Back

World Factbook 1988

HathiTrust Text Edition · 1,293,085 bytes

factbook-1988.txt · 51,463 lines
UNIVERSITY  OF 

ILLINOIS  LIBRARY 

AT  URBANA  CHAMPAIGN 

BOOKSTACKS 


Central 

Intelligence 

Agency 


The 

World 

Factbook 

1987 


CP/1S  WF  87-001 


US  Government  officials  should  obtain  copies  of 
The  World  Factbook  directly  from  their  own 
organization  or  through  liaison  channels  from  the 
Central  Intelligence  Agency. 

Requesters  in  the  Department  of  Defense  may 
obtain  copies  from: 

Defense  Intelligence  Agency 

RTS-2C 

Washington,  D.C.  20340-3344 

Tel:  (202)  373-3869  or  Autovon  243-3869 

Requesters  in  the  Department  of  State  may 
obtain  copies  from: 

Department  of  State 
INR/IC/CD 

Room  8646  New  State 
Washington,  D.C.  20520 
Tel:  (202)  647-9673. 

Requesters  outside  the  US  Government  may 
purchase  copies  from: 

Superintendent  of  Documents 
US  Government  Printing  Office 
Washington,  D.C.  20402 
Tel:  (202)  783-3238 

Requesters  outside  the  US  Government  may 
obtain  a  subscription  from: 

National  Technical  Information  Service 
5285  Port  Royal  Road 
Springfield,  VA  22161 
Tel:  (703)  487-4630 

or:        Document  Expediting  (DOCEX)  Project 
Exchange  and  Gift  Division 
Library  of  Congress 
Washington,  D.C.  20540 
Tel:  (202)  287-9527 

Requesters  outside  the  US  Government  may  ....  ' 

purchase  this  publication  in  photocopy  or  micro- 
form from: 

National  Technical  Information  Service 
5285  Port  Royal  Road 
Springfield,  VA  22161 

Tel:  (703)  487-4650 

i 

or:        Photoduplication  Service 
Library  of  Congress 
Washington,  D.C.  20540 
Tel:  (202)  287-5640 


Central 

Intelligence! 

Agency 


toOC. 


The 

World 

Factbook 


1987 


The  person  charging  this  material  is  re- 
sponsible for  its  return  to  the  library  from 
which  it  was  withdrawn  on  or  before  the 
Latest  Date  stamped  below. 


The  World  Factbook  is 

by  the  Directorate  of  II 

Central  Intelligence  Ag 

United  States  Governm'    i  •  11    n  n 

style,  format,  coverage,   ^ 

designed  to  meet  their  < 

requirements. 

Comments  and  queries 

may  be  addressed  to:  ,.    j    £. 

Central  Intelligence  Ag«    M  f* ' 
Attn:  Public  Affairs 
Washington,  D.C.  20505 
(703)351-2053  >^         . 


Theft,    mut.lat.on.    and    underllnln,    of    book,    or.    reo.on, 
for   dl,«ipllnory   action   ond   moy    re.ult   In    dl.ml».ol   fron, 
the  University. 
To  renew  call  Telephone  Center,  333-840O 

UNIVERSITY    OF    ILLINOIS    LIBRARY    AT    URBANA-CHAMPAIGN 


m  02 

m  08 

APR  15 
APR  1  8 


CPAS  WF  87-001 
(Supersedes  CR  WF  86-001) 
June  1987 


Contents 


Page 


Notes,  Definitions,  and  Abbreviations  ix 


Afghanistan 


Albania 


Algeria 


Andorra 


Angola 
Anguilla 


Antigua  and  Barbuda 


Argentina 


Aruba  11 

Australia  12 

Austria  13 


Bahamas,  The                                                   15 

Bahrain  16 

Bangladesh  17 

Barbados  19 

Belgium  20 

Belize  22 

Benin  23 

Bermuda  25 

Bhutan  26 

Bolivia  27 

Botswana  28 

Brazil  30 

British  Indian  Ocean  Territory  31 

British  Virgin  Islands  32 

Brunei  33 

Bulgaria  34 

Burkina                                                            36 

Burma  37 

Burundi  38 


Cambodia  40 

Cameroon  41 

Canada  42 

Cape  Verde  44 

Cayman  Islands  45 

Central  African  Republic  -l(i 

Chad  47 

Chile  49 

China  (Taiwan  entry  on  page  274)  50 

Christmas  Island  52 

Colombia  53 

Comoros  54 


iii 


Page 

(.'nnvjn  55 

Cook  Islands 57 

Costa  Rica  58 

Cuba  59 

Cyprus 61 

Czechoslovakia  62 


D  Denmark  64 


Djibouti 05 

Dominica  66 

Dominican  Republic  67 


Ecuador  69 

Egypt 70 

El  Salvador 72 

Equatorial  Guinea  74 

Ethiopia  75 


Falkland  Islands  (Islas  Malvinas) 76 

Faroe  Islands  77 

Fiji  78 

Finland 79_ 

France  81 

French  Guiana 83 

French  Polynesia  84 


Gabon 85 

Gambia,  The        87 

Gaza  Strip  (see  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry  on  page  276) 

German  Democratic  Republic  (East  Germany) 88 

Germany,  Federal  Republic  of  (West  Germany) 90 

Ghana 91_ 

Gibraltar 93^ 

Greece 9£ 

Greenland 95 

Grenada 96 

Guadeloupe 98 

Guatemala  99 

(iuenisey  101 

Guinea  102 

Guinea-Bissau  103 

Guyana  104 


H  Haiti  105 


Honduras 107 

Hong  Kong  108 

Hungary  110 


iv 


Page 

Iceland  111 

India 112 

Indonesia         114 

Iran  116 

Iraq  117 

Ireland  119 

Israel  (West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry  on  page  276)  120 

Italy  122 

Ivory  Coast  (Cote  d'lvoire)  124 


Jamaica  125 

Japan  126 

Jersey 128 

Jordan  (West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry  on  page  276)  129 


Kenya 130 

Kiribati 132 

Korea,  North 133 

Korea,  South 134 

Kuwait  136 


Laos 137 

Lebanon 138 

Lesotho  140 

Liberia  142 

Libya  143 

Liechtenstein 144 

Luxembourg  146 


M  Macau  147 


Madagascar 148 

Malawi  150 

Malaysia  151 

Maldives  153 

Mali  154 

Malta  155 

Man.  Isle  of  157 

Martinique 158 

Mauritania 159 

Mauritius 160 

Mayotte  162 

Mexico 163 

Monaco  164 

Mongolia 165 

Montserrat 167 

Morocco  168 

Mozambique  169 


Page 

N  Namibia  1 7 1 


Nauru                       172 

Nepal  17:5 

Netherlands  1 71 

Netherlands  Antilles  176 

New  Caledonia  177 

New  Zealand 178 

Nicaragua  180 

Niger  182 

Nigeria 183 

Niue         IS  I 

Norfolk  Island  1 S5 

Norway  186 


jO Oman 188 

P  Pakistan  189 


Panama  191 

Papua  New  Guinea  1 93 

Paraguay 194 

Peru  195 

Philippines  197 

Pitcairn  Islands  198 

Poland  199 

Portugal  200 


Qatar  202 


Reunion  203 

Romania 205 

Rwanda  206 


S                                         St.  Christopher  and  Nevis  207 

St.  Helena  20S 

St.  Lucia  209 

St.  Vincent  and  the  Grenadines                  210 

San  Marino 211 

Sao  Tome  and  Principe  213 

Saudi  Arabia 214 

Senegal 215 

Seychelles  216 

Sierra  Leone  218 

Singapore  219 

Solomon  Islands  220 

Somalia  221 

South  Africa  223 

Soviet  Union  224 

Spain  226 


Page 

Sri  Lanka  228 

Sudan  230 

Suriname  231 

Swaziland  232 

Sweden  234 

Switzerland  235 

Syria  237 


Taiwan  (see  Taiwan  entry  on  page  274) 


Tanzania  238 

Thailand  240 

Togo  241 

Tokelau  242 

Toiwa  243 

Trinidad  and  Tobago  244 

Tunisia  246 

Turkey  247 

Turks  and  Caicos  Islands  249 

Tuvalu  250 


U  Uganda  251 


United  Arab  Emirates  252 

United  Kingdom  253 

United  States  255 

Uruguay  257 


Vanuatu  259 

Vatican  City  260 

Venezuela  261 

Vietnam  262 


W  Wallis  and  Futuna  263 


West  Bank  (see  West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry  on  page  276) 

Western  Sahara  264 

Western  Samoa  265 


Yemen  Arab  Republic  (North  Yemen)  266 

Yemen,  People's  Democratic  Republic  of  (South  Yemen)  267 

Yugoslavia  269 


Zaire 270 

Zambia  272 

Zimbabwe  273 


Taiwan  274 


West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  276 


vii 


Page 

Appendixes 


A.  The  United  Nations  System       278 

B.  International  Organizations  279 

C.  Country  Membership  in  International  Organizations  282 

D.  Mathematical  Conversions  290 

Maps  


I.  The  World  (Guide  to  Regional  Maps) 


II.  North  America 


III.  Central  America  and  the  Caribbean 


IV.  South  America 


V.  Europe 


VI.  Middle  East 


VII.  Africa 


VIII.  Soviet  Union,  East  and  South  Asia 


IX.  Southeast  Asia 


X.  Oceania 


XI.  Arctic  Region 


XII.  Antarctic  Region 


XIII.  Standard  Time  Zones  of  the  World 


Notes,  Definitions, 
and  Abbreviations 


There  have  been  some  significant  changes  in  this  edition.  A  new 
Geography  section  has  replaced  the  former  Land  and  Water  sections. 
Entries  in  the  new  section  include  area  (total  and  land),  comparative 
area,  land  boundaries,  coastline,  maritime  claims,  boundary  disputes, 
climate,  terrain,  land  use,  environment,  and  special  notes.  In  the 
Government  section,  a  new  entry  on  dependent  areas  has  also  been 
added. 

Area:  Total  area  is  the  sum  of  all  land  and  water  areas  delimited  by 
international  boundaries  and/or  coastlines.  Land  area  is  the  aggregate 
of  all  surfaces  delimited  by  international  boundaries  and/or  coastlines, 
excluding  inland  water  bodies  (lakes,  reservoirs,  rivers).  Comparative 
areas  are  based  on  total  area  equivalents. 

Boundary  disputes:  Every  international  land  boundary  in  dispute 
from  the  "Guide  to  International  Boundaries"  published  by  the 
Department  of  State  is  included;  the  absence  of  this  entry  or 
"none"indicates  no  boundaries  are  in  dispute.  Additional  information 
may  follow  that  is  border-  or  frontier-relevant,  such  as  maritime 
disputes,  geopolitical  questions,  or  irredentist  issues.  However,  inclu- 
sion does  not  necessarily  constitute  official  acceptance  or  recognition 
by  the  US  Government. 

Contributors:  The  data  are  provided  by  the  Central  Intelligence 
Agency,  the  Defense  Intelligence  Agency,  the  Bureau  of  the  Census, 
and  the  Department  of  State. 

Country  abbreviations: 

CAR  Central  African  Republic 

FRG  Federal  Republic  of  Germany  (West  Germany) 

GDR  German  Democratic  Republic  (East  Germany) 

PDRY  People's  Democratic  Republic  of  Yemen  (South 

Yemen) 

UAE  United  Arab  Emirates 

UK  United  Kingdom 

US  United  States 

USSR  Union  of  Soviet  Socialist  Republics  (Soviet  Union) 

YAR  Yemen  Arab  Republic  (North  Yemen) 

Dates  of  information:  In  general,  information  available  as  of  1 
January  1987  was  used  in  the  preparation  of  this  edition,  with  the 
following  exceptions:  population  figures  are  projected  for  1  July  1987, 
with  the  average  annual  population  growth  rates  estimated  for  mid- 
1986  through  mid-1987;  major  political  events  have  been  updated 
through  26  March  1987;  military  age  figures  are  projected  for 
1987-91. 


Notes,  Definitions, 

and  Abbreviations  (continued) 


Economic  abbreviations: 

ave.  average 

bbl  barrel  (159  liters,  42  gallons) 

b/d  barrel(s)  per  day 

c.i.f  cost,  insurance,  and  freight 

est.  estimate 

Ex-Im  Export-Import  Bank  of  the  United  States 

f.o.b.  free  on  board 

GDP  gross  domestic  product 

GNP  gross  national  product 

kW  kilowatt 

kWh  kilowatt-hour 

ODA  official  development  assistance 

OOF  other  official  flows 

proj.  projected 

International  organization  abbreviations:  see  Appendix  B 

Land  use  abbreviations: 

NA%          data  not  available 

NEGL%    negligible  (magnitude  of  data  is  less  than  0.5%) 

0%  none  (a  determined  value,  not  the  absence  of  data) 

Maritime  claims:  Inclusion  of  a  claim  does  not  necessarily  constitute 
official  acceptance  or  recognition  by  the  US  Government.  Also,  the 
proximity  of  neighboring  states  may  prevent  some  national  claims 
from  being  fully  extended. 

Money:  All  money  figures  are  in  US  dollars  unless  otherwise 
indicated. 

Political  entities:  Some  of  the  countries,  entities,  dependencies,  areas 
of  special  sovereignty,  and  governments  included  in  this  publication 
are  not  independent,  and  others  are  not  officially  recognized  by  the 
US  Government. 

Years:  All  year  references  are  for  the  calendar  year  (CY)  unless 
indicated  as  fiscal  year  (FY)  or  otherwise. 


Afghanistan 


300km 


Set  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  647,500  km2;  land  area: 
647,500  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Texas 
Land  boundaries:  5,510  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Pushtunistan 
and  Baluchistan  questions  with  Pakistan; 
periodic  disputes  with  Iran  over  Helmand 
water  rights 

Climate:  arid  to  semiarid;  cold  winters 
and  hot  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  mountains;  plains 
in  north  and  southwest 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  46%  meadows  and 
pastures;  3%  forest  and  woodland;  39% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  damaging  earthquakes 
occur  in  Hindu  Kush  mountains;  soil 
degradation,  desertification,  overgrazing, 
deforestation,  pollution 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  narrow  and 
strategic  Vakhan  (Wakhan  Corridor)  pro- 
vides direct  access  to  China  and  separates 
Pakistan  from  USSR 


Population:  14,183,671  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.44%;  these  esti- 
mates include  an  adjustment  for  emigra- 
tion to  Pakistan  and  Iran  during  recent 
years,  but  do  not  take  into  account  other 
demographic  consequences  of  the  Soviet 
intervention  in  Afghanistan 


Nationality:  noun — Afghan(s);  adjective — 
Afghan 

Ethnic  divisions:  50%  Pushtun,  25%  Tajik, 
9%  Uzbek,  9%  Hazara;  minor  ethnic 
groups  include  Chahar  Aimaks,  Turkmen, 
Baluch,  and  others 

Religion:  74%  Sunni  Muslim,  25%  Shi'a 
Muslim,  1%  other 

Language:  50%  Pashtu,  35%  Afghan 
Persian  (Dari),  11%  Turkic  languages 
(primarily  Uzbek  and  Turkmen),  4%  thirty 
minor  languages  (primarily  Baluchi  and 
Pashai);  much  bilingualism 

Life  expectancy:  men  42.53,  women  40.87 
(1986) 

Literacy:  12% 

Labor  force:  4.98  million  (1980  est); 
67.8%  agriculture  and  animal  husbandry, 
10.2%  industry,  6.3%  construction,  5.0% 
commerce,  7.7%  services  and  other;  cur- 
rent figures  unavailable  because  of  fighting 
(1986) 

Organized  labor:  government-controlled 
unions  are  being  established 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  Republic  of 
Afghanistan 

Type:  Communist  regime  backed  by 
multidivisional  Soviet  force 

Capital:  Kabul 

Administrative  divisions:  29  provinces 

with  centrally  appointed  governors 

Legal  system:  not  established;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 
Branches:  Revolutionary  Council  acts  as 
legislature  and  final  court  of  appeal; 
Chairman  of  Council  acts  as  chief  of  state; 
Cabinet  and  judiciary  responsible  to  Coun- 
cil; Presidium  chosen  by  Council  has  full 
authority  when  Council  not  in  session; 
Loya  Jirga  (Grand  National  Assembly) 
supposed  to  convene  eventually  and  ap- 
prove permanent  constitution 

Government  leaders:  NAJIB,  General 
Secretary,  People's  Democratic  Party  of 
Afghanistan  (since  May  1986);  Haji 
Mohammad  CHAMKANI,  Acting  Chair- 
man of  the  Revolutionary  Council  (since 
November  1986);  Soltan  Ali 


KESHTMAND,  Prime  Minister  (since  June 
1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  from  age  18 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  the  ruling 
People's  Democratic  Party  of  Afghanistan 
(PDPA)  has  two  factions — the  Parchami 
faction  has  been  in  power  since  December 
1979;  members  of  the  deposed  Khalqi 
faction  continue  to  hold  some  important 
posts 

Communists:  the  PDPA  claims  160,000 
members  (1986) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  the 
military  and  other  branches  of  internal 
security  are  being  rebuilt  by  the  Soviets; 
insurgency  continues  throughout  the  coun- 
try; widespread  opposition  on  religious 
grounds;  widespread  anti-Soviet  sentiment 
Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  ITU,  NAM, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO,  WSG;  suspended  from  QIC 
in  January  1980 

Economy 

GNP:  $3.52  billion,  $250  per  capita  (1985); 
real  growth  rate  2.5%  (1975-79);  current 
growth  rate  figures  not  available  (1986) 
Natural  resources:  natural  gas,  oil,  coal, 
copper,  talc,  barites,  sulphur,  lead,  zinc, 
iron,  salt,  precious  and  semiprecious  stones 
Agriculture:  subsistence  farming  and 
animal  husbandry;  main  crops — wheat, 
fruits,  nuts,  karakul  pelts,  wool,  mutton;  an 
illegal  producer  of  opium  poppy  and 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 
Major  industries:  small-scale  production 
of  textiles,  soap,  furniture,  shoes,  fertilizer, 
and  cement  for  domestic  use;  handwoven 
carpets  for  export 

Electric  power:  476,000  kW  capacity; 
1,390  million  kWh  produced,  90  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $778  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  mostly 
fruits  and  nuts,  natural  gas,  and  carpets 
Imports:  $902  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  mostly 
food  supplies  and  petroleum  products 
Major  trade  partners:  exports — mostly 
USSR  and  other  Eastern  bloc  countries; 
imports— mostly  USSR  and  other  Eastern 
bloc  countries 


Afghanistan  (continued) 


Albania 


Budget:  current  expenditure  Af42.6  bil- 
lion, capital  expenditure  AflG.O  billion 
(FY86  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  50.6 
afghanis=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  21  March-20  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  9.6  km  (single  track)  1.524- 
meter  gauge,  spur  of  Soviet  line  from 
Kushka  (USSR)  to  Towraghondl  and  from 
Termez  (USSR)  to  Kheyrabad  tranship- 
ment point  (15  km)  on  south  bank  of  Amu 
Darya;  government  owned 

Highways:  21,000  km  total  (1984);  2,800 
km  hard  surface,  1,650  km  bituminous 
treated  gravel  and  improved  earth,  16,550 
unimproved  earth  and  tracks 

Inland  waterways:  total  navigability  1,200 
km;  chiefly  Amu  Darya,  which  handles 
steamers  up  to  about  500  metric  tons 

Pipelines:  natural  gas,  180  km 

Ports:  3  minor  river  ports  (Shir  Khan  is 
largest) 

Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  42  total,  34  usable;  12  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  9  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  15  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  limited  telephone, 
telegraph,  and  radiobroadcast  services; 
television  introduced  in  1980;  31,200 
telephones  (0.2  per  100  popl.);  5  AM  and 
no  FM  stations,  1  TV  station,  1  earth 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces,  Air  and  Defense 
Forces,  border  guard  forces,  Defense  of 
the  Revolution  Force,  National  Police 
Force — operational  battalions,  Ministry  for 
State  Security  (WAD),  People's  Militia 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  about 
3,483,000;  1,868,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; about  144,000  reach  military  age  (22) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  20 
March  1984,  $210  million,  about  63%  of 
central  government  budget 


Ionian  Sea 
Sec  rtf  ionil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  28,750  km2;  land  area:  27,400 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Maryland 

Land  boundaries:  716  km  total 
Coastline:  362  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  15  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Kosovo  question 
with  Yugoslavia;  Northern  Epirus  question 
with  Greece 

Climate:  mild  temperate;  cool,  cloudy, 
wet  winters  ;  hot,  clear,  dry  summers; 
interior  is  cooler  and  wetter 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  and  hills;  small 
plains  along  coast 

Land  use:  21%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  15%  meadows  and  pastures;  38% 
forest  and  woodland;  22%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  destructive  earth- 
quakes; tsunami  occur  along  southwestern 
coast;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  Strait 
of  Otranto  linking  Adriatic  Sea  to  Mediter- 
ranean Sea 


Population:  3,085,985  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.03% 

Nationality:  noun— Albanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Albanian 


Ethnic  divisions:  96%  Albanian;  remain- 
ing 4%  are  Greeks,  Vlachs,  Gypsies,  Serbs, 
and  Bulgarians 

Religion:  Albania  claims  to  be  the  world's 
first  atheist  state;  all  churches  and  mosques 
were  closed  in  1967  and  religious  obser- 
vances prohibited;  pre-1967  estimates  of 
religious  affiliation— 70%  Muslim,  20% 
Albanian  Orthodox,  10%  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Albanian  (Tosk  is  official  dia- 
lect), Greek 

Infant  mortality  rate:  86.8/1,000  (1971) 
Life  expectancy:  69 
Literacy:  75% 

Labor  force:  584,000  (1978);  about  22% 
agriculture,  40%  industry  and  commerce, 
38%  other  (1978) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Socialist  Republic 
of  Albania 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Tirane 

Administrative  divisions:  26  rrethet 
(districts) 

Legal  system:  based  on  constitution 
adopted  in  1976;  judicial  review  of  legisla- 
tive acts  only  in  the  Presidium  of  the 
People's  Assembly,  which  is  not  a  true 
court;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Liberation  Day,  29 
November 

Branches:  legislature  (People's  Assembly), 
Council  of  Ministers,  judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Ramiz  ALIA,  Chair- 
man, Presidium  of  the  People's  Assembly 
(chief  of  state,  since  November  1982);  Adil 
CARCANI,  Chairman,  Council  of  Minis- 
ters (premier,  since  November  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  national  elections  held  every 
four  years;  last  elections  1  February  1987 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Albanian 
Workers  Party  only;  First  Secretary, 
Ramiz  Alia  (since  April  1985) 

Communists:  147,000  party  members 
(November  1986);  4.9%  of  population 


Algeria 


Member  of:  CEMA,  FAO,  IAEA,  IPU, 
ITU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO;  has  not  participated  in  CEMA 
since  rift  with  USSR  in  1961;  officially 
withdrew  from  Warsaw  Pact  13  Septem- 
ber 1968 

Economy 

GNP:  $2.7-2.9  billion  (1986);  about  $930 
per  capita  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  gas,  coal,  chro- 
mium 

Agriculture:  corn,  wheat,  potatoes,  to- 
bacco, sugar  beets,  cotton 

Major  industries:  agricultural  products 
and  processing,  textiles  and  clothing, 
lumber,  and  extractive  industries  (chrome 
and  oil) 

Shortages:  spare  parts,  machinery  and 
equipment,  some  food  products  and  con- 
sumer goods 

Electric  power:  1,840,000  kW  capacity; 
4,900  million  kWh  produced,  1,610  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $345  million  (1985  est);  asphalt, 
bitumen,  petroleum  products,  metals  and 
metallic  ores,  electricity,  oil,  vegetables, 
fruits,  and  tobacco 

Imports:  $335  million  (1985  est.);  machin- 
ery, machine  tools,  iron  and  steel  products, 
textiles,  chemicals,  Pharmaceuticals 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Yugosla- 
via, Czechoslovakia,  Romania,  Italy,  Po- 
land, France;  imports — Yugoslavia,  Czech- 
oslovakia, FRG,  Romania,  Poland,  Italy, 
Greece,  France 

