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East Timor


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Flag of East Timor

Flag



coat_alt

Seal





Motto: Unidade, Acção, Progresso  (Portuguese)
Unidade, Asaun, Progresu  (Tetum)
(English: "Unity, Action, Progress")



Anthem: Pátria  (Portuguese)
(English: "Fatherland")




Location of East Timor

Location of East Timor
Capital
and largest city

Dili
8°33′S 125°34′E / 8.55°S 125.56°E / -8.55; 125.56Coordinates: 8°33′S 125°34′E / 8.55°S 125.56°E / -8.55; 125.56
Official languages

Tetum

Portuguesea



National languages

Religion (2010[1])

96.9% Roman Catholic
3.1% other religions
Demonym
East Timorese
Timorese
Maubere (informal)[2][3]
Government
Unitary semi-presidential constitutional republic[4][5][6]

• President

Francisco Guterres
• Prime Minister

Taur Matan Ruak

Legislature
National Parliament
Formation

• Portuguese Timor

16th century
• Independence declared

28 November 1975
• Annexation by Indonesia

17 July 1976
• Administered by UNTAET

25 October 1999
• Independence restored

20 May 2002

Area
• Total

15,410[7] km2 (5,950 sq mi) (154th)
• Water (%)

negligible
Population
• 2015 census

1,167,242[8]
• Density

78/km2 (202.0/sq mi)

GDP (PPP)

2017 estimate
• Total

$4.567 billion[9]
• Per capita

$5,479[9] (148th)

GDP (nominal)

2014 estimate
• Total

$2.498 billion[9]
• Per capita

$3,330[9]

HDI (2015)

Increase 0.605[10]
medium · 133rd
Currency
United States dollarb (USD)
Time zone
(UTC+9)
Drives on the
left
Calling code
+670
ISO 3166 code
TL
Internet TLD
.tlc


Website
timor-leste.gov.tl


  1. Fifteen further "national languages" are recognised by the Constitution.


  2. Centavo coins also used.


  3. .tp has been phased out.


East Timor (/-ˈtmɔːr/ (About this sound listen)) or Timor-Leste (/tiˈmɔːr ˈlɛʃt/; Tetum: Timór Lorosa'e), officially the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste[11] (Portuguese: República Democrática de Timor-Leste,[12]Tetum: Repúblika Demokrátika Timór-Leste),[13] is a sovereign state in Maritime Southeast Asia.[14] It comprises the eastern half of the island of Timor, the nearby islands of Atauro and Jaco, and Oecusse, an exclave on the northwestern side of the island surrounded by Indonesian West Timor. Australia is the country's southern neighbour, separated by the Timor Sea. The country's size is about 15,410 km2 (5,400 sq mi).[7]


East Timor was colonised by Portugal in the 16th century, and was known as Portuguese Timor until 28 November 1975, when the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (Fretilin) declared the territory's independence. Nine days later, it was invaded and occupied by Indonesia, and was declared Indonesia's 27th province the following year. The Indonesian occupation of East Timor was characterised by a highly violent decades-long conflict between separatist groups (especially Fretilin) and the Indonesian military.


In 1999, following the United Nations-sponsored act of self-determination, Indonesia relinquished control of the territory. East Timor became the first new sovereign state of the 21st century on 20 May 2002 and joined the United Nations and the Community of Portuguese Language Countries. In 2011, East Timor announced its intention to gain membership status in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) by applying to become its eleventh member.[15] East Timor is part of a free trade zone, the Timor-Leste–Indonesia–Australia Growth Triangle (TIA-GT).[16] It is one of only two predominantly Christian nations in Southeast Asia, the other being the Philippines.




Contents





  • 1 Etymology


  • 2 History

    • 2.1 Prehistory


    • 2.2 Classical Era


    • 2.3 Colonial Era

      • 2.3.1 First Portuguese Period


      • 2.3.2 Japanese Period


      • 2.3.3 Second Portuguese Period


      • 2.3.4 Indonesian Period



    • 2.4 Contemporary Era



  • 3 Politics and government


  • 4 Administrative divisions


  • 5 Foreign relations and military


  • 6 Geography


  • 7 Economy


  • 8 Demographics

    • 8.1 Languages


    • 8.2 Education


    • 8.3 Health


    • 8.4 Religion



  • 9 Culture

    • 9.1 Arts


    • 9.2 Cuisine


    • 9.3 Sports



  • 10 See also


  • 11 References


  • 12 Bibliography


  • 13 External links




Etymology[edit]


"Timor" derives from timur, the word for "east" in Malay, which became recorded as Timor in Portuguese, thus resulting in the tautological toponym meaning "East East": In Portuguese Timor-Leste (Leste being the word for "east"); in Tetum Timór Lorosa'e (Lorosa'e being the word for "east" (literally "rising sun")). In Indonesian, the country is called Timor Timur, thus using the Portuguese name for the island followed by the word for "east", as adjectives in Indonesian are put after the noun.


