I Constitutional Government of Timor-Leste
| I Constitutional Government | |
|---|---|
|  I Constitutional Government of East Timor | |
|  | |
| Date formed | 20 May 2002 | 
| Date dissolved | 10 July 2006 | 
| People and organisations | |
| President | Xanana Gusmão | 
| Prime Minister | Mari Alkatiri | 
| No. of ministers | 
 | 
| Member parties | Fretilin | 
| Status in legislature | Majority 55 / 88 (63%) | 
| History | |
| Election | 2001 | 
| Predecessor | II UNTAET Transitional Government | 
| Successor | II Constitutional Government | 
The I Constitutional Government (Portuguese: I Governo Constitucional, Tetum: I Governu Konstitusionál) was the first Constitutional Government (administration or cabinet) under the Constitution of Timor-Leste (formerly known as East Timor). Formed on 20 May 2002,[1] it was led by the country's second Prime Minister, Mari Alkatiri,[1] and was replaced by the II Constitutional Government on 10 July 2006.[2]
Initial composition
From 20 May 2002 until it was restructured on 26 July 2005, the government was made up of Ministers, Vice Ministers and Secretaries of State, as follows:[1]
Ministers
| Party | Minister | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fretilin | Mari Alkatiri |   | 
 | |
| Independent | José Ramos-Horta | .jpg)  | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Ana Maria Pessoa |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Maria Madalena Brites Boavida | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Ovídio Amaral | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Rogério Tiago Lobato |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Estanislau Aleixo da Silva |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Armindo Maia |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Rui Araújo |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Domingos Sarmento |   | 
 | |
Vice Ministers
| Party | Vice Minister | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fretilin | José Luís Guterres |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Jorge Teme |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | César Vital Moreira | 
 | ||
| Independent | Manuel Abrantes | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Domingos Sarmento |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Aicha Bassarewan | 
 | ||
| Independent | Alcino Baris |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Ilda Conceição |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Luís Lobato |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Abel Ximenes |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Olímpio Branco |   | 
 | |
Secretaries of State
| Party | Secretary of State | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Independent | Roque Félix Rodrigues |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Arsénio Bano |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Arlindo Rangel | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Gregório Sousa | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Antoninho Bianco |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Egídio de Jesus | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | José Teixeira |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Virgílio Simith |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | João Baptista Alves | 
 | ||
Restructured composition
Following the restructuring on 26 July 2005, the government was made up of Ministers, Vice Ministers and Secretaries of State, as follows:[1]
Ministers
| Party | Minister | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fretilin | Mari Alkatiri |   | 
 | |
| Independent | José Ramos-Horta | .jpg)  | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Maria Madalena Brites Boavida | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Ana Maria Pessoa |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Ovídio Amaral | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Rogério Tiago Lobato |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Roque Félix Rodrigues |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Antoninho Bianco |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Estanislau Aleixo da Silva |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Armindo Maia |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Rui Araújo |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Domingos Sarmento |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Abel Ximenes |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Odete Vítor | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Arsénio Bano |   | 
 | |
Vice Ministers
| Party | Vice Minister | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fretilin | Adaljíza Magno[4] |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Aicha Bassarewan | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Valentim Ximenes | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | José Teixeira |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Alcino Baris |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Francisco Sá Benevides | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Rosária Corte-Real | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Luís Lobato |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Manuel Abrantes | 
 | ||
| Independent | Arcanjo da Silva | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | Raúl da Cunha Mousaco | 
 | ||
Secretaries of State
| Party | Secretary of State | Portrait | Portfolio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fretilin | Gregório Sousa | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | José Manuel Fernandes |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | João Alves | 
 | ||
| Fretilin | José Maria dos Reis |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Virgílio Simith |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | Egídio de Jesus | 
 | ||
| Independent | César da Cruz |   | 
 | |
| Independent | Albano Salem |   | 
 | |
| Fretilin | David Ximenes |   | 
 | |
References
Notes
- ^ a b c d "I Constitutional Government". Government of Timor-Leste. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
- ^ "II Constitutional Government". Government of Timor-Leste. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
- ^ a b "Two ministers resign over E Timor crisis". ABC News. ABC/Reuters/AFP. 1 June 2006. Archived from the original on 12 January 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
- ^ "Biography - Adaljiza Magno". Fretilin blog. Fretilin. 2 October 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
Further reading
- Reilly, Benjamin (8 November 2008). "Semi-presidential democracy in East Asia". East Asia Forum. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- Shoesmith, Dennis (March–April 2003). "Timor-Leste: Divided Leadership in a Semi-Presidential System" (PDF). Asian Survey. 43 (2): 231–252. ISSN 0004-4687. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