Budget:  revenues  $2.24  billion,  expendi- 
tures $2.23  billion;  state  investment  $1.1 
billion  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  4.14 
leks=US$l  (1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  437  km— 425  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge,  single  track,  government 
owned;  12  km  narrow  gauge,  single  track 
(1986);  line  connecting  Titograd  (Yugosla- 
via) and  Shkoder  (Albania)  completed 
August  1986 


Highways:  4,989  km  total;  1,287  km 
paved,  1,609  km  crushed  stone  and/or 
gravel,  2,093  km  improved  or  unimproved 
earth  (1975) 

Inland  waterways:  43  km  plus  Albanian 
sections  of  Lake  Scutari,  Lake  Ohrid,  and 
Lake  Prespa  (1979) 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  117  km;  refined 
products,  65  km;  natural  gas,  64  km 

Freight  carried:  total  freight— 85.75 
million  metric  tons;  1.946  billion  metric 
tons/km;  highways  1.298  billion  metric 
tons/km;  railways  618.8  million  metric 
tons/km;  internal  waterways  29.2  million 
metric  tons/km  (1983) 
Ports:  1  major  (Durre's),  3  minor 
Civil  air:  none 

Airfields:  10  total;  6  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  14  AM,  4  FM,  9  TV 
stations;  50,000  TV  sets;  210,000  receiver 
sets 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Albanian  People's  Army,  Fron- 
tier Troops,  Interior  Troops,  Albanian 
Coastal  Defense  Command,  Air  and  Air 
Defense  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  830,000; 
687,000  fit  for  military  service;  34,000 
reach  military  age  (19)  annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  1  billion  leks; 
10.6%  of  total  budget 


Mediterranean  Sea 


Set  rt|ioiul  mip  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,381,740  km2;  land  area: 

2,381,740  km2 

Comparative  area:  more  than  three  times 

the  size  of  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  6,260  km  total 

Coastline:  998  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  arid  to  semiarid;  mild,  wet 
winters  with  hot,  dry  summers  along  coast; 
drier  with  cold  winters  and  hot  summers 
on  high  plateau;  sirocco  is  a  hot, 
dust/sand-laden  wind  especially  common 
in  summer 

Terrain:  mostly  high  plateau  and  desert; 
some  mountains;  narrow,  discontinuous 
coastal  plain 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  13%  meadows  and  pastures; 
2%  forest  and  woodland;  82%  other;  in- 
cludes NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  mountainous  areas  subject 
to  severe  earthquakes;  desertification 

Special  notes:  second  largest  country  in 
Africa  (after  Sudan) 


Population:  23,460,614  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.10% 
Nationality:  noun — Algerian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Algerian 


Algeria  (continued) 


Ethnic  divisions:  99%  Arab-Berber,  less 
than  1%  European 

Religion:  99%  Sunni  Muslim  (state  reli- 
gion); 1%  Christian  and  Jewish 
Language:  Arabic  (official),  French,  Berber 
dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  106/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  60 
Literacy:  52% 

Labor  force:  3.7  million  (1984);  40% 
industry  and  commerce,  30%  agriculture, 
17%  government,  10%  services;  at  least 
11%  of  urban  labor  unemployed 
Organized  labor:  16-19%  of  labor  force 
claimed;  General  Union  of  Algerian  Work- 
ers (UGTA)  is  the  only  labor  organization 
and  is  subordinate  to  the  National  Libera- 
tion Front 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  and  Popular 
Republic  of  Algeria 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Algiers 

Administrative  divisions:  31  wilayas 
(departments  or  provinces);  160  dairat 
(administrative  districts);  691  communes 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  and  Is- 
lamic law,  with  socialist  principles;  new 
constitution  adopted  by  referendum  No- 
vember 1976;  judicial  review  of  legislative 
acts  in  ad  hoc  Constitutional  Council 
composed  of  various  public  officials,  in- 
cluding several  Supreme  Court  justices; 
Supreme  Court  divided  into  four  cham- 
bers; has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Anniversary  of  the 
Revolution,  1  November 

Branches:  executive;  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (National  People's  Assembly);  judi- 
ciary 

Government  leaders:  Col.  Chadli 
BENDJEDID,  President  (since  February 
1979);  Abdelhamid  BRAHIMI,  Prime 
Minister  (since  January  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 

Elections:  presidential,  12  January  1984; 
departmental  assemblies,  2  June  1974; 
local  assemblies,  30  March  1975;  legisla- 
tive, 5  March  1982 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Liberation  Front  (FLN),  Secretary  General 
Chadli  Bendjedid 

Communists:  400  (est);  Communist  Party 
illegal  (banned  1962) 

Member  of:  AfDB,  AIOEC,  Arab  League, 
ASSIMER,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto), 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  INTERPOL,  IOOC, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAPEC,  OAU,  QIC,  OPEC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $57  billion  (1985  est.),  $2,420  per 
capita;  inflation  rate  about  15%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  crude  oil,  natural  gas, 
iron  ore,  phosphates,  uranium,  lead,  zinc, 
mercury 

Agriculture:  wheat,  barley,  oats,  grapes, 
olives,  citrus,  fruits,  dates,  vegetables; 
sheep,  cattle 

Major  industries:  petroleum,  light  indus- 
tries, natural  gas,  mining,  petrochemical, 
electrical,  automotive  plants  (under  con- 
struction), and  food  processing 

Crude  steel:  842,000  metric  tons  produced 

(1982) 

Electric  power:  3,148,000  kW  capacity; 
12,410  million  kWh  produced,  540  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $7.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  petro- 
leum and  gas  account  for  98.0%  of  exports; 
US  39.0%,  France  23.0%  (1984) 

Imports:  $6.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  major 
items — capital  goods  35.0%,  semifinished 
goods  25.0%,  foodstuffs  18.0%;  France 
25.7%,  US  6.0% 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  FRG,  France, 
Italy,  Belgium,  Netherlands,  Canada 

Budget:  $20  billion  revenue,  $20  billion 
expenditure  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  4.81  Algerian 
dinars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 

Railroads:  4,146  km  total;  2,632  km  stan- 
dard gauge  (1.435  m),  1,258  km  1.055- 
meter  gauge,  256  km  1. 000-meter  gauge; 
300  km  electrified;  345  km  double  track 

Highways:  80,000  km  total;  60,000  km 
concrete  or  bituminous,  20,000  km  gravel, 
crushed  stone,  unimproved  earth 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  6,612  km;  refined 
products,  298  km;  natural  gas,  2,948  km 

Ports:  6  major,  6  secondary,  1 1  minor 
Civil  air:  40  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  154  total,  146  usable;  55  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  28  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m;  74  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  17  AM,  0  FM,  and 
1  TV  stations;  1,445,000  TV  sets;  3,500,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces,  Army,  Navy, 
Air  Force,  National  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,257,000;  3,249,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 269,000  reach  military  age  (19) 
annually 


Andorra 


Secretion*!  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  450  km2;  land  area:  450  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  two  and  one- 
half  times  the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Land  boundaries:  105  km  total 

Climate:  temperate;  snowy,  cold  winters 
with  cool,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  rugged  mountains  dissected  by 
narrow  valleys 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  56%  meadows  and  pastures;  22% 
forest  and  woodland;  20%  other 

Environment:  deforestation,  overgrazing 
Special  notes:  landlocked 

People 

Population:  47,973  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.19% 

Nationality:  noun — Andorran(s);  adjec- 
tive— Andorran 

Ethnic  divisions:  Catalan  stock;  61% 
Spanish,  30%  Andorran,  6%  French,  3% 
other 

Religion:  virtually  all  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Catalan  (official);  many  also 
speak  some  French  and  Castilian 

Literacy:  100% 

Labor  force:  largely  shepherds  and  farm- 
ers 

Government 

Official  name:  Principality  of  Andorra 


Type:  unique  co-principality  under  formal 
sovereignty  of  President  of  France  and 
Spanish  Bishop  of  Seo  de  Urgel,  who  are 
represented  locally  by  officials  called 
verguers 

Capital:  Andorra  la  Vella 
Administrative  divisions:  7  districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  and  Span- 
ish civil  codes;  Plan  of  Reform  adopted 
1866  serves  as  constitution;  no  judicial 
review  of  legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

Branches:  legislative  (General  Council  of 
the  Valleys)  consisting  of  28  members; 
executive — syndic  (manager)  and  a  deputy 
subsyndic  chosen  by  General  Council; 
judiciary  chosen  by  Co-Princes  who  ap- 
point two  civil  judges,  a  judge  of  appeals, 
and  two  battles  (court  prosecutors);  final 
appeal  to  the  Supreme  Court  of  Andorra 
at  Perpignan,  France,  or  to  the  Ecclesiasti- 
cal Court  of  the  Bishop  of  Seo  de  Urgel, 
Spain 

Government  leaders:  head  of  state — 
French  Co-Prince  Francois  MITTER- 
RAND (President  of  France  since  1981) 
and  Spanish  Episcopal  Co-Prince  Mgr. 
Juan  MARTI  y  Alanis  (Bishop  of  Seo  de 
Urgel,  Spain,  since  1971);  Syndic— Fran- 
cesc  CERQUEDA  Pasquet  (since  1982); 
Subsyndic — Antoni  GARRALLA  Rossell 
(since  1986);  head  of  government — Josep 
PINTAT  Solans  (Chief  Executive  since 
1984;  re-elected  1986) 

Suffrage:  those  of  21  or  over  who  are 
third-generation  Andorrans  can  vote  for 
General  Council  members 
Elections:  28-member  General  Council 
chosen  every  four  years;  last  election 
December  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  not  yet  legally  recognized;  tradi- 
tionally no  political  parties  but  partisans 
for  particular  independent  candidates  for 
the  General  Council  on  the  basis  of  com- 
petence, personality,  and  orientation 
toward  Spain  or  France;  various  small 
pressure  groups  developed  in  1972;  first 
formal  political  party,  Andorran  Demo- 
cratic Association,  was  formed  in  1976  and 
reorganized  in  1979  as  Andorran  Demo- 
cratic Party 


Communists:  negligible 
Member  of:  UNESCO 

Economy 

Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  power, 
mineral  water 

Agriculture:  sheep  raising;  small  quantities 
of  tobacco,  rye,  wheat,  barley,  oats,  and 
some  vegetables 

Major  industries:  tourism  (particularly 
skiing),  sheep,  timber,  tobacco,  and  smug- 
gling 

Electric  power:  35,000  kW  capacity;  140 
million  kWh  produced,  2,860  kWh  per 
capita  (1986);  power  is  mainly  exported  to 
Spain  and  France 

Major  trade  partners:  Spain,  France 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l,  136.13  Spanish 
pesetas=US$l  (November  1986) 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 
Highways:  about  96  km 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  none 

Telecommunications:  international  land- 
line  circuits  to  Spain  and  France;  1  AM 
station;  about  12,800  telephones  (43.5  per 
100  popl.)  (1982) 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  Spain  and 
France 


Angola 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,246,700  km2;  land  area: 
1,246,700  km2 

Comparative  area:  almost  twice  the  size 
of  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  5,070  km  total 
Coastline:  1,600  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  20  nm 

Climate:  semiarid  in  south  and  along  coast 
to  Luanda;  north  has  cool,  dry  season  (May 
to  October)  and  hot,  rainy  season  (Novem- 
ber to  April) 

Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain  rises 
abruptly  to  vast  interior  plateau 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  23%  meadows  and  pastures; 
43%  forest  and  woodland;  31%  other 

Environment:  locally  heavy  rainfall  causes 
periodic  flooding  on  plateau;  desertification 

Special  notes:  Cabinda  is  separated  from 
rest  of  country  by  Zaire 


Population:  7,950,244  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.86%;  includes  Cabi- 
nda 109,802,  average  annual  growth  rate 
6.64% 

Nationality:  noun — Angolan(s);  adjective — 
Angolan 


Ethnic  divisions:  37%  Ovimbundu,  25% 
Kimbundu,  13%  Bakongo,  2%  Mestico,  1% 
European 

Religion:  68%  Roman  Catholic,  20% 
Protestant,  about  12%  indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  Portuguese  (official);  various 
Bantu  dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  148/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  40.6,  women  42.9 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  2,783,000  economically 
active  (mid-1985  est);  85%  agriculture, 
15%  industry 

Organized  labor:  about  450,695  (1980) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  An- 
gola 

Type:  Marxist  people's  republic 

Capital:  Luanda 

Administrative  divisions:  18  provinces 

Legal  system:  formerly  based  on  Portu- 
guese civil  law  system  and  customary  law; 
being  modified  along  socialist  model 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  11 
November 

Branches:  the  official  party  is  the  supreme 
political  institution;  legislative — National 
People's  Assembly 

Government  leader:  Jose  Eduardo  dos 
SANTOS,  President  (since  September  1979) 

Suffrage:  to  be  determined 
Elections:  none  held  to  date 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Popular 
Movement  for  the  Liberation  of  Angola  - 
Labor  Party  (MPLA  -  Labor  Party),  led  by 
dos  Santos,  is  the  only  legal  party;  National 
Union  for  the  Total  Independence  of 
Angola  (UNITA),  lost  to  the  MPLA  in 
immediate  postindependence  struggle,  now 
carrying  out  insurgency 

Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de 
facto),  ICAO,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  SADCC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UNICEF,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO 


Economy 

GDP:  $3.0  billion,  $390  per  capita,  0% 
real  growth  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  diamonds, 
iron,  phosphates,  copper,  feldspar,  gold, 
bauxite,  uranium 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — coffee,  sisal,  corn 
cotton,  sugar,  manioc,  and  tobacco;  food 
crops — cassava,  corn,  vegetables,  plantains, 
bananas,  and  other  local  foodstuffs;  disrup- 
tions caused  by  civil  war  require  food 
imports 

Fishing:  catch  112,000  metric  tons  (1982) 

Major  industries:  mining  (oil,  diamonds), 
fish  processing,  brewing,  tobacco,  sugar 
processing,  textiles,  cement,  food  process- 
ing plants,  building  construction 

Electric  power:  540,000  kW  capacity;  851 
million  kWh  produced,  100  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.)  oil, 
coffee,  diamonds,  sisal,  fish  and  fish  prod- 
ucts, timber,  and  cotton 

Imports:  $1.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
capital  equipment  (machinery  and  electri- 
cal equipment),  food,  vehicles  and  spare 
parts,  textiles  and  clothing,  medicines; 
substantial  military  deliveries 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  USSR,  Cuba, 
Portugal,  and  Brazil 

Budget:  total  expenditures  $2.7  billion 
(1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  official  rate 
30.214  kwanza=US$l;  black  market  rate 
reportedly  1,200-1,500  kwanza=US$l 
(December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,189  km  total;  2,879  km  1.067 
meter  gauge,  310  km  0.600-meter  gauge 

Highways:  73,828  km  total;  8,577  km 
bituminous-surface  treatment,  29,350  km 
crushed  stone,  gravel,  or  improved  earth, 
remainder  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,295  km  navigable 

Ports:  3  major  (Luanda,  Lobito,  Namibe), 
5  minor 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  179  km 


6 


Anguilla 


Civil  air:  30  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  349  total,  252  usable;  25  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  12  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  71  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of  wire, 
radio-relay,  and  troposcatter  routes;  high 
frequency  used  extensively  for  military/ 
Cuban  links;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite 
stations;  40,300  telephones  (0.5  per  100 
popl.);  16  AM,  13  FM,  2  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force/ Air 
Defense;  paramilitary  forces — People's 
Defense  Organization  and  Territorial 
Troops,  Frontier  Guard,  Popular  Vigilance 
Brigades 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,933,000;  972,000  fit  for  military  service; 
85,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1983,  $587  million;  25%  of 
central  government  budget 


Sombrero 


Caribbean 
Sea 


Prickly  Pear  Cays 


Scrub  Island 
£> 


VALLEY^         J 


THE  VALLEY/ 


Anguilla 


Blowing  Point 


See  regional  mip  HI 


Geography 

Total  area:  91  km2;  land  area:  91  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-half  the  size 
of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  about  61  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  northeast 
trade  winds 

Terrain:  flat  and  low-lying  island  of  coral 
and  limestone 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other; 
mostly  rock  with  sparse  scrub  oak,  few 
trees,  some  commercial  salt  ponds 

Environment:  frequent  hurricanes,  other 
tropical  storms  (July  to  October) 

Special  notes:  northernmost  of  Leeward 
Islands 


Population:  6,828  (1987),  average  annual 
growth  rate  0.69% 

Nationality:  noun — Anguillan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Anguillan 

Ethnic  divisions:  mainly  of  black  African 
descent 

Beligion:  Anglican,  Methodist,  and  Catho- 
lic 


Language:  English  (official) 
Literacy:  80% 

Labor  force:  2,000  Anguillans  living 
overseas  send  remittances  home;  26.4% 
unemployed  (1984) 

Government 
Official  name:  Anguilla 
Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  The  Valley 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  came  into  effect  on  1 
April  1982 

Branches:  11-member  House  of  Assembly, 
seven-member  Executive  Council 

Government  leaders:  Allistair  BAILLE, 
Governor  and  President  of  Executive 
Council  (since  1983) 

Suffrage:  native  born,  resident  before 
separation  from  St.  Christopher  and  Nevis, 
or  15  years  residence  for  belonger  status 

Elections:  general  election,  March  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Anguilla 
National  Alliance  (ANA),  Emile  Gumbs; 
Anguillan  People's  Party  (APP),  Bonald 
Webster 

Voting  strength:  ANA,  4  seats;  APP,  2 
seats;  1  independent 

Communists:  none 
Member  of:  Commonwealth 

Economy 

GDP:  $6  million,  $6,000  per  capita  (1983 
est.) 

Agriculture:  pigeon  peas,  corn,  sweet 
potatoes,  sheep,  goats,  pigs,  cattle,  poultry 

Fishing:  inshore  and  reef  fishing 

Major  industries:  tourism,  lobster  exports, 
salt,  fishing 

Electric  power:  3,000  kW  capacity;  9 
million  kWh  produced,  1,320  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  lobsters 

Budget:  revenues,  $4.8  million;  expendi- 
tures, $5.8  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  probably  calendar 


Anguilla  (continued) 


Antigua  and  Barbuda 


Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  about  60  km  surfaced 
Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  1  major  (Road  Bay),  1  minor  (Blow- 
ing Point) 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  3  total,  3  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways  of  1,100  m 
(Wallblake  Airport) 

Telecommunications:  modern  internal 
telephone  system;  890  telephones  (13.6  per 
100  popl.);  1  FM  and  3  AM  stations;  radio- 
relay  link  to  St.  Martin's  Island 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  United 
Kingdom 

Branches:  Police 


20km 


Barbuda 


Caribbean  Sea 


ST.  JOHN'S 


0  Redonda 
See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  440  km2;  land  area:  440  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  two  and  one- 
half  times  the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  153  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  little  seasonal 
temperature  variation 

Terrain:  mostly  low-lying  with  some 
higher  volcanic  areas 

Land  use:  18%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  16% 
forest  and  woodland;  59%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  and 
tropical  storms  (June  to  October);  insuffi- 
cient freshwater  resources;  deeply  in- 
dented coastline  provides  many  natural 
harbors 

Special  notes:  about  650  km  from  Puerto 
Rico 

People 

Population:  69,280  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.47% 

Nationality:  noun — Antiguan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Antiguan 

Ethnic  divisions:  almost  entirely  of  black 
African  origin;  some  of  British,  Portuguese, 
Lebanese,  and  Syrian  origin 


Religion:  Anglican  (predominant),  other 
Protestant  sects,  some  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  English  (official),  local  dialects 
Infant  mortality  rate:  31.5/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  70 
Literacy:  about  90% 

Labor  force:  30,000;  20%  unemployment 
(1983);  agriculture  11%,  industry  7%,  and 
commerce  and  services  82% 

Government 

Official  name:  Antigua  and  Barbuda 

Type:  independent  state  recognizing  Eliza- 
beth II  as  Chief  of  State 

Capital:  St.  John's 

Administrative  divisions:  6  parishes,  2 
dependencies  (Barbuda,  Redonda) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  British  Caribbean  Court  of  Appeal 
has  exclusive  original  jurisdiction  and  an 
appellate  jurisdiction 

Branches:  bicameral  legislative, 
17-member  popularly  elected  House  of 
Representatives  and  17-member  Senate; 
executive,  Prime  Minister  and  Cabinet; 
judiciary,  Court  of  Appeals 

Government  leaders:  Vere  Cornwall 
BIRD,  Sr.,  Prime  Minister  (since  1976); 
Lester  BIRD,  Deputy  Prime  Minister 
(since  1976);  Sir  Wilfred  Ebenezer 
JACOBS,  Governor  General  (since  1967) 

Suffrage:  universal  suffrage  at  age  18 

Elections:  every  five  years;  last  general 
election  17  April  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Antigua 
Labor  Party  (ALP),  Vere  C.  Bird,  Sr., 
Lester  Bird;  United  National  Democratic 
Party  (UNDP),  Dr.  Ivor  Heath 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  House  of 
Representatives — ALP,  16  seats;  indepen- 
dent, 1  seat 

Communists:  negligible 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  An- 
tigua Caribbean  Liberation  Movement 
(ACLM),  a  small  leftist  nationalist  group 
led  by  Leonard  (Tim)  Hector 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ILO,  IMF,  ISO, 
OAS,  UN,  UNESCO,  WHO,  WMO 


8 


Argentina 


Economy 

GDP:  $158  million  (1984),  $1,980  per 
capita;  inflation  rate  4.0%  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  negligible 
Agriculture:  cotton  (main  crop),  sugar, 
livestock 

Major  industries:  tourism  15.2%,  construc- 
tion 7.7%,  manufacturing  0.5% 
Electric  power:  29,000  kW  capacity;  63.8 
million  kWh  produced,  780  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $41  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  cloth- 
ing, rum,  lobsters 

Imports:  $134  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  fuel, 
food,  machinery 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 47% 
Trinidad  and  Tobago,  8%  Barbados,  1% 
US;  imports— 49%  US,  13%  UK,  4%  Ja- 
maica, 2%  Trinidad  and  Tobago  (1983) 
Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  ODA  and 
OOF  (1970-80)  from  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  $20  million 
Budget:  (current)  revenues,  $40  million; 
expenditures,  $44  million  (1984) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  (EC)  dollars=US$l  (November 
1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  64  km  0.760-meter  narrow 
gauge,  13  km  0.610-meter  gauge,  em- 
ployed almost  exclusively  for  handling 
cane 

Highways:  240  km  main 

Ports:  1  major  (St.  John's),  1  minor 

Civil  air:  10  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  1  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  good  automatic 
telephone  system;  6,700  telephones  (9.2  per 
100  popl.);  tropospheric  scatter  links  with 
Saba  and  Guadeloupe;  6  AM,  2  FM,  2  TV 
stations;  1  coaxial  submarine  cable;  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Antigua  and  Barbuda  Defense 
Force,  Royal  Antigua  and  Barbuda  Police 
Force 


lOOOkm 


Sec  regional  maji  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,766,890  km2;  land  area: 
2,736,690  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  four  times  the 
size  of  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  9,414  km  total 
Coastline:  4,989  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm  (overflight  and 
navigation  permitted  beyond  12  nm) 

Boundary  disputes:  Uruguay;  short  section 
with  Chile  is  indefinite;  claims  Falkland 
Islands  (Islas  Malvinas)  which  are  adminis- 
tered by  UK;  territorial  claim  in  Antarc- 
tica 

Climate:  mostly  temperate;  arid  in  south- 
east; subantarctic  in  southwest 

Terrain:  rich  plains  of  the  Pampas  in 
northern  half,  flat  to  rolling  plateau  of 
Patagonia  in  south,  rugged  Andes  along 
western  border 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  52%  meadows  and  pastures;  22% 
forest  and  woodland;  13%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  Tucuman  and  Mendoza 
areas  in  Andes  subject  to  earthquakes; 
pamperos  are  violent  windstorms  that  can 
strike  Pampas  and  northeast;  irrigated  soil 
degradation;  desertification 

Special  notes:  second  largest  country  in 
South  America  (after  Brazil);  strategic 


location  relative  to  sea  lanes  between 
Atlantic  and  Pacific  Oceans  (Strait  of 
Magellan,  Beagle  Channel,  Drake  Passage) 


Population:  31,144,775  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.27% 

Nationality:  noun — Argentine(s);  adjec- 
tive— Argentine 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  white,  15%  mestizo, 
Indian,  or  other  nonwhite  groups 

