Holpilat

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Matai
Street in Holpilat
The Suco Holpilat is located in the northwest of the administrative office of Maucatar.  The place Holpilat is in the south of the Sucos.
Data
surface 55.59 km²
population 1,597  (2015)
Chefe de Suco Jaime Cardoso Mendonça
(election 2009)
Aldeias Population  (2015)
Fatuc Oan 397
Hatu 293
Lela 54
Leogore 294
Manulor 278
Nainare 281
Holpilat (East Timor)
Holpilat
Holpilat
Coordinates: 9 ° 13 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E

Holpilat ( Holpilar ) is an East Timorese place and Suco in the administrative office of Maucatar ( municipality of Cova Lima ).

The place

Holpilat is the main town of the sucos of the same name.

The Suco

Matai
places position height
Ager 9 ° 11 ′  S , 125 ° 12 ′  E 642  m
Airik 9 ° 14 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 685  m
Holpilat 9 ° 13 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 741  m
Holuban 9 ° 13 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 860  m
Lela 9 ° 11 ′  S , 125 ° 12 ′  E 599  m
Leogore 9 ° 14 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 685  m
Manulor 9 ° 13 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 860  m
Nainare 9 ° 12 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 759  m

1597 inhabitants (2015) live in Holpilat, of which 796 are men and 801 women. The population density is 28.7 inhabitants / km². There are 347 households in the Suco. More than 95% of the residents state Bunak as their mother tongue. Small minorities speak Tetum Prasa , Tetum Terik and Mambai .

Before the 2015 regional reform, Holpilat had an area of ​​35.03 km². Now it is 55.59 km². The Suco is located in the northwest of Maucatar. To the south is the Suco Ogues , which also belongs to Maucatar , and to the southeast is the Suco Belecasac . To the west, across the Lelosi River , a tributary of the Tafara , lies the Fatululic administrative office with its Suco Taroman . To the northeast, Holpilat borders the administrative office of Lolotoe ( municipality of Bobonaro ) with its Sucos Lebos and Deudet . The border with Lebos is followed by the Lotula river , which flows into the Ruiketan from the border with Deudet , the later Raiketan . The Ruiketan forms the entire border with Deudet. In the northwest, Holpilat shares a narrow border with the Indonesian West Timor . The Apatopol rises to the west of the town of Holpilat and flows west into the Lelosi.

Across the Suco leads from south to north a country road that comes from the community capital Suai . All major towns are located on it. These are Holpilat, Manulor , Holuban ( Holuhan ), Nainare , Lela , Airik ( Aisik ), Leogore ( Leohore , Leobore ) and Ager . There are primary schools in Leogore, Nainare and Ager. There is also a helipad for emergencies in the east of Sucos.

In the Suco are the six Aldeias Fatuc Oan , Hatu , Lela , Leogore , Manulor and Nainare .

history

Holpilat belonged to the Maucatar exclave, which was subordinated to the Netherlands in the Treaty of Lisbon (1859) . Maucatar was only connected to the rest of the Dutch territory by a narrow strip in the north. All around were Timorese empires that were assigned to Portugal . Although there was already an agreement between the colonial powers in 1904 that Maucatar was to be ceded to the Portuguese, it was not until 1916 that it passed into Portuguese ownership.

An Indonesian attack on Lela failed in mid-October .

In Leogore there was a post of the pro-Indonesian militia Laksaur . On April 9, 1999, members of the Laksaur attacked Holpilat and Nainare and burned houses. Several hundred people fled into the woods.

politics

In the 2004/2005 elections , Camdido Gusmão was elected Chefe de Suco. In the 2009 elections , Jaime Cardoso Mendonça won .

Web links

Commons : Holpilat  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Direcção-Geral de Estatística : Results of the 2015 census , accessed on November 23, 2016.
  2. List of polling stations for the parliamentary elections in East Timor 2007 (PDF file; 118 kB)
  3. Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
  4. Results of the 2010 census for the Suco Holpilat ( tetum ; PDF; 8.3 MB)
  5. 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).
  6. a b Timor-Leste GIS Portal ( Memento from June 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  7. UNMIT: Timor-Leste District Atlas version 02, August 2008 ( Memento from December 3, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 449 kB)
  8. Jornal da Républica with the Diploma Ministerial n. 199/09 ( Memento of February 3, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) (Portuguese, PDF file; 315 kB)
  9. Antoinette Schapper: Finding Bunaq: The homeland and expansion of the Bunaq in central Timor ( Memento of the original from October 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / epress.anu.edu.au archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Pp. 163–186, in: Andrew McWilliam, Elizabeth G. Traube: Land and Life in Timor-Leste: Ethnographic Essays , 2011
  10. "Part 3: The History of the Conflict" (PDF; 1.4 MB) from the "Chega!" Report of the CAVR (English)
  11. "Chapter 7.3 Forced Displacement and Famine" (PDF; 1.3 MB) from the "Chega!" Report of the CAVR (English)
  12. Secretariado Técnico de Administração Eleitoral STAE: Eleições para Liderança Comunitária 2004/2005 - Resultados ( Memento of August 4, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  13. Secretariado Técnico de Administração Eleitoral STAE: Eleições para Liderança Comunitária 2009 - Resultados ( Memento of August 4, 2010 in the Internet Archive )

f1Georeferencing Map with all coordinates: OSM | WikiMap