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- Geography
- Senegal: An In Depth Study
-
- Senegal is a republic located in western Africa and has Dakar
- which is its largest city as capital. On the northern border is located
- Mauritania, on the east is Mali and on the Guinea. Senegal is also
- bordered by the Atlantic ocean on the west. Located in the center of the
- country is the small republic of Gambia. The county is pierced by the
- River Gambia. (see figure: 1)
-
- Figure 1
-
-
-
- Senegal primarily is made up of a large plain. The only real
- exceptions to this are in the south east where relatively high elevations
- exist. There are only a few rivers of any reasonable size in Senegal,
- these include; the Saloum, Gambia, Casamance and of course the Senegal
- which runs along the northern border of the country. Like all rivers,
- these recess during dry seasons and surge forth during wet seasons.
- Like most other countries of this region in Africa, Senegal has a
- vast multitude of climatic regions. These range from dry desert to a wet
- tropical zone in the southern portion of the country leaving the dry
- region to the north. There are two distinct seasons; the dry season, and
- the rainy season. The latter lasts from July to October in the north.
- (see figure: 2)
-
- Figure 2
-
- Here, the rainfall averages 350 mm . In the south the season starts a
- month later in June but ends as it does in the north in October. In the
- north the average yearly rainfall averages 1525 mm . In January the
- average temperature is 22 degrees centigrade and in July it averages at
- 28 degrees centigrade. In Senegal the citizens to indeed have to endure
- very diverse climatic conditions.
-
- Figure 3
-
- Figure 4
- As mentioned before the northern portion of the country is dominated by
- very dry desert like conditions while the south is a very wet region. The
- northern portion of the Country is part of the Sahal which is a buffer
- for the wetter southern part of the country against the Sahara which is
- located to the north of the country. In the Sahel the vegetation
- resembles that of the movie The Lion King in that it consists primarily
- of savanna grasses with random outcroppings of small stunted shrubs (see
- Figure: 3). As you move south towards the Gambia trees become more
- common. Further south still, there are actual swamps and dense forests.
- In these forests the typical tropical woods can be found including
- mahogany, palms and bamboo. In the Gambia and the others rivers as well
- crocodiles and hippopotamuses can be found. Other animals such as
- elephants can be found in the eastern portion of the country. SenegalÆs
- infamous varieties of snake include the cobra and the boa constrictor.
-
- Senegal possess many minerals and other natural resources. Among
- these is SenegalÆs principal exploited mineral resource, phosphates.( see
- figure:5) Iron ore is also present I but it has not yet been exploited
- due to a lack of accessibility. In the 1970Æs deposits of both natural
- gas and petroleum were located off the western coast of Senegal.
-
- Figure 5
-
- Senegal's economy is based primarily on agriculture.
- The soul of the agricultural economy is based on peanuts,
- literally. Although this is the case Senegal has a growing
- industrial sector which is the largest in West Africa. Senegal
- receives aid from France and other European countries through
- the World Bank. Senegal is starting to learn to budget, and is
- now only spending $700 million more than the country brings in
- every year.
- About 27% of SenegalÆs land is arable which is very
-
- inproportionate to the 78% of the population which relies on subsistence
- farming. Because of French colonization, Senegal is now the leading
- producer of peanuts in the world. These peanuts are primarily grown in
- the north-west but are also grown in other
- parts of the country. Peanuts and peanut oils constitute a significant
- percent of the yearly export earnings ranging from
- 29% in the 80s to 12% in the early 90s . Most of the land is
-
- Figure 6
- devoted to the production of peanuts and great strides have been
-
-
- made recently to diversify the types of crops grown. (see Figure:6) Among
- the
- crops to be grown are; rice, and tomatoes. This will allow the
- people of Senegal to produce food which could sustain its
- population. The traditional crops of Senegal are; sugarcane, millet and
- sorghum, peanuts, rice, and maize. The livestock
- raised are; cattle, sheep, goats, and poultry. Senegal's
- coast is rich with fish. With the use of a modern fishing fleet
- Senegal harvested over 319 700 tons which represented 23% of
- export earnings in 1990 .
