![]() Flag Description of Central African Republic: four equal horizontal bands of blue (top), white, green, and yellow with a vertical red band in center; there is a yellow five-pointed star on the hoist side of the blue band |
![]() Map of Central African Republic |
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Other African Countries |
Geography
Area: 622,984 sq. km. (242,000 sq. mi.); slightly smaller than Texas.
Cities: Capital--Bangui (pop. 690,000). Other cities--Berberati
(56,867), Bouar (39,676), Bambari (32,603), Bangassou (24,450), Bossangoa
(31,723), Mbaiki (16,901), and Carnot (31,324).
Terrain: Rolling plain 600 meters-700 meters (1,980 ft.-2,310 ft.) above sea
level; scattered hills in northeast and southwest.
Climate: Tropical, ranging from humid equatorial in the south to Sahelo-Sudanese
in the north; hot, dry winters with mild to hot, wet summers.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Central African(s).
Population (July 2007 est.): 4,369,038.
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 1.505%.
Ethnic groups: More than 80; Baya 33%, Banda 27%, Sara 10%, Mandja 13%, Mboum
7%, M'baka 4%, Yakoma 4%, other 2%.
Religions: Protestant 25%, Roman Catholic 25%, Muslim 15%, indigenous beliefs
35%.
Languages: Sangho (official), Sangho (national).
Education: Years compulsory--6. Enrollment--primary school 75%.
Literacy--50%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--115 deaths/1,000. Life expectancy--avg.
43 yrs.
Work force (approx. 53% of pop.): Agriculture--75%; industry--6%;
commerce and services--4%; government--15%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: August 13, 1960.
Constitution: Passed by referendum December 29, 1994; adopted January 1995.
Suspended by decree in March 2003. New constitution passed by referendum
December 5, 2004.
Branches: Executive--president, prime minister, and Council of
Ministers. Legislative--unicameral National Assembly. Judicial--Constitutional
Court, inferior courts, criminal courts, Court of Appeals.
Administrative subdivisions: 16 prefectures, commune of Bangui.
Political parties: Alliance for Democracy and Progress (ADP), Central African
Democratic Assembly (RDC), Civic Forum (FC), Democratic Forum (FODEM), Liberal
Democratic Party (PLD), Movement for Democracy and Development (MDD), Movement
for the Liberation of the Central African People (MLPC), Patriotic Front for
Progress (FPP), People's Union for the Republic (UPR), National Unity Party
(PUN), and Social Democratic Party (PSD).
Suffrage: Universal over 21.
Economy
GDP (2006): $1.542 billion.
Annual real GDP growth rate: -7.2% (2003); 0.5% (2004 est.); 3% (2006 est.).
Per capita income (2002): $260.
Avg. inflation rate: 4.2% (2003); 3.2 (2004 est.).
Natural resources: Diamonds, uranium, timber, gold, oil.
Agriculture (2002, 54.8% of GDP): Products--Timber, cotton, coffee,
tobacco, foodcrops, livestock. Cultivated land--unavailable.
Industry (2002, 21.6% of GDP): Types--Diamond mining, sawmills,
breweries, textiles, footwear, assembly of bicycles and motorcycles, and soap.
Services (2002): 23.6% of GDP.
Trade (2004): Exports--$161 million; diamonds, coffee, cotton, timber,
tobacco. Major markets--Belgium, Italy, France, Luxembourg, Germany,
Egypt, Spain, and Cote d'Ivoire. Imports--$119 million; food, textiles,
petroleum products, machinery, electrical equipment, motor vehicles, chemicals,
pharmaceuticals, consumer goods, industrial products. Major suppliers--France,
United States, Cote d'Ivoire, Cameroon, Germany, Japan.
Central government budget (2002): $226 million.
Defense (2002, 2.4% of budget): $5.4 million.
Fiscal year: Calendar year.
