Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Ramos-horta Jose

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ramos-horta Jose:     more books (40)
  1. Außenminister (Osttimor): José Ramos-Horta, Marí Bin Amude Alkatiri, José Luís Guterres, Zacarias Da Costa, Adaljiza Magno (German Edition)
  2. East Timorese People by Ethnic or National Origin: East Timorese of Arab Descent, East Timorese of Portuguese Descent, José Ramos-Horta
  3. East Timorese Roman Catholics: Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, José Ramos-Horta, Martinho Da Costa Lopes, Francisco Guterres, Basilio Do Nascimento
  4. Expatriates in the United Kingdom: José Ramos-Horta, Michael Carrington, James Nyamweya
  5. Presidents of East Timor: José Ramos-Horta
  6. East Timorese Christians: East Timorese Christian Socialists, East Timorese Roman Catholics, Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, José Ramos-Horta
  7. FUNU THE UNIFINISHED SAGA OF EAST TIMOR by Jose Ramos Horta, 1996-01-01
  8. Inside the East Timor Resistance by Constancio Pinto, Matthew Jardine, 1997-01-01
  9. La Saga du Timor-Oriental, préface de Monseigneur Jacques Gaillot by José Ramos-Horta, Armand Guillain, 2000-04-19
  10. Inside Out - East Timor by Xanana Gusmao ; Jose Ramos Horta ; Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo, 1999
  11. Nobel hears East Timor: the Norwegian Nobel Committee thrust a generation-long rebellion into the spotlight, but is anyone watching?: An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Keith Suter, 1997-01-01
  12. Ya se barajan nombres: la sucesión en la ONU.(Organización de Naciones Unidas): An article from: Siempre! by María Cristina Rosas, 2006-06-04

41. Daily Telegraph: JOSE RAMOS-HORTA: Counting The Cost Of War [ 27feb03 ]
Print this page jose ramoshorta Counting the cost of Jos ramos-horta, East Timor'sminister of foreign affairs and cooperation, shared the nobel Peace Prize
http://www.dailytelegraph.news.com.au/printpage/0,5942,6044379,00.html
Print this page JOSE RAMOS-HORTA: Counting the cost of war
By JOS RAMOS-HORTA: DILI, East Timor
I OFTEN find myself counting how many of us are left in this world. One recent morning my two surviving brothers and I had coffee together. And I found myself counting again.
We were seven brothers and five sisters, another large family in this tiny Catholic country. One brother died when he was a baby. Antonio, our oldest brother, died in 1992 of lack of medical care. Three other siblings were murdered in our country's long conflict with Indonesia. One, a younger sister, Maria Ortencia, died on Dec. 19, 1978, killed by a rocket fired from a OV-10 Bronco aircraft, which the United States had sold to Indonesia. She was buried on a majestic mountaintop and her grave was tended by the humble people of the area for 20 years. Early in September of last year, I went through the heart-wrenching process of unearthing the improvised grave of our sister, whom I last saw when she was 18. As her body was exhumed, I noticed that the back of her head and one side of her face had been blown off. She must have died instantly.

42. Irwin Abrams: "Nobel Prize Has Antioch Link"
This year the nobel Peace Prize has a local connection. jose ramoshorta of EastTimor, who with his countryman Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo will be
http://www.irwinabrams.com/articles/ddn_dec96.html
NOBEL PRIZE HAS ANTIOCH LINK By Irwin Abrams Dayton Daily News , Op-Ed, December 6, 1996. This year the Nobel Peace Prize has a local connection. Jose Ramos-Horta of East Timor, who with his countryman Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo will be presented with the award at the ceremony in Oslo on December 10, received his Master of Arts degree from Antioch University in 1984. Moreover, Congressman Tony Hall has been one of the prominent nominators of Bishop Belo for the prize. For his M.A. thesis, Ramos-Horta says in the preface that he decided to write "on the tragedy of the people of East Timor, not only out of moral and patriotic duty, but because it constitutes one of the most glaring examples of human rights violations in modern times that the rest of the world knows little and cares less about." Ramos-Horta's tiny homeland is only the eastern half of a remote island at the very tip of the long strung out Indonesian archipelago, much closer to Australia than to Jakarta, Indonesia's capital. The world took little note when East Timor, a former Portuguese colony populated mainly by Catholics, after a brief period of independence was invaded in 1975 and then annexed by its giant Moslem neighbor. East Timorese continued resistance has met with years of brutal military oppression, in which almost a third were killed or died from starvation and disease. Occasionally stories of the murders, rapes and tortures would surface in the world's media, notably in 1991 when news photos and a film circulated of an appalling massacre of some 200 men, women and children shot in cold blood at a funeral procession. But then for most of the world East Timor receded again into obscurity.

