Hatolia Vila
Hatolia Vila | ||
Data | ||
surface | 18.62 km² | |
population | 3,049 (2015) | |
Chefe de Suco | José Boavida Gusmão (election 2009) |
|
Aldeias | Population (2015) | |
Aimeraulo | 418 | |
Hatu Batu | 499 | |
Hohopu | 457 | |
Simohei | 1,675 | |
|
Hatolia Vila ( Hatólia, Hatolia, Hatu Lia, Hatu-Lia ) is an East Timorese place and Suco in the administrative office of Hatulia ( municipality of Ermera ).
Place name
In 1936 the place Hatolia Vila was renamed by the Portuguese, after the former governor of Portuguese Timor José Celestino da Silva , in Vila Celestino da Silva or Vila Celestino da Silva . But the name did not catch on and a few years after the Second World War , the old name was reverted to.
The place
The place Hatolia Vila is in the northwest of the Sucos of the same name. Hatolia Vila forms a loosely connected settlement with some neighboring towns. These places are Santa Cruz ( Santacruz ), Malioboru , Aimeraulo ( Aimerulu ), Hatu Batu ( Hatobato ), Hohopu and Simohei .
Hatulia is on the main road from Maliana to the municipal capital Gleno . After Gleno it is about 17 km to the northeast from Hatulia as the crow flies, to the state capital Dili about 41 km. The place is at an altitude of 882 m above sea level. There is a primary school ( Escola Primaria Hatolia Vila ), a pre-secondary school, a helipad, a community health center and a station for the national police in the village .
The Suco
Hatolia Vila | ||
places | position | height |
Aimeraulo | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 20 ′ E | 985 m |
Diaro | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 20 ′ E | 1182 m |
Fatunapa | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 21 ′ E | 1322 m |
Hatu Batu | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 20 ′ E | 985 m |
Hatolia Vila | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 19 ′ E | 882 m |
Hohopu | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 19 ′ E | 841 m |
Malioboru | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 19 ′ E | 882 m |
Narlolo | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 21 ′ E | 1322 m |
Santa Cruz | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 19 ′ E | 841 m |
Simohei | 8 ° 49 ′ S , 125 ° 20 ′ E | 985 m |
Talo | 8 ° 48 ′ S , 125 ° 21 ′ E | 1402 m |
3049 people (2015) live in Suco Hatolia Vila, of which 1546 are men and 1485 women. The population density is 163.8 inhabitants / km². There are 511 households in the Suco. Almost 78% of the population name Tetum Prasa as their mother tongue. Over 13% speak Mambai , over 7 % speak Kemak and a small minority speak Bunak .
Before the 2015 regional reform, Hatolia Vila had an area of 17.63 km². Now there are 18.62 km². The Suco is located south of the center of the administrative office. In the north Hatolia Vila borders on the Sucos Ailelo and Manusae , in the east on the Suco Coilate-Letelo and in the south-west on the Suco Samara . The Aiboro flows along the southeastern border, and the Celere on the northwestern border . The Motur has its source in the Suco and flows like the others towards the southwest. All rivers are part of the Lóis river system . In addition to the settlement center Hatulia in the northwest of the Sucos, the villages Diaro , Fatunapa , Talo and Narlolo are in the northeast .
The four Aldeias Aimeraulo , Hatu Batu , Hohopu and Simohei are located in the Suco .
history
At the end of the 1970s, the Indonesian occupying forces interned thousands of East Timorese in so-called transit camps . The Hatolia Vila transit camp was just outside in Modolaran . The internees only got some corn, salted fish and salt to eat. The fish caused diarrhea, which mainly killed children and the elderly. About 7,000 people lived in the camp, from which they were not allowed to move more than 100 meters away. There were eight military posts around the camp. Only occasionally were the internees, accompanied by the soldiers, allowed to go to Leimea-Craic or Samara to look for edible roots. There were many deaths, especially among inmates from other parts of East Timor, such as Zumalai . It wasn't until late 1979 that the International Red Cross brought food and medical supplies to the camp. In 1980 the internees were given more freedom. Then they were moved to Leimea-Craic and finally they were allowed to return to their homeland.
During the 1999 riots in Hatulia between January 27 and September the pro-Indonesian militias Darah Merah , Aitarak and Pancasila operated together with the Indonesian military against supporters of East Timor’s independence. In April 1999 the wave of violence began. That month, Darah Merah received modern firearms and two military vehicles from the District Command ( Kodim ) of the Indonesian Army. 200 Darah Merah militiamen then attacked CNRT members in Hatulia. A battle broke out in the course of which a militiaman and two CNRT members were killed.
politics
In the 2004/2005 elections , Duarte Martins was elected Chefe de Suco. In the 2009 elections , José Boavida Gusmão won .
Personalities
- Francisco David Xavier Carlos (1967), politician
Web links
- Results of the 2010 census for Suco Hatolia Vila ( tetum ; PDF file; 8.08 MB)
- Results of the 2015 census for Suco Hatolia Vila (tetum; PDF)
- Seeds of Life: Suco information sheets Hatulia (tetum)
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Direcção-Geral de Estatística : Results of the 2015 census , accessed on November 23, 2016.
- ↑ Geoffrey Hull : The placenames of East Timor , in: Placenames Australia (ANPS): Newsletter of the Australian National Placenames Survey, June 2006, pp. 6 & 7, ( Memento of February 14, 2017 in the Internet Archive ). September 2014.
- ↑ a b Timor-Leste GIS Portal ( Memento from June 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ List of polling stations for the parliamentary elections in East Timor 2007 (PDF file; 118 kB)
- ↑ a b UNMIT: Timor-Leste District Atlas version 02, August 2008 ( Memento from December 3, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF file; 571 kB)
- ↑ Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
- ↑ Results of the 2010 census for the Suco Hatolia Vila ( tetum ; PDF file; 8.08 MB)
- ↑ Direcção Nacional de Estatística: Population Distribution by Administrative Areas Volume 2 English ( Memento from January 5, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) (Census 2010; PDF; 22.6 MB)
- ↑ Jornal da Républica with the Diploma Ministerial n. 199/09 ( Memento of February 3, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) (Portuguese; PDF file; 315 kB)
- ↑ a b CAVR Chega Files: Part 7.3: Forced Displacement and Famine ( Memento from November 28, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF file; 1.22 MB)
- ↑ Secretariado Técnico de Administração Eleitoral STAE: Eleições para Liderança Comunitária 2004/2005 - Resultados ( Memento of August 4, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Secretariado Técnico de Administração Eleitoral STAE: Eleições para Liderança Comunitária 2009 - Resultados ( Memento of August 4, 2010 in the Internet Archive )