Amo, Temburong

Amo (Malay: Mukim Amo) is a mukim or subdistrict in the Temburong District of Brunei. It is located in the eastern part of the district,[1] bordering the mukims of Batu Apoi to the north-east, Bokok to the west and Bangar to north-west, as well as the Malaysian state of Sarawak to the east and south. Amo has an area of 542 square kilometres (209 sq mi);[1] as of 2016, it had a total population of 2,240.[2]

Amo

Mukim Amo
Mukim location
Coordinates: 4°36′N 115°08′E
CountryBrunei
DistrictTemburong
Government
  PenghuluBahrun bin Talib
Area
  Total542 km2 (209 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)[2]
  Total2,240
  Density4.1/km2 (11/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+8 (Brunei Darussalam Time)

Administration

Amo is administered as a mukim or subdistrict, the second-level administrative division of Brunei. As a mukim, the head of Amo is a penghulu, and the incumbent is Bahrun bin Talib.[1]

Areas and divisions

Amo is officially subdivided into 12 areas called villages (Malay: kampung, sometimes kampong), namely:

  • Amo 'A'
  • Amo 'B'
  • Amo 'C'
  • Batang Duri
  • Belaban
  • Biang
  • Parit
  • Selangan
  • Sibulu
  • Sibut
  • Sumbiling Lama
  • Sumbiling Baru

The areas above are as delineated by the Survey Department and the Postal Services Department, in which the latter also designates each area to have its own postcode.[3] However, the Temburong District Office, which de facto administers the villages, recognises only four areas as functioning village institution, namely Amo, Sumbiling, Sibut, and the collective area of Selangan, Parit and Biang.[1] Each of these has its own village head (Malay: ketua kampung) and is responsible for several matters pertaining residency and community in respective area. Where an area has no village head, the residents may refer to the heads in neighbouring villages.

The mukim of Amo and its constituent villages are administered by the Temburong District Office, a government department under the Ministry of Home Affairs.

gollark: There isn't really, because if you're just dealing with random TCP streams I don't think they have a similar thing to the HTTP Host header, which tells you what domain ~~you~~ the client wants to access.
gollark: caddy is a newer and trendier one which does nice stuff like HTTPS without having to use an external program like certbot, but in my opinion v2 made configuring it quite annoying.
gollark: I'd recommend nginx for reverse-proxying, it has reasonably non-annoying configuration and is very fast.
gollark: Reverse proxies are mostly a HTTP thing. You can probably get away with just running the other stuff on multiple ports.
gollark: You can also have that one reverse proxy server do all the HTTPS, which is mildly convenient.

References

  1. "Jabatan Daerah Temburong, Kementerian Hal Ehwal Dalam Negeri - MUKIM AMO". temburong.gov.bn (in Malay). Retrieved 2018-01-08.
  2. "Data Set Population Temburong Population by Mukims" (XLSX). www.data.gov.bn. Retrieved 2018-01-08.
  3. "Brunei Postal Services - postcodes". post.gov.bn. Retrieved 2018-01-08.
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