Religion:  90%  nominally  Roman  Catholic 
(less  than  20%  practicing),  2%  Protestant, 
2%  Jewish,  6%  other 

Language:  Spanish  (official),  English, 
Italian,  German,  French 

Infant  mortality  rate:  36/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  68 
Literacy:  94% 

Labor  force:  16.8  million  (1984  est); 
15.9%  agriculture,  24.3%  manufacturing, 
13.2%  commerce,  11.5%  transport  and 
communications,  7.7%  finance  and  bank- 
ing, 4.4%  utilities,  3.6%  construction,  2.7% 
mining,  16.7%  services  and  other;  6.3% 
unemployment  (April  1985) 

Organized  labor:  3  million;  about  33%  of 
labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Argentine  Republic 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Buenos  Aires 

Administrative  divisions:  22  provinces,  1 
district  (Federal  Capital),  and  1  territory 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  US  and  West 
European  legal  systems;  constitution 
adopted  1853  is  in  effect;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 
National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 
May 

Branches:  executive  (President,  Vice 
President,  Cabinet);  legislative  (National 
Congress — Senate,  Chamber  of  Deputies); 
national  judiciary- 
Government  leaders:  Raul  ALFONSIN, 
President  (since  December  1983);  Victor 
MARTINEZ,  Vice  President  (since  Decem- 
ber 1983) 


9 


Argentina  (continued) 


Elections:  general  elections  held  30  Octo- 
ber 1983;  Senate  elections  held  November 
1986;  Gubernatorial  and  Congressional 
elections  scheduled  for  1987;  next  general 
election  1989 

Political  parties:  operate  under  statute 
passed  in  1983  that  sets  out  criteria  for 
participation  in  national  elections;  Radical 
Civic  Union  (UCR) — moderately  left  of 
center;  Justicialist  Party  (JP) — Peronist 
umbrella  political  organization;  Intransi- 
gent Party  (PI) — leftist  party;  Union  of  the 
Democratic  Center — conservative  party); 
several  provincial  parties 

Communists:  some  70,000  members  in 
various  party  organizations,  including  a 
small  nucleus  of  activists 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
Peronist-dominated  labor  movement, 
General  Confederation  of  Labor  (Peronist- 
leaning  umbrella  labor  organization), 
Argentine  Industrial  Union  (manufacturers' 
association),  Argentine  Rural  Society  (large 
landowners'  association),  business  organiza- 
tions, students,  the  Catholic  Church,  the 
Armed  Forces 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Inter-American  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IOOC,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Whaling  Commission, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
LAIA,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $63.3  billion  at  average  official 
exchange  rate  (1985),  $2,090  per  capita; 
80%  consumption,  15%  investment;  5%  net 
exports;  4.4%  real  GDP  decline  (1985); 
economic  activity  grew  by  2-3%  in  1986 

Natural  resources:  pampas,  lead,  zinc,  tin, 
copper,  iron,  manganese,  oil,  uranium 

Agriculture:  main  products — cereals, 
oilseed,  livestock  products;  major  world 
exporter  of  temperate  zone  foodstuffs 

Fishing:  catch  377,200  metric  tons;  exports 
$127.4  million  (1985) 


Major  industries:  food  processing  (espe- 
cially meat  packing),  motor  vehicles, 
consumer  durables,  textiles,  chemicals, 
printing,  and  metallurgy 

Steel:  2.9  million  metric  tons  produced,  95 
kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  15,300,000  kW  capacity; 
42,790  million  kWh  produced,  1,370  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $8.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  wheat, 
corn,  oilseed,  hides,  wool 

Imports:  $4.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  chemi- 
cal products,  machinery,  metallurgical 
products,  fuel  and  lubricants 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 20% 
USSR,  13%  US,  9%  Netherlands,  5%  Bra- 
zil, 5%  Italy,  5%  Japan,  4%  FRG;  im- 
ports—18%  US,  16%  Brazil,  14%  FRG,  9% 
Bolivia,  7%  Japan,  6%  France  (1985) 

Budget:  (1986)  general  government  reve- 
nues $26.4  billion;  current  and  capital 
expenditures  $31.3  billion  at  average 
official  exchange  rate  for  1986 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.25 
australes=US$l  (31  December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  39,738  km  total;  3,086  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  22,788  km 
1.676-meter  broad  gauge,  13,461  km 
1.000-meter  gauge,  403  km  0.750-meter 
gauge;  of  total  in  country,  142  km  are 
electrified 

Highways:  208,350  km  total,  of  which 
47,550  km  paved,  39,500  km  gravel, 
101,000  km  improved  earth,  20,300  km 
unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  11,000  km  navigable 

Pipelines:  4,090  km  crude  oil;  2,200  km 
refined  products;  9,918  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  7  major,  30  minor 

Civil  air:  54  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1,849  total,  1,689  usable;  126 
with  permanent-surface  runways;  1  with 
runways  over  3,695  m,  29  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  334  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  extensive  modern 
system;  2.45  million  telephones  (7.9  per 
100  popl.),  radio  relay  widely  used;  2 
satellite  stations  with  3  Atlantic  Ocean 
antennas;  163  AM,  10  shortwave,  196  TV 
stations;  30-station  domestic  satellite  net- 
work 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Argentine  Army,  Navy  of  the 
Argentine  Republic,  Argentine  Air  Force, 
National  Gendarmerie,  Argentine  Naval 
Prefecture,  National  Aeronautical  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
7,500,000;  6,084,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 256,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $1.1  billion;  7.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


10 


Aruba 


Caribbean 
Sea 


ORANJESTA 


10km 


Sec  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  193  km2;  land  area:  193  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  about  72  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  little  seasonal 
temperature  variation 
Terrain:  flat  with  a  few  hills;  scant  vegeta- 
tion 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 
Environment:  lies  outside  the  Caribbean 
hurricane  belt 
Special  notes:  28  km  from  Venezuela 


Population:  62,125  (1987  est),  average 

annual  growth  rate  0.34% 

Nationality:  noun — Aruban(s);  adjective — 

Aruban 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  mixed  African; 
remainder  Carib  Indian,  European,  Latin, 
and  Oriental 

Religion:  82%  Roman  Catholic,  8%  Protes- 
tant; also  small  Hindu,  Muslim,  Confucian, 
and  Jewish  minority 

Language:  Dutch  (official),  Papiamento  (a 
Spanish,  Portuguese,  Dutch,  English  dia- 
lect), English  (widely  spoken),  Spanish 

Literacy:  95% 


Labor  force:  30%  oil  refining;  10%  unem- 
ployment 

Government 
Official  name:  Aruba 
Capital:  Oranjestad 

Type:  self-governing  until  complete  inde- 
pendence from  the  Netherlands  is  granted 
in  1996 

Legal  system:  based  on  Dutch  civil  law 
system,  with  some  English  common  law 
influence 

Government  leaders:  Acting  Governor 
Maximo  CROES;  Henny  EMAN,  Prime 
Minister  (since  January  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  People's 
Electoral  Movement  (MEP),  Nel  Oduber, 
acting  leader;  Aruban  Patriotic  Party 
(PPA),  Benny  Nisbet;  Aruban  People's 
Party  (AVP),  Henny  Eman;  Democratic 
Party  of  Aruba  (PDA),  Dr.  Leo  Berlinski; 
National  Democratic  Action  Party  (ADN), 
Pedro  Kelly;  governing  coalition  includes 
the  AVP,  former  PPA  and  PDA  dissidents, 
and  the  ADN  (Berlinski,  originally  a  mem- 
ber of  the  coalition  government,  was 
forced  out  of  the  Cabinet  because  of 
corruption  charges  in  1986;  a  faction  of  his 
PDA  continues  to  support  the  coalition, 
calling  itself  the  Democratic  Action  Party 
AD-86) 

Economy 

GNP:  $461.4  million,  $6,885  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  -  5.8%  (1984) 
Agriculture:  little  production 
Major  industries:  petrochemicals,  oil 
refining,  petroleum  transshipment  facili- 
ties, tourism,  light  manufacturing 

Electric  power:  310,000  kW  capacity,  945 
million  kWh  produced,  1,410  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Budget:  revenues,  $100  million;  expendi- 
tures $150  million  (1985) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.8  Aruban 
florins=US$l  (1986) 

Communications 

Ports:  2  (Oranjestad,  Sint  Nicolaas) 


11 


Airfield:  government-owned  airport  east  of 
Oranjestad 

Telecommunications:  facilities,  which 
include  extensive  interisland  radio-relay 
links,  are  generally  adequate;  49,600 
telephones;  3  AM  and  3  FM  stations;  1  TV 
station 

Defense 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  Nether- 
lands until  1996 


Australia 


Coral  Sea 


Inditn  Ocean 


See  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  7,686,850  km2;  land  area: 
7,617,930  km2 

Comparative  area:  almost  as  large  as 
conterminous  US 

Coastline:  25,760  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Indonesia;  territorial  claim  in 
Antarctica  (Australian  Antarctic  Territory) 

Climate:  generally  arid  to  semiarid;  tem- 
perate in  south  and  east;  tropical  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  low  plateau  with  deserts; 
fertile  plain  in  southeast 

Land  use:  6%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  58%  meadows  and  pastures; 
14%  forest  and  woodland;  22%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  severe  droughts 
and  floods;  cyclones  along  coast;  limited 
freshwater  availability;  irrigated  soil  degra- 
dation; regular,  tropical,  invigorating,  sea 
breeze  known  as  the  doctor  occurs  along 
west  coast  in  summer;  desertification 

Special  notes:  world's  smallest  continent 
but  sixth  largest  country 


Population:  16,072,986  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.21% 

Nationality:  noun — Australian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Australian 

Ethnic  divisions:  96%  Caucasian,  4% 
Asian,  Aboriginal,  and  other 

Religion:  26.1%  Anglican,  26.0%  Roman 
Catholic,  24.3%  other  Christian 

Language:  English,  native  languages 
Infant  mortality  rate:  10/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  men  72.1,  women  78.7 
(1983) 

Literacy:  98.5% 

Labor  force:  7.6  million  (November  1986); 
26.9  manufacturing  and  industry;  22.4 
public  and  community  services;  20.0 
wholesale  and  retail  trade;  18.1  finance 
and  services;  6.0%  agriculture;  8.2%  unem- 
ployment (January  1987) 

Organized  labor:  62%  of  total  employees 
(1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Commonwealth  of  Austra- 
lia 

Type:  federal  parliamentary  state  recog- 
nizing Elizabeth  II  as  sovereign  or  head  of 
state 

Capital:  Canberra 

Administrative  divisions:  6  states  and  2 
territories 

Dependent  areas:  Ashmore  and  Cartier 
Islands,  Christmas  Island,  Cocos  (Keeling) 
Islands,  Coral  Sea  Islands,  Heard  Island 
and  McDonald  Islands,  Norfolk  Island 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  adopted  1900;  High 
Court  has  jurisdiction  over  cases  involving 
interpretation  of  the  constitution;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions 

National  holiday:  Australia  Day,  26 
January 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (Federal 
Parliament — Senate  and  House  of  Repre- 
sentatives); Prime  Minister  and  Cabinet 
responsible  to  House;  independent  judi- 
ciary 


Government  leaders:  Sir  Ninian 
STEPHEN,  Governor  General  (since  July 
1982);  Robert  HAWKE,  Prime  Minister 
(since  March  1983) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  held  at  three-year  intervals  or 
sooner  if  Parliament  is  dissolved  by  Prime 
Minister;  last  election  1  December  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  govern- 
ment— Australian  Labor  Party  (Robert 
Hawke);  opposition — Liberal  Party  (John 
Howard),  National  Party  (Ian  Sinclair), 
Australian  Democratic  Party  (Janine 
Haines),  Nuclear  Disarmament  Party 
(Michael  Denborough) 

Voting  strength:  (1984  parliamentary 
election)  House  of  Representatives — Labor 
Party  82  seats,  Liberal-National  coalition 
66  seats;  Senate — Labor  Party  34  seats, 
Liberal-National  coalition  33  seats,  Austra- 
lian Democratic  Party  7  seats,  indepen- 
dents 2  seats 

Communists:  4,000  members  (est.) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Aus- 
tralian Democratic  Labor  Party  (anti- 
Communist  Labor  Party  splinter  group); 
Peace  and  Nuclear  Disarmament  Action 
(Nuclear  Disarmament  Party  splinter 
group) 

Member  of:  ADB,  AIOEC,  ANZUS, 
CIPEC  (associate),  Colombo  Plan,  Com- 
monwealth, DAC,  ELDO,  ESCAP,  FAO, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IATP,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAC, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO, 
ILO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study 
Group,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITC, 
ITU,  IWC — International  Whaling  Com- 
mission, IWC — International  Wheat  Coun- 
cil, OECD,  SPF,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

„ 
Economy 

GDP:  $153.0  billion  (1985),  $9,760  per 
capita;  60%  private  consumption,  22% 
investment,  17.1%  government  expendi- 
ture; 1.25%  average  annual  real  growth 
rate  (1986);  inflation  rate  8.9%  (October 
1986) 


12 


Austria 


Natural  resources:  bauxite,  coal,  iron  ore, 
copper,  tin,  silver,  uranium,  nickel,  tung- 
sten, mineral  sands,  lead,  zinc,  diamonds, 
natural  gas,  oil 

Agriculture:  large  areas  devoted  to  graz- 
ing; 60%  of  area  used  for  crops  is  planted 
in  wheat;  major  products — wool,  lamb, 
beef,  wheat,  fruits,  sugarcane;  self- 
sufficient  in  food 

Major  industries:  mining,  industrial  and 
transportation  equipment,  food  processing, 
chemicals 

Crude  steel:  6.6  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 420  kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  34,616,000  kW  capacity; 
125,000  million  kWh  produced,  7,810 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $22.9  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  princi- 
pal products — wheat,  barley,  beef,  lamb, 
dairy  products,  wool,  coal,  iron  ore 

Imports:  $26.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985)  princi- 
pal products — manufactured  raw  materi- 
als, capital  equipment,  consumer  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  (1983-84)  exports — 
26%  Japan,  11%  US,  6%  New  Zealand,  4% 
North  Korea,  4%  Singapore,  3%  USSR; 
imports— 22%  US,  22%  Japan,  7%  UK,  6% 
FRG,  4%  New  Zealand 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $7  billion 

Budget:  (FY86-87  proj.)  expenditures, 
$49.3  billion;  revenues,  $47.0  billion; 
deficit,  $2.3  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.55  Australian 
dollars=US$l  (14  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  40,661  km  total  (1985);  7,970 
km  1.600-meter  gauge,  16,201  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  16,307  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge;  183  km  dual  gauge;  1,130 
km  electrified;  government  owned  (except 
for  a  few  hundred  kilometers  of  privately 
owned  track) 

Highways:  837,872  km  total;  243,750  km 
paved,  228,396  km  gravel,  crushed  stone, 
or  stabilized  soil  surface,  365,726  km 
unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  8,368  km;  mainly  by 
small,  shallow-draft  craft 


Pipelines:  crude  oil,  2,475  km;  refined 
products,  500  km;  natural  gas,  5,600  km 

Ports:  12  major,  numerous  minor 

Civil  air:  around  150  major  transport 
aircraft 

Airfields:  1,014  total,  973  usable;  228  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  20  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  486  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  very  good  interna- 
tional and  domestic  service;  8.7  million 
telephones  (55  per  100  popl.);  258  AM,  67 
FM,  134  TV  stations;  3  international  earth 
satellite  stations;  submarine  cables  to  New 
Zealand  and  Papua  New  Guinea;  domestic 
satellite  service 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Australian  Navy,  Austra- 
lian Army,  Royal  Australian  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,317,000;  3,792,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 137,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1986,  $4.6  billion;  about  9.9%  of  total 
central  government  budget 


150km 


Seert|ionil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  83,850  km2;  land  area:  82,730 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Maine 

Land  boundaries:  2,582  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  South  Tyrol 
question  with  Italy 

Climate:  temperate;  continental,  cloudy; 
cold  winters  with  frequent  rain  in  low- 
lands and  snow  in  mountains;  cool  sum- 
mers with  occasional  showers 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  Alps  in 
west  and  south;  low  local  relief  and  gentle 
slopes  along  eastern  and  northern  margins 

Land  use:  17%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  24%  meadows  and  pastures;  39% 
forest  and  woodland;  19%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  due  to  steep  slopes,  poor 
soils,  and  cold  temperatures,  population  is 
concentrated  on  eastern  lowlands 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategic  loca- 
tion at  the  crossroads  of  central  Europe 
with  many  easily  traversable  Alpine  passes 
and  valleys 

People 

Population:  7,569,283  (July  1987),  average 

annual  growth  rate  0.09% 

Nationality:  noun — Austrian(s);  adjective — 

Austrian 


13 


Austria  (continued) 


Ethnic  divisions:  99.4%  German,  0.3% 
Croatian,  0.2%  Slovene,  0.1%  other 

Religion:  88%  Roman  Catholic,  6%  Protes- 
tant, 6%  none  or  other 

Language:  German 

Infant  mortality  rate:  16/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  73 

Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  2.9  million  (est.  1985); 
41.10%  industry  and  crafts,  57.55%  ser- 
vices, 1.35%  agriculture  and  forestry;  4.8% 
unemployed  (est.  1985);  an  estimated 
200,000  Austrians  are  employed  in  other 
European  countries;  foreign  laborers  in 
Austria  number  138,700,  about  5.4%  of 
labor  force  (1984) 

Organized  labor:  1,672,820  members  of 
Austrian  Trade  Union  Federation  (1984) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Austria 

Type:  federal  republic 

Capital:  Vienna 

Administrative  divisions:  9  states  (lander) 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  with  Ro- 
man law  origin;  constitution  adopted  1920, 
repromulgated  1945;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  by  a  Constitutional  Court; 
separate  administrative  and  civil/penal 
supreme  courts;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  26  October 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (Federal 
Assembly — Federal  Council,  National 
Council),  directly  elected  President  whose 
functions  are  largely  representational, 
independent  federal  judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Kurt  WALDHEIM, 
President  (since  July  1986);  Franz 
VRANITZKY,  Chancellor  (since  June 
1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  19;  compul- 
sory for  presidential  elections 

Elections:  presidential,  every  six  years 
(next  1992);  parliamentary,  every  four 
years  (next  1990) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Socialist 
Party  of  Austria  (SPO),  Fred  Sinowatz, 
chairman;  Austrian  People's  Party  (OVP), 


Alois  Mock,  chairman;  Freedom  Party  of 
Austria  (FPO),  Jorg  Haider,  chairman; 
Communist  Party  (KPO),  Franz  Muhri, 
chairman;  Green  Alternative  List  (GAL), 
Freda  Meissner-Blau 

Voting  strength:  1986  parliamentary 
election— SPO  43.1%,  OVP  41.3%,  FPO 
9.7%,  GAL  4.8%,  KPO  .7%,  other  .32%; 
1986  presidential  election— {53.9%  of  4.7 
million  votes  cast)  SPO  80  seats,  OVP  77 
seats,  FPO  18  seats,  GAL  8  seats 

Communists:  membership  15,000  est.; 
activists  7,000-8,000 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Fed- 
eral Chamber  of  Commerce  and  Industry; 
Austrian  Trade  Union  Federation  (prima- 
rily Socialist);  three  composite  leagues  of 
the  Austrian  People's  Party  (OVP)  repre- 
senting business,  labor,  and  farmers;  OVP- 
oriented  League  of  Austrian  Industrialists; 
Roman  Catholic  Church,  including  its 
chief  lay  organization,  Catholic  Action 

Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  ECE,  EFTA,  EMA,  ESRO  (ob- 
server), FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $66.26  billion,  $8,888  per  capita; 
57%  private  consumption,  22%  investment, 
19%  public  consumption;  real  GNP  growth 
rate,  2.9%;  3.3%  inflation  rate  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  iron  ore,  petroleum, 
timber,  magnesite,  aluminum,  coal,  lignite, 
cement,  copper 

Agriculture:  livestock,  forest  products, 
cereals,  potatoes,  sugar  beets;  84%  self- 
sufficient 

Major  industries:  foods,  iron  and  steel, 
machinery,  textiles,  chemicals,  electrical, 
paper  and  pulp 

Crude  steel:  5.3  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1984) 

Electric  power:  15,846,000  kW  capacity; 
46,460  million  kWh  produced,  6,160  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 


Exports:  $17.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  iron 
and  steel  products,  machinery  and  equip- 
ment, lumber,  textiles,  paper  products, 
chemicals 

Imports:  $20.8  billion  (c.i.f,  1984);  ma- 
chinery and  equipment,  chemicals,  textiles 
and  clothing,  petroleum,  foodstuffs,  vehi- 
cles, office  machines,  Pharmaceuticals 

Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  imports — 
41%  FRG,  8.2%  Italy,  7.3%  East  Europe 
(excluding  USSR),  4.5%  Switzerland,  4.4% 
USSR,  3.7%  US;  exports— 30.1%  FRG, 
9.6%  East  Europe  (excluding  USSR),  9.0% 
Italy,  6.7%  Switzerland,  6.0%  OPEC,  4.7% 
US 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $1.4  billion 

Budget:  expenditures,  $22.10  billion; 
revenues,  $18.80  billion;  deficit,  $3.3 
billion  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  14.26 
schillings=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  6,497  km  total;  5.857  km  gov- 
ernment owned;  5,403  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge  of  which  3,017  km  electri- 
fied and  1,520  km  double  tracked;  454  km 
0.760-meter  narrow  gauge  of  which  91  km 
electrified;  640  km  privately  owned  1.435- 
and  1.000-meter  gauge 

Highways:  95,412  km  total;  34,612  are  the 
classified  network  (including  1,012  km  of 
autobahn,  10,400  km  of  federal,  and 
23,200  km  of  provincial  roads);  of  this 
number,  21,812  km  are  paved  and  12,800 
km  are  unpaved;  additionally,  there  are 
60,800  km  of  communal  roads  (mostly 
gravel,  crushed  stone,  earth) 

Inland  waterways:  446  km 
Ports:  2  major  river  (Vienna,  Linz) 

Pipelines:  554  km  crude  oil;  2,61 1  km 
natural  gas;  171  km  refined  products 

Civil  air:  25  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  56  total,  54  usable;  19  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  5  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  5  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


14 


The  Bahamas 


Telecommunications:  highly  developed 
and  efficient;  extensive  TV  and 
radiobroadcast  systems  with  6  AM,  693 
FM,  910  TV  stations;  1  INTELSAT  (for 
Atlantic  and  Indian  regions);  3.72  million 
telephones  (45.9  per  100  popl.) 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Flying  Division 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,964,000;  1,655,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 57,000  reach  military  age  (19)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $1.13  billion;  about  4.2% 
of  the  proposed  federal  budget 


200km 


Great  Inagua 


See  refionil  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  13,940  km2;  land  area:  10,070 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Connecticut 

Coastline:  3,542  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 
Climate:  tropical  marine;  moderated  by 
warm  waters  of  Gulf  Stream 
Terrain:  long,  flat,  coral  formations  with 
some  low,  rounded  hills 
Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and 
pastures;  32%  forest  and  woodland;  67% 
other 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  and 
other  tropical  storms;  archipelago  of  about 
700  islands  and  keys 
Special  notes:  strategic  location  adjacent 
to  US  and  Cuba 

People 

Population:  238,817  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.75% 
Nationality:  noun — Bahamian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bahamian 
Ethnic  divisions:  85%  black,  15%  white 


Religion:  Baptist  29%,  Anglican  23%, 
Boman  Catholic  22%,  smaller  groups  of 
other  Protestants,  Greek  Orthodox,  and 
Jews 

Language:  English;  some  Creole  among 
Haitian  immigrants 

Infant  mortality  rate:  20.20/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64,  women  70 
Literacy:  89% 

Labor  force:  82,000  (1982);  30%  govern- 
ment, 25%  hotels  and  restaurants,  10% 
business  services,  5%  agriculture;  30% 
unemployment  (1983) 
Organized  labor:  25%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  The  Commonwealth  of 
The  Bahamas 

Type:  independent  commonwealth  recog- 
nizing Elizabeth  II  as  Chief  of  State 

