Poets

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Poets
Main street and church of Ermera
The Suco Poetete is located in the northwest of the administrative office of Ermera.  The place Poetete is east of the center of Sucos.
Data
surface 17.62 km²
population 8,828  (2015)
Chefe de Suco Felisberto das Neves
(election 2009)
Aldeias Population  (2015)
Aldeia Vila 2,761
Biluli 781
Gueguemara 736
Leqisi 2.149
Loblala 278
Poepun 261
Rematu 218
Samatrae 475
Taclela 555
Tidibessi 72
Urletoho 248
Holidays 294
Poetete (East Timor)
Poets
Poets
Coordinates: 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E

Poetete is an East Timorese village and Suco in the Ermera administrative office ( Ermera municipality ). This is also where Ermera is located .

The place

The place Poetete ( Poetete Vila , Porehe , Porahein ) is located at an altitude of 1195  m above sea level, east of the center of Sucos, near the place Ermera. Poetete is part of the Ermera settlement.

The politician Rui Manuel Hanjam was born in Ermera.

The Suco

Poets
places position height
Aifu 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 23 ′  E 1215  m
Biluli 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 25 ′  E 913  m
Ermera 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 1195  m
Hulorema 8 ° 46 ′  S , 125 ° 23 ′  E 1348  m
Leqisi 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 999  m
Loblala 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 23 ′  E 1266  m
Pasehei 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 26 ′  E 893  m
Poepun 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 23 ′  E 1319  m
Poets 8 ° 45 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 1195  m
Rematu 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 937  m
Samatrae 8 ° 46 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 1319  m
Tidibessi 8 ° 46 ′  S , 125 ° 23 ′  E 1319  m
Tlihueo 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 24 ′  E 1019  m
Urletepoho 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 26 ′  E 938  m
Holidays 8 ° 44 ′  S , 125 ° 26 ′  E 943  m

The Suco has 8,828 inhabitants (2015), of which 4405 are men and 4423 women. The population density is 501.0 inhabitants / km². There are 1,356 households in the Suco.

Before the 2015 territorial reform, Poetete had an area of ​​17.35 km². Now there are 17.62 km². The Suco is located in the northwest of the administrative office Ermera. To the northwest lies Suco Ponilala , part of the Ermera administrative office , to the east of Riheu , to the south of Talimoro and Mertuto and to the south of Leguimea . In the west is the administrative office of Hatulia with its sucos Manusae and Fatubolo and in the north the administrative office of Railaco with its sucos matata and tocoluli . The northern border is formed by the Gleno River , which is part of the Lóis river system . The Daurecco from Poetete and the eastern border river to Riheu, the Goumeca, flow into the Gleno . The Buri rises southwest of the town of Ermera and later flows into the Goumeca as an office . The southern tip of the Sucos Poetete touches the Lahosa River , another tributary of the Lóis.

The settlement Ermera, in the center of Sucos, is a loosely connected settlement made up of the places Poetete , Poepun ( Poepung ) and Loblala . To the south are the towns of Tidibessi ( Tidibesse ), Hulorema and Samatrae ( Samatrai ), to the north the villages of Tlihueo ( Tlibugeo ), Biluli ( Berluli ), Rematu ( Renatu ) and Leqisi ( Lequesi , Lekese ). In the eastern strip, near the town of Gleno , on the Goumeca are the towns of Pasehei ( Pasehe , Paschei ), Urletepoho and Urluli .

Ermera has a helipad, a primary school ( Escola Primaria Katolika Porahein ), a pre-secondary school, a secondary school ( Escola Secundaria Katolik No. 746 ) and a community health center. There are other primary schools in Hulorema, Rematu and Biluli.

In Suco are the twelve Aldeias Aldeia Vila , Biluli , Gueguemara , Leqisi , Loblala , Poepun , Rematu , Samatrae , Taclela (Taklela) , Tidibessi , Urletoho and Urluli .

history

On September 1, 1975, during the civil war between UDT and FRETILIN , there were skirmishes and executions in Aifu. A memorial has been commemorating the Klaek Reman and Aifu massacre and the victims of the fighting since 2016.

At the end of 1979 there was an internment camp for East Timorese civilians ( transit camp ) in Ermera , who were to be relocated by the Indonesian occupiers in order to better combat the FALINTIL . The district capital was moved to Gleno during the occupation .

At the beginning of 1979, around a hundred men from the previous district capital Ermera and Suco Ponilala were brought by the Indonesian occupying forces to the place where the city of Gleno is today. The Indonesian military forced the men to clear the previously uninhabited area and remove the vegetation so that the new city could be built here. If the forced laborers failed to complete their daily quota, they were tortured as a punishment. Three men who were too sick to work were killed by the soldiers. Since it was not possible to create gardens at that time, food was supplied by the military. When work on the new district capital, Gleno, was finished in 1983, the military stopped supplies. The families of the forced laborers have now also been forcibly relocated to Gleno. Because basic gardens had still not been laid out, deaths from starvation occurred. It was not until 1985 that the residents of Glenos were allowed to move freely.

The resistance leader Nino Konis Santana hid under a residential building in Loblala between 1993 and 1998.

On April 10, Indonesian soldiers and Darah Merah militiamen burned down dozens of houses in the town of Ermera.

politics

In the 2004/2005 elections , Francisco Babo was elected Chefe de Suco. In the 2009 elections , Felisberto won the Neves .

Personalities

Web links

Commons : Poetete  - 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. Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
  3. a b c Timor-Leste GIS-Portal ( Memento from June 30, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  4. Fallingrain.com: Directory of Cities, Towns, and Regions in East Timor
  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 UNMIT: Timor-Leste District Atlas version 02, August 2008 ( Memento from December 3, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF file; 571 kB)
  7. a b List of polling stations for the parliamentary elections in East Timor 2007 (PDF file; 118 kB)
  8. Jornal da República: Diploma Ministerial n ° 16/2017 , with corrections dated May 9, 2017 , accessed on March 12, 2019.
  9. ^ Government of East Timor: Government builds Reconciliation Monument of Aifu's massacre , April 8, 2016 , accessed June 20, 2017.
  10. "Chapter 7.2 Unlawful Killings and Enforced Disappearances" (PDF; 2.5 MB) from the "Chega!" Report of the CAVR (English)
  11. a b c "Chapter 7.3 Forced Displacement and Famine" (PDF; 1.3 MB) from the "Chega!" Report of the CAVR (English)
  12. Jornal da República: DECRETO DO PRESIDENTE DA REPÚBLICA Nº. 72/2015 de 19 de Novembro , accessed April 22, 2019.
  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