According to Australian journalist and author Jill Jolliffe, Reis's older brother, Vicente [de], "... was one of a group of radical students who ... studied in Portugal and [fell] under the influence of Marxist-Leninist ideas. Yet he [was] never ... connected with fanaticism, nor with the ill-treatment of alleged dissidents ... On the contrary, there [are] many stories of his role as a gentle teacher behind guerilla lines, and he ... died a lingering death from untreated wounds ..."[1]
Political career
Reis is a long time member of Fretilin. In 2001, he was elected as a Fretilin candidate to the Constituent Assembly of East Timor, from which the National Parliament emerged in 2002.[2][3][4]
On 26 July 2005, as part of a restructure by Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri of the I Constitutional Government in response to tensions within the Fretilin party, Reis was sworn in to one of five new positions in the executive, the key electoral role of Secretary of State for the Coordination of Region I (Lautem, Viqueque and Baucau).[5][6] He held that office until 8 August 2007.[7][8][9]
Following a change in the governing coalition, and the admission of Fretilin to the VIII Constitutional Government, Reis was sworn in as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Planning and Territory in that government on 24 June 2020.[13][14]
In April 2021, Reis, in both of his official capacities, led the government's response to Cyclone Seroja and its associated rain and flooding, which he described as the worst incident in East Timor in 40 years.[15] As well as making a statement to the media,[15] he participated in a visit by government officials to the St John Paul II area at Tasitolu to observe the damage caused by the flooding and support its victims,[16] and, later, chaired an official meeting to analyse an interim report by a technical team that had surveyed the damage, and estimated repair costs at US$24 million.[17]
During July 2021, Reis, as extraordinary envoy of the President of East Timor, Francisco Guterres,[18] led an 18-member East Timorese delegation to the 12th Summit of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (Portuguese: Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, CPLP) in Luanda, Angola.[19] En route to the Summit, he paid a courtesy call to Lisbon, Portugal, where he met with Portuguese leaders to discuss the strengthening of cooperation between the two countries.[20] On 17 July 2021, in the course of a speech at the general debate of the Summit, he said [translation]:
"We need to move towards prosperity and we must do so without neglecting other CPLP objectives. In fact, the CPLP gets it right, based on the history, language and culture that make its members cohesive. If building requires looking to the past, looking to the future requires keeping our nature in mind."[21]
At the Summit, the member countries signed an agreement providing for mobility of doctors, business people and academics between them. Reis later confirmed that the East Timorese delegation to the Summit had addressed the preparation of the approved processes for the agreed mobilities.[20]
^The Constitution of Timor-Leste provides, in sections 104 and 105, for the appointment of officials referred to in its English language version as "Deputy Ministers". In other English language publications, those officials are commonly referred to as "Vice Ministers", even though the word "Vice", in context, arguably has a different meaning in English from the word "Deputy". In this article, the constitutional expression "Deputy" is used.