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Same, Timor-Leste

Coordinates:9°00′12″S125°38′49″E / 9.00333°S 125.64694°E /-9.00333; 125.64694
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(Redirected fromSame, East Timor)
This article is about the town. For theadministrative post, seeSame Administrative Post.
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Town in Manufahi, Timor-Leste
Same
Town
Same is located in East Timor
Same
Same
Location in Timor-Leste
Coordinates:9°00′12″S125°38′49″E / 9.00333°S 125.64694°E /-9.00333; 125.64694
Country Timor-Leste
MunicipalityManufahi
Area
 • Total
355.28 km2 (137.17 sq mi)
Elevation
384 m (1,260 ft)
Population
 (2015 census)
 • Total
7,413
 • Density21/km2 (54/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+09:00 (TLT)
ClimateAm

Same (Portuguese pronunciation:[ˈsamɛ]) is a town in theSame administrative post in the interior ofTimor-Leste, 81 kilometres (50 mi) south ofDili, the national capital. Same has a population of 7,413 and is the capital ofManufahi municipality, which was known asSame District inPortuguese Timor.

During the Portuguese colonial period, the district was named after Same, its capital. In the time of theEstado Novo, the place inVila Filomeno da Câmara was renamed after the former governor of Portuguese TimorFilomeno da Câmara de Melo Cabral.

After Timor-Leste's independence from Indonesia, the town was almost completely destroyed by Indonesian militias[1] A rebuilding project called Friends of Same is currently helping rebuild the city, along with UN envoys.[2] During the2006 East Timorese crisis, theBattle of Same took place in the area.

Geography

[edit]

The city is located in the interior of the island, 49 kilometres (30 mi) south of the provincial capital of Dili, at an altitude of 384 metres (1,260 ft), south of the mountain Cabalaki (Foho Kabulaki). The centre is located in the Suco Letefoho in which are situated the districts Ria-Lau (Rialau) Manico 1, 2 Manico, Cotalala (Kotalala), Rai-Ubo (Raiubu) and Akadiruhun. The suburbs Manikun, Lia-Nai (Lianai), Maibuti (Maihuti), Raimera (Raimerak), Searema (Scarema, Serema), Uma-Liurai (Umaliurai, Umahurai), Nunu-Fu (Nunufu), Babulo und Lapuro (Laiuru) are in the Suco Babulo. An overland road leads from Same to Maubisse in the north and Betano in the south. One branch leads to Alas and Welaluhu in the East.[3] Both Sucos are classified as "urban". Same has 11,258 inhabitants (2010).[4]

Infrastructure

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There is a preschool, six primary schools, three secondary schools and one pre-secondary school. There is also a police station, a helipad and a community health centre.[5] From the old market building, only the concrete walls are left since its destruction by the Indonesians. Also in ruins is the ancient Catholic Church. However, it had already been destroyed in the Second World War by the Japanese.

Organisation

[edit]
Portuguese statue in central Same

Same is divided into eight Sucos: Babulo (Babulu) Betano, Dai-Sua (Daisua, Daisula) Grotu (Gratu) Holarua, Letefoho, Rotuto (Rotutu) and Tutuluro. Letefoho and Babulo are classified as urban. To the northeast are the Subdistricts Turiscai and Fatuberlio, east of the subdistrict Alas. In the northwest and west borders on the Same District Ainaro with its sub-districts Maubisse, Hatu-Builico and Hato-Udo. To the south is the Timor Sea. The Caraulun river system runs through the north of Same before it opens as a border river to Ainaro in the Timor Sea. Its most important tributary, the Sui, follows the north eastern border to Alas and Fatuberlio. At its mouth is the small Quelun, the river forming the border of Alas in the south.

The sub-district has 27 554 inhabitants Same (2010,[6] 2004: 26 066[7]). The largest language group consists of the speakers of the national language Bunak. The average age is 18.3 years (2010,[6] 2004: 18.2 years[8]).

The Administrator of the subdistrict is Adão Mendes (April 2010).[9]

66% of households in Same grow manioc, 65% corn, 52% coconut, 54% vegetables, 44% coffee and 15% rice.[8] In 2010, the inhabitants of the Sucos Holarua, Grotu, Dai-Sua and Rotuto complained that they constantly suffer from a shortage of food because their soils are not sufficiently productive. In Rotuto, fields have also been destroyed by storms and landslides.[9]

History

[edit]

Kingdom of Manufahi and Portuguese rule

[edit]

Same was the capital of the kingdom of Manufahi. Boaventura, the Liurai of Manufahi and his father Duarte (1895–1912), led several major revolts against the former Portuguese colonial power. At this time Boaventura united several Timorese kingdoms into the largest resistance movement, which the Portuguese met with during the colonial period. It was only during the rebellion of Manufahi in 1911-1912 that Boaventura was finally defeated and captured, during the uprising inBetano, by the loyal Timorese and Portuguese-African troops from Mozambique, and sometimes even from Angola. He died shortly afterwards on the island ofAtauro. East Timorese sources estimate that in the last revolt 15,000-25,000 people were killed and many thousands more were captured and imprisoned.

In the area of today's Suco ofDai-Sua, one of the largest massacres in Portuguese colonial history occurred in August 1912. About 3,000 men, women and children died.[10][11]

During the Second World War, Portuguese Timor was occupied by the Japanese. During theBattle of Timor, Australian troops offered resistance throughguerrilla warfare. The Australian reinforcements came via the Port of Betano. The Australian destroyerHMAS Voyager was lost here. The Roman Catholic Church of Same, whose ruins remain, was destroyed during the occupation.

