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Tri-State Area

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Tri-State Area
Special administrative territory
Tri-State Area Special Administrative Territories
Wilayah Pentadbiran Khas Tri-State Area

Flag

Coat of arms
Motto: "Bersatu Teguh" (Firmly United) 
Nickname(s): Metropolitan Tiga Negeri
Anthem: Maju dan Sejahtera
Location of the Tri-State Area (circled in red) within Phinbella
Sovereign state Phinbella
Entity Free area of the Federation
Proclamation of BI State 29 August -40BP
Adjacent Territories lease 9 June -28BP
Transferred of Petite Martinique and Islands 19 December -7BP
Tri-State Area Unification Day 15 July -4BP
Established as the special administrative territory 15 July RP 2600
Capital Danville
Official languages Phineaner · Common Tongue
Regional language Hiliorian Phineaner · Gangwol Phineaner · Pyeongrang Phineaner · Taemhwanian Phineaner · Taesongean · Common Tongue · Ferb Latin
other minority languages
Ethnic groups
Demonym Tri-Statian · Tri-State Area Citizens
Government Devolved executive-led government within a federal republic
 • Chief Executive Roger Doofenshmirtz
 • Chief Secretary Hyeon Joo-seul
 • Council President Mohammed Batrishah Zainal
 • Chief Justice Umikou Yukitsuko
Legislature Legisative Assembly
National representation
 • Phinbella Federal Legislative Assembly 14 deputies
 • Estates of the Federation 8 deputies
Area
 • Total 957.36 km2 (369.64 sq mi)
 • Land 819.45 km2 (316.39 sq mi)
 • Water 137.91 km2 (53.25 sq mi)
Highest elevation 957 m (3,140 ft)
Population (1730 AN)
 • Total 2,419,920
 • Density 2,500/km2 (6,500/sq mi)
Currency Phinbellan florin (ðƒ) (PKF)
Time zone CMT+05:20 (PPT)
Date format dd/mm/yyyy
yyyy년mm월dd일
Mains electricity 220 V–50 Hz
Driving side left
Calling code +852 10
MOS-1 code PH-TRS
License plate prefixes TS

The Tri-State Area (Taesongean: 삼주지역; Hanja: 三州地域; RRSamju Jiyeok; MRSamju Chiyŏk), officially the Special Administrative Territory of the Tri-State Area (Phineaner: Wilayah Pentadbiran Khas Kawasan Kesatuan Tri-State Area; Taesongean: 삼주지역 특별행정구역; Hanja: 三州地域 特別行政區域; RRSamju Jiyeok Teukbyeol Haengjeong Guyeok; MRSamju Chiyŏk T'ŭkpyŏl Haengjŏng Kuyŏk) is a metropolitan area and a special administrative territory of Phinbella located west of the Taeyang River Delta. It is a metropolitan area that surrounds Danville as the capital and administrative center. This territory was founded by John P. Trystat (John P. Trijstadt), who united the Bi-State territory (pronounced as Biai State) with the adjacent areas known as the Adjacent Area, founded by Otto H. Adjacent.

The Tri-State Area is bordered by the Territory of Province Wellesley and Suyaj-Ardab to the east, the Territory of Nabor-Klafterschft to the north, Oriental Hispanioéire Taemhwanian district of the Yapreay Islands to the west and the Plazas de Irian to the south. Its capital, Danville is 340 kilometers west of the Phinbella's capital city, Negara Awan, 67 kilometers southeast of Batu Balik, 47 kilometers west of the Providenciales Bonin Islands and 124 kilometers northwest of the Springwind Islands. The RP 2616 census recorded the population of the Tri-State Area as 2,446,052 people, and by RP 2621 it estimates its population will increase to 2.8 million people. The people of the Tri-State Area celebrate Tri-State Area Unification Day on July 15 each year, commemorating the historic event, which unites the Bi-State and nearby areas that took place in -4BP.

Danville is the economic center as well as the administrative center of the Tri-State Area territorial government. One of the most important cities in the Tri-State Area is Padang Pauh, Peladang and Kota Victoria because of its strategic tourist attractions. Its main port is located in the coastal area of Danville, mostly connecting nearby towns including Providenciales and major cities in the Keijinshin Metropolitan Area. Another most important area is Takeo in the Jefferson County Precinct which located two schools namely the main campus of Danville Metropolitan University and the Tri-State Area Community College.

