covid-19 local transmission case. To prevent spread of the virus, the lockdown immediately limits social and economic activities within as well as bars exit from and entry to the city. Only essential and emergency related traffics are allowed with a so-called tight protocol. It allows essentials to be transported and being accessed in the market.

The lockdown affects the local food market as well. After the first week of the lockdown, the local food supply in the traditional markets started scarce. As far as I go out and observe, the stock of fruits, vegetables, tubers, legumes, and others started to phase out in the first week. Some of fruit street vendor stalls are even empty completely. I stopped by onetime and asked, they said “no banana anymore coming from vicinity and municipal areas.”

As a regular buyer of banana, I started to recognize the price difference last week. According to my experience, the normal average price for a bunch of banana is $1.5. The maximum is like $2.5 for a healthy and fresh look one. This morning, I went to the traditional markets including the fruit market at Lecidere and found out that the average price has gone up to $2.5. Another, I found a larger and fresh look banana and it was $5. 

I used to bargain in the market, and there was a room for bargaining most of the time. I often could still get it reduced after the negotiation. However, for this time, the vendor jokingly told me that there is no time for bargaining anymore. $ 5.00 is a fixed price for this damn good banana.

We laughed together (of course in a social distance manner). I then asked the vendor again “Do you think you will low the price once we come to the normal live? Yes, he said when there are more bananas.” He meant that if the normal supply resumes, then the market will set itself to the normal price. I hope that the Covid-19 can get controlled, so that we all can get what we afford.  

**Hope this gives you an inspiration.


Japanese Airplane Crashes in Lore, Lautem


The War World II effect was also felt in East Timor. East Timor was under the colonial, Portuguese rule during the War occurring between 1942-1943, some Timorese were being bombed and killed. The killed Timorese were the aides for Australian military who was the main enemy of the Japanese military at the time. In a more sustained local suffering, I heard from my village grandparents, the Japanese military forced them to serve in building shelters or housing and infrastructure in order to facilitate logistical distributions.

Fortunately, the War ended, and thus the suffering also stopped. The WWII left a lot of footprint in physical forms as well. There are so many tunnels, roads, compounds that the Japanese military built. It is all now becoming historic assets. Those assets need to be preserved for tourism and educational purposes. I am afraid; however, the government is able to go that far in preserving the historical assets located sporadically all over the country and that being out of sight and reach as time goes by.

One specific remnant that drew my attention is a Japanese WWII military airplane crashed in Lore, a village in the South side of Lospalos, the capital city of Lautem municipality. The airplane crashed in the forest; the color of the airplane is white. However, it is now being eaten up by mosses to about turn green entirely.  According to the source I contacted to, the exact name of the location where the airplane crashed is Raka, Lore - Lautem. It would be interesting to find more sources to tell about the story, and if get a chance, to visit the location. Japanese tourists who visit East Timor should be more interested than any other tourists, right?

Lastly, I must admit that I have not confirmed fully whether it is real. A Facebook friend posted it, I asked him, and he said yes it is real. Then I texted a friend who is from the village also said yes. I could not wait until confirmed, I go ahead to share with those of you who read this blog, by the way with an expectation that you might be interested to visit one day either for the sake of curiosity or for a predetermined purpose. If you happen to confirm the reality of the photo, please let me know so I can edit the content, or even delete if it is totally fake.

 

**Hope this gives you an inspiration.


Trail Shaped by Nature


“When left alone, the nature eventually takes over.” This is what happens to the circular road right at the toe of Cristo Rei’s statue hill. The road was progressively damaged by waves. I remember the first damage occurred years back. It was just news without intervention until the road paralyzed and is totally out of service. Ever since the road had not been in use and impassable by cars.

Some people complained for this long abandoned road never came back to open because it could be an alternative route for them to go to Hera, and on to the East side of the country. Dili residents similarly have limited options to go farther of the coast line of Cristo Rei. They have to park the cars in the other side and then walk to Dolok Oan.

The abandoned road has shaped a new character and serves new functions.  Trees and grass have outgrown the used to be asphalt and concrete surface. The trees getting taller and the grass getting thicker in the rainy season. It is a new space for birds, and other animals to live in. The sound or birds quite relaxing; while walking, you could also see the sunlight shines through the tree canopy. This has shaped a new character of this area as before.

