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Milandhoo

Milandhoo
Inhabited island
Shaviyani Milandhoo satellite photo
Shaviyani Milandhoo satellite photo
Milandhoo is located in Maldives
Milandhoo
Milandhoo
Location in Maldives
Coordinates: 06°17′05″N 73°14′36″E / 6.28472°N 73.24333°E / 6.28472; 73.24333Coordinates: 06°17′05″N 73°14′36″E / 6.28472°N 73.24333°E / 6.28472; 73.24333
Country Maldives
Geographic atoll Miladhummadulhu Atoll
Administrative atoll Shaviyani Atoll
Government
 • Island Chief Abdullah Faiz Hassan
Population (2010)
 • Total 2,425
Time zone MST (UTC+05:00)

Milandhoo (Dhivehi: މިލަންދޫ) is an island in the Shaviyani Atoll administrative division of the Maldives and geographically part of the Miladhummadulhu group in Thiladhunmati Atoll.

It is the administrative capital of Shaviyani Atoll.

Milandhoo was uninhabited in 1997, when the Maldive's Minister of Atolls Abdulla Hameed launched a project to construct houses there and relocate residents from the neighboring island Maakandoodhoo, where the water had become contaminated. The resettlement was hastened in 2004, when the Boxing Day tsunami severely damaged Maakandoodhoo. The government officially recognized Milandhoo as an inhabited island on 20 March 2005. With more than 2140 residents, it is now the most populous island in Shaviyani Atoll. It became the atoll's administrative capital on 26 October 2009.

Milandhoo is at 06°17′05″N 73°14′36″E in the southeast of Shaviyani atoll between Maakandoodhoo and Nalandhoo. Covering 126 hectares, Milandhoo is the largest island in the atoll.

In northwestern Milandhoo is a lake, Sikundi Kulhi ("Prawn Lake"), so named because of its abundant prawns and shrimp, which are transparent and up to 1.5 inches (38 mm) long. Barracudas and a few other fish species also inhabit the lake, while crabs and hermit crabs live around its shore. Sikundi Kulhi is about 350 ft (110 m) long, 250 ft (76 m) wide, and up to 5 ft (1.5 m) deep. Clay deposited at its center is used for traditional medicine. Bottle gourd plants, ironwood, sea hibiscus and mangroves are common nearby, while great morinda and coconut palm are rare.


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