There are some business enterprises and groups that have the word “Tri-State Area” in their name such as Tri-State Area Public Library, Tri-State Bombers, etc. The Tri-State Area forms the Keijinshin metropolitan area, the second largest and most populous metropolitan area in Phinbella after the Capital Metropolitan Area.

Etymology

The name Tri-State Area in Phinbella came into existence due to the unification of the three areas namely Bi-State, Adjacent Area and Petite Martinique. In general, there are some metropolitan areas throughout Micras that use the term "Tri-State Area" to unite three or more areas or districts that make up a metropolitan area and it does not cover the entire state, instead this term is also used in metropolitan areas located between borders. three states or provinces.

There is also the term "Quad-State Area" where it covers the metropolitan area on the border between four states or provinces.

History

Geography

Skyline of Danville, capital and largest city of the Tri-State Area

The Tri-State Area is located on the west coast of Menet Island which includes the State of Shintaro, Plazas de Irian, Nabor-Klafterschaft and Taemhwanian East Bank. Located at the mouth of the Taeyang River. It is surrounded by nearby islands and the Captive Sea to the west, while to the east it is close to or adjacent to the Territory of Province Wellesley and Suyaj-Ardab, the Territory of Nabor-Klafterschft and the Plazas de Irian, it also borders the Fukien Islands administered by Oriental Hispanioéire Taemhwan, where it is within the district of the Yapreay and Fukien Islands. The Tri-State Area is also adjacent to Dinding Island as well as Providenciales. The area of 819.45 square kilometers (316.39 square miles) and it is an island area that consists of two main islands, Ujong Island and Wan Man Island, as well as more than 25 small islands including the southern part of Tandus Island, where the northern part of the island is administered by Province Wellesley and Suyaj-Ardab. The Tri-State Area has a coastline of 74 kilometers, where the beach is white sand, Tanjeuran Beach is one of the famous beach areas in the Tri-State Area which is located near Danville. And other beach areas are Pulau Anting Beach and Bisikan Bayu Beach. The highest point in this territory is Mount Lutong Barat which is located 39 kilometers from Danville, the height of this mountain is 957 meters above sea level. In general, the Tri-State Area is mostly a lowland area with an average elevation below 60 meters above sea level, the rest of the area is hilly with an average elevation above 350 meters above sea level. Its development is concentrated in lowland areas including the Danville urban area and nearby towns.

The undeveloped areas are hilly areas, most of which are made up of swampy forests, grasslands and farmland. As much as 38% of the undeveloped areas are nature reserve areas. There are six major rivers and 37 minor rivers in the Tri-State Area including Jefferson, Peladang, Tanjeuran, Pauh, Kerdau and Pagalan. The Jefferson River is a major river located in the Danville downtown area. The Tri-State Area has 25 islands off the coast of the main islands, with Oran Island being the largest of all. Tandus Island is an island divided into two areas, where the southern area is administered by the Tri-State Area while the northern area is administered by Province Wellesley and Suyaj-Ardab..

Climate

Tri-State Area (-10BP–RP 2616)
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
32
 