43. NEWS.com.au | "Ramos-Horta Backs War On Saddam" Has Been Archived
nobel Peace Prize winner jose ramoshorta has endorsed a war against SaddamHussein as a necessary price to liberate the Iraqi people.
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,6047021%5E2,00.html
Murdered girls' parents face accused
Australia v West Indies: LIVE on FOXSPORTS.com.au

April 20, 2003
News Home Breaking News Focus on Iraq State News ... Cartoon Other Sections Business Technology Entertainment body+soul ... Trivia Quiz Our Newspapers The Australian Herald Sun Daily Telegraph The Courier-Mail ... World Vision News
Unable to find requested news story If you are looking for an article from one of our newspapers, you may find it in our online newspaper archives at Newstext NEWS AT A GLANCE COVER STORY Police catch 'heroin' ship
BREAKING NEWS
Baghdad airport to open in a week ...
Sir John Paul Getty II dies

ELSEWHERE ON NEWS.COM.AU THE OTHER SIDE QLD cops to become 'superhuman'
Man 'king-hits' Easter Bunny

Elephant kills Aussie tourist
...
Advertise with us

44. Haleakala Times - Online Edition - Volume 4 1998
Timor was cast on the global conscience when jose ramoshorta and Bishop Carlos FilipeXimenes Belo were recognized as co-recipients of the nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.maui.net/~haltimes/vol4_98/frontpage/ambass.html
Nobel winning "Ambassador of peace" to speak at MCC
By Joshua Cooper An island nation is living under repression in the Asia-Pacific region. The people are actively resisting the oppression and an ambassador of peace is speaking truth to power around the world. In 1996, the movement for self-determination and peace in East Timor was cast on the global conscience when Jose Ramos-Horta and Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo were recognized as co-recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize. Jose Ramos-Horta, an East Timorese exile, has spent 22 years organizing peaceful solutions, defending human rights and denouncing the illegal invasion and occupation of East Timor. Ramos-Horta, a trained journalist and international law specialist, will speak at Maui Community College February 24 at 7:30 p.m. The lecture focusing on Strategies for a Nonviolent Campaign for Self-Determination is free to all interested in human rights. The genocide in East Timor is one of the tragedies of the 20th century. Since Indonesia invaded the former Portuguese colony in 1975, one-third of the population has died due to the harsh circumstances of colonialism. When Indonesia invaded, Ramos-Horta was minister for external relations in the first East Timorese government. He left three days before the invasion to address the conscience of humanity at the United Nations. He encouraged the family of nations to take action against the onslaught of Indonesia's military forces.

45. Jonathan Manthorpe, Nobel Peace Laureate Denounces Asian Racism
HONG KONG nobel Peace Prize laureate jose ramoshorta says many Asian governmentsare hypocritical and more racist than the western nations they criticize.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/50/009.html
Date: Sat, 25 Jan 97 10:18:41 CST
From: rich%pencil@UKCC.uky.edu (Rich Winkel)
Subject: Horta on "Asian Racism" /** reg.easttimor: 636.0 **/
** Topic: JRH on "Asian Racism" **
** Written 8:06 PM Jan 15, 1997 by web:pet in cdp:reg.easttimor **
"NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE DENOUNCES ASIAN RACISM"
By: Jonathan Manthorpe
Ottawa Citizen (Southam Newspapers)
January 15, 1997
Nobel Peace Laureate denounces Asian racism
By Jonathan Manthorpe, in the Ottawa Citizen,
15 January, 1997
HONG KONG Nobel Peace Prize laureate Jose Ramos-Horta says many Asian governments are hypocritical and more racist than the western nations they criticize. Ramos-Horta singled out racism in China, Malaysia and Indonesia during a speech Tuesday to the Foreign Correspondents' Club here following criticism in the region of race relations in Australia. "If you compare Australia with Malaysia, Indonesia or China, Australia is the most tolerant country in the region," the East Timorese activist said. "Several regimes in Asia are more color- sensitive than Australia. I get incensed when hypocrites from this region criticize Australia for racism. They should learn from Australia." Australia has come in for criticism recently after independent legislator Pauline Hanson called for limits to Asian immigration. But Ramos-Horta, while admitting he has had some problems in Australia in the past because of his color, said the country has "made enormous efforts over the years to become really multicultural."

