Official Name
Central African Republic
Capital Bangui
Currencies CFA franc
Language(s) French
Population 3.8 million
GNP per head (US$) 280
Area (square miles) 622980
Population per sq. km 6
Population per sq. mile 16


COUNTRY INFORMATION

Introduction

Landlocked at the western end of the Sahel, the Central African Republic (CAR) is a low plateau stretching north from one of Africa's great rivers, the Ubangi, which forms its border with the DRC. Almost all the population lives in the equatorial, rainforested south. "Emperor" Bokassa's eccentric rule from 1965 to 1979 was followed by military dictatorship. Democracy was restored in 1993.



Climate

The south is equatorial, the north has a savanna-type climate, and the far north lies within the Sahel.



People
Languages Sango, Banda, Gbaya, French
URBAN/RURAL POPULATION DIVIDE
Urban 41
% Rural 59
%

Although the Baya and the Banda are the largest ethnic groups, the lingua franca is Sango. This is spoken by the southern riverine minorities, who provided the political leaders from independence until 1993 (Presidents Dacko and Kolingba and "Emperor" Bokassa). President Patasse is from the interior. Resentment against the river peoples occasionally flares up, as happened after the coup attempt in 2001. Women, as in other non-Muslim African countries, have considerable power. Elizabeth Domitien was prime minister from 1975 to 1976 and Ruth Rolland ran for president in 1993.



Economy
GNP (US$) 1031
M GNP World rank 152
 
Inflation -2 % Unemployment 6 %

Strengths

Self-sufficiency in food. Some diversity of export earnings (diamonds, cotton, timber, iron, coffee). Transit zone in central Africa. Trans-African Highway and waterways.

Weaknesses

Landlocked. Poor infrastructure. Not enough trained people to run economy.



Politics
Lower house Last election 1998 Next election 2003
Upper house Last election Not applicable Next election Not applicable

Democratic elections in 1993 ended four years of Gen. Kolingba's single-party rule, bringing in Ange-Félix Patasse as president. Patasse was Bokassa's prime minister during the 1970s, but was jailed for dissent and subsequently went into exile. Army mutinies in 1996 prompted the formation of a government of national unity, but fighting continued, including an incident in Bangui when two French soldiers were killed. A French-led multinational force kept the peace from February 1997. It was replaced by a UN force (UNMICAR) in April 1998. Patasse's party, the MLPC, remained the most important in the new parliament after the 1998 elections but needs the support of opposition parties to maintain a workable coalition. In 2001 the government weathered a coup attempt and a military insurrection, with assistance from Libyan troops.



Resources
Minerals Diamonds, gold, uranium, iron, copper, manganese
Oil reserves (barrels) No data Oil production (barrels/day) Not an oil producer and has no refineries

Cotton and diamonds are the CAR's major exports. Other minerals are potentially important.



Health
Life expectancy 44 Life expect. World rank 180
Population per doctor 20000 Infant mortality (per 1000 births) 96
Expend. % GDP 2 %
Principal causes of death Communicable and parasitic diseases, malnutrition

Colonial neglect and postcolonial maladministration have resulted in a poorly developed health system.



Education
Literacy 47 % Expend. % GNP 2

%

PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION IN FULL TIME EDUCATION
Primary 57 % Secondary 10 % Tertiary 2 %

Schooling, on the French model, is compulsory, but in practice is only received by 68% of 6–14 year olds.



Wealth
Cars 1 per 1,000 population
Telephones 3 per 1,000 population
Televisions 6 per 1,000 population

There is a small political–military elite, which came into being only in postcolonial days. For its members Paris is the chosen destination and style leader.



History

The French established the colony of Ubangi-Chari in 1905 and gave it autonomy as the CAR in 1958.

  • 1960 Independence under David Dacko; one-party state.
  • 1965 Coup by Jean-Bédel Bokassa.
  • 1977 Bokassa crowned "emperor."
  • 1979 French help reinstate Dacko.
  • 1981 Gen. Kolingba ousts Dacko.
  • 1996 Government of national unity formed following army rebellion.
  • 2001 Coup attempt. Army rebellion.