 
7
−2
 
 
48
 
 
9
0
 
 
80
 
 
12
4
 
 
127
 
 
18
10
 
 
151
 
 
22
14
 
 
210
 
 
25
18
 
 
314
 
 
31
20
 
 
254
 
 
31
24
 
 
159
 
 
30
17
 
 
52
 
 
25
14
 
 
45
 
 
16
8
 
 
20
 
 
11
1
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
1.3
 
 
45
29
 
 
1.9
 
 
48
33
 
 
3.2
 
 
54
40
 
 
5
 
 
64
49
 
 
6
 
 
71
57
 
 
8.3
 
 
77
64
 
 
12
 
 
87
68
 
 
10
 
 
89
75
 
 
6.3
 
 
85
63
 
 
2
 
 
78
58
 
 
1.8
 
 
61
47
 
 
0.8
 
 
52
35
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Although the Tri-State Area is an island area, while having a hilly area, the Tri-State Area has a cold subtropical humid climate (Köppen climate classification Cwa), bordering the subtropical highland climate (Köppen climate classification Cwc) which covers mountainous areas in Menet Island. The summer in this territory is hot and humid and it occurs from mid-June to the end of September, lowland areas are cooler than inland and hilly areas due to the effects of the ocean. Usually in the summer, the Tri-State Area is frequently visited by visitors from every corner in Phinbella and Forajasaki as well as from certain countries, it occasionally rains with thunderstorms and warm air from the southwest, at the end of the summer hurricanes are rare, only usually heavy rains that cause floods and landslides if in hilly areas. The winter in this territory is cold and dry with strong and cold winds from the northeast especially from the Shintaro mountains and it occurs in early December to early March. The winter is often snowfall especially in December and it is rarely rain, snow down on average for about two weeks in twice a year. Autumn is the sunniest and spring is a little cloudy.

The Tri-State Area has an average of 1,704 hours of sunlight a year. Very high or very low temperatures are rare in the Tri-State Area. The extreme temperatures recorded at the Tri-State Area Observatory were 37.1 °C on August 10, RP 2610 and −14.0 °C on January 4, -8BP. The highest and lowest temperatures recorded throughout the Tri-State Area were 38.8 °C in Takeo on 11 July RP 2615 and −21.3 °C in Bukit Payong on 23 December RP 2600.

S'Winter is a term that is too unfamiliar to the residents of the Tri-State Area and Phinbella itself especially in the summer, perhaps it is also considered a phenomenon. Not only in the Maple Drive neighborhood that has S'Winter, but there are several theme parks either in the Tri-State Area or outside the Tri-State Area have attractions which have the concept of the term, usually it is artificial snow made of ice which is ground into snow or which is made from soap bubbles in addition to using air conditioning. Usually attractions like this are done every year especially in the summer. What is a phenomenon related to this term is happening in Kota Hilir and not in the Tri-State Area (see Climate in Kota Hilir). There is also a local telenovela that uses the term, S'Winter Sonata (Phineaner: Sonata Pulau Senok; literally Senok Island Sonata), where the storyline does take place in the Tri-State Area, actually in Senok Island in Petite Martinique.

Administrative divisions, urban and suburban areas

The Tri-State Area is divided into seven precincts, 59 communes and three local governments. Each precinct as usual is administered by a precinct officer and each commune or mukim is administered by a penghulu. In the 59 communes there are 178 villages. The seven precincts in the Tri-State Area are Jefferson County, Mantanani, Padang Pauh, Kertau, Adjacent Area, Hebron and Petite Martinique. The Tri-State Area is also divided into three geographical areas namely Jefferson County which covers two precincts (precincts of Jefferson County and Mantanani) including the city of Danville, Adjacent Area which covers four precincts and also Petite Martinique which covers Kota Victoria area and nearby islands. The Tri-State Area also has 32 cities and towns.

Architecture

Government and politics

The Tri-State Area is a special administrative territory of Phinbella, with executive, legislative and judicial powers devolved from the federal government. The Queenstown Agreement is a declaratory agreement between the Federal Provisional Government and the Tri-State Area Government providing for economic and administrative continuity through merger. As in other special administrative territories, the Tri-State Area is also one of the five Phinbellan territories that does not have a governorship system, instead using an executive-led government system that is largely inherited from the territory's history of governance that was influenced by Western systems. Under these terms and the principle of "one country, two systems" in Phinbella, the Basic Law of the Tri-State Area (Phineaner: Undang-undang Tubuh Tri-State Area) is a regional constitution. The Chief Executive is the head of the territory and the head of the government of the Tri-State Area, where whoever is appointed by the President of Phinbella, he is also practically a figure whose main function is executive. The current Chief Executive of the Tri-State Area is Tan Sri Dato' Roger Doofenshmirtz, in office since April 12, RP 2611, formerly a mayor of Danville.

The Tri-State Area territorial governments have their own executive councils and legislatures, but they have relatively limited powers compared to the federal government of Phinbella. The Basic Law of the Tri-State Area, enacted in RP 2600, is the supreme law of the territory. Consisting of 42 articles, the constitution deals with the proceedings and powers of the territorial government.

