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Indigenous regions are shown in the table in italics. Note: the HDI values are calculated using pre-2014 borders, so the newly established Panamá Oeste Province (which was split from Panamá Province ) is not included in the data and neither is the Naso Tjër Di Comarca since it was created in 2018.
The indigenous peoples of Panama, also known as Native Panamanians, are the original inhabitants of Panama, is the Native peoples whose history in the territory of today's Panama predates Spanish colonization. As of the 2010 census, Indigenous peoples constitute 12.3% of Panama’s population of 3.4 million, totaling just over 418,000 individuals.
Ngäbe-Buglé (Spanish: [ˈŋɡoβe βuˈɣle]) is the largest and most populous of Panama's five comarcas indígenas.It was created in 1997 from lands formerly belonging to the provinces of Bocas del Toro, Chiriquí, and Veraguas.
Printable version; In other projects ... Provinces and Indigenous regions of Panama ... (Indigenous Regions) 4,393.9 km 2 ...
Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Indigenous peoples in Panama (5 C, 9 P) J. Jews and Judaism in Panama (1 C, 1 P) P.
Death rates from cardiovascular disease (C.V.D.) and cancer – the #1 and #2 causes of death in the U.S. – are low in the Guna. Between 2000 and 2004 in mainland Panama, for every 100,000 residents, 119 died from C.V.D. and 74 died from cancer; in contrast, per 100,000 Guna, these death rates were 8 for C.V.D. and 4 for cancer. [12]
Afro-Panamanians are Panamanians of African descent. The population can be mainly broken into two categories: "Afro-Colonials", those descended from slaves brought to Panama during the colonial period; and "Afro-Antilleans", West Indian immigrant descendants with origins in Trinidad, Martinique, Saint Lucia, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Grenada, Haiti, Belize, Barbados, and Jamaica, whose ancestors ...
91.2% of Ngäbes are unemployed; Ngäbe life expectancy is 67.9 years; Ngäbe average annual income is $430; 91.7% of the population lives in extreme poverty (that is, they make less than $2 a day) [15] [17] Development projects like the Cerro Colorado mining project put Ngobe-Bugle ancestral lands in peril. [18]