Customs taboo in East Timor
Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (English: Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste), short East Timor, the first country to be born in the new century in 2002.
The island States located at the eastern end of the Nusa Tenggara Islands include the Oecussi area on the eastern and western north coasts of Timor and the nearby islands of Atauro and Yaku at the eastern end.
West is connected to West Timor in Indonesia, and South is located between the Timor Sea and Australia.
The capital is Dili.
The official languages are Tetum, Portuguese and working languages are Indonesian and English, of which Tetum is the national language and the main national language.
The total population of Timor-Leste is 1.17 million (calculated in July 2011) and about 160,000 in the capital, Dili.
It had 78 per cent indigenous, 20 per cent Indonesian and 2 per cent Chinese.
The indigenous peoples are descendants of a mixed group of black migrants from Melanesian and yellow migrants from the Malay Islands, who have been further classified as native Malays, secondary Malays, Veda-South Islanders and Melanesians, with the highest proportion of native Malays, because of their different origins and degrees.
Timor-Leste has a tropical climate with annual rainy seasons and dry seasons, with a chronic climate of around 30-35 degrees Celsius, hot weather and high mosquitoes, and areas with a high incidence of dengue fever, malaria, hepatitis B, tuberculosis and cholera.
Timor-Leste is still a poor country, and it is a problem to feed, let alone to eat.
Life in Timor-Leste is simple and simple.
There are few options, there are no supermarkets, and there are very few options in the commissaries.
Business also lags behind, with no large commercial facilities, and only small supermarkets, where basic necessities and food can be purchased at high prices.
The men in many parts of Timor-Leste are comfortable, and women are responsible for firewood, water, land and child-serving, with machetes on their waists and coconuts picked up in trees and some fishermen's family men were responsible for fishing.
Women are used to taking on everything.
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