This nature-shaped character made the road is not for cars anymore but people. People go there for jogging. It is a place to go farther if you want to be alone; it also becomes a fishing spot. Locals and even foreigners go there for fishing, both day and night times. The road severs the new functions.

Since the abandoned road could also provide benefits for the environment, and the people, what do you think that this place should be for? to restore the function by rehabbing the road to bring back the cars or Keep as it is now for people to enjoy the nature, and their leisure time? I will leave it for you to answer if you are from Dili. 


** Hope this gives you and inspiration


Green Building Concept in Timor-Leste



It had been a long time not hearing about green building, neither in a public discussion, or reading a public document. I don’t know whether the green building concept is not for the country like Timor-Leste which is struggling to cope with many basic priorities. But, thanks to UNDP who brought up the green building concept into the public arena. It was this year in March 2020 before COVID lockdown phenomena, UNDP organized a green building workshop, and I was excited to attend the workshop.

The goal of the workshop was to mobilize individuals and organizations to discuss about the concept, and possibly UNDP, under its project scheme, would recruit a potential individual or group to design a green building prototype. The winner will get funding, and the prototype will then be built. I have been asking around to ex-participants of the workshop if UNDP has done with the prototype and what is the actual green building project? It would be interesting to see the outcome.  

The workshop was a very good event to talk with engineers, architects, professionals, and even private developers who are interested to work on sustainable building technology in Timor-Leste. The concept was not new to all the participants. Media bombards news about climate change and its impacts to the society, and the world. The participants have been aware of the importance of climate change mitigation, and adaptation from the angle of built-environment. It was recognized that the building industry and its embodied energy is one of the biggest that emit a lot of CO2 to the environment.

Even though every discussion on the green building concept started always from the global climate change context, some were discussing more about how the green building concept can benefit the local before global. For example, they discussed about how to tap existing local resources for cost efficient and other multiple benefits coming out of this. However, the challenge of adopting the green building concept into the very own local context requires a lot of research and innovation. This kind of attitude is the most important one. And I think future discussions should be local-focused, and that everyone in the circle should weight the benefits of using green building concept in making their building, or community.

In our Timor-Leste, it is difficult to define exactly where to start. However, bringing the concept into the public arena often time is enough, at least. I am sure that some of sustainable design professionals do have green principles already in mind when they make designs. The action might still be sporadic, and that a community of professions in the area need to make the concept widely recognized, and have well-structured, and even more ambitious one is to have TL’s own green building design principles. Minister of Public Works also attended the workshop, so it can start with public buildings, and public built-environment.

**Hope this gives you an inspiration.


Dolok Oan Beach Cleanup


Do you see in the photo people with white shirts flocking all over the beach holding black trash bags? they are not playing a game or something, but cleaningup the beach.  

It was on 19 September 2020, around 3:30pm. I also went there after seeing Facebook event notification. It was to commemorate the World Beach Cleanup Day. The activity got support from various national and international organizations, but was organized by Movimento Tasi Mos (MTM) or in English called  Movement for Clean Ocean. The activity took place at Dolok Oan beach, behind the Cristo Rei statue. 

The MTM group has been proactively advocating and organizing beach cleanup activities in Dili started several years ago. Multiple cleanup activities conducted inviting all elements of the society, government agencies, and even ministers. The first time I saw this movement, I was thinking this is massive and it would become a national movement which is very progressive attitude and action. 
  
In my opinion, the movement is pretty consistent and determined even though there are so many vivid challenges lie right in their eyes. Cleanup after cleanup, but beaches get littered again just within hours; plastics reinstate the beaches like normal days. The movement does not give up though, they keep doing it. 
 
It was Saturday so Dolok Oan visitors came there on day time for picnic and some came later for overnight camping. When we were wandering and collecting trash, it was ironic to see that they did not bother at all to join or at least stop doing their activity. Even the visitors did not care when we asked them to move to get the trash out under their butts. From a moral perspective, if any voluntary action that benefits the public, everyone around should feel ashamed to join. As far as I observe, Dolok Oan beach littering comes from that kind of visitors.