46. Jose RAMOS-
PERSONAL DATA NAME jose ramoshorta AGE 47 DATE/PLACE OF BIRTH December 26th ActivistAward (Gleitsman Foundation, USA) 1996 awarded the nobel Peace Prize
http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/9273/Horta.html
Jose RAMOS-HORTA
Curriculum Vitae
PERSONAL DATA
NAME: Jose Ramos-Horta
AGE: 47
DATE/PLACE OF BIRTH: December 26th, 1949 - Dili (East Timor)
NATIONALITY: East Timorese (Portuguese citizen)
RESIDENCE: Darwin (Australia)
EDUCATION / COURSES ATTENDED
1983: Human Rights Law at the International Institute of Human Rights (Strasbourg, France)
1983: Public International Law at the Academy of International Law (The Hague, Netherlands) 1983: Post-graduation course in American Foreign Policy at the Columbia University (USA) 1984: Master in Peace Studies (Public International Law) at the Antioch University (USA) 1996: Doctorate honoris causa at the Campinas University (Brazil) 1997: Doctorate honoris causa at the Antioch University (USA) POSITIONS HELD 1969-74: Journalist (radio/tv correspondent) 1975: Minister for External Affairs and Information in the First Transitional Government (Democratic Republic of East Timor) - prior to the Indonesian invasion 1976-89: Permanent representative of FRETILIN at the United Nations (New York, USA) Since 1990: Lecturer at the Diplomacy Training Programme, Law Faculty of the New South Wales University (Sydney, Australia)

47. Nobel Peace Prize For 1996: Congratulations To Carlos Ximenes Belo And Jose (RP)
Friday, October 11, 1996. 5. nobel Peace Prize for 1996 congratulations to CarlosXimenes Belo and jose (RP). ramoshorta and all the people of East Timor.
http://www.tibet.ca/wtnarchive/1996/10/11_5.html
World Tibet Network News
Friday, October 11, 1996
5. Nobel Peace Prize for 1996: congratulations to Carlos Ximenes Belo and Jose (RP)
Ramos-Horta and all the people of East Timor. Immediate return to the
campaign for the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize for Wei Jingsheng.
Brussels, Oct. 11th, 1996. The Transnational Radical Party praises the
decision of the Nobel Committee for having chosen Carlos Filipe XIMINES
BELO, bishop of East Timor, and Jos RAMOS-HORTA as the recipients of the
1996 Nobel Prize for Peace: they are two persons who symbolize peaceful
struggle of the inhabitants of East Timor against the ferocious oppression
of the Indonesian dictatorship.
At the same time, the announcement of the return, with greater force and
determination, to the international campaign, that, together with the
Federation for Democracy in China and Human Rights in China, is being conducted for the attribution of the 1997 Nobel peace Prize to WEI Jingsheng, one of the most famous dissidents of the Chinese regime, who was recently condemned to an additional fifteen years of prison after having already spent the years 1979-1993 incarcerated.

48. Nobel Peace Prize Winner Attacks France On China Rights Stance
BRUSSELS, April 22 (AFP) jose ramos-horta, the East Timorese nobel peace prizewinner, on Tuesday accused France of submitting to economic gangsterism by
http://www.tibet.ca/wtnarchive/1997/4/22_6.html
World Tibet Network News
Tuesday, April 22, 1997
6. Nobel peace prize winner attacks France on China rights stance
BRUSSELS, April 22 (AFP) - Jose Ramos-Horta, the East Timorese Nobel peace
prize winner, on Tuesday accused France of submitting to "economic
gangsterism" by refusing to support UN criticism of Beijing's human rights
record.
Addressing the European Parliament's foreign affairs committee, Ramos-Horta
said the failure of the UN Human Rights Commission in Geneva to adopt a
resolution on China earlier this month "stands as an ominous omen for the
fate of Hong Kong."
China comfortably saw off a critical resolution proposed by Denmark after
France had blocked a common European Union position in support of a
condemnation. The move resulted in the collapse of the western coalition in favour of a resolution with three other EU states, Australia and Canada all changing sides in the debate in response to threats of economic reprisals from China. "If every country with democratic ideals were to surrender all its principles for economic short-term interest, to submit to economic gangsterism, it would

49. Jose Ramos-Horta To Speak April 7 At UW-Eau Claire
EAU CLAIRE — Exiled East Timorese political activist jose ramoshorta, recipientof the 1996 nobel Peace Prize, will speak at the University of Wisconsin-Eau
http://www.uwec.edu/newsbureau/release/past/1999/99-03/032499Ramoshorta.html
UW-Eau Claire News Bureau Schofield Hall 218 Eau Claire, WI 54702-4004 Jose Ramos-Horta to Speak
April 7 at UW-Eau Claire phone fax web http://www.uwec.edu e-mail newsbur@uwec.edu
MAILED: March 24, 1999
Exiled East Timorese political activist Jose Ramos-Horta, recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize, will speak at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire on Wednesday, April 7.
The Forum will present his lecture, titled "Human Rights: Democracy and the Rule of Law in the Asia Pacific Region," at 7:30 p.m. in Schofield Auditorium.
The presentation will be followed by a question-and-answer session and a reception in the Dulany Inn, Davies Center.
In 1975, Indonesia invaded and illegally annexed the newly independent country of East Timor, brutally slaughtering nearly a third of the population with weapons imported from the United States and Europe. Since then, Jose Ramos-Horta has tirelessly championed human rights and independence for his homeland and other repressed countries of the world. As the United Nations marks the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Nobel laureate will assess the advances that have been made and discuss the unprecedented events that are taking place today.
Born in Dili, East Timor, in 1949, Ramos-Horta is the son of a native Timorese mother and a Portuguese father who was deported to East Timor for revolting against the dictator Antonio Salazar. After studying law in the United States, Ramos-Horta returned to East Timor, then still a colony of Portugal, and worked as a radio and TV correspondent. His involvement with the independence movement provoked East Timor's Portuguese rulers and he was forced to flee to Mozambique in 1970.

50. Nobel Prize Winner To Speak At KU
nobel Prize winner to speak at KU. LAWRENCE jose ramoshorta will speakon Peacemaking the Power of Nonviolence at 7 pm Thursday, Oct.
http://www.ur.ku.edu/News/01N/OctNews/Oct9/nobel.html
October 9, 2001
Contact: Linda Luckey, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, (785) 864-3516.
Nobel Prize winner to speak at KU
LAWRENCE Jose Ramos-Horta will speak on "Peacemaking: the Power of Nonviolence" at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 11, at the University of Kansas in the Kansas Union ballroom. Ramos-Horta won the 1996 Nobel Prize for Peace for his work as a spokesman for human rights and self-determination. Until December 1999, he was in exile from East Timor for 25 years. The tiny island and former Portuguese colony of 600,000 people is located between the Indonesian island of Java and northwestern Australia. Between 1975, when Indonesia invaded East Timor, and 1981, a third of the population died. Four of Ramos-Horta's 11 brothers and sisters were among the dead. As an exiled citizen, Ramos-Horta served as an ambassador to the United Nations for the East Timorese cause. In 1996, Ramos-Horta and Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo received the Nobel Prize for Peace for "sustained efforts to hinder the oppression of a small people." The award brought international attention to Horta's efforts and to reports of widespread abuses conducted by the Indonesian authorities in their efforts to quell opposition to Jakarta's rule, the BBC reported. In 1999, in a historic referendum, the East Timorese unequivocally expressed their will for independence from Indonesia. In December 1999, Ramos-Horta returned to East Timor to help rebuild from the devastation.