PEOPLE
There are more than 80 ethnic groups in the Central African Republic (C.A.R.),
each with its own language. About 75% are Baya-Mandjia and Banda (40% largely
located in the northern and central parts of the country), and 4% are M'Baka
(southwestern corner of the C.A.R.). Sangho, the language of a small group along
the Oubangui River, is the national language spoken by the majority of Central
Africans. Only a small part of the population has more than an elementary
knowledge of French, the official language.
More than 55% of the population of the C.A.R. lives in rural areas. The chief
agricultural areas are around the Bossangoa and Bambari. Bangui, Berberati,
Bangassou, and Bossangoa are the most densely populated urban centers.
HISTORY
The C.A.R. appears to have been settled from at least the 7th century on by
overlapping empires, including the Kanem-Bornou, Ouaddai, Baguirmi, and Dafour
groups based in Lake Chad and the Upper Nile. Later, various sultanates claimed
present-day C.A.R, using the entire Oubangui region as a slave reservoir, from
which slaves were traded north across the Sahara and to West Africa for export
by European traders. Population migration in the 18th and 19th centuries brought
new migrants into the area, including the Zande, Banda, and Baya-Mandjia.
In 1875 the Egyptian sultan Rabah governed Upper-Oubangui, which included present-day C.A.R. Europeans, primarily the French, German, and Belgians, arrived in the area in 1885. The French consolidated their legal claim to the area through an 1887 convention with Congo Free State, which granted France possession of the right bank of the Oubangui River. Two years later, the French established an outpost at Bangui, and in 1894, Oubangui-Chari became a French territory. However, the French did not consolidate their control over the area until 1903 after having defeated the forces of the Egyptian sultan Rabah and established colonial administration throughout the territory. In 1906, the Oubangui-Chari territory was united with the Chad colony; in 1910, it became one of the four territories of the Federation of French Equatorial Africa (A.E.F.), along with Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), and Gabon. The next 30 years were marked by small-scale revolts against French rule and the development of a plantation-style economy.
In August 1940, the territory responded, with the rest of the A.E.F., to the call from Gen. Charles de Gaulle to fight for Free France. After World War II, the French Constitution of 1946 inaugurated the first of a series of reforms that led eventually to complete independence for all French territories in western and equatorial Africa. In 1946, all A.E.F. inhabitants were granted French citizenship and allowed to establish local assemblies. The assembly in C.A.R. was led by Barthelemy Boganda, a Catholic priest who also was known for his forthright statements in the French Assembly on the need for African emancipation. In 1956 French legislation eliminated certain voting inequalities and provided for the creation of some organs of self-government in each territory. The French constitutional referendum of September 1958 dissolved the A.E.F., and on December 1 of the same year the Assembly declared the birth of the Central African Republic with Boganda as head of government. Boganda ruled until his death in a March 1959 plane crash. His cousin, David Dacko, replaced him, governing the country until 1965 and overseeing the country's declaration of independence on August 13, 1960.
