Sociedade Agrícola Pátria E Trabalho
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Sociedade Agrícola Pátria e Trabalho Lda. (SAPT) (The Portuguese version of the company's name is usually not translated in English language sources) was a company with far-reaching
agribusiness Agribusiness is the industry, enterprises, and the field of study of value chains in agriculture and in the bio-economy, in which case it is also called bio-business or bio-enterprise. The primary goal of agribusiness is to maximize profit ...
interests in the colony of
Portuguese Timor Portuguese Timor () was a Portuguese colony on the territory of present-day East Timor from 1702 until 1975. During most of this period, Portugal shared the island of Timor with the Dutch East Indies. The first Europeans to arrive in the regio ...
, where its focus was on cultivating coffee for export.


History

Governor
José Celestino da Silva General José Celestino da Silva, (6 January 1849 – 10 February 1911) was a Portuguese Army officer and colonial administrator. Between 1894 and 1908, he was governor of the colony of Portuguese Timor. Early life and career Celestino da S ...
(in office 1894–1908) founded SAPT in 1897. During his tenure, he was either the owner of, or involved in, almost all private plantation companies, and SAPT practically acted as a
state within a state Deep state is a term used for (real or imagined) potential, unauthorized and often secret networks of power operating independently of a state's political leadership in pursuit of their own agendas and goals. Although the term originated in Turke ...
.Geoffrey C. Gunn, ''Timor Loro Sae: 500 years'' (Macau: Livros do Oriente, 1999), pp.248, 250, 253 Together with its subsidiaries, the Empresa Agrícola Perseverança and the Empresa Agrícola Limitada Timor, SAPT was the only agricultural enterprise in Portuguese Timor of any importance. SAPT often appropriated land and then hired the dispossessed former owners as labourers on subsistence wages. In the late 1920s, SAPT produced 200 tons of coffee in Portuguese Timor, and bought another hundred tons for export. As Portugal came close to bankruptcy in the Great Depression of the 1930s, SAPT had 47.62% of its shares transferred to
Banco Nacional Ultramarino Banco Nacional Ultramarino (, BNU; ; ) is a Macau banking and financial services corporation. It was historically a Portuguese bank with operations throughout the world, especially in Portugal's former overseas provinces. It ceased existence as ...
(BNU). In 1940, Sachimaro Sagawa, a member of the board of the Japanese strategic development company Nan’yō Kōhatsu, bought 48% of SAPT for one million pounds sterling. As a result, Dr Sales Luís, who had sold the shares to Nan’yō Kōhatsu, was banned from re-entering Portuguese Timor as a "bad patriot". From 1941, SAPT was the only large plantation and trading company in the colony. SAPT also controlled trade with Portugal and Japan, and thereby commanded 20% of all of the trade of Portuguese Timor. The company had a monopoly on the purchase of Arabica coffee, the finest and most important variety grown in Timor, and also produced cocoa and rubber. After World War II, the Japanese lost their shares: 40% of SAPT (the former Japanese-owned shares) now belonged to the Portuguese state, 52% to the Silva family and 8% to the BNU. In import/export business, SAPT and the ''Sociedade Oriental de Transportes e Armazens'' (Sota) were the only companies that were out of the hands of the local Chinese population. In 1948/49, the new SAPT administration building was erected at the corner of Rua Sebastião and Rua Dom Fernando (today Rua da Justiça / Rua de Moçambique), opposite the Liceu Dr. Francisco Machado, as one of the first new buildings in Dili after the Second World War. Above the former main entrance, the company name "SAPT" is still recognizable under the new coat of paint. Part of the building was initially used by the BNU until a new BNU building was built in the 1960s. Today, the former SAPT building is home to a number of companies, such as engineering services or food distribution. Following the
Indonesian invasion of East Timor The Indonesian invasion of East Timor, known in Indonesia as Operation Lotus (), began on 7 December 1975 when the Indonesian military (ABRI/TNI) invaded East Timor under the pretext of anti-colonialism and anti-communism to overthrow the Fre ...
in 1975, Indonesian officers took control of SAPT's holdings, for personal gain. After East Timor became independent in 2002, the new government was burdened with the complex responsibility of working out what to do with the tracts of land previously owned by SAPT. In February 2012, the National Parliament passed three laws to deal with that issue, but the laws were controversial, as many in East Timor felt that they had been designed more to help corporate investments than protect individuals.


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Sociedade Agrícola Pátria e Trabalho Defunct companies of Timor-Leste Defunct companies of Portugal Portugal–Timor-Leste relations Food and drink companies established in 1897 Portuguese Timor 1970s disestablishments in East Timor