The official names under the Constitution are Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste[17] in English, República Democrática de Timor-Leste[12] in Portuguese and Repúblika Demokrátika Timór-Leste[13] in Tetum.


The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) official short form in English and all other languages is Timor-Leste (codes: TLS & TL), which has been adopted by the United Nations,[18] the European Union,[19] and the national standards organisations of France (AFNOR), the United States (ANSI),[20]United Kingdom (BSI), Germany (DIN), and Sweden (SIS), all diplomatic missions to the country by protocol and the CIA World Factbook.[21]



History[edit]




Prehistory[edit]


Humans first settled in East Timor 42,000 years ago.[22] Descendants of at least three waves of migration are believed still to live in East Timor. The first is described by anthropologists as people of the Veddo-Australoid type. Around 3000 BC, a second migration brought Melanesians. The earlier Veddo-Australoid peoples withdrew at this time to the mountainous interior. Finally, proto-Malays arrived from south China and north Indochina.[23] Hakka traders are among those descended from this final group.[24] Timorese origin myths tell of ancestors that sailed around the eastern end of Timor arriving on land in the south. Some stories recount Timorese ancestors journeying from the Malay Peninsula or the Minangkabau highlands of Sumatra.[25]Austronesians migrated to Timor, and are thought to be associated with the development of agriculture on the island.[citation needed]



Classical Era[edit]


Before European colonialism, Timor was included in Chinese and Indian trading networks, and in the 14th century was an exporter of aromatic sandalwood, slaves, honey, and wax. It was the relative abundance of sandalwood in Timor that attracted European explorers to the island in the early 16th century.[26] During that time, European explorers reported that the island had a number of small chiefdoms or princedoms.[citation needed]




Arms of Portuguese Timor (1935–1975)[27]



Colonial Era[edit]



First Portuguese Period[edit]


The Portuguese established outposts in Timor and Maluku. Effective European occupation of a small part of the territory began in 1769, when the city of Dili was founded and the colony of Portuguese Timor declared.[28] A definitive border between the Dutch-colonised western half of the island and the Portuguese-colonised eastern half of the island was established by the Permanent Court of Arbitration of 1914,[29] and it remains the international boundary between the successor states East Timor and Indonesia. For the Portuguese, East Timor remained little more than a neglected trading post until the late nineteenth century, with minimal investment in infrastructure, health, and education. Sandalwood remained the main export crop with coffee exports becoming significant in the mid-nineteenth century. As was often the case, Portuguese rule was generally neglectful but exploitative where it existed.[30]


At the beginning of the twentieth century, a faltering home economy prompted the Portuguese to extract greater wealth from its colonies, which was met with East Timorese resistance.[30]



Japanese Period[edit]


During World War II, first the Allies and later the Japanese occupied Dili, and the mountainous interior became the scene of a guerrilla campaign, known as the Battle of Timor. Waged by Allied forces and East Timorese volunteers against the Japanese, the struggle resulted in the deaths of between 40,000 and 70,000 East Timorese.[31] The Japanese eventually drove the last of the Australian and Allied forces out. However, following the end of World War II and Japanese surrender, Portuguese control was reinstated.



Second Portuguese Period[edit]


Following the 1974 Portuguese revolution, Portugal effectively abandoned its colony on Timor and civil war between East Timorese political parties broke out in 1975.


The Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (Fretilin) resisted a Timorese Democratic Union (UDT) coup attempt in August 1975,[32] and unilaterally declared independence on 28 November 1975. Fearing a communist state within the Indonesian archipelago, the Indonesian military, with Australian, British, and US support, launched an invasion of East Timor in December 1975.[33] Indonesia declared East Timor its 27th province on 17 July 1976.[34] The UN Security Council opposed the invasion and the territory's nominal status in the UN remained as "non-self-governing territory under Portuguese administration".[35]




A demonstration for independence from Indonesia held in Australia during September 1999



Indonesian Period[edit]


Indonesia's occupation of East Timor was marked by violence and brutality. A detailed statistical report prepared for the Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor cited a minimum bound of 102,800 conflict-related deaths in the period 1974–1999, namely, approximately 18,600 killings and 84,200 "excess" deaths from hunger and illness.[36] The East Timorese guerrilla force (Forças Armadas da Libertação Nacional de Timor-Leste, Falintil) fought a campaign against the Indonesian forces from 1975 to 1999.[citation needed]





José Ramos-Horta, 1996 Nobel Peace Prize winner, second President of East Timor


The 1991 Dili Massacre was a turning point for the independence cause and an East Timor solidarity movement grew in Portugal, the Philippines, Australia, and other Western countries.


Following the resignation of Indonesian President Suharto, a UN-sponsored agreement between Indonesia and Portugal allowed for a UN-supervised popular referendum in August 1999. A clear vote for independence was met with a punitive campaign of violence by East Timorese pro-integration militia with the support of elements of the Indonesian military. With Indonesian permission, an Australian-led multi-national peacekeeping force was deployed until order was restored. In 25 October 1999, the administration of East Timor was taken over by the UN through the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET).[37] The INTERFET deployment ended in February 2000 with the transfer of military command to the UN.[38]



Contemporary Era[edit]





Xanana Gusmão, the first East Timorese President.


On 30 August 2001, the East Timorese voted in their first election organised by the UN to elect members of the Constituent Assembly.[17][39] On 22 March 2002, the Constituent Assembly approved the Constitution.[17] By May 2002, over 205,000 refugees had returned.[40] On 20 May 2002, the Constitution of the Democratic Republic of East Timor came into force and East Timor was recognised as independent by the UN.[39][41] The Constituent Assembly was renamed the National Parliament and Xanana Gusmão was sworn in as the country's first President. On 27 September 2002, East Timor was renamed to Timor-Leste, using the Portuguese language, and was admitted as a member state by the UN.[42]


The following year, Gusmão declined another presidential term, and in the build-up to the April 2007 presidential elections there were renewed outbreaks of violence. José Ramos-Horta was elected President in the May 2007 election,[43] while Gusmão ran in the parliamentary elections and became Prime Minister. Ramos-Horta was critically injured in an attempted assassination in February 2008. Prime Minister Gusmão also faced gunfire separately but escaped unharmed. Australian reinforcements were immediately sent to help keep order.[44] In 2006, the United Nations sent in security forces to restore order when unrest and factional fighting forced 15 percent of the population (155,000 people) to flee their homes. In March 2011, the UN handed over operational control of the police force to the East Timor authorities. The United Nations ended its peacekeeping mission on 31 December 2012.[45]



Politics and government[edit]



The head of state of East Timor is the President of the Republic, who is elected by popular vote for a five-year term. Although their executive powers are somewhat limited, the President does have the power to appoint the Prime Minister and veto government legislation. Following elections, the President usually appoints the leader of the majority party or coalition as Prime Minister of East Timor and the cabinet on the proposal of the latter. As head of government, the Prime Minister presides over the cabinet.[4][5]





Nicolau Lobato Presidential Palace in Dili.




The National Parliament of East Timor




East Timor`s Attorney General's Office


The unicameral East Timorese parliament is the National Parliament or Parlamento Nacional, whose members are elected by popular vote to a five-year term. The number of seats can vary from a minimum of fifty-two to a maximum of sixty-five. The East Timorese constitution was modelled on that of Portugal. The country is still in the process of building its administration and governmental institutions. Government departments include the Polícia Nacional de Timor-Leste (police), East Timor Ministry for State and Internal Administration, Civil Aviation Division of Timor-Leste, and Immigration Department of Timor-Leste.[citation needed]




Administrative divisions[edit]





The thirteen municipalities of East Timor


East Timor is divided into thirteen municipalities, which in turn are subdivided into 65 administrative posts, 442 sucos (villages), and 2,225 aldeias (hamlets).[46][47]


  1. Oecusse

  2. Liquiçá

  3. Dili

  4. Manatuto

  5. Baucau

  6. Lautém

  7. Bobonaro

  8. Ermera

  9. Aileu

  10. Viqueque

  11. Cova Lima

  12. Ainaro

  13. Manufahi


Foreign relations and military[edit]







F-FDTL soldiers standing in formation


East Timor sought membership in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 2007, and a formal application was submitted in March 2011.[48]Indonesia and the Philippines support East Timor's bid to join ASEAN.