51. Timor
jose ramoshorta, the 1996 nobel Peace Prize winner from East Timor, was a guestspeaker at a conference held in San Francisco in June 1997, with the Dalai Lama
http://www.saudades.org/timor.html

EAST TIMOR NOBEL LAUREATE......
A CONNECTION....
Jose Ramos-Horta, the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize winner from East Timor, was a guest speaker at a conference held in San Francisco in June 1997, with the Dalai Lama. Ramos-Horta, who is Catholic, was among 100 writers, community organisers and political activists sharing the stage with the Dalai Lama at the event, titled "Peacemaking; The Power of Non-Violence". The conference was sponsored by Tibet House of New York, and co-sponsored by the Californian Institute of Integral Studies. In seven public appearances, addressing several thousand people, Jose Ramos-Horta talked in depth, and lovingly, about the Jewish people. Twice a day the Dalai Lama, with Ramos-Horta and Guatemalan activist Anita Menchu, the sister of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Rigoberta Menchu, regaled audiences with lessons on peacemaking, forgiveness and strategies for global rebuilding. For two decades, Ramos-Horta has led a campaign against the Indonesian government, which invaded his country in 1976. Three of his brothers and a sister have perished in the conflict.The activist said he has a very personal connection with Jewish culture. Citing Jewish roots that date back hundreds of years, he said members of his family were victims of the inquisition. "With a native Timorese mother and a Portuguese father, I can trace back my Jewish background to the period when Jews were forced to convert to Christianity.

52. Ramos-Horta, Jose. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language: F
ramoshorta, José. An exiled spokesman for the liberation of East Timor from Indonesia,he shared the 1996 nobel Peace Prize with Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo.
http://www.bartleby.com/61/35/R0033550.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary ramose ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. SYLLABICATION: PRONUNCIATION m DATES: Born 1945 East Timorese resistence leader. An exiled spokesman for the liberation of East Timor from Indonesia, he shared the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize with Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo.

53. Maui Time Magazine In Maui Hawaii, Community Page
In this capacity, jose ramoshorta presented a possible peace plan to the EuropeanParliament. selected as the co-recipient of the nobel Peace Prize in 1996
http://www.mauitime.com/issue18/community2.html
International Affairs Jose Ramos-Horta East Timor has been colonized since the 1500s. In 1520, the Portuguese invaded the island putting the eastern half under their rule while the Dutch settled the western half. For over 250 years, the East Timorese were unable to exercise their self determination. On November 28, 1975, FRETILIN, the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor, declared independence. While December 7 plays an important role in U.S. history, the East Timor also share this day as a tragedy in history. Indonesia invaded the newly declared nation with brute force and advanced weaponry. Since 1975, a campaign of genocide has been waged against the East Timorese. In these 22 years, over one-third of the population has been killed. Over 200,000 Timorese faced napalm bombings, summary executions, torture, rapes, massive starvation, arbitrary detention and murder as well as forced relocation through tactics such as the destruction of villages. One individual has been working with activist supporters in and outside East Timor. Jose Ramos-Horta, a journalist and international human rights advocate, was appointed minister for external relations in the first East Timorese government. His first challenging assignment was to inform the global community about the Indonesia invasion. Ramos-Horta left only a few days before the invasion. He spoke to the United Nations General Assembly and Security Council sparking both bodies to condemn the invasion. Since 1975, Ramos-Horta represented FRETILIN for the next decade raising awareness and encouraging the family of nations to be more involved in peacemaking efforts. His involvement in the development of political awareness in East Timor has been serving as the Special Representative of the National Council of Maubere Resistance (CNRM), an umbrella organization coordinating the resistance movements in the border and around the world.

