The National Stadium of East Timor (Portuguese: Estádio Nacional de Timor-Leste, Tetum: Estadiu Nasional Timor Lorosa'e), also known as the Municipal Stadium of Dili (Portuguese: Estádio Municipal de Díli, Tetum: Estadiu Munisipal Díli), is a multi-purpose stadium in Dili, East Timor.
The stadium has a capacity of 5,000 and is used mostly for football matches.
History
In 1999-2000, during the 1999 East Timorese crisis and its aftermath, the stadium was used as a makeshift refugee camp and emergency relief distribution point.[1][2][3]
During the 2010s, the stadium was renovated in two separate projects, commenced in 2011 and 2016, respectively. The 2011 renovations were inaugurated in April 2012 by the then Prime Minister of East Timor, Xanana Gusmão.[12]
The 2016 renovations were valued at US$1.64 million, and included the renovation of the grandstand, construction of bathrooms, electricity rooms, and lighting poles, and adding seats to the grandstand. As of mid-2019, those renovations had not yet been completed.[15]
On 20 September 2019, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the formation of INTERFET task force, friendly football matches were played at the stadium between teams of Falintil and Interfet veterans, and between the Timor-Leste national team and an Australian Defence Force team.[16]
In February 2021, the Board of Directors of the Infrastructure Fund (Portuguese: Conselho da Administração do Fundo das Infraestruturas (CAFI)) approved an additional budget of more than US$300,000 to complete the 2016 renovations.[17]
On 13 June 2022, the Minister of Justice, Tiago Amaral Sarmento, met with the East Timor Football Federation (FFTL), as representative of the International Association Football Federation (FIFA), and handed over documentation assigning the site of the stadium, including land known as Kampo Demokrasia, to the FFTL. The assignment, for a price to be agreed later, was made in connection with a long term contract between the parties, under which the stadium and other football fields in East Timor would be brought up to international standards, at FIFA's expense.[18][19]
Just under a year later, on 8 June 2023, the Secretary of State for Youth and Sport, Abrão Saldanha [de], announced that FIFA had agreed to build two international standard football stadiums in East Timor, one of them at the National Stadium, and the other at the Xanana Sports Center. He also said that the two stadium designs had been finalised and analysed by a FIFA technical team, and that after data verification was complete, FIFA would call tenders for construction.[20]
Facilities
The stadium has an athletics track,[14] which has been used for training for the Summer Olympic Games.[21] There are two grandstands on the Eastern and Western sides of the field;[14] the main grandstand has a roof.[22][23] Total capacity of the stadium is 5,000 people.[24]
Due to problems with the stadium's infrastructure, the national football team must sometimes play its home games in other countries.[25] For example, in the first rounds of the 2026 FIFA World Cup AFC qualification and 2027 AFC Asian Cup qualification (which double up as each other), Timor-Leste played both its home and way games at the National Stadium in Kaohsiung, Taiwan rather than the home game being played domestically.
^"PM Xanana Inagura Stadium Municipal" [PM Xanana Inaugurates Municipal Stadium]. Radio Liberdade Dili - FM 95.8 MHz (in Tetum). 30 April 2012. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
^Witono, Agus Dwi (20 August 2017). "4 Fakta Menarik Sepakbola Timor Leste" [4 Interesting Facts about Timor Leste Football]. INDOSPORT.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 27 March 2022.