Capital:  Nassau 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  10 
July 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (Parlia- 
ment— 16-member  appointed  Senate, 
43-member  elected  House  of  Assembly); 
executive  (Prime  Minister  and  Cabinet); 
judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Sir  Lynden  Oscar 
PINDLING,  Prime  Minister  (since  1969); 
Sir  Gerald  C.  CASH,  Governor  General 
(since  1979) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  House  of  Assembly  (June  1982); 
next  election  constitutionally  due  in  five 
years 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Progressive 
Liberal  Party  (PLP),  Sir  Lynden  O.  Pind- 
ling;  Free  National  Movement  (FNM),  • 
Kendal  Isaacs 

Voting  strength:  73,309  registered  voters 
(July  1977);  (1982  election)  House  of  As- 
sembly—PLP  32  seats,  FNM  11  seats, 
others  0  seats 
Communists:  none  known 


15 


The  Bahamas  (continued) 


Bahrain 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Van- 
guard Nationalist  and  Socialist  Party 
(VNSP),  a  small  leftist  party  headed  by 
Lionel  Carey;  Trade  Union  Congress 
(TUC),  headed  by  Leonard  Archer 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  CDB,  Common- 
wealth, FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto), 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDE— Inter-American  De- 
velopment Bank,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.1  billion,  $8,950  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  2%  (1986  est);  inflation  rate 
4.0%  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  salt,  aragonite,  timber 

Agriculture:  food  importer;  produces 
vegetables,  tomatoes,  pineapples,  bananas, 
citrus  fruits;  pigs,  sheep 

Major  industries:  banking,  tourism,  ce- 
ment, oil  refining  and  transshipment, 
lumber,  salt  production,  rum,  aragonite, 
Pharmaceuticals,  spiral  weld,  and  steel 
pipe 

Electric  power:  350,000  kW  capacity;  885 
million  kWh  produced,  3,770  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $296  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  phar- 
maceuticals,  cement,  rum,  crawfish 

Imports:  $891  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, manufactured  goods,  mineral  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US  90%, 
UK  10%;  imports— Iran  30%,  Nigeria  20%, 
US  10%,  EC  10%,  Gabon  10%  (1981) 

Aid:  US  economic  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im  (1970-80),  from  US,  $42  million; 
ODA  and  OOF  economic  commitments 
(1970-84),  $168  million 

Budget:  (June  1986  est.)  revenues,  $422.4 
million;  expenditures,  $414.9  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.175  Baha- 
mian dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,400  km  total;  1,350  km 
paved,  1,050  km  gravel 


Ports:  2  major  (Freeport,  Nassau),  9  minor 
Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  59  total,  56  usable;  29  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  23  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  highly  developed, 
including  84,000  telephones  (37.9  per  100 
popl.)  in  totally  automatic  system;  tropo- 
spheric  scatter  and  cable  links  with  Flor- 
ida; 3  AM,  2  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  3 
coaxial  submarine  cables;  satellite  ground 
station  under  construction 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Bahamas  Defense  Force 
(a  coast  guard  element  only),  Royal  Baha- 
mas Police  Force 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1985  $12.7  million,  about  3%  of 
the  total  budget 


Persian  Gulf 


Al  Muharra 
MANAMA 


S«  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  620  km2;  land  area:  620  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  three  times  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  161  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 
Boundary  disputes:  none;  territorial  dis- 
pute with  Qatar  over  the  island  of  Hawar 
and  its  ring  of  islets 

Climate:  arid;  mild,  pleasant  winters;  very 
hot,  humid  summers 
Terrain:  mostly  low  desert  plain  rising 
gently  to  low  central  escarpment 
Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  90%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  subsurface  water  sources 
being  rapidly  depleted  (requires  develop- 
ment of  desalination  facilities);  dust  storms; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  close  proximity  to  primary 
Middle  East  crude  oil  sources  and  strategic 
location  in  Persian  Gulf  through  which 
much  of  western  world's  crude  oil  must 
transit  to  reach  open  ocean 


Population:  464,102  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.54% 


16 


Bangladesh 


Nationality:  noun — Bahraini(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bahraini 

Ethnic  divisions:  63%  Bahraini,  13% 
Asian,  10%  other  Arab,  8%  Iranian,  6% 
other 

Religion:  Muslim  (70%  Shi'a,  30%  Sunni) 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English  also 
widely  spoken;  Farsi,  Urdu 

Literacy:  40% 

Labor  force:  140,000  (1982);  42%  of  labor 
force  is  Bahraini;  85%  industry  and  com- 
merce, 5%  agriculture,  5%  services,  3% 
government 

Government 

Official  name:  State  of  Bahrain 

Type:  traditional  monarchy;  independent 

since  1971 

Capital:  Manama 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  and 

English  common  law;  constitution  went 

into  effect  in  December  1973 

National  holiday:  16  December 

Branches:  Amir  rules  with  help  of  a 

Cabinet  led  by  Prime  Minister;  Amir 

dissolved  the  National  Assembly  in  August 

1975  and  suspended  the  constitutional 

provision  for  election  of  the  Assembly; 

independent  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Isa  bin  Sulman  Al 

KHALIFA,  Amir  (since  November  1961) 

Suffrage:  none 

Political  parties  and  pressure  groups: 

political  parties  prohibited;  several  small, 

clandestine  leftist  and  Shi'a  fundamentalist 

groups  are  active 

Communists:  negligible 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 

GATT  (de  facto),  GCC,  IBRD,  ICAO, 

IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank,  ILO, 

IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM, 

OAPEC,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 

WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  $4.6  billion,  $11,190  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  7.5%  (1984  est.) 
Natural  resources:  oil,  associated  and 
nonassociated  natural  gas,  fish 
Agriculture:  not  self-sufficient  in  food 
production;  produces  some  fruit  and 


vegetables;  engages  in  dairy  and  poultry 

farming  and  in  shrimping  and  fishing 

Major  industries:  petroleum  processing 

and  refining,  aluminum  smelting,  offshore 

banking,  ship  repairing 

Electric  power:  1,552,000  kW  capacity; 

6.800  million  kWh  produced,  16,110  kWh 

per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  nonoil 

exports  $400  million;  oil  exports  $2.4 

billion  (1985) 

Imports:  $2.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  nonoil 

imports  $1.4  billion;  oil  imports  $1.0 

billion  (1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  Japan,  US, 

Saudi  Arabia 

Budget:  $952  million  current  expenditures, 

$510  million  capital  expenditures  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.38  Bahrain 

dinar=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  225  km  bituminous  surfaced; 
undetermined  kilometers  of  natural  sur- 
face tracks;  25  km  bridge-causeway  to 
Saudi  Arabia  opened  in  November  1986 
Ports:  1  major  (Mlna'  Sulman),  1  minor 
(Mlna'  al  ManSmah),  1  petroleum,  oil,  and 
lubricant  terminal  (Sitrah) 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  56  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 16  km;  natural  gas,  32  km 
Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  3  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  interna- 
tional telecommunications;  adequate 
domestic  services;  98,000  telephones  (23.2 
per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  1  FM,  and  2  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean,  1  Indian  Ocean, 
and  1  ARABSAT  satellite  stations;  tropo- 
spheric  scatter  and  microwave  to  Qatar, 
United  Arab  Emirates,  Saudi  Arabia; 
submarine  cable  to  Qatar  and  United  Arab 
Emirates 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Naval  Wing,  Air  Wing 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  168,000; 
95,000  fit  for  military  service 


150km 


Bay  of  Bengal 


Sec  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  144,000  km2;  land  area: 
133,910  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Wisconsin 

Land  boundaries:  2,535  km  total 
Coastline:  580  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  18  nm 

Continental  shelf:  up  to  outer  limits  of 

continental  margin 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  India 

Climate:  tropical;  cool,  dry  winter  (Octo- 
ber to  March);  hot,  humid  summer  (March 
to  June);  cool,  rainy  monsoon  (June  to 
October) 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  alluvial  plain;  hilly  in 
southeast 

Land  use:  67%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  16% 
forest  and  woodland;  11%  other;  includes 
14%  irrigated 

Environment:  vulnerable  to  droughts; 
much  of  country  routinely  flooded  during 
summer  monsoon  season;  overpopulation; 
deforestation 

Special  notes:  almost  completely  sur- 
rounded by  India;  Joint  River  Commission 
on  water  sharing  with  upstream  riparian 
India 


17 


Bangladesh  (continued) 


Population:  107,087,586  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.70% 

Nationality:  noun — Bangladeshi(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bangladesh 

Ethnic  divisions:  98%  Bengali;  250,000 
Biharis  and  fewer  than  one  million  tribals 

Religion:  83%  Muslim,  about  16%  Hindu, 
less  than  1%  Buddhist,  Christian,  and  other 
Language:  Bangla  (official),  English  widely 
used 

Infant  mortality  rate:  119.4/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  53.9 
Literacy:  23%  (31%  men,  16%  women) 
Labor  force:  35. 1  million  (FY86);  extensive 
export  of  labor  to  Saudi  Arabia,  UAE, 
Oman,  and  Kuwait;  74%  of  labor  force  is 
in  agriculture,  15%  services,  11%  industry 
and  commerce;  unemployment  and  under- 
employment 40%  (est.) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  Ban- 
gladesh 

Type:  republic;  martial  law  lifted  10 
November  1986 

Capital:  Dhaka 

Administrative  divisions:  4  divisions,  21 
regions,  64  districts,  495  thanas  (rural 
townships  consisting  of  4,472  unions  or 
village  groupings) 

Legal  system:  civilian  legal  system  sus- 
pended; traditionally  based  on  English 
common  law;  constitution  adopted  Decem- 
ber 1972,  amended  January  1975  to  more 
authoritarian  presidential  system,  and 
changed  by  proclamation  in  April  1977  to 
reflect  Islamic  character  of  nation;  further 
change,  by  proclamation  in  December 
1978,  provided  for  the  appointment  of  the 
Prime  Minister,  Deputy  Prime  Minister, 
and  other  Cabinet-rank  ministers  and 
defined  the  powers  of  the  President 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  26 
March;  Victory  Day,  16  December 

Branches:  constitution  provides  for  uni- 
cameral  legislature  (Parliament),  strong 
President;  independent  judiciary;  President 
has  substantial  control  over  the  judiciary 


Government  leaders:  Hussain  Mohammad 
ERSHAD,  President  (since  December 
1983,  elected  in  October  1986);  Mizanur 
Rahman  CHOUDHURY,  Prime  Minister 
(since  July  1986) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  some  local  elections  held  in 
December  1983;  higher  local  elections  held 
in  May  1985;  last  parliamentary  elections 
held  in  May  1986;  last  presidential  election 
held  in  October  1986  electing  President  to 
a  full  five-year  term 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Jatiyo  Party, 
Hussain  Mohammad  Ershad;  Bangladesh 
Nationalist  Party,  Begum  Ziaur  Rahman; 
Awami  League,  Sheikh  Hasina  Wazed; 
United  People's  Party,  Kazi  Zafar  Ahmed; 
Democratic  League,  Khondakar  Musht- 
aque  Ahmed;  Muslim  League,  Khan  A. 
Sabur;  Jatiya  Samajtantrik  Dal  (National 
Socialist  Party),  M.  A.  Jalil;  Bangladesh 
Communist  Party  (pro-Soviet),  Mohammad 
Farhad;  numerous  small  parties;  political 
activity  banned  following  March  1982 
coup;  ban  lifted  in  March  1984,  reimposed 
in  March  1985,  and  lifted  again  in  January 
1986 

Voting  strength:  May  1986  parliamentary 
elections — Jatiya  Party  (progovernment) 
206  seats,  Awami  League  80  seats,  Awami 
League  Allies  21  seats,  Jamaat-E-Islami  10 
seats,  Independents  5  seats,  Muslim 
League  4  seats,  JSD  (Socialist)  4  seats 

Communists:  2,500  members  (est.) 
Member  of:  ADB,  Afro-Asian  People's 
Solidarity  Organization,  Colombo  Plan, 
Commonwealth,  ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IOC,  IRC,  ITU,  NAM,  QIC,  SAARC,  UN, 
UNCTAD,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WFTU,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $13.9  billion  (FY85,  current  prices), 
$140  per  capita;  4.5%  real  growth  (FY86); 
11%  inflation  rate  (FY86) 
Natural  resources:  natural  gas,  uranium 

Agriculture:  large-scale  subsistence  farm- 
ing, heavily  dependent  on  monsoon  rain- 


fall; main  crops  are  jute,  tea,  and  rice; 
grain,  cotton,  and  oilseed  shortages 

Fishing:  production  751,000  metric  tons 

(1984) 

Major  industries:  jute  manufactures,  food 

processing,  and  cotton  textiles 

Electric  power:  1,212,000  kW  capacity; 

4,590  million  kWh  produced,  40  kWh  per 

capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $934  million  (f.o.b.,  FY85);  raw 

and  manufactured  jute,  leather,  tea 

Imports:  $2.6  billion  (c.i.f.,  FY85);  food- 
grains,  fuels,  raw  cotton,  fertilizer,  manu- 
factured products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Middle 
East  19%,  US  18%,  Japan  7%,  UK  5%, 
Italy  4.7%;  imports— US  13.7%,  Western 
Europe  11.5%,  Middle  East  11%,  Japan  7% 
(FY85) 

Budget:  (FY87)  current  expenditures, 
$1.25  billion;  capital  expenditures,  $1.59 
billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  30.48 
takas=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,892  km  total  (1986);  1,914  km 
meter  gauge,  978  km  meter  gauge;  govern- 
ment owned 

Highways:  7,240  km  total  (1985);  3,840 
km  paved,  3,400  km  unpaved 
Inland  waterways:  5,150-8,046  km  navi- 
gable waterways  (includes  2,575-3,058  km 
main  cargo  routes) 

Ports:  2  sea  (Chittagong,  Chalna),  7  inland 
Pipelines:  650  km  natural  gas 
Civil  air:  15  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  18  total,  13  usable;  14  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  7  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  interna- 
tional radio  communications  and  landline 
service;  fair  domestic  wire  and  microwave 
service;  fair  broadcast  service;  182,000 
telephones  (0.18  per  100  popl.);  9  AM,  6 
FM,  1 1  TV  stations;  2  satellite  ground 
stations 


18 


Barbados 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force;  para- 
military forces — Bangladesh  Rifles,  Ban- 
gladesh Ansars,  Armed  Police  Reserve, 
Coastal  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
25,768,000;  15,327,000  fit  for  military 
service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1987,  $218  million;  about  18%  of 
central  government  budget 


North 

Atlantic 

Ocean 


5km 


Caribbean 
Sea 


See  regional  map  III 


The  Crane 


Geography 

Total  area:  430  km2;  land  area:  430  km2 
Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  97  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (June  to 
November) 

Terrain:  relatively  flat;  rises  gently  to 
central  highland  region 

Land  use:  77%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  9%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  14%  other 
Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  (espe- 
cially June  to  November) 

Special  notes:  easternmost  Caribbean 
island 


Population:  323,839  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.04% 

Nationality:  noun  —  Barbadian(s);  adjec- 
tive —  Barbadian 

Ethnic  divisions:  80%  African,  16% 
mixed,  4%  European 

Religion:  70%  Anglican,  9%  Methodist,  4% 

Roman  Catholic,  17%  other,  including 

Moravian 

Language:  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  26.3/1,000  (1984) 


Life  expectancy:  70.8 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  112,300  (1985  est);  37% 
services  and  government;  22%  commerce; 
22%  manufacturing  and  construction;  9% 
transportation,  storage,  communications, 
and  financial  institutions;  8%  agriculture; 
and  2%  utilities 
Organized  labor:  32% 

Government 

Official  name:  Barbados 

Type:  independent  sovereign  state  within 

the  Commonwealth  recognizing  Elizabeth 

II  as  Chief  of  State 

Capital:  Bridgetown 

Administrative  divisions:  1 1  parishes  and 

city  of  Bridgetown 

Legal  system:  English  common  law; 
constitution  came  into  effect  upon  inde- 
pendence in  1966;  no  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  30 
November 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (Parlia- 
ment— 21-member  appointed  Senate  and 
27-member  elected  House  of  Assembly); 
Cabinet  headed  by  Prime  Minister 
Government  leaders:  Errol  BARROW, 
Prime  Minister  (since  May  1986);  Sir  Hugh 
SPRINGER,  Governor  General  (since  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  House  of  Assembly  members 
have  terms  no  longer  than  five  years;  last 
general  election  held  28  May  1986 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Barbados 
Labor  Party  (BLP),  Henry  Forde;  Demo- 
cratic Labor  Party  (DLP),  Errol  Barrow 

Voting  strength:  (1981  election)  BLP, 
52.4%;  DLP,  46.8%;  independent,  negligi- 
ble; House  of  Assembly  seats— BLP  24, 
DLP  3 
Communists:  negligible 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 

People's  Progressive  Movement,  Bobby 
Clarke;  People's  Pressure  Movement,  Eric 
Sealy;  Workers'  Party  of  Barbados,  Dr. 
George  Bell 


19 


Barbados  (continued) 


Belgium 


Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Wheat  Council,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1,151.7  million  (1984),  $4,560  per 
capita;  real  GDP  growth  rate  2.5%  (1986 
est.)  inflation  rate  7.0%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  negligible 

Agriculture:  main  products — sugarcane, 
subsistence  foods 

Major  industries:  tourism,  sugar  milling, 
light  manufacturing,  component  assembly 
for  export 

Electric  power:  120,000  kW  capacity;  389 
million  kWh  produced,  1,540  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $352  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  sugar 
and  sugarcane  byproducts,  electrical  parts, 
clothing 

Imports:  $552  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, consumer  durables,  machinery,  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 42%  US, 
22%  CARICOM,  7%  UK;  imports— 48% 
US,  12%  CARICOM,  8%  UK,  6%  Canada 
(1984) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-84),  $14 
million;  ODA  and  OOF  commitments 
from  other  Western  countries  (1970-84), 
$125  million 

Budget:  (FY84)  revenues,  $288  million; 
expenditures,  $323  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.01  Barbados 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  1,570  km  total;  1,475  km 
paved,  95  km  gravel  and  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Bridgetown),  2  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways  2,440-3,659  m 


Telecommunications:  islandwide  auto- 
matic telephone  system  with  75,000  tele- 
phones (30.0  per  100  popl.);  tropospheric 
scatter  link  to  Trinidad  and  St.  Lucia;  2 
AM,  1  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Barbados  Defense  Force,  Royal 
Barbados  Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  89,000; 
63,000  fit  for  military  service,  no  conscrip- 
tion 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  1986, 
$10.1  million;  3%  of  central  government 
budget 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  30,510  km2;  land  area:  30,230 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Maryland 

Land  boundaries:  1,377  km  total 
Coastline:  64  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  temperate;  mild  winters,  cool 
summers;  rainy,  humid,  cloudy 

Terrain:  flat  coastal  plains  in  northwest, 
central  rolling  hills,  rugged  mountains  of 
Ardennes  Forest  in  southeast 

Land  use:  24%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  20%  meadows  and  pastures;  21% 
forest  and  woodland;  34%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  air  and  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  majority  of  West  European 
capitals  within  1,000  km  of  Brussels; 
crossroads  of  Western  Europe 


Population:  9,873,066  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.07% 

Nationality:  noun — Belgian(s);  adjective — 
Belgian 

Ethnic  divisions:  55%  Fleming,  33% 
Walloon,  12%  mixed  or  other 


20 


Religion:  75%  Roman  Catholic;  remainder 
Protestant,  none,  or  other 

Language:  56%  Flemish  (Dutch),  32% 
French,  1%  German;  11%  legally  bilingual; 
divided  along  ethnic  lines 
Infant  mortality  rate:  11.15/1,000(1979) 
Life  expectancy:  men  68.6,  women  75.1 
Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  4  million;  58%  services,  37% 
industry,  5%  agriculture;  13.6%  unem- 
ployed (1985) 
Organized  labor:  70%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Belgium 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Brussels 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  provinces; 
as  of  1  October  1980,  Wallonia  and  Flan- 
ders have  regional  subgovernments  with 
elected  regional  councils  and  executive 
officials;  those  regional  authorities  have 
limited  powers  over  revenues  and  certain 
areas  of  economic,  urban,  environmental, 
and  housing  policy;  Wallonia  also  has  a 
separate  Walloon  Cultural  Council 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  influenced 
by  English  constitutional  theory;  constitu- 
tion adopted  1831,  since  amended;  judicial 
review  of  legislative  acts;  accepts  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  21  July 

Branches:  executive  branch  consists  of 
King  and  Cabinet;  Cabinet  responsible  to 
bicameral  parliament  (Senate  and  Cham- 
ber of  Representatives);  independent 
judiciary;  coalition  governments  are  usual 

Government  leaders:  BAUDOUIN  I,  King 
(since  August  1950);  Wilfried  MARTENS, 
Prime  Minister  (since  April  1979,  with  a 
10-month  interruption  in  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  held  at  least  once  every  four 
years;  last  held  13  October  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Flemish 
Social  Christian  (CVP),  Frank  Swaelen, 
president;  Walloon  Social  Christian  (PSC), 
Gerard  Deprez,  president;  Flemish  Social- 
ist (SP),  Karel  van  Miert,  president;  Wal- 
loon Socialist  (PS),  Guy  Spitaels,  president; 


Flemish  Liberal  (PVV),  Annemie  Neyts- 
Uyttebroeck,  president;  Walloon  Liberal 
(PRL),  Louis  Michel,  president;  Fran- 
cophone Democratic  Front  (FDF),  Georges 
Clerfayt,  president;  Volksunie  (VU),  Jaak 
Gabriels,  president;  Communist  Party 
(PCB),  Louis  van  Geyt,  president;  Walloon 
Rally  (RW),  Fernand  Massart;  Ecologist 
Party  (ECOLO-AGALEV),  loosely  orga- 
nized with  no  president;  Anti-Tax  Party 
(UDRT-RAD),  Robert  Hendrick,  president; 
Vlaams  Blok  (VB),  Karel  Dillen 
Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  212-seat 
Chamber  of  Representatives— CVP  49 
seats,  PS  35  seats,  PVV  22  seats,  SP  32 
seats,  PRL  24  seats,  VU  16  seats,  PSC  20 
seats,  FDF  3,  ECOLO-AGALEV  9  seats, 
UDRT-RAD  1  seat,  VB  1 
Communists:  under  5,000  members  (De- 
cember 1985  est.) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Chris- 
tian and  Socialist  Trade  Unions;  Federa- 
tion of  Belgian  Industries;  numerous  other 
associations  representing  bankers,  manu- 
facturers, middle-class  artisans,  and  the 
legal  and  medical  professions;  various 
organizations  represent  the  cultural  inter- 
ests of  Flanders  and  Wallonia;  various 
peace  groups  such  as  Flemish  Action 
Committee  Against  Nuclear  Weapons  and 
Pax  Christi 

Member  of:  ADB,  Benelux,  BLEU,  Coun- 
cil of  Europe,  DAC,  EC,  ECE,  ECOSOC, 
EIB,  ELDO,  EMS,  ESRO,  FAO,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDE — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  International 
Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU, 
ITC,  ITU,  NATO,  OAS  (observer),  OECD, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WEU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $79.9  billion  (1985),  $8,100  per 
capita;  65.3%  private  consumption,  17.9% 
government  consumption,  15.6%  invest- 
ment, 1.2%  net  foreign  balance  (1983); 
1.1%  real  growth  rate  (1985);  average 
exchange  rate  59.378  Belgian  francs= 
US$1  (1985) 


Natural  resources:  coal 
Agriculture:  livestock  production  predomi- 
nates; main  crops — grains,  sugar  beets,  flax, 
potatoes,  other  vegetables,  fruits 

Fishing:  catch  44,308  metric  tons  (1985); 

exports  $83.52  million,  imports  $300.12 

million 

Major  industries:  engineering  and  metal 

products,  processed  food  and  beverages, 

chemicals,  basic  metals,  textiles,  glass, 

petroleum 

Crude  steel:  14.6  million  metric  tons 
capacity;  10.7  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 1,086  kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  16,921,000  kW  capacity; 

57,450  million  kWh  produced,  5,820  kWh 

per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  (Belgium-Luxembourg  Economic 

Union)  $53.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  iron  and 

steel  products  (cars),  petroleum  products, 

chemicals 

Imports:  (Belgium-Luxembourg  Economic 

Union)  $55.8  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  fuels, 

foodstuffs,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners: 

