States of Palau

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State
States of Palau.png
CategoryUnitary State
LocationPalau
Number16
Populations25 (Hatohobei) – 11,444 (Koror)
Areas.9 km2 (0.35 sq mi) (Hatohobei) – 65 km2 (25 sq mi) (Ngeremlengui)
Government

Palau is divided into sixteen administrative regions, called states. Palau has a high ratio of government offices to citizens, with 16 states and both a tribal chiefdom and elected legislature in each state, for 20,000 people.[1]

State Capital Area
(km2)
Population
(Census 2015)
North of Babeldaob
Flag of Kayangel State.png Kayangel Kayangel 3 54
Babeldaob
Flag of Aimeliik.svg Aimeliik Mongami 52 334
Flag of Airai State.png Airai Ngetkib 44 2,455
Flag of Melekeok.png Melekeok Melekeok 28 277
Flag of Ngaraard State.svg Ngaraard Ulimang 36 413
Flag of Ngarchelong.svg Ngarchelong Mengellang 10 316
Flag of Ngardmau State.png Ngardmau Urdmang 47 185
Flag of Ngeremlengui State.png Ngeremlengui Imeong 65 350
Flag of Ngatpang State.png Ngatpang Ngereklmadel 47 282
Flag of Ngchesar State.png Ngchesar 41 291
Flag of Ngiwal State.png Ngiwal Ngerkeai 26 282
Southwest of Babeldaob
Flag of Angaur State.svg Angaur Ngaramasch 8 119
Flag of Koror State.png Koror Ngerbeched 65 11,444
Flag of Peleliu State.png Peleliu Kloulklubed 13 484
Southwest Islands
Flag of Hatohobei.svg Hatohobei Hatohobei 3 25
Flag of Sonsorol.svg Sonsorol Dongosaru 3 40

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Patterson, Carolyn Bennett, et al. "At the Birth of Nations: In the Far Pacific." National Geographic Magazine, October 1986 page 493. National Geographic Virtual Library, Accessed 17 May 2018. "The westernmost among the emerging nations of the Pacific, the Republic of Palau (or Belau), population more than 15,000, is divided into 16 separate states, each with its own governor, lieutenant governor, and legislature. Most state populations are very small, and one wonders if anyone has time for anything but government, American style and democratic though it may be. An example is Peleliu, the tragic island where more than 13,000 Americans and Japanese died during less than three months of fighting, often hand to hand, in the autumn of 1944. Pat and I went to Peleliu from Koror, the republic's capital, by speedboat, a wave-tossing, rear-slapping 45 minutes, and arrived to discover it was election day, with five candidates running for governor. Although Peleliu claims a population of 2,000 people, only 400 actually live there. More registered voters live in Koror than on their home island, and 800 send votes from Guam. The situation is similar in Palau's other states. A current joke puts a laugh in the truth. A man walks into a bar in Koror and calls out, "Hey, Governor!" And half the men in the place stand up. But that's only the state story. The national government is headed by President Lazarus Salii, followed by a vice president, a cabinet responsible for five ministries, a judiciary, and a legislature with a 16-member house and a 14-member senate. The there's the hereditary leadership. Each village has ten chiefs, ranked in importance. And, dividing the island group, there are two paramount chiefs. Never, I thought, have so few been governed by so many."

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