The Europe House in Dili, the European Union's representation in East Timor





Indonesia-East Timor border in Mota'ain


The Timor Leste Defence Force (Forças de Defesa de Timor-Leste, F-FDTL) is the military body responsible for the defence of East Timor. The F-FDTL was established in February 2001 and comprised two small infantry battalions, a small naval component, and several supporting units.


The F-FDTL's primary role is to protect East Timor from external threats. It also has an internal security role, which overlaps with that of the National Police of East Timor (Polícia Nacional de Timor-Leste, PNTL). This overlap has led to tensions between the services, which have been exacerbated by poor morale and lack of discipline within the F-FDTL.


The F-FDTL's problems came to a head in 2006 when almost half the force was dismissed following protests over discrimination and poor conditions. The dismissal contributed to a general collapse of both the F-FDTL and PNTL in May and forced the government to request foreign peacekeepers to restore security. The F-FDTL is being rebuilt with foreign assistance and has drawn up a long-term force development plan.




Demonstration against Australia on December 2013


Since the discovery of petroleum in the Timor Sea in the 1970s, there have been disputes surrounding the rights to ownership and exploitation of the resources situated in a part of the Timor Sea known as the Timor Gap, which is the area of the Timor Sea which lies outside the territorial boundaries of the nations to the north and south of the Timor Sea.[49] These disagreements initially involved Australia and Indonesia, although a resolution was eventually reached in the form of the Timor Gap Treaty. After declaration of East Timor's nationhood in 1999, the terms of the Timor Gap Treaty were abandoned and negotiations commenced between Australia and East Timor, culminating in the Timor Sea Treaty.


Australia's territorial claim extends to the bathymetric axis (the line of greatest sea-bed depth) at the Timor Trough. It overlaps East Timor's own territorial claim, which follows the former colonial power Portugal and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea in claiming that the dividing line should be midway between the two countries.


It was revealed in 2013 that the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) planted listening devices to listen to East Timor during negotiations over the Greater Sunrise oil and gasfields. This is known as the Australia–East Timor spying scandal.



Geography[edit]






Ilha de Jaco, Lautém, East Timor


Located in Southeast Asia,[50] the island of Timor is part of Maritime Southeast Asia, and is the largest and easternmost of the Lesser Sunda Islands. To the north of the island are the Ombai Strait, Wetar Strait, and the greater Banda Sea. The Timor Sea separates the island from Australia to the south, and the Indonesian Province of East Nusa Tenggara lies to East Timor's west.


Much of the country is mountainous, and its highest point is Tatamailau (also known as Mount Ramelau) at 2,963 metres (9,721 ft).[51] The climate is tropical and generally hot and humid. It is characterised by distinct rainy and dry seasons. The capital, largest city, and main port is Dili, and the second-largest city is the eastern town of Baucau. East Timor lies between latitudes 8° and 10°S, and longitudes 124° and 128°E.


The easternmost area of East Timor consists of the Paitchau Range and the Lake Ira Lalaro area, which contains the country's first conservation area, the Nino Konis Santana National Park.[52] It contains the last remaining tropical dry forested area within the country. It hosts a number of unique plant and animal species and is sparsely populated.[53] The northern coast is characterised by a number of coral reef systems that have been determined to be at risk.[54]



Economy[edit]





East Timor export treemap, 2010




Fractional coins "centavos"




Coffee plantations in Aileu


East Timor has a market economy that used to depend upon exports of a few commodities such as coffee, marble, petroleum, and sandalwood.[55] East Timor's economy grew by about 10% in 2011 and at a similar rate in 2012.[56]


East Timor now has revenue from offshore oil and gas reserves, but little of it has gone to develop villages, which still rely on subsistence farming.[57] Nearly half the population lives in extreme poverty.[57]


The Timor-Leste Petroleum Fund was established in 2005, and by 2011 it had reached a worth of US$8.7 billion.[58] East Timor is labelled by the International Monetary Fund as the "most oil-dependent economy in the world".[59] The Petroleum Fund pays for nearly all of the government's annual budget, which has increased from $70 million in 2004 to $1.3 billion in 2011, with a $1.8 billion proposal for 2012.[58] East-Timor's income from oil and gas stands to significantly increase after its announcement to cancel a controversial agreement with Australia, which has given Australia half of the income from oil and gas since 2006.[60]





Shopping mall in Dili


The economy is dependent on government spending and, to a lesser extent, assistance from foreign donors.[61] Private sector development has lagged due to human capital shortages, infrastructure weakness, an incomplete legal system, and an inefficient regulatory environment.[61] After petroleum, the second largest export is coffee, which generates about $10 million a year.[61]Starbucks is a major purchaser of East Timorese coffee.[62]





Dili's harbour


9,000 tonnes of coffee, 108 tonnes of cinnamon and 161 tonnes of cocoa were harvested in 2012 making the country the 40th ranked producer of coffee, the 6th ranked producer of cinnamon and the 50th ranked producer of cocoa worldwide.[63]


According to data gathered in the 2010 census, 87.7% of urban (321,043 people) and 18.9% of rural (821,459 people) households have electricity, for an overall average of 38.2%.[64]


The agriculture sector employs 80% of the active population.[65] In 2009, about 67,000 households grew coffee in East Timor, with a large proportion being poor.[65] Currently, the gross margins are about $120 per hectare, with returns per labour-day of about $3.70.[65] There were 11,000 households growing mungbeans as of 2009, most of them subsistence farmers.[65]


The country was ranked 169th overall and last in the East Asia and Pacific region by the Doing Business 2013 report by the World Bank. The country fared particularly poorly in the "registering property", "enforcing contracts" and "resolving insolvency" categories, ranking last worldwide in all three.[66]


As regards telecommunications infrastructure, East Timor is the second to last ranked Asian country in the World Economic Forum's Network Readiness Index (NRI), with only Myanmar falling behind it in southeast Asia. NRI is an indicator for determining the development level of a country's information and communication technologies. East Timor ranked number 141 overall in the 2014 NRI ranking, down from 134 in 2013.[67]


The Portuguese colonial administration granted concessions to the Australia-bound Oceanic Exploration Corporation to develop petroleum and natural gas deposits in the waters southeast of Timor. However, this was curtailed by the Indonesian invasion in 1976.[citation needed] The resources were divided between Indonesia and Australia with the Timor Gap Treaty in 1989.[68] East Timor inherited no permanent maritime boundaries when it attained independence.[citation needed] A provisional agreement (the Timor Sea Treaty, signed when East Timor became independent on 20 May 2002) defined a Joint Petroleum Development Area (JPDA) and awarded 90% of revenues from existing projects in that area to East Timor and 10% to Australia.[69] An agreement in 2005 between the governments of East Timor and Australia mandated that both countries put aside their dispute over maritime boundaries and that East Timor would receive 50% of the revenues from the resource exploitation in the area (estimated at A$26 billion, or about US$20 billion over the lifetime of the project)[70] from the Greater Sunrise development.[71] In 2013, East Timor launched a case at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague to pull out of a gas treaty that it had signed with Australia, accusing the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) of bugging the East Timorese cabinet room in Dili in 2004.[72]


There are no patent laws in East Timor.[73]


A railway system has been proposed but the current government has yet to approve the proposal due to lack of funds and expertise. If established, the country's economy is foreseen to have the same economic boom as Japan almost did a century ago. The Philippines has noted that if they finally finish their own railway system by 2022, they may send experts and aid to Timor-Leste for its railway ambitions.



Demographics[edit]





An East Timorese in traditional dress























Historical populations
YearPop.±%
1980 555,350—    
1990 747,557+34.6%
2001 787,340+5.3%
2004 923,198+17.3%
2010 1,066,582+15.5%
2015 1,167,242+9.4%
Source: 2015 census[74]


East Timor demographic change between 1861 and 2010.


East Timor recorded a population of 1,167,242 in its 2015 census.[8]


The CIA's World Factbook lists the English-language demonym for Timor-Leste as Timorese,[75] as does the Government of Timor-Leste's website.[76] Other reference sources list it as East Timorese.[77][78]


The word Maubere,[79] formerly used by the Portuguese to refer to native East Timorese and often employed as synonymous with the illiterate and uneducated, was adopted by Fretilin as a term of pride.[80] Native East Timorese consist of a number of distinct ethnic groups, most of whom are of mixed Austronesian and Melanesian/Papuan descent.[citation needed] The largest Malayo-Polynesian ethnic groups are the Tetum[81] (100,000), primarily in the north coast and around Dili; the Mambai (80,000), in the central mountains; the Tukudede (63,170), in the area around Maubara and Liquiçá; the Galoli (50,000), between the tribes of Mambae and Makasae; the Kemak (50,000) in north-central Timor island; and the Baikeno (20,000), in the area around Pante Macassar.[citation needed]


The main tribes of predominantly Papuan origin include the Bunak (84,000), in the central interior of Timor island; the Fataluku (40,000), at the eastern tip of the island near Lospalos; and the Makasae (70,000), toward the eastern end of the island.[citation needed] As a result of interracial marriage which was common during the Portuguese era, there is a population of people of mixed East Timorese and Portuguese origin, known in Portuguese as mestiços. There is a small Chinese minority, most of whom are Hakka.[82] Many Chinese left in the mid-1970s.[83]



Languages[edit]





Major language groups in East Timor by suco


East Timor's two official languages are Portuguese and Tetum. English and Indonesian are sometimes used, and are designated as working languages.[84] Tetum belongs to the Austronesian family of languages spoken throughout Southeast Asia.[85]


The 2010 census found that the most commonly spoken mother tongues were Tetum Prasa (mother tongue for 36.6% of the population), Mambai (12.5%), Makasai (9.7%), Tetum Terik (6.0%), Baikenu (5.9%), Kemak (5.9%), Bunak (5.3%), Tokodede (3.7%), and Fataluku (3.6%). Other indigenous languages largely accounted for the remaining 10.9%, while Portuguese was spoken natively by just under 600 people.[86]


Under Indonesian rule, the use of Portuguese was banned and only Indonesian was allowed to be used in government offices, schools and public business.[87] During the Indonesian occupation, Tetum and Portuguese were important unifying elements for the East Timorese people in opposing Javanese culture.[88] Portuguese was adopted as one of the two official languages upon independence in 2002 for this reason and as a link to Lusophone nations in other parts of the world. It is now being taught and promoted with the help of Brazil, Portugal, and the Community of Portuguese Language Countries.[89]


Indonesian and English are defined as working languages under the Constitution in the Final and Transitional Provisions, without setting a final date. Aside from Tetum, Ethnologue lists the following indigenous languages: Adabe, Baikeno, Bunak, Fataluku, Galoli, Habun, Idaté, Kairui-Midiki, Kemak, Lakalei, Makasae, Makuv'a, Mambae, Nauete, Tukudede, and Waima'a.[90] It is estimated that English is understood by 31.4% of the population. As of 2012, 35% speak, read, and write Portuguese, which is up significantly from less than 5% in the 2006 UN Development Report. Portuguese has now been made the official language of Timor, and is being taught in most schools. [84][91]


East Timor is a member of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (also known as the Lusophone Commonwealth) and of the Latin Union.[92]


According to the Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger, there are six endangered languages in East Timor: Adabe, Habu, Kairui-Midiki, Maku'a, Naueti, and Waima'a.[93]



Education[edit]





Escola Portuguesa Ruy Cinatti, the Portuguese School of Díli.


East Timor's adult literacy rate in 2010 was 58.3%, up from 37.6% in 2001.[94] Illiteracy was at 95% at the end of Portuguese rule.[95]


The National University of East Timor is the country's main university. There are also four colleges.[96]


Since independence, both Indonesian and Tetum have lost ground as mediums of instruction, while Portuguese has increased: in 2001 only 8.4% of primary school and 6.8% of secondary school students attended a Portuguese-medium school; by 2005 this had increased to 81.6% for primary and 46.3% for secondary schools.[97] Indonesian formerly played a considerable role in education, being used by 73.7% of all secondary school students as a medium of instruction, but by 2005 it was used by most schools only in Baucau, Manatuto, as well as the capital district. The Philippines has sent Filipino teachers to Timor-Leste to teach English, so that a program between the two countries can begin, where deserving English-knowledgeable East Timorese nationals will be granted university scholarships in the Philippines.[97]



Health[edit]


Life expectancy at birth was at 60.7 in 2007.[98] The fertility rate is at six births per woman.[98] Healthy life expectancy at birth was at 55 years in 2007.[98] Government expenditure on health was at US$150 (PPP) per person in 2006.[98] There were only two hospitals and 14 village healthcare facilities in 1974. By 1994, there were 11 hospitals and 330 healthcare centres.[96]


The 2010 maternal mortality rate per 100,000 births for East Timor was 370. This compares with 928.6 in 2008 and 1016.3 in 1990. The under-5 mortality rate per 1,000 births is 60 and the neonatal mortality rate per 1,000 live births is 27.[99] The number of midwives per 1,000 live births is 8 and the lifetime risk of death for pregnant women is 1 in 44.[100]


The country has one of the highest smoking rates in the world, with 33% of the population, including 61% of men, smoking daily.[101]


By 2015, due to a Cuban–East Timorese training programme initiated in 2003, East Timor will have more doctors per capita than any other country in southeast Asia.[102]



Religion[edit]






The Church of Santo António de Motael, Dili


According to the 2010 census, 96.9% of the population is Roman Catholic; 2.2% Protestant; 0.3% Muslim; and 0.5% practice some other or no religion.[1] A 2016 survey conducted by the Demographic and Health Survey programme showed that Catholics made up 98.3% of the population, Protestants 1.2%, and Muslims 0.3%.[103]


The number of churches has grown from 100 in 1974 to over 800 in 1994,[96] with Church membership having grown considerably under Indonesian rule as Pancasila, Indonesia's state ideology, requires all citizens to believe in one God and does not recognise traditional beliefs. East Timorese animist belief systems did not fit with Indonesia's constitutional monotheism, resulting in mass conversions to Christianity. Portuguese clergy were replaced with Indonesian priests and Latin and Portuguese mass was replaced by Indonesian mass.[104] While just 20% of East Timorese called themselves Catholics at the time of the 1975 invasion, the figure surged to reach 95% by the end of the first decade after the invasion.[104][105] In rural areas, Roman Catholicism is syncretized with local animist beliefs.[106] With over 95% Catholic population, East Timor is currently one of the most densely Catholic countries in the world.[107]





Igreja da Imaculada Conceição church, in Viqueque


The number of Protestants and Muslims declined significantly after September 1999 because these groups were disproportionately represented among supporters of integration with Indonesia and among the Indonesian civil servants assigned to work in the province from other parts of Indonesia, many of whom left the country in 1999.[108] There are also small Protestant and Muslim communities.[108] The Indonesian military forces formerly stationed in the country included a significant number of Protestants, who played a major role in establishing Protestant churches in the territory.[108] Fewer than half of those congregations existed after September 1999, and many Protestants were among those who remained in West Timor.[108] The Assemblies of God is the largest and most active of the Protestant denominations.[108]


While the Constitution of East Timor enshrines the principles of freedom of religion and separation of church and state in Section 45 Comma 1, it also acknowledges "the participation of the Catholic Church in the process of national liberation" in its preamble (although this has no legal value).[109] Upon independence, the country joined the Philippines to become the only two predominantly Roman Catholic states in Asia, although nearby parts of eastern Indonesia such as West Timor and Flores also have Roman Catholic majorities.


The Roman Catholic Church divides East Timor into three dioceses: the Diocese of Díli, the Diocese of Baucau, and the Diocese of Maliana, all of which have friendly ties with the hundreds of dioceses in the Philippines.[110]



Culture[edit]





Sacred house (lee teinu) in Lospalos


The culture of East Timor reflects numerous influences, including Portuguese, Roman Catholic and Indonesian, on Timor's indigenous Austronesian and Melanesian cultures. East Timorese culture is heavily influenced by Austronesian legends. For example, East Timorese creation myth has it that an aging crocodile transformed into the island of Timor as part of a debt repayment to a young boy who had helped the crocodile when it was sick.[111][112] As a result, the island is shaped like a crocodile and the boy's descendants are the native East Timorese who inhabit it. The phrase "leaving the crocodile" refers to the pained exile of East Timorese from their island. Timor-Leste is currently finalizing its dossiers needed for nominations in the UNESCO World Heritage List, UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists, UNESCO Creative Cities Network, UNESCO Global Geoparks Network, and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Network. The country currently has one document in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register, namely, On the Birth of a Nation: Turning points.[113]



Arts[edit]




Traditional Timorese dancers


There is also a strong tradition of poetry in the country.[114] Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão, for example, is a distinguished poet, earning the moniker "poet warrior".[115]


Architecturally, Portuguese-style buildings can be found, along with the traditional totem houses of the eastern region. These are known as uma lulik ("sacred houses") in Tetum and lee teinu ("legged houses") in Fataluku.[citation needed] Craftsmanship and the weaving of traditional scarves (tais) is also widespread.[citation needed]


An extensive collection of Timorese audiovisual material is held at the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. These holdings have been identified in a document titled The NFSA Timor-Leste Collection Profile, which features catalogue entries and essays for a total of 795 NFSA-held moving image, recorded sound and documentation works that have captured the history and culture of East Timor since the early 20th century.[116] The NFSA is working with the East Timor government to ensure that all of this material can be used and accessed by the people of that country.[117]


In 2013 the first East Timorese feature film, Beatriz's War, was released.[118] In 2009 and 2010, East Timor was the nation of subject matter for the Australian and South Korean films Balibo and A Barefoot Dream.



Cuisine[edit]


The cuisine of East Timor consists of regional popular foods such as pork, fish, basil, tamarind, legumes, corn, rice, root vegetables, and tropical fruit. East Timorese cuisine has influences from Southeast Asian cuisine and from Portuguese dishes from its colonisation by Portugal. Flavours and ingredients from other former Portuguese colonies can be found due to the centuries-old Portuguese presence on the island. Due to the East and West combination of Timor-Leste's cuisine, it developed features related with Filipino cuisine, which also experienced an East-West culinary combination.



Sports[edit]



Sports organisations joined by East Timor include the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), the International Badminton Federation (IBF), the Union Cycliste Internationale, the International Weightlifting Federation, the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF), the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), and East Timor's national football team joined FIFA. East Timorese athletes competed in the 2003 Southeast Asian Games held 2003. In the 2003 ASEAN Paralympics Games, East Timor won a bronze medal. In the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, East Timorese athletes participated in athletics, weightlifting and boxing. East Timor won three medals in Arnis at the 2005 Southeast Asian Games. East Timor competed in the first Lusophony Games and, in October 2008, the country earned its first international points in a FIFA football match with a 2–2 draw against Cambodia.[119] East Timor competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics.


Thomas Americo was the first East Timorese fighter to fight for a world boxing title. He was murdered in 1999, shortly before Indonesian occupation of East Timor ended.[120]



See also[edit]




  • Accession into ASEAN

  • Outline of East Timor

  • Index of East Timor-related articles





  • List of cities, towns and villages in East Timor

  • List of East Timor-related topics

  • Telecommunications in East Timor

  • Transport in East Timor

  • Visa policy of East Timor

  • Australian Involvement in the East Timor Invasion




References[edit]




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Bibliography[edit]


.mw-parser-output .refbeginfont-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ullist-style-type:none;margin-left:0.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>ddmargin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100font-size:100%

  • Cashmore, Ellis (1988). Dictionary of Race and Ethnic Relations. New York: Routledge. ASIN B000NPHGX6

  • Charny, Israel W. Encyclopedia of Genocide Volume I. Denver: Abc Clio.


  • Dunn, James (1996). East Timor: A People Betrayed. Sydney: Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 

  • Hägerdal, Hans (2012), Lords of the Land, Lords of the Sea; Conflict and Adaptation in Early Colonial Timor, 1600–1800. Oapen.org

  • Leach, Michael, and Damien Kingsbury, eds. The Politics of Timor-Leste: Democratic Consolidation After Intervention (Cornell Southeast Asia Program, distributed by Cornell University Press; 2013) 292 pages;

  • Levinson, David. Ethnic Relations. Denver: Abc Clio.

  • Rudolph, Joseph R. Encyclopedia of Modern Ethnic Conflicts. Westport: Greenwood P, 2003. 101–106.

  • Shelton, Dinah. Encyclopedia of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity. Thompson Gale.

  • Taylor, John G. (1999). East Timor: The Price of Freedom. Australia: Pluto Press. ISBN 978-1-85649-840-1.


  • East Timor: a bibliography, a bibliographic reference, Jean A. Berlie, launched by PM Xanana Gusmão, Indes Savantes editor, Paris, France, published in 2001. ISBN 978-2-84654-012-4, ISBN 978-2-84654-012-4.


  • East Timor, politics and elections (in Chinese)/ 东帝汶政治与选举 (2001–2006): 国家建设及前景展望, Jean A. Berlie, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies of Jinan University editor, Jinan, China, published in 2007.



External links[edit]



Government


  • Timor-Leste official government website

  • Timor-Leste official tourism website

  • Chief of State and Cabinet Members

General information



  • "Timor-Leste". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. 


  • East Timor from UCB Libraries GovPubs


  • Timor-Leste at Curlie (based on DMOZ)


  • East Timor at Encyclopædia Britannica


  • East Timor profile BBC News


  • Wikimedia Atlas of East Timor


  • Key Development Forecasts for Timor-Leste from International Futures









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