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President Jose Ramos-Horta returned today to East Timor after
a difficult recovery from an assassination attempt.
Thousands of enthusiastic people were present at the airport
to greet him, waving East Timorese flags and banners that said, "Welcome
home our beloved president! We love you!"
The president was visibly weakened by the struggling past
months and was accompanied by bodyguards, aides and his personal physician.
Doctor Rui de Araujo was quoted by the Associated Press saying that Ramos-Horta’s
recovery has been outstanding: "The wounds have completely closed. He
still has some neuropathic pain, but that is normal for the kind of damage he
had... Medically speaking he is up to 90 percent cured."
The 58-year-old president was shot on February 11 by rebel
soldiers, in front of his house in Dili. The attack was part of a coordinated attempt
to shake the country’s leadership as Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao was also
ambushed on his motorcade the same day. He escaped unharmed.
Ramos-Horta appealed to the rebels and also their commander
to give themselves up in order to protect other Timorese from getting hurt. "I
do not want Mr. Salsinha or any more Timorese to lose their lives. Too many
Timorese have died. Mr. Salsinha has to surrender to justice," he said
according to the AP.
Jose Ramos-Horta won the 1996 Nobel Peace prize for his
assistance and determination in his country’s independence quest, after decades
of brutal Indonesian rule.
Ever since East Timor declared independence in 2002 from
Indonesia’s harsh ruling, many have been killed and more than 150,000 people have been forced to flee their homes.
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