54. Taiwanese Collegian: News
jose ramoshorta received the 1996 nobel Peace Prize for work towardsa just and peaceful solution to the conflict in East Timor.
http://tc.formosa.org/news/113098.html
The Taiwanese government denied the entry of Nobel Peace Laureate and East Timorese leader Dr. Jose Ramos-Horta for several hours on November 25th, 1998. While the government claims the incidence as the result of mistakes, Taiwanese Collegian finds such an excuse unbelieveable and therefore issues the following statement condemning the government's misguided foreign policy. Jose Ramos-Horta received the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize for work towards a just and peaceful solution to the conflict in East Timor. Statement by Taiwanese Collegian 30-NOV-1998 Taiwanese Collegian condemns in the strongest terms the Taiwanese government's blacklisting and consequent denial of entry into Taiwan of Nobel Peace Laureate and East Timorese leader Dr. Jose Ramos-Horta. In his second visit to the island, on 25 November, Ramos-Horta had expected to observe island-wide election campaigns in progress, and visit the incumbent Taipei City mayor Shui-Bien Chen, a former political prisoner. Whereas the ruling Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) had lifted bans on exiled Taiwanese dissidents in the early 1990's, Ramos-Horta's blacklisting highlights the fundamental flaws of an Asian-Pacific diplomatic strategy centered on economic and geopolitical considerations. The consequences of such a strategy are to reject basic human rights values and to mock the half-century of Taiwanese democratic struggles. To their credit, Taiwanese opposition politicians with democratic credentials were quick to fault the KMT for the fiasco, including demands for apology and resignations. At the same time Taiwanese Collegian would like to point out that given Taiwan's history of struggling for democracy and independence, and its relative economic well-being, the opposition can use the opportunity to set forth an alternative Asian-Pacific diplomatic vision siding with a genuine "Asian value" of the people, one opposed to the self-serving needs of Asian authoritarians. Only through a constructive engagement with human rights, ecological concerns, labor, and other issues important to the people of the region be it Tibet, East Timor, Burma, Indonesia, Malaysia, Eastern Turkestan, or Southern Mongolia can Taiwan hope to escape the geopolitical blackhole into which the fruits of Taiwanese democracy are rapidly disappearing.

55. NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR 1996: CONGRATULATIONS TO CARLOS XIMENES BELO AND JOSE RAMO
EAST TIMOR. nobel PEACE PRIZE FOR 1996 CONGRATULATIONS TO CARLOS XIMENESBELO AND jose ramoshorta AND ALL THE PEOPLE OF EAST TIMOR.
http://www.radicalparty.org/humanrights/et_com1.htm
EAST TIMOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR 1996: CONGRATULATIONS TO CARLOS XIMENES BELO AND JOSE RAMOS-HORTA AND ALL THE PEOPLE OF EAST TIMOR. IMMEDIATE RETURN TO THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE 1997 NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR WEI JINGSHENG. Brussels, Oct. 11th, 1996. The Transnational Radical Party praises the decision of the Nobel Committee for having chosen Carlos Filipe XIMINES BELO, bishop of East Timor, and José RAMOS-HORTA as the recipients of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Peace: they are two persons who symbolize peaceful struggle of the inhabitants of East Timor against the ferocious oppression of the Indonesian dictatorship. At the same time, the announcement of the return, with greater force and determination, to the international campaign, that, together with the Federation for Democracy in China and Human Rights in China, is being conducted for the attribution of the 1997 Nobel peace Prize to WEI Jingsheng, one of the most famous dissidents of the Chinese regime, who was recently condemned to an additional fifteen years of prison after having already spent the years 1979-1993 incarcerated. To date over 500 Parliamentarians and University Professors who support the candidacy of WEI Jingsheng for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997. The objective is to reach 2,000 signatures by January 31st, 1997.

56. Initiative And Idealism - UN Volunteers At The Core Of East Timor's Independence
grants. It is named after Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, cowinnerof the 1996 nobel Peace Prize with jose ramos-horta. Some
http://www.unv.org/infobase/unv_news/2002/93/02_08_93TMP_indep.htm

Sitemap
Search Contact Home
Publications: Annual Report UN Volunteers News Fact Sheets On Volunteerism Initiative and idealism - UN Volunteers at the core of East Timor's independence celebrations UNV News #93 August 2002 East Timor has been the largest operation ever in the 31-year history of the United Nations Volunteers programme (UNV). UN Volunteers were among the first international UN personnel to return to East Timor in October 1999, after weeks of violent fighting between opponents and supporters of independence. In a UN-organized ballot held on 30 August 1999, a vast majority of East Timorese had voted for sovereignty. Since then, some 3,000 UN Volunteers from more than 100 countries have supported authorities in East Timor, also in conducting other electoral processes. They carried out a range of activities in all parts of the country with the UN agencies and as part of the UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET). UN Volunteers work in various sectors of relief and development, including forestry and fisheries, border control, district finances, gender affairs, human rights, refugee and returnee issues, forensics, civil engineering, water and sanitation, judicial and political affairs, research and census, health, trade, public information and taxation - and continue to do, in a post-independence context.

