Last modified: 2023-12-09 by zachary harden
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An interesting photo was published showing many political flags (image archived here). Trying to identify these flags:
1: Fretilin
2: unknown
3: Maybe
P.S.T. - Partido Socialista de Timor
4: a
green flag
5: a white flag
6: C.N.R.T. -
Congresso Nacional da Reconstrução Timorense
7: Maybe
P.N.T. - Partido Nacionalista Timorense
8:
unknown
9: P.P.T. - Partido do Povo de Timor
10: P.D.C. - Partido Democrata Cristão
11:
hidden behind the national flag
12: P.S.D. -
Partido Social-Democrata
13: P.M.D. -
Partido Milénio Democrático
14: A.D. -
Aliansa Demokratika
15: P.L.P.A. - Partidu
Liberta Povu Aileba
16: P.D.R.T. -
Democratika Republica de Timor
17: unknown
18:
P.L. - Partai Liberal (new version)
19: unknown
20:
U.D.T. - União Democrática Timorense
21:
P.D. - Partido Democrático
22: unknown
23,24: hidden behind pillar, maybe two flags
2nd to rightmost: unknown
rightmost: unknown
António Martins and J. Patrick Fischer, 16 March 2012
There are several new parties with new flags. Some can be found at:
http://unmit.unmissions.org/Portals/UNMIT/DGSU/Key%20Institutions%20Report_final_15%20December_2011.pdf
[t91ll]. Party flags start out on p. 216.
J. Patrick Fischer, 18 May 2012
Last June 30th parliament elections were held in East Timor and there are
quite a few changes: There are new parties, others disappeared, yet others
changed names — and there are new and changed flags, too!
António Martins, 07 September 2007
New parties in Timor-Leste and new party flags.
Here are some
pictures of the flags of the parties which are taken place at elections in
June 2007.
J. Patrick Fischer, 31 May 2007
Main sources for the official flags used this election are the
ETAN page, and
a 8-page
leaflet in Tetum with a short campaign statement from each party, complete
with flag, Vota ba partidu ne’ebé ita hakarak
[t9l07].
At the Parliament website, some parties
(not necessarily the larger) have their own page: some of these show either
their flag or logo. Interesting that the
ballot
paper
shows most party logos as flags. This is never done in
Portugal, and as far as I know party flags are not a big issue
in Australia either (these two being the foreign
countries that most influenced the Timorese electoral process). This relative
popularity of party flags is surely something that evolved locally,
perhaps also influenced by Indonesian practice.
António Martins, 7 September 2007
I am not at all very surprised to witness the disappearance of most parties
who run for the 2001 elections.
António Martins, 07 April 2007
At least some parties will go further. I am collecting information as far as possible about the Timorese elections via internet. These are the candidates for presidential elections:
In the presidential election of 2007.04.07, the ballot paper identified candidates with a flag design, along a photo and full name, as usual:
East Timor is preparing for elections, as a step on the way to independence. Party flags are appearing, as can be seen from news photos like these:
Adding to the 16 parties (PDC,
UDC/PDC, APODETI,
UDT, PNT,
PPT, PST,
PD, PL,
PTT, KOTA,
PARENTIL, FRETILIN,
PDM, ASDT and
PSD), five
individual candidates also run to the August 2001 elections, of which
two are identified by means of their personal ex-libris — I know
nothing of these being used on flags…
António Martins, 22 September 2001
UNTAET’s Regulation No. 2001/2:
Quite interesting, isn’t it? It seems that Falintil/CNRT-derived flags are to be reserved for the new national symbol…On the election of a constituent assembly to prepare a constitution
A political party … shall be deemed to be registered … if the Chief Electoral Officer is satisfied … that the political party does not have a symbol which is the same as or similar to the flag of another nation, any currently used military symbol or insignia, the Falintil symbol, or the National Council of East Timorese Resistance symbol …
for an independent and democratic East Timor
Section 24
Registration
It allows symbols based on the red-yellow-black
arrowhead flag, entirely connoted to the most radical independentist
tendencies. But I guess it would have been hard to avoid it with anything
short of a direct reference…
Jorge Candeias, 28 April 2001
Another party in the news is the National Unity Forum FUN, another
anti-FRETILIN-party. I am not sure, if it is the
same party like the Movement for National Unity MUN, a daughter of the street
gang organization Colimau 2000, which I found in some reports
before. Colimau 2000 had important roles in the ethnical clashes in
2006 in Timor-Leste. It is suspect of criminal actions like robbery, extortion
and arson. Colimau 2000 has it center in the districts of
Ermera and Bobonaro in
the west of the country.
J. Patrick Fischer, 08 April 2007
At the official blog of U.D.T., a new party is announced to have been created in June 2007 ("yesterday," they say on an undated page?): The Liga Democrática Progressiva (“Democratic Progressive League”, though the correct word in Portuguese would be "Progressista"), joins all six smaller parties, which received no seats in the Parliament: