Hkamti District

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Khamti District
ခန္တီးခရိုင်
District
Khamti District is located in Myanmar
Khamti District
Khamti District
Location in Burma
Coordinates: 26°00′N 95°41′E / 26.000°N 95.683°E / 26.000; 95.683Coordinates: 26°00′N 95°41′E / 26.000°N 95.683°E / 26.000; 95.683
CountryBurma
RegionSagaing Region
No. of Townships3
CapitalSingkaling Hkamti
Time zoneUTC+6.30 (MST)

Hkamti District or Khamti District (sometimes Naga Hills District[1]) is a district in northern Sagaing Division of Burma (Myanmar). Its administrative center is the town of Singkaling Hkamti.

Townships[]

Townships of Hkamti district


  Hkamti
  Homalin

The district consists of the two townships:

Prior to 2010,[2] it additionally controlled Lahe, Lay Shi (Lashe), and Nanyun townships, which were transferred under the 2008 Constitution[3] to the Naga Self-Administered Zone. The revised smaller district still has a significant minority Naga population.

Borders[]

Hkamti District is bordered[4] by:

Economy[]

Most people in Hkamti District practice subsistence farming. There is also a jade mine,[5] although most of the jade mining is nearby in Mohnyin District.[6]

Demographics[]

The district is inhabited by the Khamti, Duleng (Kachin) and Nung Rawang people.

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Naga Hills District" Geonames
  2. ^ "တိုင်းခုနစ်တိုင်းကို တိုင်းဒေသကြီးများအဖြစ် လည်းကောင်း၊ ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရ တိုင်းနှင့် ကိုယ်ပိုင်အုပ်ချုပ်ခွင့်ရ ဒေသများ ရုံးစိုက်ရာ မြို့များကို လည်းကောင်း ပြည်ထောင်စုနယ်မြေတွင် ခရိုင်နှင့်မြို့နယ်များကို လည်းကောင်း သတ်မှတ်ကြေညာ". Weekly Eleven News (in Burmese). 2010-08-20. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
  3. ^ ပြည်ထောင်စုသမ္မတမြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော် ဖွဲ့စည်းပုံအခြေခံဥပဒေ (၂၀၀၈ ခုနှစ်) (in Burmese) [0]=1|2008 Constitution PDF Archived 2011-05-01 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Myanmar States/Divisions & Townships Overview Map" Archived 2010-12-03 at the Wayback Machine Myanmar Information Management Unit (MIMU)
  5. ^ "2001 Gem News Archive: Oct. 29, 2001: New Burma Jade Mine" Archived 2009-06-08 at the Wayback Machine Gem News Pala International
  6. ^ Hughes, Richard W. (2000) "Burmese Jade: The Inscrutable Gem, Part I: Burma's Jade Mines" Pala International

External links[]


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