57. UN Volunteers At Core Of East Timor's Independence Celebrations
We shall never forget you, our international friends… This site inspired and dedicatedon May 19th, 2002 by Dr. jose ramoshorta nobel Peace Prize Laureate.
http://www.unv.org/infobase/news_releases/2002/02_05_20TMP_indep_cel.htm

Sitemap
Search Contact Home
News/Media: Releases Review Events Media Kit ... Speeches News Release
United Nations Volunteers at the core of East Timor's independence celebrations Representative of UN Volunteers (UNV) among the two civilians chosen to lower the UN flag and to raise the new flag of East Timor - Service of 3,000 UN Volunteers recognized at independence celebrations and through a Distinguished Service Award DILI, East Timor, 20 May 2002 Some 200,000 East Timorese from all parts of the country were gathered at Taci Tolo site in the outskirts of Dili to witness independence celebrations, led by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and President Xanana Gusmao. Many of them had spent the previous night at the site to make sure not to miss the historic event marking the end of the United Nations Transitional Administration to East Timor (UNTAET) and the official birth of the Democratic Republic of East Timor. UN Volunteer Tarik Jasarevic from Bosnia played an important role in the celebration. He was one of two UN civilian staff members who together with two representatives of the peacekeeping force and two civilian police lowered the UN flag and raised the black, white and yellow East Timorese flag at midnight. "I feel honoured and grateful that I could represent UNV at this unique moment in history," he said. "I truly believe that we all deserve the recognition. United Nations Volunteers were a great team and have jointly accomplished a great job."

58. Nobel Prize Winner On Our Side By Lee Moore
nobel Peace Prize winner jose ramoshorta has endorsed a war against SaddamHussein as a 'necessary price' to liberate the Iraqi people.
http://www.chronwatch.com/content/contentDisplay.asp?aid=1720&catcode=11

59. [Fair-trade] FW: ETAN: Nobel Peace Prize Winner Jose Ramos-Horta To Speak (Fwd)
Fairtrade FW ETAN nobel Peace Prize Winner jose ramos-horta to Speak(Fwd). Ed Mays edmays@igc.org Tue, 18 Sep 2001 031800 -0700
http://lists.riseup.net/www/d_read/fair-trade/old-archives/2001-September/000431
[Fair-trade] FW: ETAN: Nobel Peace Prize Winner Jose Ramos-Horta to Speak (Fwd)
Ed Mays edmays@igc.org
Tue, 18 Sep 2001 03:18:00 -0700 -Original Message- From: owner-etan@scn.org [mailto: owner-etan@scn.org ]On Behalf Of Frank Zucker Sent: Friday, September 14, 2001 12:23 PM To: etan@scn.org Cc: etanseattle@yahoogroups.com brookster2000@hotmail.com frankz@scn.org cathylin@u.washington.edu

60. Jose Ramos Horta, Nobel Peace Laureate, Speaks For Leyla Zana
jose Ramos Horta 1996 nobel Peace Prize CoLaureate Free Leyla Zana Reception 28May 1996 The honor is mine to be here, to try to lend my humble and faint
http://kurdistan.org/Articles/horta.html
Jose Ramos Horta,
Nobel Peace Laureate, Speaks for Leyla Zana
Wednesday, May 28, 1997
Washington, DC
American Kurdish Information Network (AKIN)
2623 Connecticut Avenue NW #1
Washington, DC 20008-1522 Tel: (202) 483-6444
Fax: (202) 483-6476 E-mail: akin@kurdish.org
Home Page: http://www.kurdistan.org
The American-Kurdish Information Network (AKIN)
provides a public service to foster Kurdish-American understanding and friendship

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter