Repúblika Demokrátika
Timór Lorosa'e
República Democrática
de Timor-Leste
Democratic Republic
of Timor-Leste
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 |
 |
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Flag |
Coat of arms |
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Motto: Unidade,
Acção, Progresso
(Portuguese:
"Unity,
Action, Progress") |
Anthem: Pátria
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Location
of East Timor |
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Capital
(and largest city) |
Dili
8°34′S,
125°34′E |
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Official languages |
Tetum and
Portuguese1 |
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Demonym |
East Timorese |
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Government |
Parliamentary republic |
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- |
President |
José Ramos-Horta |
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- |
Prime Minister |
Xanana Gusmão |
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Independence |
from
Portugal² |
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- |
Declared |
November 28,
1975 |
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- |
Recognized |
May 20,
2002 |
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Area |
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- |
Total |
15,410 km² (158th)
5,743 sq mi |
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- |
Water (%) |
negligible |
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Population |
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- |
July 2005 estimate |
1,115,000[citation
needed] (155th) |
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- |
Density |
64/km² (132nd)
166/sq mi |
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GDP (PPP) |
2007 est. estimate |
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- |
Total |
$2.608 billion (178) |
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- |
Per capita |
$2,500 (188) |
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HDI (2007) |
0.514 (medium) (150th) |
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Currency |
U.S. Dollar³ (USD) |
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Time zone |
(UTC+9) |
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Internet TLD |
.tl4 |
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Calling code |
+670 |
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1 |
Indonesian and
English are
recognised by the
Constitution as "working
languages". |
|
2 |
Indonesia invaded
East Timor on
December 7,
1975 and left in
1999. |
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East Timor
(officially the Democratic
Republic of Timor-Leste) is
a country in Southeast Asia. It
comprises the eastern half of
the island of Timor, the nearby
islands of Atauro and Jaco, and
Oecussi-Ambeno, an exclave on
the northwestern side of the
island, within Indonesian West
Timor. The small country of
15,410 km²[1] (5,400 sq mi) is
located about 640 km (400 mi)
northwest of Darwin, Australia.
East Timor was colonized by
Portugal in the 16th century,
and was known as Portuguese
Timor until Portugal's
decolonization of the country.
In late 1975 East Timor declared
its independence but was invaded
and occupied by Indonesia later
that year, and declared that
country's 27th province the
following year. In 1999,
following the United
Nations-sponsored act of
self-determination, Indonesia
relinquished control of the
territory and East Timor became
the first new sovereign state of
the twenty-first century on May
20, 2002. East Timor is one of
only two predominantly Roman
Catholic countries in Asia, the
other being the Philippines.
At US$2,500,[2] the per capita
GDP (purchasing power parity
adjusted) of East Timor is one
of the poorest nations in the
world. Its Human Development
Index (HDI), however,
corresponds to a medium degree
of human development and places
East Timor 142nd among the
world's states.