During the civil war betweenFRETILIN andUDT in the last days of Portuguese colonial rule, on 11 August 1975, most residents of Letefoho fled from their homes to the mountains. They feared abduction by the UDT after the killing of 11 FRETILIN supporters in theWedauberek massacre in the Alas sub-district.[12]

Indonesian rule

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In 1975 the Indonesians marched into East Timor. By October 1976 the most important cities such as Same had been occupied.[12]

On 27 January 1976, FRETILIN fighters rounded up eight UDT prisoners in Hat Nipah and killed all but two of them, one which was later stabbed in the stomach with a spear and shot dead in a cornfield in Holarua the next day. 11 more prisoners were taken out of the elementary school in Same and knowing they were going to be executed, they all jumped out of the truck, nine of the prisoners successfully escaped with the other two had been shot dead. On 29 January, in anger the FRETILIN fighters stormed into the elementary school and opened fire on the prisoners killing 30 of them, leaving only three survivors who had either played dead or had escaped by jumping out a window.[13]

On 20 August 1982Falintil fighters attacked the IndonesianHansip (local security officer) in Rotuto. This was part of theCabalaki uprising, in which several Indonesian bases in the region were attacked simultaneously. The Indonesians immediately sent troops to the region. Houses were burned down, schools closed, and women and children forced to stand guard in a military post. Also, it came to forced relocation, arson, looting and rape. Falintil fighters and a large part of the population fled the area.[14][15][16]

In 1999, the city of Same was almost entirely destroyed by pro-Indonesian militias, during the general upheaval following theindependence referendum in East Timor.

Post-independence

[edit]
Performance in traditional attire duringXanana Gusmão's visit to Same in 2000

In 2001, the Australian city ofBoroondara, Victoria founded the Friends of Same,[17] which supports aid projects in the region.

TheBattle of Same, as part of the2006 East Timorese crisis, resulted in the Australians successfully securing the target compound and defeating the small rebel Petitioner force led byAlfredo Reinado, before the assault was called off by the Timor-Leste government.

On 1 March 2007, the fugitive rebel leader Alfredo Reinado came to Same together with 150 men of theAustralian ISF, including soldiers. He was joined by Gastão Salsinha, and Leonardo Isaac, another leader of the rebel soldiers and the Member of Parliament of the Partido Social Democrata (PSD) – to render assistance. About a hundred residents fled. On 4 March the Australian Army, with the support of helicopters and armoured vehicles, stormed the place. Five rebels were killed there, while none of the Australians were injured. Reinado escaped, as did Gastão Salsinha and his men. Leonardo Isaac was uninjured. Some rebels were captured.

Four days later about ten houses in the nearby village Searema were destroyed during a night search operation by Australian soldiers in search of Reinado. The Australian army denies the destruction and claims there was only minor damage, of which soldiers later helped in the repair. Australian soldiers also carried out an aggressive search in the village of Sasaneh. Furniture was damaged and the residents were rounded up with hands raised.

The old market of Same was destroyed by the Indonesian army and in 2010 has still not been rebuilt.

Sister cities

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Same has onesister city.[18]

Notable residents

[edit]

References

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  1. ^"East Timor 'Ghost Town' Raises Disturbing Questions".
  2. ^"Home".friendsofsame.org.
  3. ^Timor-Leste GIS-Portal
  4. ^Direcção Nacional de Estatística: Preliminary Result of Census 2010 EnglishArchived 2014-09-06 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 3,2 MB)
  5. ^UNMIT-Landkarte von Manufahi, August 2008Archived 2011-12-03 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 523 kB)
  6. ^abDirecção Nacional de Estatística: 2010 Census Wall Chart (English)Archived 2011-08-12 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 2,7 MB)
  7. ^Direcção Nacional de Estatística Census 2004Archived 2007-09-29 at theWayback Machine
  8. ^abDirecção Nacional de Estatística: Census of Population and Housing Atlas 2004Archived 2012-11-13 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 14,0 MB)
  9. ^abRadio Timor-Leste, 23. April 2010, Four villages Residents of Same sub district run short of food
  10. ^Steve Sengstock, Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra
  11. ^History of Timor – Technische Universität Lissabon (PDF; 824 kB)
  12. ^ab„Chapter 7.3 Forced Displacement and Famine“Archived 2015-11-28 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 1,3 MB), from theCAVR's "Chega!" report
  13. ^"07.2 Unlawful Killings and Enforced Disappearances"(PDF).East Timor and Indonesia Action Network. Retrieved17 October 2024.
  14. ^„Chapter 7.4 Arbitrary detention, torture and ill-treatment“Archived 2016-02-04 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 2,0 MB), from theCAVR's "Chega!" report
  15. ^6.4 Mauchiga case study: a quantitative analysis of violations experienced during counter-Resistance operationsArchived 2016-02-04 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 456 kB), from theCAVR "Chega!" report's conclusion
  16. ^Chapter 7.7: Sexual ViolenceArchived 2016-02-04 at theWayback Machine (PDF; 1,2 MB), from theCAVR "Chega!" report's conclusion
  17. ^https://www.facebook.com/pages/Friends-of-Same/96381047341[user-generated source]
  18. ^"Friends of Same". City of Boroondara. Retrieved29 August 2015.

Further reading

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  • Project Document for Environmental Licensing: Same City(PDF).Consulting Services for Detailed Engineering Design of Timor-Leste Four Municipal Capitals Water Supply & Sanitation Project (Report). Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste Ministry of Public Works / AdP Timor-Leste / Engidro Engineering Solutions. September 2020. RFP/039/MOP-2019.Archived(PDF) from the original on 27 May 2023. Retrieved10 February 2025.

External links

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Media related toSame Vila at Wikimedia Commons

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