- Mining is not a small business in Senegal, 1990s
- production of phosphates totaled 5.1 million cu m . There is also
- a oil refinery which processes oil for foreign oil as well as
- domestic. Senegal also employs other processing plants such as
- those used for peanuts, flour, chemicals, and tobacco products.
- There are several power plants in Senegal which have the
- capacity of 230 kilowatt and can produce 720 kWh of electricity a year.
- All of the power generated in Senegal is done so thermally.(see figure 7)
-
- Figure 7
-
- The currency in Senegal is the franc, which is broken
- down into 100 centimes. The rate of exchange for the franc is
- 295.2 to 1 U.S. dollar or 50 francs for 1 French franc.
-
- The constitution of 1963, amended 1991, provides for a single-chamber
- legislature, the 120-member national assembly, elected by universal
- suffrage for a five-year term. The president, also elected by universal
- suffrage, serves a seven-year term, renewable only once. The president
- appoints a prime minister to lead a council of ministers. SenegalÆs ten
- regions enjoy a high degree of autonomy, each having its own appointed
- governor and elected assembly and controlling a separate budget.
- history For early history, see Africa. Portuguese explorers arrived in
- the 15th century, and French settlers in the 17th. Senegal had a French
- governor from 1854, became part of French West Africa 1895, and a
- territory 1902.
- Senegal became an independent republic Sept 1960, with LΘopold
- SΘdar Senghor, leader of the Senegalese Progressive Union (UPS), as its
- first president. Senghor was also prime minister 1962-70. The UPS was the
- only legal party from 1966 until in Dec 1976 it was reconstituted as the
- Senegalese Socialist Party (PS) and two opposition parties were legally
- registered. In 1978 Senghor was decisively reelected.
- Senghor retired at the end of 1980 and was succeeded by Abdou Diouf, who
- declared an amnesty for political offenders and permitted more parties to
- register. In the 1983 elections the PS won 111 of the assembly seats and
- the main opposition, the Senegalese Democratic Party (PDS), eight seats.
- Later that year Diouf tightened control of his party and the government,
- abolishing the post of prime minister. This met open, sometimes violent,
- opposition, but he and the PS remained firmly in power.
- In 1980 Senegal sent troops to the Gambia to protect it against a
- suspected Libyan invasion, and it intervened again 1981 to thwart an
- attempted coup. As the two countries came closer together, they agreed on
- an eventual merger, and the confederation of Senegambia came into being
- Feb 1982. Senegal has always maintained close links with France, allowing
- it to retain military bases. In the Feb 1988 elections Diouf was
- reelected president with 73% of the vote, but his ruling party had a
- slightly reduced majority in the national assembly. In April 1989 border
- disputes led to a severance of diplomatic relations with neighboring
- Mauritania, with more than 450 people killed during violent clashes
- between Senegalese and Mauritanians. Over 50,000 people were repaid from
- both countries May 1989. In Aug 1989 formal recognition was given of the
- ending of the unsuccessful federation of Senegambia.
- Constitutional changes were proposed Sept 1991, including the
- reduction of the voting age from 21 to 18 and the limitation of the
- presidential mandate to two terms. Diplomatic relations with Mauritania,
- severed 1989, were restored April 1992. In March 1993 Diouf was reelected
- for a third and (under the revised constitution) final term. In May the
- ruling Senegalese Socialist Party (PS) was the assembly elections and in
- June a new cabinet was formed, with Habib Thiam as prime minister (the
- post having been reinstated 1992).
- The political history of Senegal is not as bloody as many of the
- other countries of Africa so the countyÆs fifth world status can not be
- blamed on this but rather on the French and their despotic rule of the
- country.
- The French persuaded the farmers of Senegal to produce peanuts
- which was a crop of little benefit to the locals, but could fetch a high
- price for the French. Very little of the proceeds were actually given to
- the farmers with the remaining amount staying in France. Now the farmers
- of Senegal are still producing peanuts and receiving very little money
- for them because the price has dropped drastically. The result is that
- the farmers grow peanuts so that they can get money to buy food. There is
- nowhere near enough money to provide for a whole family.
- To drag Senegal out of the fifth world we must first make them
- agriculturally self sufficient so that they are now no longer starving.
- This is possible by teaching them new farming techniques, providing them
- with wells, and providing them with seeds that will grow into a wide
- variety of crops.
-