On January 1, 1966, following a swift and almost bloodless coup, Col. Jean-Bedel
Bokassa assumed power as President of the Republic. Bokassa abolished the
constitution of 1959, dissolved the National Assembly, and issued a decree that
placed all legislative and executive powers in the hands of the president. On
December 4, 1976, the republic became a monarchy with the promulgation of the
imperial constitution and the proclamation of the president as Emperor Bokassa
I. His regime was characterized by numerous human rights atrocities.
Following riots in Bangui and the murder of between 50 and 200
schoolchildren, former President Dacko led a successful French-backed coup
against Bokassa on September 20, 1979. Dacko's efforts to promote economic and
political reforms proved ineffectual, and on September 1, 1981, he in turn was
overthrown in a bloodless coup by Gen. Andre Kolingba. For 4 years, Kolingba led
the country as head of the Military Committee for National Recovery (CRMN). In
1985 the CRMN was dissolved, and Kolingba named a new cabinet with increased
civilian participation, signaling the start of a return to civilian rule. The
process of democratization quickened in 1986 with the creation of a new
political party, the Rassemblement Democratique Centrafricain (RDC), and
the drafting of a new constitution that subsequently was ratified in a national
referendum. General Kolingba was sworn in as constitutional President on
November 29, 1986. The constitution established a National Assembly made up of
52 elected deputies, elected in July 1987. Due to mounting political pressure,
in 1991 President Kolingba announced the creation of a national commission to
rewrite the constitution to provide for a multi-party system. Multi-party
presidential elections were conducted in 1992 but were later cancelled due to
serious logistical and other irregularities. Ange Felix Patasse won a
second-round victory in rescheduled elections held in October 1993, and was
re-elected for another 6-year term in September 1999.
Salary arrears, labor unrest, and unequal treatment of military officers from different ethnic groups led to three mutinies against the Patasse government in 1996 and 1997. The French succeeded in quelling the disturbances, and an African peacekeeping force (MISAB) occupied Bangui until 1998 when they were relieved by a UN peacekeeping mission (MINURCA). Economic difficulties caused by the looting and destruction during the 1996 and 1997 mutinies, energy crises, and government mismanagement continued to trouble Patasse's government through 2000. In March 2000 the last of the MINURCA forces departed Bangui. In May 2001 rebel forces within the C.A.R. military, led by former President and Army General Andre Kolingba, attempted a military coup. After several days of heavy fighting, forces loyal to the government, aided by a small number of troops from Libya and the Congolese rebel Movement for the Liberation of the Congo (MLC), were able to put down the coup attempt. In November 2001, there were several days of sporadic gunfire between members of the Presidential Security Unit and soldiers defending sacked Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces Francois Bozize, who fled to Chad. In mid-2002 there were skirmishes on the C.A.R.-Chad border.
In October 2002, former Army Chief of Staff Francois Bozize launched a coup attempt that culminated in the March 15, 2003 overthrow of President Patasse and the takeover of the capital. General Bozize declared himself President, suspended the constitution, and dissolved the National Assembly. Since seizing power, President Francois Bozize has made significant progress in restoring order to Bangui and parts of the country, and professed a desire to promote national reconciliation, strengthen the economy, and improve the human rights situation. A new constitution was passed by referendum in December 2004. In spring 2005, the country held its first elections since the March 2003 coup. The first round of presidential and legislative elections were held in March 2005, and in May, President Bozize defeated former Prime Minister Martin Ziguele in a second-round runoff. On June 13, Bozize named Elie Dote, an agricultural engineer who had worked at the African Development Bank, his new Prime Minister.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The government is a republic comprised of a strong executive branch (president,
vice president, prime minister, and council of ministers), and weak legislative
and judicial branches. Government and opposition party members, as well as civil
society and the military are represented in the three branches, although the
president appoints the vice president, prime minister, members of the cabinet
(Council of Ministers), top military officials, and managers of national
parastatals.
The National Assembly is made up of 109 members elected by popular vote to
serve 5-year terms. Legislative elections were held in 1998; in contested
results, the government’s Movement for the Liberation of the Central African
People (MLPC) won just over 50% control of the legislative body. Legislative
elections were last held in spring 2005.
For administration purposes, the country is divided into 16 prefectures that
are further divided into over 60 subprefectures; the commune of Bangui is
administered separately. The president currently appoints heads of these
administrative units, called "prefets" and "sous-prefets". There are 174
communes, each headed by a mayor and council appointed by the president.
Suffrage is universal over the age of 21.
The judicial sector encompasses the Constitutional Court, Court of Cassation, Court of Appeals, criminal and civil courts, Labor Court, and Juvenile Court, although several of these courts have insufficient resources and trained personnel to operate on a regular basis. The Criminal Court of Bangui sits once or twice a year, usually for 1 or 2 months each session. Judges are appointed by the president; executive influence often impedes transparent handling of judicial affairs. Military courts exist but are currently only used to try military personnel for crimes committed in the course of duty. There are a limited number of formal courts currently functioning outside Bangui; traditional arbitration and negotiation play a major role in administering domestic, property, and probate law.
