A/HRC/42/37/Add.2
52.
The country is extremely rich in terrestrial and marine ecosystems. Almost half of
the land area of Timor-Leste is forest. 19 The Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO) has estimated that approximately 65 per cent of the forestland is
owned or managed by communities.20 Between 70 and 80 per cent of the population lives in
rural areas and are heavily reliant on subsistence agriculture and the ecosystem. 21
53.
However, the country is facing environmental concerns which, if not addressed,
could result in environmental damage and loss of livelihood and culture. The destruction of
natural resources during the Indonesian occupation has contributed to the environmental
problems that the country is now experiencing. Deforestation during the occupation
resulted in the loss of about 30 per cent of the forest coverage. Timor-Leste is now facing
amplified impacts of climate change, including the degradation of soil and freshwater
resources. 22 The Special Rapporteur was informed about several government schemes to
plant trees throughout the country, and in this regard notes the importance of the use of
native species in these efforts in order to protect the environment in a sustainable manner
and reduce soil erosion.
54.
Empirical evidence has proven that indigenous peoples’ traditional management of
resources has been effective in keeping territories resilient to climate change and has
protected parts of their territories from unmitigated devastation. Traditional knowledge of
resource management is now being promoted internationally as a means to combat and
mitigate the impacts of climate change and prevent environmental disasters
(A/HRC/36/46).
55.
The Special Rapporteur notes the positive step taken by the Government in the
Strategic Development Plan 2011–2030, in which it acknowledges the importance of
strengthening the bond of the Timorese with nature in order to ensure sustainable
management of the environment and natural resources for the next generation. 23 The
decision of the Government in 2015 to make the teaching of permaculture a compulsory
subject in the primary school curriculum is an excellent example of this recognition. During
the visit, the Special Rapporteur witnessed inspiring initiatives undertaken in schools to
educate children hands-on about plants and conservation.
56.
The Special Rapporteur notes the Government’s creation of over 40 protected areas
and the adoption by the Department of Protected Areas and National Parks of the Strategic
Action Plan (2011), which is designed to ensure the active participation of local
communities and the use of their traditional knowledge in the management of protected
areas.24
57.
Among the customary practices being revitalized since independence is tara bandu,
traditional rules that govern the relationship between people but that also regulate the
relationship between people and the environment and animals. Tara bandu is rooted in the
cultural and customary beliefs of the Timorese, whose lives are deeply interlinked with
their lands, environment and resources and which they consider sacred (lulik) and an
obligation to protect for the next generation. Tara bandu is developed and enforced
collectively at the local community level under the leadership of traditional authorities. 25 It
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
10
Timor-Leste forest information and data available at
https://rainforests.mongabay.com/deforestation/2000/Timor-Leste.htm.
2010 census. For further information on conservation agriculture and use of forestland in Timor-Leste,
see www.fao.org.
See http://gov.east-timor.org/MAFF/.
Timor-Leste’s Fifth National Report to the Convention on Biodiversity 2015.
Timor-Leste Strategic Development Plan 2011–2030, pp. 54 and 220.
P. Pinto, “The functions of local knowledge in the management of protected areas and national parks”,
in Local Knowledge of Timor Leste!, D. do Amaral de Carvalho, ed. (Jakarta, United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO, 2011), pp. 35–38.
N. Miyazawa, “Customary law and community-based natural resource management in post-conflict
Timor-Leste”, in J. Unruh and R.C. Williams, eds., Land and Post-Conflict Peace-Building
(Earthscan, 2013); Belun and Asia Foundation, Tara Bandu, p. 14; and do Amaral de Carvalho, “Tara
bandu as traditional (local) ecological knowledge”, in Local Knowledge of Timor Leste!, pp. 52–67.