There must be something wrong that makes the effort of cleaningup does not have sustainable effect. Like you, I also see two problems. One is about behavior. The visitors just don't see a clean beach is for their benefit, so they don't care and keep littering, and changing that behavior takes time, you know. Second is about unavailability of trash facilities. In a sense, if people cant find a trash bin nearby where to throw water bottles,  they would just let them in the beach. So it is important to put more trash bins and start to install collection bins as well.

But it would be more effective and efficient to invest in trash bins and collection facilities if the Dolok Oan beach has a clear definition of land use plan and initial concept. At least about the basic layout of the area. What kind of tourism activity this area should be for? do you have a sketched layout plan already? For examples, layout of the road, parking area, sidewalks, etc. You can imagine exactly like what we see on the Cristo Rei side. So by knowing the plan, putting the facilities can be more directed and not random, and I think donors or other profit organizations who usually donate trash bins might be interested to provide more.  

I also think that the current condition of Dolok Oan makes the visitors might think that there is no value to be disciplined because the area is still isolated from Dili downtown, no certain future development plan yet, no residents, and animals entering the area freely, and at last no trash and collection bins yet. The visitors might still consider Dolok Oan as a periphery which their littering behavior does not have immediate effect, not to mention to the ocean. In addition, the current condition makes it pointless to put the trash facilities randomly into this wide area without any clear space arrangement, at least from the conceptual stage.  

So, in order to make the effort of cleaningup the beach at Dolok Oan to have sustainable effect, all stakeholders should start thinking broader and bigger while keep walking the walk. MTM and other groups should start advocating about this to the government. The intention of doing it this way is the incremental effort will be directed to a clear goal in an efficient way. Otherwise, you clean today, it gets littered tomorrow, because, one reason is, you don't provide enough facility to encourage people to be disciplined, but where to put all the facilities? you need a more directed and clear goal in the context of Dolok Oan. You make mistake if you think cleaning up Dolok Oan beach will safe the the whole ocean and tackle global climate change. Don't do something like blind goats walking in the dark. First, please be local, and from local. It is very important!

**Hope this gives you an inspiration. 

Triste no Hirus Dala Ida



Source

Triste tebes ohin meiu dia hau sai nudar sasin ba cruelidade desijaun ida husi ita nia nain ulun sira hodi harahun estátua ou uma adat oan ida iha rotunda estrada Mercado Municipal--Estadio Municipal nian. Ha’u haré bulldozer ida nia kakorok naruk kesi tutan ho martélu bo’ot maka baku no tú’u fila—fila uma oan ne too rahun-rihun ba rai leten.

Nudar humanu ida nebe iha sentimentu, maske ida ne’e laos criatura moris, maibe hau triste tebes wain hira haré ita nia desijaun hirak ne’e. Maske uma adat ne’e hare kikoan no lá vale, maibé ninia presensa ba ita nudar populasaun senti rotunda ne’e iha ona karater ketak ida ba ita sira nebe lor-loron halo movimentu iha estrada neba. 
  
Problema mak uma adat oan iha rotunda ne’e hau senti ema foin halo iha tinan hirak liu ba. Agora ita tengki baku rahun tomak. Tanba saida? Iha Timor, ita iha crise moral no étika ba profisaun balun nebe namkari iha instituisaun balun. Quando ita baku rahun sasan kada tinan hanesan ne, ita lá respeita ona ita nia resultado servisu origin, ita la respeita ona karater no valor nebe inherente husi sasan ida nebe ita hari ona.

Ita kán liu ba osan, ba físiku nebe laos tanba valor maibé tanba ho pinta—pinti ho kor oi-oin, ita kán liu ba festa, ita kán liu ba celebrasaun. Ita haluha ona katak wain hira ita mantein sasan tuan nebe ita hari uluk ona, ne signifika katak ita apresia ita nia idea, ita nia servisu, ita nia kreatividade. So lideres prematura deit mak la tau valor ba nia idea, kreatividade nebe nia rasik inicia. Tanba ne’e mak ohin nia halo, aban ba soe deit ou baku rahun deit.

Ema mentalidade destroidor deit maka hanoin halo ohin aban baku rahun tomak no halo foun deit. Ne mentalidade grupo intelektual nebe jagoan terlambat iha tempu mundu modernijasaun agora ninian. Ita nia nai ulun sira presija pikiniki (picnic) barak. 

Se karik nia rajaun tanba uma adat oan ne’e at ona, ntaun nia pergunta mak ne’e, tanba sa mak uluk la halo diak kedan para hodi dura netik tinan lima ba leten? Agora mak ita tengki halo fila-fila kada tinan ba tinan. Hau hanoin katak sorti estatua Nai Jesus Cristo ne nudar Maromak, se lae ida ne’e mos ema bele hanoin at hela mak ne. Tanba tauk tama inferno, sira troka ba troka mai kada tinan mak fasilidade no infraestrutura iha estatua ne’e nia okos deit.

Baku rahun tomak sasan ne laos alternativa mesak deit. Alternativa seluk presija tau hodi tetu par fo balansu ba interese entre saida mak ita iha ona no saida mak ita hakarak iha tempu oin mai. Kuandu idea mak buntu ou hotu ona, hanoin maka destroy los deit.
Sentimentu tristeja ida ne’e mosu wain hira ohin hau asiste ekipa destroyer baku rahun strutura uma adat ne ho live ou Timor balun bolu dehan siarang lansu. Hau ohin la konsege foti fotografia. Deskulpa!

**Espera artigu ne halo ita bot triste mos no fo inspirasaun dala ida

Congratulations to all my Classmates, Fulbrighters, and Friends

Taken in from of Marvin Hall

It was 7 am morning today here in East Timor, and about 5 pm in Lawrence, Kansas. I opened up my Facebook wall seeing it full of joyful photo poses. Everyone was happy to celebrate their graduation of college studies. Graduation is indeed one of the biggest life achievements one has. Everyone must be so proud of what they have completed in this phase of life.

Time flies. I just left Lawrence 5 months ago. I left friends as students, but they became graduates today and will become professionals in the future. They still look the same as I left them, friendly, welcoming, and inspiring. That I would like them to keep the characters because friendliness always brings rewards.

I graduated earlier than those who I congratulate here in this blog. However, the commencement part, the fun part, the last hours being together, was missed. I was not alone though. I have started seeing friends saying good bye to one another. Some of them will head South, North, West or East.

“Life must go on,” an old saying puts it. After this memorable event, everyone starts to leave. They leave the town, city, country, or even the continent. They leave to start a new journey in their life. School time will only become a story of their life. Everyone will miss everyone when they think about things and the place at which once they become students.

I did not think to blog today to congratulate them until a Facebook friend request pooped up today. It is the friend who made me to think to blog. The friend request tells me that the memory in school is about to fade as old friends leave and unknown folks reinstate our chairs. Thus, I should do something in order to preserve my memory.

It is sometime painful to leave friends and the place. However, the world is a small village now. We still can keep in touch and say hello anytime. Sharing stories about our impacts to people who really needs our contribution is one of the important things.  

Congratulations all the way from East Timor, crossing oceans and lands, to all of you who graduated from the University of Kansas.

Rock Chalk


**I hope this gives you an inspiration. 

Have You Ever Heard of Talk Fusion?

Source


To share the work, you search on google if you don’t know it yet. It might be new in your place, or you might have ever been invited to join by a sibling of you. I am referring to ‘sibling’ because one of the business’s potent strategies is to influence people from family first; if the inviter can’t start it in his own family, he will first from close friends. It does not care if you are interested in the products it offers you. If you know a friend participating the business, you are a target! Sooner or later you will get a call to participate in a workshop.

A pure business will let the market decides. I do totally respect friends who do the business; however, I have been so allergic to such a kind of business since the similar ones came into market, MLM, and Tien Sing. What animal is it? Again, we share the work. These sorts of businesses do not see us as free traders. I mean it does not let us to decide freely what we want to trade between two or more parties. It is, instead, like a sort of begging to find new members. They keep calling you, trying to convince that it is a good business. If you are close friends, it is very hard to refuse calls; and that makes you susceptible to join.