Specifically, the Tri-State Area territorial government is divided into three branches:

  • Executive: The Chief Executive is responsible for enforcing regional laws in the Tri-State Area, can force reconsideration of existing legislation, and appoints members of the Executive Council and principal officers. Acting with the Executive Council, the Chief Executive-in-Council can propose new bills, issue subordinate legislation, and have the power to dissolve the legislature. In case of emergency or public danger, the Chief Executive-in-Council is further empowered to enact any regulations necessary to restore public order to the citizens of the Tri-State Area.
  • Legislature: The unicameral Legislative Assembly of the Tri-State Area enacts territorial laws, approves the budget, and has the power to impeach the sitting chief executive.
  • Judiciary: The Court of Final Appeals and lower courts in the Tri-State Area can interpret existing laws and invalidate laws that are inconsistent with the Basic Law of the Tri-State Area. Judges in the Tri-State Area are appointed by the Chief Executive on the advice of a recommendation commission.

The Executive Council of the Tri-State Area is an executive authority of the Tri-State Area territorial government, it is similar in function to the national cabinet. The Chief Executive is responsible for appointing members of the executive council and key officers. The Chief Executive can also propose new bills, issue subordinate legislation, and has the power to dissolve the legislature.

After territorial elections during the Roger Doofenshmirtz administration in RP 2614, the PAR-LDP coalition formed a new government in the Tri-State Area with a simple majority, with the chief administrative secretary going to the former for being the single largest party in the state legislature.

Political Party/
Alliance
Legislative Assembly Estates

The Legislative Assembly of the Tri-State Area is a unicameral legislative body with 40 members, whose members are called Members of the Territorial Legislative Assembly, each serving a term of four years. All members are directly elected from constituencies. The assembly convenes in the Capitol-shaped Seri Tiga Negeri Building located in Sembulan. The Tri-State Area, as in most other special administrative territories, uses a presidential system but the members of the Executive Council are appointed from among the elected members of the Territorial Legislative Assembly, possibly influenced by the Westminster system. In addition, the dissolution of the Legislative Assembly of the Tri-State Area, which is usually carried out before the Territorial Election, requires the approval of the President.

Amendments to the Basic Law require the support of two-thirds of the Legislative Assembly of the Tri-State Area.

Nine political parties including local parties have representatives elected to the Legislative Assembly in the Special Administrative Territories Legislative Election. These parties have aligned themselves into three ideological groups including local groups. Federal political parties do not have an official political presence in the Tri-State Area, just like other special administrative territories, and members of Federal political parties do not run in elections in these territories. The Tri-State Area is represented in the Phinbella Federal Legislative Assembly by 2 representatives of the Dewan Senat and 14 representatives of the Dewan Perwakilan, while in the Estate of the Federation by eight representatives elected from the eight constituencies of the Federation.

File:LA Tri-State Area.svg
Affiliation Coalition/Party Leader Status Seats
RP 2619 election Current
Total
Government majority
The Tri-State Area High Court building in Danville, is also the Court of Final Appeal Building which used to house the Legislative Assembly.

Neither the laws of Phinbella Proper nor the laws of the Federation of Phinbella generally apply in this territory, and like other special administrative territories, the Tri-State Area is considered a separate jurisdiction in Phinbella. The judicial system is based on common law, which is influenced by legal traditions brought from Nova England or Britannia. The power of interpretation and amendment of the Basic Law and jurisdiction over state actions rests with the federal authorities, but local courts can of course refer to precedents set in laws in Floria (probably) where it is influenced from Britannic laws and foreign legislation. However, the law of criminal procedure in the Federation or Phinbella Proper applies to cases investigated by the Office of National Security Protection of the Federal Government in the Tri-State Area SAT. In addition, Sharia law applies to cases involving Umraist residents who commit crimes in this territory, where they are investigated by the Tri-State Area Department of Umraism and Phineaner Customs, and tried in sharia courts in the Tri-State Area. Decisions made by the Standing Committee of the Federal Senate can override any territorial judicial process. Furthermore, in a situation where the Standing Committee declares a state of emergency in the Tri-State Area, the Federal Council of Ministers as the central government can enforce national laws in this territory with the approval of the President of Phinbella as the head of state.

The territory's jurisdictional independence is most evident in its immigration and taxation policies. The Registration Department issues passports for permanent residents that are different from those issued for residents of Phinbella or other special administrative territories, and these territories maintain controlled borders with territories within the Federation. All travelers between the Tri-State Area and Phinbella and other special administrative territories must pass through border controls, regardless of nationality. The Phinbella nationality law stipulates that Phinbellan citizens in Phinbella Proper have no right of abode in the Tri-State Area, with the exception of Phinbellan citizens in other special administrative territories and dependent territories who are allowed to retain the same new Phinbellan Citizenship, and it is subject to immigration control. Public finances are managed separately from the federal government; taxes levied in the Tri-State Area do not fund the central government.

As part of Phinbella, the Tri-State Area Garrison is responsible for the territory's defense. Although the Chairman of the Federal Military Commission is the supreme commander-in-chief in the Phinbellan Armed Forces, the territorial government can request assistance from the garrison. Despite Phinbella citizenship, residents of the Tri-State Area are not required to do or not participate in military service, and the current law has no provision for local registration, so the defense consists entirely of non-Tri-State Area residents, but Phinbella citizens working as soldiers who reside in the Tri-State Area.

Local governments

The Tri-State Area has four local governments that govern three geographic areas in the Tri-State Area.

The mayor of Danville and the presidents of the municipalities of Pantai Tanjeuran, Adjacent Area and Petite Martinique are appointed by the Tri-State Area territorial government for two-year terms, while councilors are appointed for one-year terms. Local councils are responsible for regulating traffic and parking, maintaining cleanliness and drainage, managing waste disposal, issuing business licenses, and overseeing public health, provision and maintenance of urban infrastructure.

In addition to three geographic areas, the Tri-State Area is divided into seven administrative precincts. Each precinct is headed by a precinct officer. Land and precinct offices in each precinct deal with land and revenue administration; then it is different from the local government (city council) which oversees the provision and maintenance of urban infrastructure.

Danville City Hall, seat of the Danville City Council
Pantai Tanjeuran Municipal Council
Adjacent Area Municipal Council
Petite Martinique Municipal Council

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
-22BP 583,031—    
-17BP 789,032+35.3%
-12BP 878,321+11.3%
-7BP 1,099,430+25.2%
-2BP 1,246,781+13.4%
RP 2602 1,409,945+13.1%
RP 2607 1,564,166+10.9%
RP 2612 1,754,301+12.2%
RP 2615 2,189,420+24.8%
RP 2617 2,446,052+11.7%
Source: Tri-State Area Department of Statistics
Ethnic composition of the Tri-State Area (RP 2617)
Ethnicities/Nationality Percentage
Phineaners
60.48%
Eurphineonesians
13.81%
Hāfu
7.14%
Sam-Sam Laut
3.89%
Petite Martinique Creole
3.183%
Taesongeans
1.92%
Bajau Samah
1.28%
Taemhwanians
1.182%
Sangunese
1.1%
Sino-Keltians
1.1%
Jews
0.985%
Indians
0.01%
Phinbellan aliens
0.01%
Others
3%
Non-Tri-Statian/Non-Phinbellans
0.9%

The census in 2021 shows that the total population in the Tri-State Area is 2,446,052 people, and has a population density of 2,600 people per kilometer. The vast majority of the population in the Tri-State Area as much as 60.48% are Phineaners who are mostly Hiliorian Phineaners, Gangwol Phineaners, Barbarite Phineaners and Taemhwanian Phineaners. Eurphineonesians are the largest non-Phineaners minority with a total population of 13.81% consisting of Zaipinichi Peranakans, Greenlandic Martians, Kristangs, Ryukchiners, Burghers and Yapreayans. Hāfu in the Tri-State Area is very different from Hāfu in Oriental Taemhwan where this community shows the most unique characteristics and makes up more than seven percent of the population. Sam-Sam Laut or Orang Laut who make up 3.89% of the population mostly live in coastal areas and the rest of the total live in the waters of this territory including some who live in their traditional boats. While the remainder amounting to 10.77% of the population are other non-Phineaners minorities, mainly Petite Martinique Creoles, Zaipinichi Taesongeans, Bajau Samah, other Taemhwanians, Sangunese, Sino-Keltians, Jews, Indians and Phinbellan aliens. Three percent of the population in the Tri-State Area is categorized as other ethnicity. 0.9 percent of the total population are expatriates living in the Tri-State Area, most of the expatriate community are short-term workers including security guards and housekeepers. Because the Tri-State Area is part of the Keijinshin Metropolitan Area which causes its vibrant economy, the Tri-State Area is a special administrative territory that is the main recipient of cross-territorial immigrants, usually cross-territorial immigrants are among three percent of the population of this territory.

