Timor-Leste - Background information

Timor-Leste, or East Timor as it is commonly known has only recently emerged from a brutal conflict with neighbouring Indonesia that ended in 2002.

15 year-old Carolina Pereira is from Elcolbere Aldea, Timor-Leste
Carolina Pereira
Credit: WaterAid / Dinesh
"If a new water system is built, we will be very happy as it will save a lot of time to collect water. Then there will be more time to clean the house and look after my little brothers and sisters. I would also have more time to read."

This newly independent state includes the eastern half of the island of Timor, the Oecussi (Ambeno) region of the island of Timor, and the islands of Pulau Atauro and Pulau Jaco.

A rugged mountain range dominates the landscape of the main island with the southern coastal plains consisting of an array of river deltas and swamps. Farming is difficult in the rocky terrain and seasonal food and water shortages are common.

With up to a quarter of the East Timorese having died during their 25 year struggle for independence the population is now estimated to be under a million.

The country is one of the world's poorest with high infant and maternal mortality rates. Twelve percent of children die before the age of five, many from illness and disease caused by a lack of safe water and adequate sanitation.

Life expectancy is higher than most developing countries at 65 years but a climate favourable to mosquitoes and poor sanitation in the cities means that malaria is one of the major causes of death and has a large impact on economic and educational development.

The United Nations estimates that only 20% of the population has access to safe water and only 15% to sanitation facilities.

Timor-Leste
Timor-Leste Map
Area: 144,000km²
Capital: Dili
Other main cities:
Pante Makasar, Manatuto, Baucau, Suai
  • Population
    Population icon1.1m
  • Infant mortality
    Infant mortality icon55/1000
  • Child deaths (under five) from diarrhoea per annum
    Under five icon320
  • Life expectancy
    Life expectancy icon61 years
  • Water supply coverage
    Water supply coverage icon69%
  • Sanitation coverage
    Sanitation coverage icon50%
  • Below poverty line
    Below poverty line icon50% 
  • Development index
    Development index icon147
  • Adult literacy
    Adult literacy iconno data
Sources:
World Bank (2011) World Development Indicators database - databank.worldbank.org, WHO / UNICEF (2010) Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) report 2010, UNDP (2011), Human Development Report 2011
NB. Official statistics tend to understate the extent of water and sanitation problems, sometimes by a large factor. There are not sufficient resources available for accurate monitoring of either population or coverage. Varying definitions of water and sanitation coverage are used and national figures mask large regional differences in coverage.
 

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