(Belgium-Luxembourg  Economic  Union, 
1985)  exports— 69.1%  EC  (19.0%  France, 
18.7%  FRG,  14.3%  Netherlands,  9.7%  UK), 
6.3%  US,  2.8%  Communist  countries; 
imports— 68.9%  EC  (21.1%  FRG,  18.7% 
Netherlands,  15.2%  France,  9.0%  UK), 
5.7%  US,  3.4%  Communist  countries 

Aid:  ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid  com- 
mitments (1970-84),  $3.8  billion 
Budget:  revenues,  $23.3  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $32.5  billion;  deficit,  $9.2  billion 
(1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  40.17  Belgian 
francs=US$l  (8  January  1987) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  Belgian  National  Railways 
(SNCB)  operates  3,741  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge,  government  owned;  2,563 
km  double  track;  1,969  km  electrified;  191 
km  1.000-meter  gauge,  government  owned 
and  operated 


21 


Belgium  (continued) 


Belize 


Highways:  103,396  km  total;  1,317  km 
limited  access,  divided  autoroute;  11,717 
km  national  highway;  1,362  km  provincial 
road;  about  38,000  km  other  paved;  about 
51,000  km  unpaved  rural 
Inland  waterways:  2,043  km  (1,528  km  in 
regular  commercial  use) 

Ports:  6  major,  1  minor 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  1,115  km; 
crude,  161  km;  natural  gas,  3,300  km 

Civil  air:  47  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  44  total,  43  usable;  25  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  14  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  domestic 
and  international  telephone  and  telegraph 
facilities;  4.22  million  telephones  (42.8  per 
100  pop!.);  6  AM,  39  FM,  32  TV  stations; 
6  submarine  cables;  2  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  stations;  2  EUTELSAT  anten- 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,500,000;  2,114,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 80,000  reach  military  age  (19)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $3.4  billion;  8.3%  of  the 
central  government  budget 


izeCitvy..    jl 

i:  •  P 

•  < 


, 

.-Caribbean 
I        Sea 


Punta  Gorda 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  22,960  km2;  land  area:  22,800 

km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 

Massachusetts 

Land  boundaries:  515  km  total 
Coastline:  386  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claimed  by 
Guatemala 

Climate:  tropical;  very  hot  and  humid; 
rainy  season  (May  to  February) 

Terrain:  flat,  swampy  coastal  plain;  low 
mountains  in  south 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures; 
44%  forest  and  woodland;  52%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  frequent  devastating  hurri- 
canes (September  to  December)  and 
coastal  flooding  (especially  in  south);  defor- 
estation 

Special  notes:  national  capital  moved  80 
km  inland  from  Belize  City  to  Belmopan 
because  of  hurricanes;  only  country  in 
Central  America  without  a  coastline  on  the 
Pacific  Ocean 


Population:  168,204  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.95% 


Nationality:  noun — Belizean(s);  adjec- 
tive— Belizean 

Ethnic  divisions:  51%  black,  22%  mestizo, 
19%  Amerindian,  8%  other 
Religion:  50%  Roman  Catholic;  Anglican, 
Seventh-Day  Adventist,  Methodist,  Baptist, 
Jehovah's  Witnesses,  Mennonite 

Language:  English  (official),  Spanish  Maya, 
Carib 

Infant  mortality  rate:  56/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  66 
Literacy:  about  90% 

Labor  force:  51,500  (1985);  30.0%  agricul- 
ture, 16.0%  services,  15.4%  government, 
11.2%  commerce,  10.3%  manufacturing; 
shortage  of  skilled  labor  and  all  types  of 
technical  personnel;  over  14%  are  unem- 
ployed 

Organized  labor:  15%  of  labor  force;  7  of 
16  registered  unions  currently  active 

Government 

Official  name:  Belize 

Type:  parliamentary;  independent  state;  a 

member  of  the  Commonwealth 

Capital:  Belmopan 
Administrative  divisions:  6  districts 
Legal  system:  English  law 
Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (National 
Assembly — electoral  redistricting  in  Octo- 
ber 1984  expanded  House  of  Representa- 
tives from  18  to  28  seats;  eight-member 
appointed  Senate;  either  house  may  choose 
its  speaker  or  president,  respectively,  from 
outside  its  membership);  Cabinet;  judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Manuel  A. 
ESQUIVEL,  Prime  Minister  (since  Decem- 
ber 1984);  Dr.  Elmira  Minita  GORDON, 
Governor  General  (since  December  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 
Elections:  parliamentary  elections  held 
December  1984;  municipal  elections  held 
December  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
Democratic  Party  (UDP),  Manuel 
Esquivel,  Curl  Thompson,  Dean  Lindo; 
People's  United  Party  (PUP),  George  Price, 
Florencio  Marin,  Said  Musa;  Belize  Popu- 
lar Party  (BPP),  Louis  Sylvestre 


22 


Benin 


Voting  strength:  (December  1984)  Na- 
tional Assembly— UDP  21  seats  (25,785— 
54.1%),  PUP  7  seats  (20,971—44.0%); 
before  redistricting,  PUP  held  13  seats, 
UDP  4  seats,  and  independents  1  seat 

Communists:  negligible 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  United 
Workers  Union,  which  is  connected  with 
PUP 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  CDB,  Common- 
wealth, FAO,  GATT,  IBRD,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  G-77,  ISO,  ITU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $193  million  (1985),  $1,190  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  1.5%  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  arable  land,  timber, 
fish 

Agriculture:  main  products — sugarcane, 
citrus  fruits,  corn,  molasses,  rice,  beans, 
bananas,  livestock  products,  honey;  net 
importer  of  food;  an  illegal  producer  of 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  1,349  metric  tons  (1980) 

Major  industries:  sugar  refining,  garments, 
timber  and  forest  products,  furniture,  rum, 
soap,  beverages,  cigarettes 

Electric  power:  34,340  kW  capacity;  71 
million  kWh  produced,  420  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $90.1  million  (1985  est);  sugar, 
garments,  seafood,  molasses,  citrus  fruits, 
wood  and  wood  products 

Imports:  $128  million  (1985  est.);  machin- 
ery and  transportation  equipment,  food, 
manufactured  goods,  fuels,  chemicals, 
Pharmaceuticals 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US  36%, 
UK  22%,  Trinidad  and  Tobago  11%, 
Canada  10%;  imports— US  55%,  UK  17%, 
Netherlands  Antilles  8%,  Mexico  7%  (1983) 

Aid:  US  economic  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $56  million;  ODA  and 
OOF  commitments  from  Western  (non- 
US)  countries  (1970-84),  $174  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $49  million;  expendi- 
tures, $90  million  (FY84/85) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2  Belize 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 


Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,575  km  total;  340  km  paved, 
1,190  km  gravel,  735  km  improved  earth, 
and  310  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  825  km  river  network 
used  by  shallow-draft  craft;  seasonally 
navigable 

Ports:  2  major  (Belize  City,  Belize  City 
Southwest),  6  minor 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  40  total,  35  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  8,650  telephones 
(4.5  per  100  popl.),  above  average  system 
based  on  radio-relay;  6  AM,  5  FM  stations; 
1  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  British  Forces  Belize,  Belize 
Defense  Force,  Police  Department 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  37,000; 
22,000  fit  for  military  service;  1,800  reach 
military  age  (18)  annually;  the  nucleus  of 
the  Belize  Defense  Force  (BDF)  is  the 
former  Special  Force  of  the  Belize  Police, 
which  was  transferred  intact  to  the  new 
organization;  the  bulk  of  the  early  recruits 
were  drawn  from  the  Belize  Volunteer 
Guard,  a  home  guard  force  that  had 
previously  acted  as  a  police  reserve;  the 
BDF  currently  consists  of  full-time  soldiers 
known  as  the  Regulars  and  an  essentially 
reserve  group,  which  has  maintained  the 
Volunteer  Guard  name;  recruitment  is 
voluntary  and  the  terms  of  service  vary 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1986,  $3.5  million;  3.3%  of  central 
government  budget 


lanville 


Cotgnou^j 


PORTO-NOVO 


Bight  of  Benin 

See  rfgional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  112,620  km2;  land  area: 
110,620  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Pennsylvania 

Land  boundaries:  1,963  km  total 
Coastline:  121  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid  in  south; 
arid  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  undulating  plain; 
some  hills  and  low  mountains 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  35% 
forest  and  woodland;  45%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dusty  harmattan 
wind  may  affect  north  in  winter;  defores- 
tation; desertification 

Special  notes:  recent  droughts  have  se- 
verely affected  marginal  agriculture  in 
north;  no  natural  harbors 


Population:  4,339,096  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.52% 

Nationality:  noun — Beninese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Beninese 

Ethnic  divisions:  99%  African  (42  ethnic 
groups,  most  important  being  Fon,  Adja, 
Yoruba,  Bariba);  5,500  Europeans 


Benin  (continued) 


Religion:  70%  indigenous  beliefs,  15% 
Muslim,  15%  Christian 

Language:  French  (official);  Fon  and 
Yoruba  most  common  vernaculars  in 
south;  at  least  six  major  tribal  languages  in 
north 

Infant  mortality  rate:  45/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  46.9 
Literacy:  11% 

Labor  force:  1.5  million  (1982);  60%  of 
labor  force  employed  in  agriculture;  less 
than  2%  of  the  labor  force  work  in  the 
industrial  sector,  and  the  remainder  are 
employed  in  transport,  commerce,  and 
public  services 

Organized  labor:  about  75%  of  wage 
earners  (two  major  and  several  minor 
unions) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  Benin 

Type:  Soviet-modeled  civilian  government 

Capital:  Porto-Novo  (official),  Cotonou  (de 
facto) 

Administrative  divisions:  6  provinces,  84 
districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
and  customary  law;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  30  November 

Branches:  Revolutionary  National  Assem- 
bly, National  Executive  Council 

Government  leader:  Brig.  Gen.  Mathieu 
KEREKOU,  President  and  Chief  of  State 
(since  1972) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  National  Assembly  elections 
were  held  in  November  1979;  Assembly 
then  formally  elected  Kerekou  President  in 
February  1980 

Political  parties:  People's  Revolutionary 
Party  of  Benin  (PRPB)  is  sole  party 

Communists:  PRPB  espouses  Marxism- 
Leninism 

Member  of:  AfDB,  CEAO,  EAMA,  ECA, 
ECOWAS,  Entente,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM, 


Niger  River  Commission,  OAU,  OCAM, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $974.2  million  (1984  est),  $250  per 
capita  (1983);  1.6%  growth  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  small  offshore  oil 
deposits;  no  other  known  minerals  in 
commercial  quantity 

Agriculture:  major  cash  crop  is  palm  oil; 
peanuts,  cotton,  coffee,  shea  nuts,  and 
tobacco  also  produced  commercially;  main 
food  crops — corn,  cassava,  yams,  rice, 
sorghum,  millet;  livestock,  fish 

Fishing:  catch  21,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  palm  oil  and  palm 
kernel  oil  processing,  textiles,  beverages 

Electric  power:  28,000  kW  capacity;  24 
million  kWh  produced,  5  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $172.5  million  (f.o.b.,  1984  est.); 
palm  products,  cotton,  other  agricultural 
products 

Imports:  $225.4  million  (f.o.b.  1984  est.); 
thread,  cloth,  clothing  and  other  consumer 
goods,  construction  materials,  iron,  steel, 
fuels,  foodstuffs,  machinery,  and  transport 
equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  EC,  franc 
zone;  preferential  tariffs  to  EC  and  franc 
zone  countries 

Budget:  revenues  $119  million;  expendi- 
tures, $119  million  (1985  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  580  km,  all  1.000-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  8,550  km  total;  828  km  paved, 
5,722  km  improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  small  sections,  only 
important  locally 

Ports:  1  major  (Cotonou) 

Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  9  total,  8  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of  open 
wire  and  radio  relay;  16,200  telephones 
(0.4  per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  2  FM,  and  1  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  eligible  15-49, 
1,738,000;  of  the  805,000  males  15-49, 
412,000  are  fit  for  military  service;  of  the 
933,000  females  15-49,  471,000  are  fit  for 
military  service;  about  54,000  males  and 
52,000  females  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually;  both  sexes  are  liable  for  military 
service 


Bermuda 


5  km 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 


See  regional  map  II 


Geography 

Total  area:  50  km2;  land  area:  50  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  103  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  subtropical;  mild,  humid;  gales, 
strong  winds  common  in  winter 

Terrain:  low  hills  separated  by  fertile 
depressions 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  20% 
forest  and  woodland;  80%  other;  includes 
11%  leased  for  military  bases 

Environment:  ample  rainfall,  but  no  rivers 
or  freshwater  lakes;  consists  of  about  360 
small  coral  islands 

Special  notes:  1,050  km  east  of  North 
Carolina;  some  reclaimed  land  leased  by 
US  Government 


Population:  58,033  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.18% 

Nationality:  noun — Bermudian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bermudian 

Ethnic  divisions:  61%  black,  39%  white 
and  other 


Religion:  37%  Anglican,  14%  Roman 
Catholic,  10%  African  Methodist  Episcopal 
(Zion),  6%  Methodist,  5%  Seventh-Day 
Adventist,  28%  other 

Language:  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  7.1/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  69,  women  76 
Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  32,000  employed  (1984);  25% 
clerical,  22%  services,  21%  laborers,  13% 
professional  and  technical,  10%  adminis- 
trative and  managerial,  7%  sales,  2% 
agriculture  and  fishing 

Organized  labor:  8,573  members  (1985); 
largest  union  is  Bermuda  Industrial  Union 

Government 

Official  name:  Bermuda 

Type:  British  dependent  territory 

Capital:  Hamilton 

Administrative  divisions:  9  parishes,  2 
municipalities 

Legal  system:  English  law 

Branches:  Executive  Council  (cabinet) 
appointed  by  governor,  led  by  government 
leader;  bicameral  legislature  with  an 
appointed  Senate  and  a  40-member  di- 
rectly elected  House  of  Assembly;  Su- 
preme Court 

Government  leaders:  Viscount  DUNROS- 
SIL,  Governor  (since  1983);  John  William 
David  SWAN,  Premier  (since  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  age  21 

Elections:  at  least  once  every  five  years; 
last  general  election  October  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
Bermuda  Party  (UBP),  John  W.  D.  Swan; 
Progressive  Labor  Party  (PLP),  Frederick 
Wade;  National  Liberal  Party,  Gilbert 
Darrell 

Voting  strength:  1985  elections — 40  seats 
total— UBP  31  House  of  Assembly  seats; 
PLP,  7;  National  Liberal  Party,  2 

Communists:  negligible 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Ber- 
muda Industrial  Union  (BIU),  headed  by 
Ottiwell  Simmons 

Member  of:  INTERPOL,  WHO 


Economy 

GDP:  $1,148.1  million  (1985-86),  $19,800 
per  capita — factor  cost  (1984-85);  real 
growth  rate  1.1%  (1983-84);  average  infla- 
tion rate  3.8%  (1984-85) 
Natural  resources:  limestone  (used  prima- 
rily for  building) 

Agriculture:  main  products — bananas, 
vegetables,  Easter  lilies,  dairy  products, 
citrus  fruits 

Major  industries:  tourism  (33%),  finance, 
structural  concrete  products,  paints,  per- 
fumes, furniture 

Electric  power:  118,000  kW  capacity;  378 
million  kWh  produced,  6,410  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $38  million  (1984);  semitropical 
produce,  light  manufactures 
Imports:  $404  million  (1984);  fuel,  food- 
stuffs, machinery 

Major  trade  partners:  56%  US,  11% 
Caribbean  countries,  8%  UK,  6%  Canada, 
19%  other;  tourists,  90%  US 
Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im  (FY70-81),  from  US  $34  million; 
from  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $265  million 
Budget:  revenues,  $208  million;  expendi- 
tures, $218  million  (FY85/86  est.) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  1  Bermuda 
dollar=US$l  (September  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  210  km  public  roads,  all  paved 
(about  400  km  of  private  roads) 
Ports:  3  major 

Civil  air:  16  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable,  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways  2,440-3,659  m 
Telecommunications:  modern  telecom 
system,  includes  fully  automatic  telephone 
system  with  46,290  sets  (84.6  per  100 
popl.);  4  AM,  3  FM,  2  TV  stations;  3 
submarine  cables;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satel- 
lite antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  United 

Kingdom 

Branches:  The  Bermuda  Regiment 


25 


Bhutan 


75km 


Sec  regional  mip  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  47,000  km2;  land  area:  47,000 
km2 

Comparative  area:  the  size  of  Vermont 
and  New  Hampshire  combined 

Land  boundaries:  870  km  total 

Climate:  varies;  tropical  in  southern 
plains;  cool  winters  and  hot  summers  in 
central  valleys;  severe  winters  and  cool 
summers  in  Himalayas 

Terrain:  mostly  mountainous  with  some 
fertile  valleys  and  savanna 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures; 
70%  forest  and  woodland;  23%  other 

Environment:  violent  storms  coming  down 
from  the  Himalayas  were  the  source  of  the 
country  name  which  translates  as  Land  of 
the  Thunder  Dragon 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategic  loca- 
tion between  China  and  India;  controls 
several  key  Himalayan  mountain  passes 

People 

Population:  1,472,911  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.03% 

Nationality:  noun — Bhutanese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Bhutanese 

Ethnic  divisions:  60%  Bhote,  25%  ethnic 
Nepalese,  15%  indigenous  or  migrant 
tribes 

Religion:  75%  Lamaistic  Buddhism,  25% 
Indian-  and  Nepalese-influenced  Hinduism 


Language:  Bhotes  speak  various  Tibetan 
dialects — most  widely  spoken  dialect  is 
Dzongkha  (official);  Nepalese  speak  various 
Nepalese  dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  162/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  43 
Literacy:  5% 

Labor  force:  95%  agriculture,  1%  industry 
and  commerce  (1983);  massive  lack  of 
skilled  labor 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Bhutan 
Type:  monarchy;  special  treaty  relation- 
ship with  India 

Capital:  Thimphu;  Paro  is  the  administra- 
tive capital 

Administrative  divisions:  4  regions  (east, 
central,  west,  south)  divided  into  18  dis- 
tricts 

Legal  system:  based  on  Indian  law  and 
English  common  law;  in  1907  the  monarch 
assumed  full  power — no  written  constitu- 
tion or  bill  of  rights;  in  1968-69  a  separate 
judiciary  that  provided  for  local,  district, 
and  national  courts  with  appellate  jurisdic- 
tion was  established;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 
National  holiday:  17  December 
Branches:  appointed  ministers; 
150-member  indirectly  elected  National 
Assembly  consisting  of  110  village  elders 
or  heads  of  family,  10  monastic  represen- 
tatives, and  30  senior  government  adminis- 
trators 

Government  leader:  Jigme  Singye 
WANGCHUCK,  King  (since  1974) 
Suffrage:  each  family  has  one  vote 
Elections:  popular  elections  on  village 
level  held  every  three  years 
Political  parties:  no  legal  parties 
Communists:  no  overt  Communist  pres- 
ence 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Bud- 
dhist clergy,  Indian  merchant  community, 
ethnic  Nepalese  organizations 
Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  IDA,  IFAD,  IMF, 
NAM,  SAARC,  UNESCO,  UPU,  UN, 
WHO 


Economy 

GDP:  $300  million,  $210  per  capita;  6.7% 
real  GDP  growth  (FY84/85) 

Natural  resources:  timber,  hydroelectric 
power 

Agriculture:  rice,  corn,  barley,  wheat, 
potatoes,  fruit,  spices 

Major  industries:  cement,  chemical  prod- 
ucts, mining,  distilling,  food  processing, 
handicrafts 

Electric  power:  352,000  kW  capacity; 
1,950  million  kWh  produced,  13  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $15.1  million  (FY84/85);  agricul- 
tural and  forestry  products,  coal 

Imports:  total  imports  $69.4  million 

(FY84/85);  imports  from  India  $61.0 

million;  textiles,  cereals,  vehicles,  fuels, 

machinery 

Major  trade  partner:  India 

Budget:  total  receipts,  $59.168  million; 

expenditures,  $66.861  million  (FY85/86 

est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  both  ngul- 

trums  and  Indian  rupees  are  legal  tender; 

12.88  ngultrums=  12.88  Indian 

rupees=US$l  (October  1985) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Highways:  1,304  km  total;  418  km  sur- 
faced, 515  km  improved,  371  km  unim- 
proved earth 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total;  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  facilities  inade- 
quate; 1,300  telephones  (0.1  per  100  popl.); 
11,000  est.  radio  sets;  no  TV  sets;  20  AM 
stations;  no  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Bhutan  Army 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  362,000; 

194,000  fit  for  military  service;  16,000 

reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


Bolivia 


See  regional  map  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,098,580  km2;  land  area: 
1,084,390  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
California  and  Texas  combined 

Land  boundaries:  6,083  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  has  wanted  a 
sovereign  corridor  to  the  Pacific  Ocean 
since  Atacama  area  was  lost  to  Chile  in 
1884;  dispute  with  Chile  over  Rio  Lauca 
water  rights 

Climate:  varies  with  altitude;  humid  and 
tropical  to  cold  and  semiarid 

Terrain:  high  plateau,  hills,  lowland  plains 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  25%  meadows  and  pastures; 
52%  forest  and  woodland;  20%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  cold,  thin  air  of  high  pla- 
teau makes  physical  activity  very  difficult; 
overgrazing;  soil  erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  shares  control 
of  Lago  Titicaca,  world's  highest  navigable 
lake,  with  Peru 

People 

Population:  6,309,642  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.19% 

Nationality:  noun — Bolivian(s);  adjective 
Bolivian 

Ethnic  divisions:  30%  Quechua,  25% 
Aymara,  25-30%  mixed,  5-15%  European 


Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic;  active 
Protestant  minority,  especially  Methodist 
Language:  Spanish,  Quechua,  and  Aymara 
(all  official) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  142/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  49 
Literacy:  63% 

Labor  force:  1.7  million  (1983);  50% 
agriculture,  26%  services  and  utilities,  10% 
manufacturing,  4%  mining,  10%  other 

Organized  labor:  150,000-200,000,  con- 
centrated in  mining,  industry,  construc- 
tion, and  transportation;  mostly  organized 
under  Bolivian  Workers'  Central  (COB) 
labor  federation 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Bolivia 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  La  Paz  (seat  of  government); 
Sucre  (legal  capital  and  seat  of  judiciary) 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  depart- 
ments with  limited  autonomy 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  law  and 
Code  Napoleon;  constitution  adopted  1967; 
constitution  in  force  except  where  contrary 
to  dispositions  dictated  by  governments 
since  1969;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  6 
August 

Branches:  executive;  bicameral  legislature 
(National  Congress — Senate  and  Chamber 
of  Deputies);  Congress  began  meeting 
again  in  October  1982;  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Victor  PAZ  Estens- 
soro,  President  (since  August  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  at  age 
18  if  married,  21  if  single 

Elections:  presidential  election  on  14  July 
1985  did  not  produce  the  required  major- 
ity for  any  of  the  three  leading  candidates; 
Victor  Paz  Estenssoro,  center-left  leader  of 
the  Nationalist  Revolutionary  Movement 
(MNR),  placed  second  in  the  popular  vote 
to  center-right  Hugo  Banzer,  head  of  the 
Nationalist  Democratic  Action  (ADN); 
however,  the  MNR  won  94  congressional 
seats  compared  to  the  ADN's  51;  as  a 


result,  the  Bolivian  Congress  on  5  August 
chose  Paz  Estenssoro  to  head  the  govern- 
ment; he  was  inaugurated  on  6  August 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  the  two 

parties  that  garnered  the  most  votes  in  the 
1985  elections,  the  Nationalist  Revolution- 
ary Movement  (MNR)  and  the  Nationalist 
Democratic  Action  (ADN),  continue  to 
have  a  tactical  alliance;  MNR,  Victor  Paz 
Estenssoro;  ADN,  Hugo  Banzer;  Movement 
of  the  Revolutionary  Left  (MIR),  Jaime 
Paz  Zamora;  Nationalist  Revolutionary 
Movement  of  the  Left  (MNRI),  Hernan 
Siles  Zuazo;  Bolivian  Socialist  Falange 
(FSB),  Mario  Gutierrez;  Authentic  Revolu- 
tionary Party  (PRA),  Walter  Guevara; 
Christian  Democratic  Party  (PDC),  Ben- 
jamin Miguel;  Nationalist  Revolutionary 
Party  of  the  Left,  Juan  Lechin  Oquendo 

Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  ADN 
28.11%,  MNR  26.66%;  MIR  8.86% 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  IADB,  IAEA, 
IATP,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Inter-American  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council,  LAIA  and  Andean  Sub- 
Regional  Group  (created  in  May  1969 
within  LAIA,  formerly  LAFTA),  NAM, 
OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $3.79  billion  (1986  est.),  $610  per 
capita;  79.2%  private  consumption,  16.6% 
public  consumption,  12.0%  gross  domestic 
investment;  -  11.0%  current  account  bal- 
ance (1983);  real  growth  rate  -  3.7%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  tin,  natural  gas,  petro- 
leum, zinc,  tungsten,  antimony,  silver,  iron 
ore 

Agriculture:  main  crops — potatoes,  corn, 
rice,  sugarcane,  yucca,  bananas,  coffee; 
imports  significant  quantities  of  wheat;  an 
illegal  producer  of  coca  for  the  interna- 
tional drug  trade 

Major  industries:  mining,  smelting,  petro- 
leum refining,  food  processing,  textiles, 
and  clothing 

Electric  power:  508,000  kW  capacity; 
2,080  million  kWh  produced,  330  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 


27 


Bolivia  (continued) 


Botswana 


Exports:  $673  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  tin, 
natural  gas,  silver,  tungsten,  zinc,  anti- 
mony, lead,  bismuth,  gold,  coffee,  sugar, 
cotton 

Imports:  $582  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, chemicals,  capital  goods,  pharma- 
ceuticals,  transportation 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Argentina 
44%,  US  24%,  EC  19%,  FRG  6%,  UK  4%; 
imports— Brazil  22%,  US  16%,  EC  16%, 
Argentina  14%,  Japan  13%,  FRG  4%  (1984) 

Budget:  revenues,  $476.9  million;  expendi- 
tures, $669.8  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1,923,000 
pesos=US$l  (December  1986);  currency 
changed  to  boliviano  on  1  January  1987 
with  a  one-year  transition  period;  1.92 
bolivianos=US$l  (1  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,675  km  total;  3,538  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge  and  32  km  0.760-meter 
gauge,  all  government  owned,  single  track; 
105  km  1,000-meter  gauge,  privately 
owned 

Highways:  38,836  km  total;  1,300  km 
paved,  6,700  km  gravel,  30,836  km  im- 
proved and  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  officially  estimated  to 
be  10,000  km  of  commercially  navigable 
waterways 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  1,670  km;  refined 
products,  1,495  km;  natural  gas,  580  km 

Ports:  none  (Bolivian  cargo  moved  through 
Arica  and  Antofagasta,  Chile,  and  Matar- 
ani,  Peru) 

Civil  air:  56  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  711  total,  643  usable;  9  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  7  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  130  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  radio-relay  system 
being  expanded;  improved  international 
services;  144,300  telephones  (2.6  per  100 
popl.);  129  AM,  62  shortwave,  38  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT 
station 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Bolivian  Army,  Bolivian  Navy, 
Bolivian  Air  Force  (literally,  the  Army  of 
the  Nation,  the  Navy  of  the  Nation,  the 
Air  Force  of  the  Nation) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,510,000;  984,000  fit  for  military  service; 
65,000  reach  military  age  (19)  annually 


2001"" 


"is ha bong 


Boundary  representation  is 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


See  refionil  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  600,370  km2;  land  area: 
585,370  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Texas 

Land  boundaries:  3,774  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 
Namibia  is  indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  warm  winters  and  hot 
summers 

Terrain:  predominately  flat  to  gently 
rolling  tableland 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  75%  meadows  and  pastures;  2% 
forest  and  woodland;  21%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  continuing  drought  severely 
affecting  important  cattle  industry;  over- 
grazing; desertification 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  very  long 
boundary  with  South  Africa 


Population:  1,149,141  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.48% 

Nationality:  noun — Motswana  (sing.), 
Botswana  (pi.);  adjective — Botswana 

Ethnic  divisions:  95%  Batswana;  about  4% 
Kalanga,  Basarwa,  and  Kgalagadi;  about 
1%  white 

Religion:  50%  indigenous  beliefs,  50% 
Christian 

Language:  English  (official),  Setswana 


28 


Infant  mortality  rate:  about  63/1,000 
(1985) 

Life  expectancy:  63.5  (1985) 

Literacy:  about  24%  in  English;  about  35% 
in  Tswana;  less  than  1%  secondary  school 
graduates 

Labor  force:  about  400,000  total;  110,000 
formal  sector  employees  (1984);  most 
others  are  engaged  in  cattle  raising  and 
subsistence  agriculture;  40,000  formal 
sector  employees  spend  at  least  six  to  nine 
months  per  year  as  wage  earners  in  South 
Africa  (1980);  17%  unemployment  (1983) 

Organized  labor:  16  trade  unions  orga- 
nized 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Botswana 

Type:  parliamentary  republic;  independent 
member  of  Commonwealth 

Capital:  Gaborone 

Administrative  divisions:  10  administra- 
tive districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  Roman-Dutch  law 
and  local  customary  law;  constitution  came 
into  effect  1966;  judicial  review  limited  to 
matters  of  interpretation;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Botswana  Day,  30 
September 

Branches:  executive — President  appoints 
and  presides  over  the  Cabinet,  which  is 
responsible  to  National  Assembly;  bicam- 
eral legislature  (National  Assembly  with  34 
popularly  elected  members  and  four 
members  elected  by  the  34  representatives; 
House  of  Chiefs  with  deliberative  powers 
only);  judicial — local  courts  administer 
customary  law,  High  Court  and  subordi- 
nate courts  have  criminal  jurisdiction  over 
all  residents,  Court  of  Appeal  has  appellate 
jurisdiction 

Government  leader:  Dr.  Quett  K.  J. 
MASIRE,  President  (since  July  1980) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  21 

Elections:  general  elections  held  8  Sep- 
tember 1984 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Botswana 
Democratic  Party  (BDP),  Quett  Masire; 
Botswana  National  Front  (BNF),  Kenneth 
Koma;  Botswana  People's  Party  (BPP); 
Botswana  Independence  Party  (BIP), 
Motsamai  Mpho 

Voting  strength:  (September  1984  election) 
Legislative  Assembly— BDP,  28  seats; 
BNF,  5  seats;  BPP,  1  seat 

Communists:  no  known  Communist  orga- 
nization; Koma  of  BNF  has  long  history  of 
Communist  contacts 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  Southern  African  Cus- 
toms Union,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $905  million,  $880  per  capita; 
average  annual  real  growth  2%  (FY83/84) 

Natural  resources:  diamonds,  copper, 
nickel,  salt,  soda  ash,  potash,  coal 

Agriculture:  principal  crops  are  corn, 
sorghum,  millet,  cowpeas;  livestock  raised 
and  exported;  heavy  dependence  on  im- 
ported food 

Major  industries:  livestock  processing; 
mining  of  diamonds,  copper,  nickel,  coal, 
salt,  soda  ash,  potash;  tourism 

Electric  power:  174,000  kW  capacity;  533 
million  kWh  produced,  480  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $653  million  (f.o.b.  1985);  dia- 
monds, cattle,  animal  products,  copper, 
nickel 

Imports:  $535  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, vehicles,  textiles,  petroleum  products 

Major  trade  partners:  Switzerland,  US, 
UK,  other  EC  members  of  Southern  Afri- 
can Customs  Union 

Budget:  revenues,  $433  million;  expendi- 
tures, $351  million  (FY84/85  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.88 
pula=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 


Communications 

Railroads:  726  km  1.0  67-meter  gauge 

Highways:  11,514  km  total;  1,600  km 
paved;  1,700  km  crushed  stone  or  gravel, 
5,177  km  improved  earth,  3,037  km  unim- 
proved earth 

Civil  air:  6  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  105  total,  97  usable;  9  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  24  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  the  small  system  is 
a  combination  of  open-wire  lines,  radio- 
relay  links,  and  a  few  radiocommunication 
stations;  17,900  telephones  (1.7  per  100 
popl.);  3  AM,  2  FM,  2  TV  stations;  1 
Indian  Ocean  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Wing,  Botswana 
Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  215,000; 
113,000  fit  for  military  service;  13,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


Brazil 


See  rc|lontl  mip  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  8,511,970  km2;  land  area: 
8,456,510  km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  contermi- 
nous US 

Land  boundaries:  13,076  km  total 
Coastline:  7,491  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Paraguay  (Rio  Parana 
area),  Uruguay;  claims  a  Zone  of  Interest 
in  Antarctica 

Climate:  mostly  tropical,  but  temperate  in 
south 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  rolling  lowlands  in 
north;  some  plains,  hills,  mountains,  and 
narrow  coastal  belt 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  19%  meadows  and  pastures;  67% 
forest  and  woodland;  6%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recurrent  droughts  in  north- 
east; floods  and  frost  in  south;  deforestation 
in  Amazon  basin 

Special  notes:  largest  country  in  South 
America;  shares  common  boundaries  with 
every  South  American  country  except 
Chile  and  Ecuador 


People 

Population:  147,094,739  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.45% 

Nationality:  noun — Brazilian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Brazilian 

Ethnic  divisions:  Portuguese,  Italian, 
German,  Japanese,  black,  Amerindian; 
55%  white,  38%  mixed,  6%  black,  1% 
other 

Religion:  (1980)  89%  Roman  Catholic 
(nominal) 

Language:  Portuguese  (official),  English 
Infant  mortality  rate:  70/1,000  (1986) 
Life  expectancy:  62.8 
Literacy:  76% 

Labor  force:  50  million  in  1984;  40% 
services,  35%  agriculture,  25%  industry 

Organized  labor:  about  25  million  (1986) 


Government 

Official  name:  Federative  Republic  of 
Brazil 

Type:  federal  republic;  democratically 
elected  president  since  March  1985 

Capital:  Brasilia 

Administrative  divisions:  23  states,  3 
territories,  1  federal  district 

Legal  system:  based  on  Latin  codes;  dual 
system  of  courts,  state  and  federal;  consti- 
tution adopted  in  1967  and  extensively 
amended  in  1969;  has  not  accepted  com- 
pulsory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  7 
September 

Branches:  strong  executive  with  very 
broad  powers;  bicameral  legislature  (Na- 
tional Congress)  with  growing  powers, 
comprised  of  Senate  and  Chamber  of 
Deputies  that  will  combine  to  form  a 
Constituent  Assembly  in  1987  to  draft  a 
new  constitution;  11-man  Supreme  Court 

Government  leader:  Jose  SARNEY  Costa, 
President  (since  April  1985) 

Suffrage:  compulsory  over  age  18 

Elections:  Tancredo  Neves  indirectly 
elected  by  an  electoral  college  composed 
of  members  of  congress  and  delegates 
from  the  state  legislatures,  ending  20  years 
of  military  rule;  died  before  assuming 


office;  municipal  elections  held  November 
1985;  congressional  and  gubernatorial 
elections  held  November  1986;  constitu- 
tional convention  February  1987 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Brazilian 
Democratic  Movement  Party  (PMDB), 
Ulysses  Guimaraes,  president;  Liberal 
Front  Party  of  President  Sarney's  govern- 
ment coalition,  Mauricio  Campos,  presi- 
dent; other  parties — Workers  Party  (PT), 
Brazilian  Labor  Party  (PTB),  Democratic 
Workers  Party  (PDT),  and  Social  Demo- 
cratic Party  (PDS);  Communist  parties 
legalized  in  March  1985 — Brazilian  Com- 
munist Party  (PCB)  and  Communist  Party 
of  Brazil  (PCdoB) 

Voting  strength:  (November  1986  Con- 
gressional elections)  77%  government 
coalition  (PMDB  and  PFL),  7%  PDS,  10% 
leftist  opposition  parties  (PT,  PDT,  PCB) 

Communists:  about  30,000 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  left 
wing  of  the  Catholic  Church  and  labor 
unions  allied  to  leftist  Worker's  Party  are 
critical  of  military  government's  social  and 
economic  policies 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDB — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  OAS,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $250  billion,  $1,740  per  capita  (1986 
est);  83%  consumption,  16%  gross  invest- 
ment, 2%  net  foreign  balance  (1984  est.); 
real  growth  rate  8.3%  (1985);  inflation  rate 
about  70%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  iron  ore,  manganese, 
bauxite,  nickel,  uranium,  tin,  gemstones, 
hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  main  products — coffee,  rice, 
corn,  sugarcane,  cocoa,  soybeans,  cotton, 
manioc,  oranges;  nearly  self-sufficient 
except  for  wheat;  an  illegal  producer  of 
coca  and  cannabis  for  the  international 
drug  trade 


30 


British  Indian  Ocean 
Territory 


Fishing:  catch  958,908  metric  tons  (1984); 
exports,  $174  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  im- 
ports, $36  million  (f.o.b.,  1984) 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  other  con- 
sumer goods,  chemicals,  cement,  lumber, 
iron  ore,  steel,  motor  vehicles,  other  metal- 
working  industries,  capital  goods,  tin 

Crude  steel:  20.0  million  metric  tons 
capacity;  17.5  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985);  125  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  42,945,000  kW  capacity; 
1,680,000  million  kWh  produced,  1,170 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $25.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  soy- 
beans, coffee,  transport  equipment,  iron 
ore,  steel  products,  chemicals,  machinery, 
orange  juice,  shoes,  sugar 

Imports:  $12.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, machinery,  chemicals,  fertilizers, 
wheat,  copper 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 27%  US, 
27%  EC,  9%  Latin  America,  5%  Japan, 
32%  other  (1985);  imports— 35%  Middle 
East  and  Africa,  20%  US,  12%  Latin 
America,  15%  EC,  4%  Japan,  14%  other 
(1985) 

Budget:  public  sector — revenues,  92,529 
million  cruzados;  current  expenditures, 
75,541  million  cruzados;  capital  expendi- 
tures, 35,070  million  cruzados  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  14.11 
cruzados=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  29,781  km  total;  25,155  km 
1.000-meter  gauge,  4,339  km  1.600-meter 
gauge,  200  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  87  km  0.760-meter  gauge;  1,915  km 
electrified 

Highways:  1,498,000  km  total;  48,000  km 
paved,  1,400,000  km  gravel  or  earth 

Inland  waterways:  50,000  km  navigable 
Ports:  8  major,  23  significant  minor 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  2,000  km;  refined 
products,  465  km;  natural  gas,  257  km 
Civil  air:  176  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  4,470  total,  3,615  usable;  332 
with  permanent-surface  runways;  1  with 
runways  over  3,659  m;  23  with  runways 


2,440-3,659  m;  489  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  telecom  sys- 
tem; extensive  radio-relay  facilities;  2 
Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  stations  with 
total  of  3  antennas;  64  domestic  satellite 
stations;  9.86  million  telephones  (7.3  per 
100  popl.);  1,141  AM,  171  shortwave,  200 
TV  stations;  3  coaxial  submarine  cables 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Brazilian  Army,  Navy  of  Brazil, 
Brazilian  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
37,002,000;  25,022,000  fit  for  military 
service;  1,579,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  estimated  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  $4.3  billion; 
7.2%  of  central  government  budget 


75km 


' '  Salomon  Islands 


Peros  Banhos' 


Chagos 
Archipelago 

'Eagle  Islands 


'  "  Egmont  Islands 

Indian  Ocean 


Diego  Garcia 


Sec  regional  map  I 


Geography 

Total  area:  80  km2;  land  area:  80  km2 

Comparative  area:  less  than  one-half  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  about  120  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Diego  Garcia 
claimed  by  Mauritius 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  hot,  humid, 
moderated  by  trade  winds 

Terrain:  flat  and  low  (up  to  4  meters  in 
elevation) 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  consists  of  2,300  islands 

Special  notes:  Diego  Garcia,  largest  and 
southernmost  island,  occupies  strategic 
location  in  central  Indian  Ocean 


Population:  no  permanent  civilian  popula- 
tion; formerly  about  3,000  islanders 

Ethnic  divisions:  civilian  inhabitants, 
known  as  the  Hois,  evacuated  to  Mauritius 
before  construction  of  UK  and  US  defense 
facilities 

Government 

Official  name:  British  Indian  Ocean  Terri- 
tory 


31 


British  Indian  Ocean 
Territory  (continued) 


British  Virgin  Islands 


Type:  colony  administered  by  United 
Kingdom 

Capital:  none 

Government  leaders:  W.  Marsden,  Com- 
missioner (since  1986;  resident  in  UK);  T. 
C.  Stilt,  Administrator  (since  1986) 

Economy 

Electric  power:  provided  by  US  military 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  short  stretch  of  paved  road 
between  port  and  airfield  on  Diego  Garcia 

Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  1  major  (Diego  Garcia) 
Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  over  3,659  m 
on  Diego  Garcia 

Telecommunications:  minimal  telecom- 
munications facilities;  US  Navy  operates  1 
AM,  1  FM,  and  1  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

United  Kingdom  and  United  States  de- 
fense facilities 


North 
Atlantic 
Ocean 


Jost 
Van 


"        ROAD  T 

Tortola 

Sceregionll  miplll 


Caribbean  Sea 


Geography 

Total  area:  150  km2;  land  area:  150  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  80  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  subtropical;  humid;  temperatures 
moderated  by  trade  winds 

Terrain:  coral  islands  relatively  flat;  volca- 
nic islands  steep,  hilly 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  33%  meadows  and  pastures;  1% 
forest  and  woodland;  33%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  and 
tropical  storms 

Special  notes:  strong  ties  to  nearby  US 
Virgin  Islands  and  Puerto  Rico 


Population:  12,374  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.12% 

Nationality:  noun — Virgin  Islanders); 
adjective — Virgin  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  over  90%  black,  remain- 
der of  white  and  Asian  origin 

Religion:  majority  Methodist;  others  in- 
clude Anglican,  Church  of  God,  Seventh- 
Day  Adventist,  Baptist,  and  Roman 
Catholic 


Language:  English  (official) 

Literacy:  98.3% 

Work  force:  4,911  (1980) 

Government 

Official  name:  British  Virgin  Islands 
Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  Road  Town 

Administrative  divisions:  9  electoral 
districts 

Legal  system:  English  law;  justice  is  ad- 
ministered by  the  Eastern  Caribbean 
Supreme  Court  and  Courts  of  Summary 
Jurisdiction  and  Magistrates;  there  is  a 
resident  puisne  judge  on  the  islands;  new 
constitution  in  1977 

National  holiday:  Territory  Day,  1  July 

Branches:  Executive  Council  (cabinet) 
consists  of  the  Governor  as  chairman,  four 
ministers  of  the  legislature,  and  an  ex 
officio  member  who  is  the  attorney  gen- 
eral; Legislative  Council  consists  of  the 
Speaker  (elected  from  outside  the  Council), 
nine  elected  members,  and  an  ex  officio 
member  who  is  the  attorney  general 

Government  leaders:  Mark  HERDMAN, 
Governor  and  Chairman  of  the  Executive 
Council  (since  1986);  H.  Lavitty  STOUTT, 
Chief  Minister  (since  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  18 

Elections:  at  least  once  every  five  years; 
last  general  election  held  30  September 
1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
Party  (UP),  Conrad  Maduro;  Virgin  Islands 
Party  (VIP),  H.  Lavitty  Stoutt;  Indepen- 
dent, C.  B.  Romney 

Voting  strength:  1986  elections— UP  2 
seats;  VIP  5  seats;  Independents  2  seats 

Communists:  probably  none 
Member  of:  Commonwealth 

Economy 

GDP:  $77.1  million  (1983) 

Agriculture:  limited — livestock  (including 
poultry),  fish,  fruit,  and  vegetables 

Fishing:  293  metric  tons  fish,  25  metric 
tons  crustaceans  (1975) 


32 


Brunei 


Major  industries:  tourism  (over  45%), 
construction,  rum,  concrete  block 

Electric  power:  7,500  kW  capacity;  33 
million  kWh  produced,  2,750  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.0  million  (1981);  fresh  fish, 
gravel,  sand,  fruits,  and  vegetables 

Imports:  $49.8  million  (1981);  building 
materials,  automobiles,  foodstuffs,  machin- 
ery 

Major  trade  partners:  mostly  with  neigh- 
boring US  Virgin  Islands 
Budget:  revenues,  $19.79  million;  expendi- 
tures, $19.0  million  (1984  est.) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  official  cur- 
rency is  the  US  dollar 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  106  km  motorable  roads  (1983) 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  1  major  (Road  Town) 

Airfields:  3  total;  3  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways 

Telecommunications:  3,000  telephones — 
worldwide  external  telephone  service  and 
cable  communication  links;  1  AM  and  1 
TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


BANDAR 
SERI  BEGAWAN 


South  China 
Sea 


See  regional  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  5,770  km2;  land  area:  5,270 

km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 

Delaware 

Land  boundary:  381  km  with  Malaysia 

Coastline:  161  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Boundary  disputes:  none;  possible  territo- 
rial claim  in  complex  dispute  over  Spratly 
Islands  involving  China,  Malaysia,  Philip- 
pines, Taiwan,  and  Vietnam 
Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid,  rainy 
Terrain:  flat  coastal  plain  rises  to  moun- 
tains in  east;  hilly  lowland  in  west 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  79% 
forest  and  woodland;  18%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  typhoons,  earthquakes,  and 
severe  flooding  are  rare 

Special  notes:  close  to  vital  sea  lanes 
through  South  China  Sea  linking  Indian 
and  Pacific  Oceans;  two  parts  physically 
separated  by  Malaysia;  almost  an  enclave 
of  Malaysia 


Population:  249,961  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.67% 


Nationality:  noun — Bruneian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bruneian 

Ethnic  divisions:  64%  Malay,  20%  Chi- 
nese, 16%  other 

Religion:  60%  Muslim  (official);  8%  Chris- 
tian; 32%  Buddhist  and  indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  Malay  (official),  English,  and 
Chinese 

Life  expectancy:  73.7 
Literacy:  45% 

Labor  force:  68,128  (includes  members  of 
the  Army);  50.4%  production  of  oil,  natu- 
ral gas,  and  construction;  47.6%  trade, 
services,  and  other;  2.0%  agriculture, 
forestry,  and  fishing  (1984) 
Organized  labor:  2%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  State  of  Brunei  Darussalam 
Type:  constitutional  sultanate;  became  a 
sovereign  state  and  fully  independent  from 
United  Kingdom  on  1  January  1984 

Capital:  Bandar  Seri  Begawan 
National  holiday:  National  Day,  23  Feb- 
ruary 

Administrative  divisions:  four  administra- 
tive districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law;  con- 
stitution promulgated  by  the  Sultan  in 
1959 

Branches:  chief  of  state  is  Sultan  (advised 
by  appointed  Privy  Council),  who  appoints 
Executive  Council  and  Legislative  Council 
Government  leader:  Sir  HASSANAL 
Bolkiah,  Sultan  and  Prime  Minister  (since 
August  1968) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  21;  three-tiered 
system  of  indirect  elections;  popular  vote 
cast  for  lowest  level  (district  councilors) 

Elections:  last  elections — March  1965; 
further  elections  postponed  indefinitely 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Brunei 
National  Democratic  Party  (established  on 
18  September  1985,  the  first  legal  political 
party),  Abdul  Latif  bin  Abdul  Hamid, 
Chairman;  Brunei  National  United  Party 
(established  on  4  February  1986),  Anak 
Hasanuddin,  chairman 
Communists:  probably  none 


33 


Brunei  (continued) 


Bulgaria 


Member  of:  ASEAN,  ESCAP  (associate 
member),  IMO,  INTERPOL,  QIC,  UN 

Economy 

GDP:  $3.422  billion,  $14,750  per  capita 
(1985) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  natural  gas 

Agriculture:  rice,  pepper;  imports  most 
food 

Major  industry:  crude  petroleum,  lique- 
fied natural  gas,  construction 

Electric  power:  163,000  kW  capacity;  470 
million  kWh  produced,  2,000  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.1  billion  (1985);  98-99%  crude 
oil,  liquefied  natural  gas,  and  petroleum 
products 

Imports:  $640  million  (1985);  includes 
machinery  and  transport  equipment, 
manufactured  goods,  food,  beverages, 
tobacco,  and  other;  most  consumer  goods 
imported 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — (crude 
petroleum  and  liquefied  natural  gas) 
roughly  two-thirds  to  Japan;  imports — 
Singapore  24%,  Japan  20%,  US  16%  (1985) 

Budget:  revenues,  $2,109  million;  expendi- 
tures, $1,219  million;  surplus  $890  million 

(1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.16  Brunei 
dollars=US$l  (March  1986)  inflation  under 
2.0%  (1985/86) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  13  km  0.610-meter  narrow- 
gauge  private  line 

Highways:  1,090  km  total;  370  km  paved 
(bituminous  treated)  and  another  52  km 
under  construction,  720  km  gravel  or 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  209  km;  navigable  by 
craft  drawing  less  than  1.2  meters 

Ports:  1  major  (Muara),  4  minor 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  135  km;  refined 
products,  418  km;  natural  gas,  920  km 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  3  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  service  throughout 
country  is  adequate  for  present  needs; 
international  service  good  to  adjacent 
Sabah  and  Sarawak;  radiobroadcast  cover- 
age good;  27,000  telephones  (11.0  per  100 
popl.);  Radio  Brunei  broadcasts  from  4 
AM/FM  stations  and  1  TV  station;  52,000 
radio  receivers;  1  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Brunei  Armed  Forces, 
including  air  wing,  navy,  and  ground 
forces;  British  Gurkha  Battalion;  Royal 
Brunei  Police;  Gurkha  Reserve  Unit 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  61,000; 
37,000  fit  for  military  service;  about  3,300 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $197.6  million;  about  17% 
of  central  government  budget 


125km 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  110,910  km2;  land  area: 
110,550  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Ohio 

Land  boundaries:  1,883  km  total 
Coastline:  354  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Macedonia 
question  with  Greece  and  Yugoslavia 

Climate:  temperate;  cold,  damp  winters; 
hot,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  lowlands 
in  north  and  south 

Land  use:  34%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures;  35% 
forest  and  woodland;  10%  other;  includes 
11%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  earthquakes, 
landslides;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  near 
Turkish  Straits;  controls  key  land  routes 
from  Europe  to  Middle  East  and  Asia 


Population:  8,960,749  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.08% 

Nationality:  noun — Bulgarian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Bulgarian 


34 


Ethnic  divisions:  85.3%  Bulgarian,  8.5% 
Turk,  2.6%  Gypsy,  2.5%  Macedonian,  0.3% 
Armenian,  0.2%  Russian,  0.6%  other 

Religion:  regime  promotes  atheism;  relig- 
ious background  of  population  is  85% 
Bulgarian  Orthodox,  13%  Muslim,  0.8% 
Jewish,  0.7%  Roman  Catholic,  0.5%  Protes- 
tant, Gregorian-Armenian,  and  other 

Language:  Bulgarian;  secondary  languages 
closely  correspond  to  ethnic  breakdown 

Infant  mortality  rate:  20.2/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  69,  women  74 
Literacy:  95%  (est.) 