The Central African Republic has a vibrant civil society, with numerous professional, labor, and local development associations actively carrying out campaigns and gaining greater local and international credibility.
The C.A.R. Government's human rights record remains flawed. There are continued reports of arbitrary detainment, torture and, to a lesser degree, extra judicial killings. Journalists have occasionally been threatened, and prison conditions remain harsh.
Principal Government Officials
President of the Republic, Head of State--Francois Bozize
Prime Minister--Elie Dote
State Minister of Foreign Affairs, Regional Integration and Francophony--Mr.
Jean-Paul NGOUPANDE
Minister of Finance and Budget--Mr. Théodore DABANGA
Ambassador to the United States--Emmanuel Touaboy
Ambassador to the United Nations--Fernand Poukre-Kono
The Central African Republic maintains an embassy in the United States at 1618-22nd Street, NW, Washington, DC (tel: 202-483-7800/01, fax: 202-332-9893).
ECONOMY
The Central African Republic is classified as one of the world's least developed
countries, with a 2002 annual per capita income of $260. Sparsely populated and
landlocked, the nation is overwhelmingly agrarian, with the vast bulk of the
population engaged in subsistence farming and 55% of the country's gross
domestic product (GDP) arising from agriculture. Principal crops include cotton,
food crops (cassava, yams, bananas, maize), coffee, and tobacco. In 2002, timber
accounted for about 30% of export earnings. The country also has rich but
largely unexploited natural resources in the form of diamonds, gold, uranium,
and other minerals. There may be oil deposits along the country's northern
border with Chad. Diamonds are the only of these mineral resources currently
being developed; in 2002, diamond exports made up close to 50% of the C.A.R.'s
export earnings. Industry contributes only about 20% of the country's GDP, with
artesian diamond mining, breweries, and sawmills making up the bulk of the
sector. Services currently account for about 25% of GDP, largely because of the
oversized government bureaucracy and high transportation costs arising from the
country's landlocked position.
Hydroelectric plants based in Boali provide much of the country’s limited electrical supply. Fuel supplies must be barged in via the Ubangui River or trucked overland through Cameroon, resulting in frequent shortages of gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. The C.A.R.'s transportation and communication network is limited. The country has only 650 kilometers of paved road, limited international and no domestic air service (except charters), and does not possess a railroad. Commercial traffic on the Ubangui River is impossible from December to May or June, and conflict in the region has sometimes prevented shipments from moving between Kinshasa and Bangui. The telephone system functions, albeit imperfectly. Four radio stations currently operate in the C.A.R., as well as one television station. Numerous newspapers and pamphlets are published on a regular basis, and at least one company has begun providing Internet service.
In the more than 40 years since independence, the C.A.R. has made slow progress toward economic development. Economic mismanagement, poor infrastructure, a limited tax base, scarce private investment, and adverse external conditions have led to deficits in both its budget and external trade. Its debt burden is considerable, and the country has seen a decline in per capita gross national product (GNP) over the last 30 years. Structural adjustment programs with the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) and interest-free credits to support investments in the agriculture, livestock, and transportation sectors have had limited impact. The World Bank and IMF are now encouraging the government to concentrate exclusively on implementing much-needed economic reforms to jumpstart the economy and defining its fundamental priorities with the aim of alleviating poverty. As a result, many of the state-owned business entities have been privatized and limited efforts have been made to standardize and simplify labor and investment codes and to address problems of corruption. The C.A.R. Government has adopted the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC) Charter of Investment, and is in the process of adopting a new labor code.