It was striking, at this time, to hear that Talk Fusion offers information technology business to illiterate users.” One question I was noting was what IT business it refers to? When I once attended its workshop, it presented products it offers such as applications of social media, videos, and emails to members to buy, and use. They argued that now we live in the 21st century, digital world; yes it is true. However, the peculiar thing was that members were extremely illiterate of technology information. They looked like they do not even know how to sign up an email account.    

So, is that a real IT business or a mere of MLM’s sort which just uses products as a steppingstone to convince members that they trade real products? The business actually aims to do MLM’s sort of business. Top level members try to convince new members or beginners. Those new members joining add points to higher level members’, thus their bonuses inflate. On the other hand, the new members will, mostly, become losers at the end. I am mostly concerned to rural people who would potentially be scammed by this type of business. It is like selling an IPhone to a person who does not even have an internet connection in his village. Most members I saw in the workshop were people who do not know much about internet. Not to mention, the communication infrastructure in the country is still running even like a turtle.

Of course, there is a market for Talk Fusion. Government agencies, companies from service to oil and gas industries currently minding their businesses in East Timor are the potential users. They can use the products as it aims for, not people who do not even use internet as we do.  

**I hope this gives you an inspiration.   

Keta Ba Selfie ho Lafaek!!

Source


Feriado paskua tinan ohin nian lao ba foho rona tan istória ida kona bá crocodile ou lafaek han tan ema ida iha parte Lautém ninian. Maibe istória ida ne diferente oituan tanba lafaek han ema ne’e wain hira vitima ne’e ba hasai fotografia ho lafaek. Istoria, wain hira primos balun konta, ne’e lafaek kalan sai mai iha tasi ibun, vitima nia uma oin ne’e. Kalan sira hetan no maun alin nain rua ne’e hetan no lao sai ba par hodi hasai fotografia.

Lafaek sai mai toba ona iha rai henek, rai maran ona, kala mais ou menus metro ida ho balun husi tasi mai rai maran. Lafaen ninia pozisaun ne’e ulun mai iha rain maran no ikun ba iha tasi. Babain teoria nebe mak hau rona, karik ema ne’e hatene nune mos katak quandu animál todan sira hanesan lafaek ita hamarik iha kotuk, nia sei susar atu tata ita tanba sira fila an presiza esforsu nebe makas. Maibe teoria ne agora provado katak sala.

Wain hira ema nain rua lao ba tasi ibun, ninia alin ne diretamente ba hamarik iha kotuk, parte lafaek nia ikun e depois losu ninia camera ou telfone hodi hasai foto. Hau la dun hatene karik ema ne konsege hasai duni fotografia balun ou lae, maibe nia foin ba hamarik iha kotu, lafaek fila ana tata nia isin. Hotu tia vitima ne’e monu tun ba tasi laran. Lafaek continua ba kaer no tata nia isin hodi dudu ba tasi klaran.

Vitima nia maun ne mos bok an la diak. Ema hatete dehan, wain hira lafaek primeiro tata nia alin, nia konsege halo esforsu ida hodi prevene. Nia konsege kaer dada lafaek ninia ikun hodi dada sai maibe niania forsa ne laek. Tanba lafaek lori nia to’o laran no sira tuir la hetan ona. Wain hira hau tesik husi fatin neba, ema konta dehan ema lafaek lori ba ladauk husik. Ema barak tuir lafaek ninia ain fatin maibe lafaek la dauk  husik. Ema la barani hodi ba hakbesik, ntaun mate isin ne’e seidauk fila tan.


Karik istória ne’e los duni hansa ema konta mai hau ne’e, ntaun lisaun nebe ita presiza hatene mak keta koko atu ba bes-besik lafaek, sá tan ba selfie fali ho lafaek. Hau koalia ida ne’e tanba, iha Dili, ikus-ikus ne’e lafaek sae mai rai maran dala barak ona. Cada vez mosu iha Palacio do Guverno niania oin. Ita hare ema barak barani tebes ba hamarik sorin no fo han. Ida ne mos karik risko tanba hansa istória ida ne’e, quando lafaek sira hamlaha, sira bele ataka iha kualker pozisaun.

**Espera katak istoria ne’e fo inspirasaun