Labor  force:  4,113,546  (1983);  34%  indus- 
try, 22%  agriculture,  44%  other 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  Bul- 
garia 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Sofia 

Administrative  divisions:  27  okrugs  (dis- 
tricts); capital  city  of  Sofia  has  equivalent 
status 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system, 
with  Soviet  law  influence;  new  constitution 
adopted  in  1971;  judicial  review  of  legisla- 
tive acts  in  the  State  Council;  has  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  National  Liberation 
Day,  9  September 

Branches:  legislative  (National  Assembly); 
judiciary,  Supreme  Court 

Government  leaders:  Todor  Khristov 
ZHIVKOV,  Chairman,  State  Council 
(President  and  Chief  of  State;  since  July 
1971);  Georgi  Ivanov  ATANASOV,  Chair- 
man, Council  of  Ministers  (Premier;  since 
March  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  held  every  five  years  for  Na- 
tional Assembly;  last  election  held  in  June 
1986;  more  than  99%  of  electorate  voted 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Bulgarian 
Communist  Party,  Todor  Zhivkov,  General 
Secretary;  Bulgarian  National  Agrarian 
Union,  a  puppet  party,  Petur  Tanchev, 
secretary  of  Permanent  Board 


Communists:  932,055  party  members 
(April  1986) 

Mass  organizations  and  front  groups: 
Fatherland  Front,  Dimitrov  Communist 
Youth  Union,  Central  Council  of  Trade 
Unions,  National  Committee  for  Defense 
of  Peace,  Union  of  Fighters  Against  Fas- 
cism and  Capitalism,  Committee  of  Bul- 
garian Women,  All-National  Committee 
for  Bulgarian-Soviet  Friendship 

Member  of:  CEMA,  FAO,  IAEA,  ICAO, 
ILO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study 
Group,  IMO,  IPU,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO;  Warsaw  Pact,  International 
Organization  of  Journalists,  International 
Medical  Association,  International  Radio 
and  Television  Organization 

Economy 

GNP:  $57.8  billion,  $6,460  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate,  -  0.8%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  copper,  lead, 
zinc,  coal,  lignite,  lumber 

Agriculture:  mainly  self-sufficient;  main 
crops — grain,  tobacco,  fruits,  vegetables, 
sheep,  hogs,  poultry,  cheese,  sunflower 
seeds 

Fishing:  catch  121,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  ma- 
chine and  metal  building,  electronics, 
chemicals 

Shortages:  some  raw  materials;  scattered 
energy  and  food  shortages  in  1985 

Crude  steel:  2.9  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  324  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  11,298,000  kW  capacity; 
45,000  million  kWh  produced,  4,956  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $  13.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
54%  machinery  and  equipment;  19% 
agricultural  products;  10%  fuels,  mineral 
raw  materials,  and  metals;  10%  manufac- 
tured consumer  goods;  7%  other 

Imports:  $14.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
47%  fuels  and  minerals,  33%  machinery 
and  equipment,  5%  chemicals,  4%  manu- 
factured consumer  goods,  11%  other  (1982) 


Major  trade  partners:  56%  USSR,  19% 
other  Communist  countries,  25%  non- 
Communist  countries 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.95 
leva=US$l  (July  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,278  km  total;  all  government 
owned  (1984);  about  4,033  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge,  245  km  narrow  gauge;  823 
km  double  track;  2,053  km  electrified 

Highways:  36,336  km  total;  33,042  km 
hard  surface  (including  211  km  superhigh- 
ways); 3,294  km  earth  roads  (1984) 

Inland  waterways:  471  km  (1981) 

Pipelines:  crude,  193  km;  refined  product, 
418  km;  natural  gas,  1,400  km 

Freight  carried:  rail — 82.9  million  metric 
tons,  18.1  billion  metric  tons/km;  high- 
way— 914  million  metric  tons,  17.1  billion 
metric  tons/km;  waterway — 4.0  million 
metric  tons,  2.0  billion  metric  tons/km 
(1985) 

Ports:  3  major  (Varna,  Varna  West, 
Burgas),  6  minor;  principal  river  ports  are 
Ruse  and  Lorn 
Civil  air:  65  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  380  total;  15  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  15  AM,  14  FM,  13 
TV  stations;  1  Soviet  TV  relay;  2,002,000 
TV  sets;  2,100,000  receiver  sets;  at  least  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Bulgarian  People's  Army,  Fron- 
tier Troops,  Air  and  Air  Defense  Forces, 
Bulgarian  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,156,000;  1,808,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 65,000  reach  military  age  (19)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  est.  for  fiscal  year  ending 
31  December  1986,  1.2  billion  leva;  6.0% 
of  total  budget 


35 


Burkina 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  274,200  km2;  land  area: 
273,800  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Colorado 

Land  boundaries:  3,307  km  total 

Climate:  tropical;  warm,  dry  winters;  hot, 
wet  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  dissected,  undulat- 
ing plains;  hills  in  south 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  37%  meadows  and 
pastures;  26%  forest  and  woodland;  27% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recent  droughts  and  deserti- 
fication severely  affecting  marginal  agri- 
cultural activities,  population  distribution, 
economy;  overgrazing;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  8,276,272  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.42% 

Nationality:  noun — Burkinabe;  adjective — 
Burkinabe 

Ethnic  divisions:  more  than  50  tribes; 
principal  tribe  is  Mossi  (about  2.5  million); 
other  important  groups  are  Gurunsi,  Se- 
nufo,  Lobi,  Bobo,  Mande,  and  Fulani 

Religion:  65%  indigenous  beliefs,  about 
25%  Muslim,  10%  Christian  (mainly  Cath- 
olic) 


Language:  French  (official);  tribal  lan- 
guages belong  to  Sudanic  family,  spoken 
by  50%  of  the  population 

Infant  mortality  rate:  182/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  42 
Literacy:  7% 

Labor  force:  90%  agriculture;  10%  indus- 
try, commerce,  services,  and  government; 
about  30,000  are  wage  earners;  about  20% 
of  male  labor  force  migrates  annually  to 
neighboring  countries  for  seasonal  employ- 
ment 

Organized  labor:  four  principal  trade 
union  groups  represent  less  than  1%  of 
population 

Government 

Official  name:  Burkina  Faso  (since  August 
1984) 

Type:  military;  established  by  coup  on  4 
August  1983 

Capital:  Ouagadougou 

Administrative  divisions:  30  provinces; 
250  departments 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  4 
August 

Branches:  President  is  an  army  officer; 
military  council  of  unknown  number; 
21-member  military  and  civilian  Cabinet; 
judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Cdr.  Thomas 
SANKARA,  President  (since  August  1983) 

Suffrage:  none 

Elections:  political  process  suspended;  no 
talk  of  returning  to  constitutional  rule 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  all  political 
parties  banned  following  November  1980 
coup 

Communists:  small  Communist  party 
front  group;  some  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  com- 
mittees for  the  defense  of  the  revolution, 
watchdog/political  action  groups  estab- 
lished by  current  regime  throughout  the 
country  in  both  organizations  and  commu- 
nities 


Member  of:  AfDB,  CEAO,  EAMA,  ECA, 
EIB  (associate),  Entente,  FAO,  GATT, 
G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC, 
ITU,  NAM,  Niger  River  Commission, 
OAU,  OCAM,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WCL,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.1  billion,  $170  per  capita;  real 
growth,  -  1.3%  (1983) 

Natural  resources:  manganese,  limestone, 
marble,  gold,  antimony,  copper,  nickel, 
bauxite,  lead,  phosphates 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — peanuts,  shea 
nuts,  sesame,  cotton;  food  crops — sorghum, 
millet,  corn,  rice;  livestock;  food  deficiency 

Fishing:  catch  7,000  metric  tons  (1983  est.) 

Major  industries:  agricultural  processing 
plants,  brewery,  bottling,  and  brick  plants; 
a  few  other  light  industries 

Electric  power:  73,000  kW  capacity;  159 
million  kWh  produced,  22  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $110  million  (f.o.b.,  1983);  live- 
stock (on  the  hoof),  peanuts,  shea  nut 
products,  cotton,  sesame 

Imports:  $230  million  (f.o.b.,  1983);  tex- 
tiles, food,  and  other  consumer  goods, 
transport  equipment,  machinery,  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  Ivory  Coast  and 
Ghana;  overseas  trade  mainly  with  France 
and  other  EC  countries;  preferential  tariff 
to  EC  and  franc  zone  countries 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $1.8  billion;  US  autho- 
rized, including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $223 
million;  Communist  countries  (1970-85), 
$64  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $220  million;  current 
expenditures,  $148  million;  development 
expenditures,  $161  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  about  331.24 
Communaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


36 


Burma 


Communications 

Railroads:  1,173  km  Ouagadougou  to 
Abidjan  (Ivory  Coast  line);  516  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  single  track  in  Burkina 

Highways:  16,500  km  total;  1,300  km 
paved,  7,400  km  improved,  7,800  km 
unimproved 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  56  total,  51  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  all  services  only 
fair;  radio-relay,  wire,  radio  communica- 
tion stations  in  use;  13,900  telephones 
(under  0.2  per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  2  FM,  2 
TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT 
station 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,772,000;  905,000  fit  for  military  service; 
no  conscription 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1984,  $26.9  million;  about 
18.1%  of  central  government  budget 


S« refionil  m»p VIII  and  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  676,550  km2;  land  area: 
657,740  km2 

Comparative  area:  nearly  as  large  as 
Texas 

Land  boundaries:  5,850  km  total 
Coastline:  3,060  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  monsoon;  cloudy,  rainy, 
hot,  humid  summers  (southwest  monsoon, 
June  to  September);  less  cloudy,  scant 
rainfall,  mild  temperatures,  lower  humid- 
ity during  winter  (northeast  monsoon, 
December  to  April) 

Terrain:  central  lowlands  ringed  by  steep, 
rugged  highlands 

Land  use:  15%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  49% 
forest  and  woodland;  34%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  destructive  earth- 
quakes and  cyclones;  flooding  and  land- 
slides common  during  rainy  season  (June 
to  September);  deforestation 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  near 
major  Indian  Ocean  shipping  lanes 


Population:  38,822,484  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.08% 

Nationality:  noun — Burmese;  adjective — 
Burmese 

Ethnic  divisions:  68%  Burman,  9%  Shan, 
7%  Karen,  4%  Raljome,  3%  Chinese,  2% 
Indian,  7%  other 

Religion:  85%  Buddhist,  15%  indigenous 
beliefs,  Muslim,  Christian,  or  other 

Language:  Burmese;  minority  ethnic 
groups  have  their  own  languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  96/1,000  (1986) 
Life  expectancy:  57 
Literacy:  78% 

Labor  force:  14.8  million  (est.  1985/86); 
66.1%  agriculture,  12.0%  industry,  10.6% 
government,  9.7%  trade,  1.6%  other 

Organized  labor:  Workers'  Asiayone  or 
association  (1.8  million  members)  and 
Peasants'  Asiayone  (7.6  million  members) 
integrated  into  the  country's  sole  political 
party 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  Republic  of  the 
Union  of  Burma 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Rangoon 

Administrative  divisions:  seven  divisions 
(predominantly  Burman  population)  and 
seven  states  (based  on  ethnic  minorities), 
subdivided  into  townships,  village-tracts 
(rural),  and  wards  (urban) 

Legal  system:  People's  Justice  system  and 
People's  Courts  instituted  under  1974 
constitution;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  4 
January 

Branches:  Council  of  State  rules  through  a 
Council  of  Ministers;  National  Assembly 
(Pyithu  Hluttaw  or  People's  Congress)  has 
legislative  power 

Government  leader:  U  SAN  YU,  President 
and  Chairman  of  Council  of  State  (since 
November  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 


37 


Burma  (continued) 


Burundi 


Elections:  National  Assembly  and  local 
People's  Councils  elected  in  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  government- 
sponsored  Burma  Socialist  Program  Party 
only  legal  party;  U  Ne  Win,  party  chair- 
man 

Communists:  est.  15,000  (primarily  as  an 
insurgent  group  on  the  northeast  frontier) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 

Kachin  Independence  Army;  Karen  Na- 
tionalist Union,  several  Shan  factions  (all 
insurgent  groups) 

Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ITU,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $7.05  billion  (in  current  prices), 
$190  per  capita;  real  growth  rate  6.2%;  7% 
inflation  rate  (FY85/86) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  timber,  tin,  copper, 
tungsten,  lead,  asbestos,  some  marble, 
limestone,  precious  stones;  possibly  chro- 
mium, gypsum 

Agriculture:  accounts  for  64%  of  total 
employment  and  about  27%  of  GDP;  main 
crops — paddy,  beans,  pulses,  maize,  oil- 
seeds, sugarcane,  peanuts;  almost  100% 
self-sufficient;  most  rice  grown  in  deltaic 
land;  an  illegal  producer  of  opium  poppy 
and  cannabis  for  the  international  drug 
trade 

Fishing:  catch  585,800  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  agricultural  processing; 
textiles  and  footwear;  wood  and  wood 
products;  petroleum  refining;  mining  of 
copper,  tin,  tungsten,  iron;  construction 
materials 

Electric  power:  826,000  kW  capacity; 
1,750  million  kWh  produced,  50  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $317.27  million  (f.o.b.,  FY85/86); 
teak  and  hardwoods,  rice,  pulses  and 
beans,  base  metals,  ores,  marine  products, 
rubber 

Imports:  $602.32  million  (f.o.b.,  FY85/86); 
machinery  and  transportation  equipment, 
building  materials,  oil  industry  equipment 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — Singapore, 
Western  Europe,  China,  UK,  Japan;  im- 
ports— Japan,  Western  Europe,  Singapore, 
UK 

Budget:  revenues,  $3,754  million;  expendi- 
tures, $4,381  million  (FY85/86  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.18 
kyats=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,353  km  total;  all  government 
owned;  3,878  km  1.000-meter  gauge,  113 
km  narrow-gauge  industrial  lines;  362  km 
double  track 

Highways:  27,000  km  total;  3,200  km 
bituminous,  17,700  km  improved  earth  or 
gravel,  6,100  km  unimproved  earth 
Inland  waterways:  12,800  km;  3,200  km 
navigable  by  large  commercial  vessels 
Pipelines:  crude,  1,117  km;  natural  gas, 
330km 

Ports:  4  major,  6  minor 
Civil  air:  17  major  transport  aircraft 
(including  3  helicopters) 
Airfields:  89  total,  83  usable;  29  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  37  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  meets  minimum 
requirements  for  local  and  intercity  ser- 
vice; international  service  is  good; 
radiobroadcast  coverage  is  limited  to  the 
most  populous  areas;  49,597  telephones 
(1982/83;  1  per  1,000  popl.);  2  AM,  1  FM, 
and  1  TV  stations  (1985);  1  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 
Military  manpower:  eligible  15-49, 
18,940,000;  of  the  9,439,000  males  15-49, 
5,069,000  are  fit  for  military  service;  of 
the  9,501,000  females  15-49,  5,091,000  are 
fit  for  military  service;  413,000  males  and 
403,000  females  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually;  both  sexes  are  liable  for  military 
service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1987,  $249.48  million;  about  21.7% 
of  central  government  budget 


L  Nyanza-Lac,, 
SttrtfionilmipVII 


Geography 

Total  area:  27,830  km2;  land  area:  25,650 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Maryland 

Land  boundaries:  974  km  total 

Climate:  temperate;  warm;  occasional  frost 
in  uplands 

Terrain:  mostly  rolling  to  hilly  highland; 
some  plains 

Land  use:  43%  arable  land;  8%  permanent 
crops;  35%  meadows  and  pastures;  2% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  soil  exhaustion;  soil  erosion; 
deforestation 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  straddles  crest 
of  the  Nile-Congo  watershed 


Population:  5,005,504  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.92% 

Nationality:  noun — Burundian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Burundi 

Ethnic  divisions:  Africans — 85%  Hutu 
(Bantu),  14%  Tutsi  (Hamitic),  1%  Twa 
(Pygmy);  other  Africans  include  around 
70,000  refugees,  mostly  Rwandans  and 
Zairians;  non-Africans  include  about  3,000 
Europeans  and  2,000  South  Asians 

Religion:  about  67%  Christian  (62%  Ro- 
man Catholic,  5%  Protestant),  32%  indige- 
nous beliefs,  1%  Muslim 


38 


Language:  Kirundi  and  French  (official); 
Swahili  (along  Lake  Tanganyika  and  in  the 
Bujumbura  area) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  121/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  42.3 
Literacy:  25% 

Labor  force:  about  1.9  million  (1983); 
93.0%  agriculture,  4.0%  government,  1.5% 
industry  and  commerce,  1.5%  services 

Organized  labor:  sole  group  is  the  Union 
of  Burundi  Workers  (UTB);  by  charter, 
membership  is  extended  to  all  Burundi 
workers  (informally);  figures  denoting 
active  membership  unobtainable 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Burundi 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Bujumbura 

Administrative  divisions:  15  provinces, 
subdivided  into  arrondissements  and 
communes  according  to  a  1982  redistrict- 
ing 

Legal  system:  based  on  German  and 
French  civil  codes  and  customary  law;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  1 
July 

Branches:  executive  (President  and  Cabi- 
net); judicial;  legislature  (National  Assem- 
bly) reestablished  in  1982 

Government  leader:  Col.  Jean-Baptiste 
BAGAZA,  President  and  Head  of  State 
(since  1976) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  new  constitution  approved  by 
national  referendum  in  November  1981; 
election  to  National  Assembly  held  in 
October  1982 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Party  of  Unity  and  Progress  (UPRONA),  a 
Tutsi-led  party,  declared  sole  legitimate 
party  in  1966;  second  national  party  con- 
gress held  in  1984;  Col.  Jean-Baptiste 
Bagaza  confirmed  as  party  president  for 
five-year  term 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 


Member  of:  AfDB,  EAMA,  ECA,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  UN,  UNE  SCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $963  million  (1984  est),  $217  per 
capita  (1985);  3%  real  growth  rate  (1983) 

Natural  resources:  nickel,  uranium,  rare 
earth  oxide,  peat,  cobalt,  copper,  platinum 
(not  yet  exploited) 

Agriculture:  major  cash  crops — coffee, 
cotton,  tea;  main  food  crops — manioc, 
yams,  peas,  corn,  sorghum,  bananas,  hari- 
cot beans 

Major  industries:  light  consumer  goods 
such  as  blankets,  shoes,  soap;  assembly  of 
imports;  public  works  construction;  food 
processing 

Electric  power:  34,000  kW  capacity;  44 
million  kWh  produced,  9  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $83.5  million  (1984);  coffee  (87%), 
tea,  cotton,  hides  and  skins 

Imports:  $158  million  (1984);  textiles, 
foodstuffs,  transport  equipment,  petroleum 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  EC  countries 

Budget:  revenues,  $121.4  million;  expendi- 
tures, $146.4  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  121.7  Burundi 
francs=US$  1  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  5,900  km  total;  400  km  paved, 
2,500  km  gravel  or  laterite,  3,000  km 
improved  or  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  Lake  Tanganyika;  1 
lake  port,  at  Bujumbura,  connects  to 
transportation  systems  of  Zaire  and  Tanza- 
nia 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  8  total,  7  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 


Telecommunications:  sparse  system  of 
wire  and  low-capacity  radio-relay  links; 
about  6,000  telephones  (0.1  per  100  popl.); 
2  AM,  2  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  1  Indian 
Ocean  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army  (including  naval  and  air 
units);  paramilitary  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,108,000;  580,000  fit  for  military  service; 
56,000  reach  military  age  (16)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $39.3  million;  about  18% 
of  central  government  budget 


39 


Cambodia 


Kampong  Sao 
Gulf  of 

Thailand 
f  regional  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  181,040  km2;  land  area: 
176,520  km2 

Comparative  area:  the  size  of  Missouri 
Land  boundaries:  2,438  km  total 
Coastline:  443  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Vietnam  (three  areas); 
occupied  by  Vietnam 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy,  monsoon  season 
(May  to  October);  dry  season  (December  to 
March);  little  seasonal  temperature  varia- 
tion 

Terrain:  mostly  low,  flat  plains;  mountains 
in  southwest  and  north 

Land  use:  16%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures;  76% 
forest  and  woodland;  4%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  a  land  of  paddies  and 
forests  dominated  by  Mekong  River  and 
Tonle  Sap 

Special  notes:  buffer  between  Thailand 
and  Vietnam 


Population:  6,536,079  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.26% 


Nationality:  noun — Cambodian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Cambodian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  Khmer  (Cambo- 
dian), 5%  Chinese,  5%  other  minorities 

Religion:  95%  Theravada  Buddhism,  5% 
other 

Language:  Khmer  (official),  French 
Life  expectancy:  men  42,  women  44.9 
Literacy:  48% 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  Kam- 
puchea (PRK;  pro- Vietnamese,  in  Phnom 
Penh);  the  three  resistance  groups  function 
collectively  as  the  Coalition  Government 
of  Democratic  Kampuchea  (CGDK) 

Type:  PRK  is  Communist;  CGDK  is  na- 
tionalist coalition  of  one  Communist  and 
two  non-Communist  factions 

Capital:  Phnom  Penh 
Administrative  divisions:  20  provinces 
Legal  system:  no  information 

National  holiday:  17  April  for  both  re- 
gimes 

Branches:  PRK — unicameral  legislature 
(National  Assembly);  highest  authority  of 
the  land  is  technically  the  Council  of 
State,  whose  chairman  serves  as  the 
country's  president;  Council  of  Ministers 
oversees  implementation  of  party  poli- 
cies— chairman  is  equivalent  of  premier 

