Ogues

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Ogues
The Suco Ogues is located in the southwest of the administrative office of Maucatar.  The place Ogues is located in the south of the Sucos.
Data
surface 38.27 km²
population 1,917  (2015)
Chefe de Suco Pedro Amaral
(election 2009)
Aldeias Population  (2015)
Baulela 217
Foho Rua 665
Ogues 247
Orun 392
Soga 396
Ogues (East Timor)
Ogues
Ogues
Coordinates: 9 ° 18 ′  S , 125 ° 14 ′  E

Ogues is an East Timorese place, Aldeia and Suco in the administrative office of Maucatar ( municipality of Cova Lima ). The administrative headquarters of the Maucatar Administration Office is located here.

The place

The place Ogues is located in the south of the Sucos at an altitude of 163  m above sea level. It forms with the place Foho Rua ( Fohorua ) a closed settlement on the river Karautun , a tributary of the Camenaça . The settlement has a primary school, the Escola Primaria Ogues .

The Suco

Ogues
places position height
Baulela 9 ° 17 ′  S , 125 ° 14 ′  E 163  m
Bergel 9 ° 15 ′  S , 125 ° 14 ′  E ?
Foho Rua 9 ° 18 ′  S , 125 ° 14 ′  E 163  m
Oges 9 ° 16 ′  S , 125 ° 13 ′  E 460  m
Ogues 9 ° 18 ′  S , 125 ° 14 ′  E 163  m

1917 inhabitants (2015) live in Ogues, of which 960 are men and 957 women. The population density is 50.1 inhabitants / km². There are 377 households in the Suco. Over 50% of the population name Bunak as their mother tongue. Over 45% speak Tetum Terik , while small minorities speak Tetum Prasa , Kemak or Makasae .

Before the 2015 regional reform, Ogues had an area of ​​45.57 km². Now there are 38.27 km². The Suco is located in the southwest of Maucatar. To the north are the Sucos Holpilat and Belecasac , which also belong to Maucatar, and to the east are Matai and Suco Labarai, which belongs to the Suai administrative office . The Suco Debos , south of Ogues , also belongs to Suai . In the west, Ogues borders on the administrative office Fohorem with its sucos Dato Tolu and Fohoren . The western border is formed by the Asaematen River, a tributary of the Tafara . In the south rises the Tasipus , which is called from the place Ogues Karautun .

The village of Baulela is close to Ogues . In the center is the town of Oges , which is also called Ogues on some maps. The village of Bergel lies on the northern border . With the exception of Bergel, all of the towns are on an interstate road that leads north from the community capital, Suai . In addition to the primary school in Ogues, there are also primary schools in Oges and Bergel.

In the Suco there are the five Aldeia Baulela , Foho Rua , Ogues , Orun and Soga .

history

During the independence referendum in East Timor on August 30, 1999, pro-Indonesian militias tried, in some cases through ritual ceremonies, to bind the population to a vote for Indonesia . The blood of goats was drunk. In Ogues, however, this ceremony failed the night before the vote in front of the UNAMET center because most of the residents had fled into the forest and only returned for the referendum in the morning.

The murder of a small child in early 2010 was at times blamed on a group of criminals who allegedly terrorized the local population, disguised as ninja . The result was a large-scale police action against the "ninjas". Other sources state that a family member was responsible for the murder.

politics

In the 2004/2005 elections , Agusto Barros was elected Chefe de Suco. In the 2009 elections won Pedro Amaral .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Direcção-Geral de Estatística : Results of the 2015 census , accessed on November 23, 2016.
  2. Jornal da República : Diploma Ministerial no 24/2014 de 24 de Julho - Orgânica dos Postos Administrativos ( Memento of March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  3. Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
  4. List of polling stations for the parliamentary elections in East Timor 2007 (PDF file; 118 kB)
  5. a b UNMIT: Timor-Leste District Atlas version 02, August 2008 ( Memento of the original dated December 3, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The 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. (PDF file; 438 kB) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / unmit.unmissions.org
  6. Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
  7. Results of the 2010 census for the Suco Ogues ( tetum ; PDF file; 7.95 MB)
  8. Direcção Nacional de Estatística: Population Distribution by Administrative Areas Volume 2 English ( Memento of the original from January 5, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (2010 census; PDF; 22.6 MB) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / dne.mof.gov.tl
  9. a b Timor-Leste GIS Portal ( Memento from June 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  10. Jornal da Républica with the Diploma Ministerial n. 199/09 ( Memento of February 3, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) (Portuguese, PDF file; 315 kB)
  11. ^ A. Walter Dorn: "The Militias in East Timor: Personal Encounters", Peace Magazine, Vol. 15, No. 5, Fall 1999, p.16-18.
  12. Wikinews, March 24, 2010, “Ninjas” in Timor-Leste?
  13. Secretariado Técnico de Administração Eleitoral STAE: Eleições para Liderança Comunitária 2004/2005 - Resultados ( Memento of August 4, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  14. 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