Burghers in the Tri-State Area have the same ancestry as the Kristang people in this territory, that is, they have a mixture of Portuguese, Batavian or Britannian ancestry with local residents in this territory who are of Phineaner, Jewish, Yapreayan, Bajau Samah, Jawi Peranakan and Chetty descent from long ago period. The Burgher community has culturally distinguished itself from the Keristang community in this territory and Kota Hilir in terms of customs, cuisine and language, and can also differentiate physically from generation to generation. In the mid--40BPs, they began intermarrying with Britannian ancestry and other Keltian ethnic ancestry such as Taesongean, Sino-Keltian and Sangunese ancestry and produced offspring with more Phineonesian and Keltian mixed phenotypes than Western phenotypes, including lighter skin like most Taesongeans and Sangunese, and a heavier body like the Westerners.

The Creole community in the Petite Martinique area is the only Creole ethnic group that originates from this territory and this community has its own uniqueness especially in clothing, way of life, music, speech patterns and cuisine. This community is said to be the descendants of slaves of various ethnicities who were placed in Petite Martinique to work and were freed in the early -30BPs, and this community flourished for approximately five decades. The town of Victoria is the cultural center of the local Creole community in Petite Martinique.

Forming 1.182% of the population of the Tri-State Area, the Taemhwanian community is distinguished from the Taemhwanian Phineaner community in this territory, consisting mostly of Scattered Islands Frontier Creole and a small number of Taemhwanian Finns, Cajuns and Isleños and Ssamaritans. The occupation of the Taemhwanian community in the Tri-State Area has been dominated by ethnic groups originating from the Scattered Islands where these groups began to form their settlements since -10BPs. The Ssamaritan community brought from the Ssamaritan Islands also formed its settlement in the same year.

The Sino-Keltian community that makes up 1.1% of the population in this territory is mostly made up of Cantonese and Hakka groups, and the rest are Tanka who live in boats whether this community has ever assimilated with the Sam-Sam Laut community or vice versa. The Cantonese are the dominant group in the Sino-Keltian community. The Sino-Keltians in the Tri-State Area is very different from the Sino-Keltians in Kota Hilir which is dominated by the Baba and Nyonya community who speak Hokkien. The Indian community in the Tri-State Area consists of Jawi Peranakan who speak Eeshan, Punjabis who speak Punjab, and Chetties who speak Phineaner with their own speech patterns. The Indian community is the smallest ethnic group in this territory with a total of 0.01% of the population. Jews in the Tri-State Area, which make up a community of 0.985% of the population, have a different culture from the Jewish community in other territories, it is considered a hybrid Jewish community. Just like the Providencialesian Jews, the Tri-Statian Jews as usual are also assimilated into Yapreayan community, and Jewish men mostly marry Yapreayan men of Omega type. The Jewish community in the Tri-State Area is divided into the dominant Ashkenatzi community, as well as the Sepharadic, Malabar and Mizrahi communities. Meanwhile, the Phinbellan alien community consisting of ethnic Gogobugians, Xenovians, Kubulus and Martians has comprised almost 0.01% of the population of this territory.

Language

Phineaner and Common Tongue are the official languages of this territory, where the Phinbellan language acts as the standard variety. Road signs and official documents issued by the government are written in Phineaner, either using Latin or Jawi script. The Tri-State Area is also a multilingual territory, and the main languages used in this territory are Phineaner, Common Tongue, Taesongean, Sangunese, Cantonese, Hakka, Eeshan, Adarani and Punjabi. The main dialects spoken by the people of the Tri-State Area are Hiliorian Phineaner, Gangwol Phineaner and Taemhwanian Phineaner. Hiliorian Phineaner is the main Phineaner variety in the Tri-State Area which originates from Kota Hilir which is also a special administrative territory. It is spoken by 83.7% of the population, 67.8% as a first language and 15.9% as a second language. A little more than half of the population of the Tri-State Area which is 52.4% speaks the Gangwol Phineaner; 10.6% are native speakers, and 41.8% speak the Gangwol Phineaner as a second language.

Religion

Economy

Infrastructure

Transport

Utilities

Culture

Cuisine

Music

PP-pop

TC-pop

Tourism

Tourist attraction

Unification Day

Sports and recreation

Media

Art of culture and entertainment

Education

Notable people

See also