Minister of Public Works (Timor-Leste)
| Minister of Public Works | |
|---|---|
| |
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since 1 July 2023 | |
| Ministry of Public Works | |
| Style |
|
| Member of | Constitutional Government |
| Reports to | Prime Minister |
| Appointer | President of Timor-Leste (following proposal by the Prime Minister of Timor-Leste) |
| Inaugural holder |
|
| Formation | 1975 / 2000 |
| Website | Ministry of Public Works |
The Minister of Public Works (Portuguese: Ministro das Obras Públicas, Tetum: Ministru Obras Públikas) is a senior member of the Constitutional Government of Timor-Leste heading the Ministry of Public Works.
Functions
Under the Constitution of Timor-Leste, the Minister has the power and the duty:
- to implement the policy defined for the Ministry of Public Works;
- to ensure relations between the Government and the other organs of the State in the area of responsibility of the Ministry.[1]
Where the Minister is in charge of the subject matter of a government statute, the Minister is also required, together with the Prime Minister, to sign the statute.[1]
Incumbent
The incumbent Minister of Public Works is Samuel Marçal.[2][3]
List of ministers
The following individuals have been appointed as the minister:
| No. | Party | Minister | Portrait | Title | Government (Prime Minister) | Term start | Term end | Term in office | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fretilin | Eduardo Carlos dos Anjos "Kaku'uk" | Minister of Public Works, Transport and Communications | 1975 CoM (Lobato) | 1 December 1975 | 17 December 1975 | 16 days | ||
| 2 | UDT | João Viegas Carrascalão | | Minister for Infrastructure | I UNTAET (Vieira de Mello) | 15 July 2000 | 16 July 2001 | 1 year, 1 day | |
| 3 | Fretilin | Ovídio de Jesus Amaral | 16 July 2001 | 20 September 2001 | 66 days | ||||
| 4 | César Vital Moreira | Minister of Water and Public Works | II UNTAET (Alkatiri) | 20 September 2001 | 20 May 2002 | 242 days | |||
| (3) | Ovídio Amaral | Minister of Transport, Communications and Public Works | I Constitutional (Alkatiri) | 20 May 2002 | 26 July 2005 | 3 years, 67 days | |||
| 5 | Independent | Odete Vítor | Minister of Public Works | 26 July 2005 | 1 June 2006 | 2 years, 13 days | |||
| II Constitutional (Ramos-Horta) | 10 July 2006 | 19 May 2007 | |||||||
| III Constitutional (da Silva) | 19 May 2007 | 8 August 2007 | |||||||
| 6 | Pedro Lay | | Minister of Infrastructure | IV Constitutional (Gusmão) | 8 August 2007 | 8 August 2012 | 5 years, 0 days | ||
| 7 | PD | Gastão Francisco de Sousa | | Minister of Public Works | V Constitutional (Gusmão) | 8 August 2012 | 16 February 2015 | 5 years, 38 days | |
| PD (to 2016) | Minister of Public Works, Transport and Communications | VI Constitutional (Araújo) | 16 February 2015 | 15 September 2017 | |||||
| Independent | |||||||||
| Vacant | VII Constitutional (Alkatiri) | 3 October 2017 | 22 June 2018 | 262 days | |||||
| 8 | PLP | Salvador Soares dos Reis Pires | | Minister of Public Works | VIII Constitutional (Ruak) | 22 June 2018 | 22 March 2022 | 3 years, 273 days | |
| 9 | PLP | Abel Pires da Silva | | 22 March 2022 | 1 July 2023 | 1 year, 101 days | |||
| 10 | CNRT | Samuel Marçal | IX Constitutional (Gusmão) | 1 July 2023 | Incumbent | 2 years, 52 days | |||
References
- ^ a b "Constitution of Timor-Leste, Section 117" (PDF). Government of Timor-Leste. 20 May 2002. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. - ^ Martins, Filomeno (30 June 2023). "The list of structure of IX Constitutional Government announced in Official Gazette". Tatoli. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
- ^ Sousa, Nelson de (1 July 2023). "PR Horta sei akompaña serbisu IX Governu" [President Horta will accompany the work of the IX Government] (in Tetum). Tatoli. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
External links
- Ministry of Public Works – official site