DEFENSE
Under military restructuring plans formulated 1999-2000, the civilian Minister
of Defense controlled and directed all armed forces, including the Presidential
Security Unit (UPS), which had previously been seen as a militia supporting the
president. In April 2001, the C.A.R. armed forces numbered about 3,000,
including army, navy, air force, gendarmerie, national police, Presidential
Security Unit, and local police personnel. An estimated 1,200 members of the
army and gendarmerie fled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo following the
failed coup attempt of May 2001.
Following the 2003 coup, Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC-Communauté
Économique et Monétaire de l'Afrique Centrale) and C.A.R. armed forces assumed
responsibility for securing the capital city. CEMAC forces currently total
approximately 400 soldiers, which are supported by an additional 200 French
soldiers. The C.A.R. armed forces number approximately 2,000. Working with the
French, the C.A.R. military is attempting to provide professional training and
decentralize its troops in an effort to combat road bandits, thievery, and
poaching throughout the C.A.R. territory.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The Central African Republic is an active member in several Central African
organizations, including the Economic and Monetary Union (CEMAC), the Economic
Community of Central African States (CEEAC) Central African Peace and Security
Council (COPAX--still under formation), and the Central Bank of Central African
States (BEAC). Standardization of tax, customs, and security arrangements
between the Central African states is a major foreign policy objective of the
C.A.R. Government. The C.A.R. is a participant in the Community of Sahel-Saharan
States (CEN-SAD), and the Organization of African Unity (OAU--now the African
Union). Libya and, to a lesser degree, Sudan have shown increased interest in
cooperation with the C.A.R. over the last year.
Outside of Africa, the C.A.R. maintains fairly close ties to France, albeit considerably reduced from previous years. In the late 1990s, France withdrew forces stationed in the C.A.R.; drops in its external assistance budget have reduced French military and social development aid to the country. Other multilateral organizations--including the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, UN agencies, European Union, and the African Development Bank--and bilateral donors--including Germany, Japan, the European Union, China, and the United States--are significant development partners for the C.A.R.
Seventeen countries have resident diplomatic or consular representatives in Bangui, and the C.A.R. maintains approximately the same number of missions abroad. Since early 1989 the government recognizes both Israel and the Palestinian state. The C.A.R. also maintains diplomatic relations with China. The C.A.R. generally joins other African and developing country states in consensus positions on major policy issues.
U.S.-C.A.R. RELATIONS
The U.S. and C.A.R. enjoy generally good relations, although concerns over the
pace of political and economic liberalization and human rights have affected the
degree of support provided by the U.S. to the country. The U.S. Embassy in
Bangui was briefly closed as a result of the 1996-97 mutinies. It reopened in
1998 with limited staff, but U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
and Peace Corps missions previously operating in Bangui did not return. The
American Embassy in Bangui again temporarily suspended operations on November 2,
2002 in response to security concerns raised by the October 2002 launch of
Francois Bozize’s 2003 military coup.
The Embassy reopened in January 2005; however, there currently is limited U.S. diplomatic/consular representation in the C.A.R. As a result, the ability of the Embassy to provide services to American citizens remains extremely limited. The Department of State approved the lifting of Section 508 aid restrictions triggered by the coup; U.S. assistance to the Central African Republic had been prohibited except in the areas of humanitarian aid and support for democratization.
The U.S. Department of State continues to warn U.S. citizens against travel
to the Central African Republic. Americans in the C.A.R. are urged to exercise
caution and maintain security awareness at all times. U.S. citizens who travel
to or remain in the Central African Republic and need emergency assistance
should contact the U.S. Embassy in Yaounde, Cameroon at telephone (237)
223-4014, (237) 223-0512, fax (237) 223-0753, and 223-0581 (Consular). Americans
may also contact the American Embassy in N'djamena, Chad at telephone (235)
51-70-09, 51-92-33 or 51-90-52 and fax (235) 51-56-54. As noted above, since the
United States has a limited diplomatic presence in the Central African Republic,
the ability to provide services to U.S. citizens in the C.A.R. is extremely
limited.
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