By Our Special Correspondent in Dili
DILI, Timor Leste : At the crack of
dawn brigades of streetsweepers fan out across Timor-Leste’s capital, Dili. In
smart blue overalls and armed with brooms, they ensure that Dili’s main streets
can vie for cleanliness with Singapore’s or Tokyo’s. It is a project designed
to provide jobs for the city’s many unemployed. And it works.
Despite the many burned-out
buildings, the town feels less depressing than it did. But just off the main
roads, the squalor of extreme poverty still prevails, and large families live
in tiny shacks without water or sanitation.