Government  leaders:  PRK— HENG 
SAMRIN,  President  (since  January  1979); 
HUN  SEN,  Prime  Minister;  CGDK— 
Prince  NORODOM  SIHANOUK,  Presi- 
dent (since  July  1982);  SON  SANN,  Prime 
Minister  (since  July  1982);  KHIEU  SAM- 
PHAN,  Vice  President  (since  July  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  PRK — 

Kampuchean  Peoples  Revolutionary  Party, 
the  Communist  party  installed  by  Vietnam 
in  1979;  CGDK — an  umbrella  organization 
for  three  resistance  groups,  including 
Democratic  Kampuchea  under  Khieu 
Samphan,  Khmer  People's  National  Liber- 
ation Front  (KPNLF)  under  Son  Sann,  and 
National  United  Front  for  an  Independent, 
Neutral,  Peaceful,  and  Cooperative  Cam- 
bodia under  Prince  Norodom  Sihanouk 


Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ITU,  Mekong  Commit- 
tee (inactive),  NAM,  UN,  UNE  SCO,  UPU, 
VVFTU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO  for  CGDK; 
none  for  PRK 

Economy 

Natural  resources:  timber,  gemstones, 
some  iron  ore,  manganese,  phosphates, 
hydroelectric  power  (potential) 

Agriculture:  mainly  subsistence  except  for 
rubber  plantations;  main  crops — rice, 
rubber,  corn;  food  shortages — rice,  meat, 
vegetables,  dairy  products,  sugar,  flour 

Major  industries:  rice  milling,  fishing, 
wood  and  wood  products,  rubber 

Shortages:  fossil  fuels 

Electric  power:  125,000  kW  capacity;  142 
million  kWh  produced,  20  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  probably  less  than  $10  million 
(1983  est);  natural  rubber,  rice,  pepper, 
wood 

Imports:  probably  less  than  $30  million 
(1983);  international  food  aid;  Soviet  bloc 
economic  development  aid  (post- 1979) 

Trade  partners:  Vietnam,  USSR,  Eastern 
Europe,  Japan,  India 

Aid:  US  (FY70-85),  $715  million;  other 
Western  (1970-84),  $265  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-82),  $1.2 
billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  4  riels=US$l 
(1984) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  612  km  1.000-meter  gauge; 
government  owned 

Highways:  13,351  km  total;  2,622  km 
bituminous,  7,105  km  crushed  stone, 
gravel,  or  improved  earth;  and  3,624  km 
unimproved  earth;  some  roads  in  disrepair 

Inland  waterways:  3,700  km  navigable  all 
year  to  craft  drawing  0.6  meters;  282  km 
navigable  to  craft  drawing  1.8  meters 

Ports:  2  major,  5  minor 


Cameroon 


Airfields:  26  total,  13  usable;  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  5  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  service  barely 
adequate  for  government  requirements 
and  virtually  nonexistent  for  general 
public;  international  service  limited  to 
Vietnam  and  other  adjacent  countries; 
earth  satellite  station  scheduled  for  early 
1987;  radiobroadcasts  limited  to  1  station; 
1  TV  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  PRK — People's  Republic  of 
Kampuchea  Armed  Forces;  resistance 
forces  are  the  National  Army  of  Demo- 
cratic Kampuchea  (Khmer  Rouge),  Khmer 
People's  National  Liberation  Armed 
Forces,  and  Sihanoukist  National  Army 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,782,000;  988,000  fit  for  military  service; 
about  73,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annu- 
ally 


300km 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  475,440  km2;  land  area: 
469,440  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
California 

Land  boundaries:  4,554  km  total 
Coastline:  402  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Territorial  sea:  50  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  sporadic  border 
dispute  with  Nigeria 

Climate:  varies  with  terrain  from  tropical 
along  coast  to  semiarid  and  hot  in  north 

Terrain:  diverse  with  coastal  plain  in 
southwest,  dissected  plateau  in  center, 
mountains  in  west,  plains  in  north 

Land  use:  13%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures;  54% 
forest  and  woodland;  13%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recent  volcanic  activity 
with  release  of  poisonous  gases;  deforesta- 
tion; overgrazing;  desertification 

Special  notes:  sometimes  referred  to  as 
the  hinge  of  Africa 


Population:  10,255,332  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.66% 

Nationality:  noun — Cameroonian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Cameroonian 


Ethnic  divisions:  over  200  tribes  of  widely 
differing  background;  31%  Cameroon 
Highlanders,  19%  Equatorial  Bantu,  11% 
Kirdi,  10%  Fulani,  8%  Northwestern 
Bantu,  7%  Eastern  Nigritic,  13%  other 
African,  less  than  1%  non- African 

Religion:  51%  indigenous  beliefs,  33% 
Christian,  16%  Muslim 

Language:  English  and  French  (official), 
24  major  African  language  groups 

Infant  mortality  rate:  113/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  44 
Literacy:  65% 

Labor  force:  (1983)  74.4%  agriculture, 
11.4%  industry  and  transport,  14.2%  other 
services 

Organized  labor:  under  45%  of  wage 
labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  United  Republic  of 
Cameroon 

Type:  unitary  republic;  one-party  presi- 
dential regime 

Capital:  Yaounde 

Administrative  divisions:  10  provinces 
divided  into  departments,  arrondissements, 
districts,  led  by  provincial  governors  ap- 
pointed by  President 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system,  with  common  law  influence;  uni- 
tary constitution  adopted  1972;  judicial 
review  by  Supreme  Court  when  a  question 
of  constitutionality  is  referred  to  it  by  the 
President;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  20  May 

Branches:  executive  (President),  legislative 
(National  Assembly),  and  judicial  (Supreme 
Court) 

Government  leader:  Paul  BIYA,  President 

(since  November  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  parliamentary  elections  held 
May  1983;  presidential  elections  held 
January  1984 


41 


Cameroon  (continued) 


Canada 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Cameroon 
People's  Democratic  Movement  (known  as 
the  Cameroon  People's  National  Union 
during  1966-85),  Paul  Biya,  President 

Communists:  no  Communist  party  or 
significant  number  of  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
Cameroon  People's  Union  (UPC),  remains 
an  illegal  group  with  its  factional  leaders 
in  exile 

Member  of:  AfBD,  KAMA,  ECA,  EIB 
(associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  ISO,  ITU,  Lake  Chad  Basin  Commis- 
sion, NAM,  Niger  River  Commission, 
OAU,  QIC,  UDEAC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $7.3  billion  (1983-84),  about  $770 
per  capita;  average  annual  growth  rate 
6.5%  (1984);  average  inflation  rate  15% 
(1984) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  natural  gas,  baux- 
ite, iron  ore,  timber 

Agriculture:  commercial  and  food  crops — 
coffee,  cocoa,  timber,  cotton,  rubber, 
bananas,  peanuts,  palm  oil  and  palm 
kernels;  root  starches,  livestock,  millet, 
sorghum,  and  rice 

Fishing:  75,000  metric  tons  (1984) 

Major  industries:  crude  oil  production, 
small  aluminum  plant,  food  processing, 
light  consumer  goods  industries;  sawmills 

Electric  power:  604,000  kW  capacity; 
4,200  million  kWh  produced,  2,540  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $855.2  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
crude  oil,  cocoa,  coffee,  timber,  aluminum, 
cotton,  natural  rubber,  bananas,  peanuts, 
tobacco,  tea,  mineral  products,  food, 
alcohol,  metal  and  metal  products,  textiles, 
wood  products 

Imports:  $1.101  billion  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
consumer  goods,  machinery,  transport 
equipment,  alumina  for  refining,  petro- 
leum products,  food,  beverages,  electrical 
equipment,  chemical  products 


Major  trade  partners:  most  trade  with 
France,  other  EC  countries,  and  the  US 

Budget:  revenues,  $1.6  billion;  current 
expenditures,  $2.3  billion  (1986-87  pro- 
jected) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,173  km  total;  858  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  145  km  0.600-meter  gauge 

Highways:  about  65,000  km  total;  includes 
2,682  km  bituminous,  30,000  km  unim- 
proved earth,  32,318  km  gravel,  earth,  and 
improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  2,090  km;  of  decreas- 
ing importance 

Ports:  1  major  (Douala),  3  minor 
Civil  air:  7  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  63  total,  58  usable;  9  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  5  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  25  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  system  of 
open  wire  and  radio-relay;  26,000  tele- 
phones (0.2  per  100  popl.);  10  AM,  1  FM, 
and  1  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satel- 
lite station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force;  para- 
military Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,345,000;  1,181,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 111,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1987,  $153.6  million;  6.5%  of  central 
government  budget 


1200km 


Vancouver       Calgary 


Set  regional  map  II 


iTTAWA 
'oronto 


Geography 

Total  area:  9,976,140  km2;  land  area: 
9,220,970  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than  US 
Land  boundaries:  9,010  km  total 
Coastline:  243,791  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
putes with  France,  US 

Climate:  varies  from  temperate  in  south  to 
subarctic  and  arctic  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  plains  with  mountains  in 
west  and  lowlands  in  southeast 

Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures; 
35%  forest  and  woodland;  57%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  80%  of  population  concen- 
trated within  160  km  of  US  border;  con- 
tinuous permafrost  in  north  a  serious 
obstacle  to  development 
Special  notes:  second  largest  country  in 
world;  strategic  location  between  USSR 
and  US  via  polar  route 


Population:  25,857,943  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.91% 
Nationality:  noun — Canadian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Canadian 


42 


Ethnic  divisions:  45%  British  Isles  origin, 
29%  French  origin,  23%  other  European, 
1.5%  indigenous  Indian  and  Eskimo 

Religion:  46%  Roman  Catholic,  16% 
United  Church,  10%  Anglican 

Language:  English  and  French  (official) 
Infant  mortality  rate:  9.1/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  men  71.9,  women  79 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  12.88  million  (1986  average); 
68%  services  (37%  government,  23%  trade 
and  finance,  8%  transportation),  18% 
manufacturing,  6%  construction,  3.8% 
agriculture,  4.2%  other;  9.6%  unemploy- 
ment (1986  average) 

Organized  labor:  30.6%  of  labor  force; 
39.6%  of  nonagricultural  paid  workers 

Government 
Official  name:  Canada 

Type:  federal  state  recognizing  Elizabeth 
II  as  sovereign 

Capital:  Ottawa 

Administrative  divisions:  10  provinces 
and  2  territories 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law,  except  in  Quebec,  where  civil  law 
system  based  on  French  law  prevails; 
constitution  as  of  1982  (formerly  British 
North  America  Act  of  1867  and  various 
amendments);  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Canada  Day,  1  July 

Branches:  federal  executive  power  vested 
in  cabinet  collectively  responsible  to  House 
of  Commons  and  headed  by  Prime  Minis- 
ter; federal  legislative  authority  resides  in 
Parliament  (282  seats)  consisting  of  Queen 
represented  by  Governor  General,  Senate, 
and  House  of  Commons;  judges  appointed 
by  Governor  General  on  the  advice  of  the 
government;  Supreme  Court  is  highest 
tribunal 

Government  leaders:  Brian  MULRONEY, 
Prime  Minister  (since  September  1984); 
Jeanne  SAUVE,  Governor  General  (since 
May  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  legal  limit  of  five  years  but  in 
practice  usually  held  within  four  years; 


last  election  September  1984;  75%  voter 
turnout 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Liberal, 
John  Turner;  Progressive  Conservative, 
Brian  Mulroney;  New  Democratic, 
Edward  Broadbent 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  Progres- 
sive Conservative,  50%;  Liberal,  28%;  New 
Democratic  Party,  19%;  parliamentary 
seats  as  of  December  1986 — Progressive 
Conservative  209,  Liberal  40,  New  Demo- 
cratic Party  30,  vacant  3 

Communists:  2,000 

Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  Com- 
monwealth, DAC,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  ICRC,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  International 
Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC, 
ITU,  IWC— International  Whaling  Com- 
mission, IWC — International  Wheat  Coun- 
cil, NATO,  OAS  (observer),  OECD, 
PAHO,  UN,  UNCTAD,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $366.0  billion,  $14,280  per  capita; 
61.4%  consumption,  19.7%  investment, 
17.2%  government,  0.8%  net  foreign  trade; 
no  change  in  inventories  (1986);  real 
growth  rate  3.0%  (1985-86);  inflation  rate 
4.2%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  nickel,  zinc,  copper, 
gold,  lead,  molybdenum,  potash,  silver, 
fish,  forests,  wildlife 

Agriculture:  livestock,  grains  (principally 
wheat),  dairy  products,  feedgrains,  oil- 
seeds, tobacco;  food  shortages — fresh  fruits 
and  vegetables 

Fishing:  catch  1.25  million  metric  tons 

(1984) 

Major  industries:  processed  and  unproc- 
essed minerals,  food  products,  wood  and 
paper  products,  transportation  equipment, 
chemicals,  fish  products,  petroleum  and 
natural  gas 

Shortages:  rubber,  fruits,  precision  instru- 
ments 

Crude  steel:  15.0  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985);  590  kg  per  capita 


Electric  power:  99,298,000  kW  capacity; 
448,840  million  kWh  produced,  17,500 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $88.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  princi- 
pal items — transportation  equipment; 
wood  and  wood  products,  including  paper; 
ferrous  and  nonferrous  ores;  crude  petro- 
leum; wheat;  Canada  is  a  major  food 
exporter 

Imports:  $75.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  princi- 
pal items — transportation  equipment, 
machinery,  crude  petroleum,  communica- 
tion equipment,  textiles,  steel,  fabricated 
metals,  office  machines,  fruits  and  vege- 
tables 

Major  trade  partners:  imports— 71.6%  US, 
5.9%  Japan,  3.0%  UK;  exports— 78.5%  US, 
4.9%  Japan,  2.0%  UK,  1.3%  USSR  (1985) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  Bank  (FY70-84), 
$1.9  billion;  ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $18.5  billion 

Budget:  total  revenues  $61.32  billion; 
current  expenditures  $84.91  billion;  budget 
deficit  $23.59  billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  C$1.373=US$1 
(8  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  81,088  km  total;  79,917  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  129  km 
electrified;  1,171  km  1.067-meter  gauge  (in 
Newfoundland);  178  km  0.915-meter 
gauge  (unused) 

Highways:  884,272  km  total;  712,936  km 
surfaced  (250,023  km  paved),  171,336  km 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  3,000  km,  including  St. 
Lawrence  Seaway 

Pipelines:  oil,  23,564  km  total  crude  and 
refined;  natural  gas,  74,980  km 

Ports:  over  250  ports  of  which  25  are 
sizeable  deep  water  ports 

Civil  air:  636  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1,407  total,  1,076  usable;  412 
with  permanent-surface  runways;  4  with 
runways  over  3,659  m,  30  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  306  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Canada  (continued) 


Cape  Verde 


Telecommunications:  excellent  service 
provided  by  modern  telecom  media;  18.0 
million  telephones  (66.4  per  100  popl.); 
countrywide  AM,  FM,  and  TV  coverage, 
including  900  AM,  80  FM,  1,100  TV 
stations;  6  coaxial  submarine  cables;  3 
satellite  stations  with  a  total  of  5  antennas 
and  300  domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Mobile  Command,  Maritime 
Command,  Air  Command,  Communica- 
tions Command,  Canadian  Forces  Europe, 
Training  Command 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
7,036,000;  6,183,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 189,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1986,  $8.0  billion;  about  10.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


75  km 


North  At/antic  Ocean 


Mtio 


^PRAIA 
Stfo  Tiego 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  4,030  km2;  land  area:  4,030 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  965  km 

Maritime  claim:  (measured  from  claimed 
archipelagic  baselines) 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  temperate;  warm,  dry,  summer 
precipitation  very  erratic 

Terrain:  steep,  rugged,  rocky,  volcanic 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NEGL%  forest  and  woodland;  85%  other; 
includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  prolonged 
droughts;  harmattan  wind  can  obscure 
visibility;  volcanically  and  seismically 
active;  deforestation;  overgrazing 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  500  km 
from  African  coast  near  major  north-south 
sea  routes;  important  communications 
station;  important  sea  and  air  refueling  site 

People 

Population:  344,282  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.61% 

Nationality:  noun — Cape  Verdean(s); 
adjective — Cape  Verdean 

Ethnic  divisions:  about  71%  Creole 
(mulatto),  28%  African,  1%  European 


Religion:  Catholicism  fused  with  indige- 
nous beliefs 

Language:  Portuguese  and  Crioulo,  a 
blend  of  Portuguese  and  West  African 
words 

Infant  mortality  rate:  60/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  61 
Literacy:  37% 

Labor  force:  bulk  of  population  engaged 
in  subsistence  agriculture 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Cape  Verde 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Praia 

Administrative  divisions:  2  distritos 
subdivided  into  14  concelhos 

Legal  system:  based  on  constitution 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  5 
July 

Branches:  56-member  National  People's 
Assembly;  the  official  party  is  the  supreme 
political  organization 

Government  leaders:  Aristides  PEREIRA, 
President  (since  July  1975);  Pedro  PIRES, 
Prime  Minister  (since  July  1975) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  15 

Elections:  National  Assembly  election  held 
December  1985,  the  second  since  indepen- 
dence 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  only  legal 
party,  African  Party  for  Independence  of 
Cape  Verde  (PAICV),  led  by  Aristides 
Pereira,  secretary  general;  PAICV  estab- 
lished in  January  1981  to  replace  the 
former  ruling  party  in  both  Cape  Verde 
and  Guinea-Bissau,  the  African  Party  for 
the  Independence  of  Guinea-Bissau  and 
Cape  Verde  (PAIGC),  in  protest  of  the 
November  1980  coup  in  Guinea-Bissau 

Communists:  a  few  Communists  and  some 
sympathizers 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto), 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  IPU,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $110  million,  $320  per  capita  (1983) 


44 


Cayman  Islands 


Natural  resources:  salt,  basalt  rock,  pozzo- 
lana,  limestone,  kaolin 

Agriculture:  main  crops — bananas,  coffee, 
sugarcane,  corn,  beans 

Fishing:  catch  13,205  metric  tons  (1983); 
largely  undeveloped  but  provides  major 
source  of  export  earnings 

Major  industries:  salt  mining 

Electric  power:  14,000  kW  capacity;  18 

million  kWh  produced,  56  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $1.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1983);  fish, 

bananas,  salt,  flour 

Imports:  $68.1  million  (c.i.f.,  1983);  petro- 
leum products,  corn,  rice,  machinery, 
textiles 

Major  trade  partners:  Portugal,  UK, 
Japan,  Angola,  Zaire 

Budget:  public  revenues,  $20.4  million; 
current  expenditures,  $26.7  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  89.21 
escudos=US$l  (December  1985) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Ports:  2  major  (Mindelo  and  Praia),  2 
minor 

Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  6  total,  6  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  interisland  radio- 
relay  system,  high  frequency  radio  to 
mainland  Portugal  and  Guinea-Bissau; 
about  1,740  telephones  (0.6  per  100  pop!.); 
2  FM,  5  AM  stations;  1  small  TV  station;  2 
coaxial  submarine  cables;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  People's  Revolutionary  Armed 
Forces  (FARP);  Army,  Navy,  and  Air 
Force  are  separate  components  of  FARP 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  64,000; 
38,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1980,  $15  million;  about  5%  of 
central  government  budget 


Caribbean  Sea 


Cayman 
Brae* 


Little" 
Cayman 


<J    r&£.nd  Cayman 

GEORGETOWN 


Caribbean  Sea 


See  regional  map  111 


Geography 

Total  area:  260  km2;  land  area:  260  km2 

Comparative  area:  less  than  twice  the  size 
of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  160  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine  with  warm 
summers  and  cool  winters 

Terrain:  low  lying  limestone  base  sur- 
rounded by  coral  reefs 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  8%  meadows  and  pastures;  23% 
forest  and  woodland;  69%  other 
Environment:  within  the  Caribbean  hurri- 
cane belt,  but  rarely  affected 

Special  notes:  important  location  between 
Cuba  and  Central  America 

People 

Population:  23,192  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.46% 

Nationality:  noun — Caymanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Caymanian 

Ethnic  divisions:  40%  mixed,  20%  white, 
20%  black,  20%  expatriates  of  various 
ethnic  groups 

Religion:  United  Church  (Presbyterian 
and  Congregational),  Anglican,  Baptist, 
Roman  Catholic,  Church  of  God,  other 
Protestant  denominations 

Language:  English 


Literacy:  97.5% 

Labor  force:  8,061;  18.7%  service  workers, 
18.6%  clerical,  12.5%  construction,  6.7% 
finance  and  investment,  5.9%  directors  and 
business  managers  (1979) 

Organized  labor:  Global  Seaman's  Union; 
Cayman  All  Trade  Union 

Government 

Official  name:  Cayman  Islands 
Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  George  Town 
Administrative  divisions:  8  electoral 
districts 

Legal  system:  British  common  law  and 
local  statutes 

National  holiday:  Constitution  Day,  8  July 
Branches:  executive — Governor  and  Exec- 
utive Council  (3  appointed  official  mem- 
bers and  4  elected  members  chosen  by  the 
Legislative  Assembly  from  its  elected 
members);  legislative — unicameral  Legisla- 
tive Assembly  (12  elected  members  and  3 
appointed  by  Governor);  judicial — Sum- 
mary Court,  Grand  Court,  Cayman  Islands 
Court  of  Appeal,  Her  Majesty's  Privy 
Council 

Government  leader:  George  Peter 
LLOYD,  Governor  and  President  of  the 
Executive  Council  (since  1982) 
Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  age  18 
Elections:  elections  held  every  four  years 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  no  formal 
political  parties 
Communists:  none 
Member  of:  Commonwealth 

Economy 

GDP:  $225.0  million,  $10,227  per  capita 
(1982) 

Agriculture:  minor  production  of  vegeta- 
bles and  livestock,  turtle  farming 
Major  industries:  tourism,  banking,  insur- 
ance and  finance,  real  estate  and  construc- 
tion 

Electric  power:  29,000  kW  capacity;  90 
million  kWh  produced,  4,090  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 


45 


Cayman  Islands  (continued) 


Central  African  Republic 


Exports:  $2.4  million  (1983);  turtle  prod- 
ucts 

Imports:  $140.4  million  (1983) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — mostly 
US;  imports — US,  Trinidad  and  Tobago, 
UK,  Netherlands  Antilles 

Budget:  current  revenues,  $41.6  million; 
current  expenditures,  $31  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .833  Cayman 
dollar=US$l  (1985) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  160  km  of  main  roads 

Ports:  1  major  (George  Town),  1  minor 

Airfields:  3  total;  3  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  2  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  telephone  system 
links  islands  and  to  worldwide  services  via 
submarine  coaxial  cable  and  satellite 
ground  station;  2  AM  and  2  FM  radio 
stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 

Branches:  police  force 


400km 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  622,980  km2;  land  area: 
622,980  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Texas 

Land  boundaries:  4,981  km  total 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  dry  winters;  mild  to 
hot,  humid,  wet  summers 

Terrain:  vast,  flat  to  rolling,  monotonous 
plateau;  scattered  hills  in  northeast  and 
southwest 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures; 
64%  forest  and  woodland;  28%  other 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dusty  harmattan 
winds  affect  northern  areas;  poaching  has 
diminished  reputation  as  one  of  last  great 
wildlife  refuges;  desertification 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  almost  the 
precise  center  of  Africa 


Population:  2,669,293  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.44% 

Nationality:  noun — Central  African(s); 
adjective — Central  African 

Ethnic  divisions:  about  80  ethnic  groups, 
the  majority  of  which  have  related  ethnic 
and  linguistic  characteristics;  34%  Baya, 
27%  Banda,  10%  Sara,  21%  Mandjia,  4% 
Mboum,  4%  M'Baka;  6,500  Europeans,  of 
whom  3,600  are  French 


Religion:  24%  indigenous  beliefs,  25% 
Protestant,  25%  Roman  Catholic,  15% 
Muslim;  animistic  beliefs  and  practices 
strongly  influence  the  Christian  majority 

Language:  French  (official);  Sangho  (lingua 
franca  and  national  language);  Arabic, 
Hunsa,  Swahili 

Infant  mortality  rate:  134/1,000  (1986) 
Life  expectancy:  44 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  775,413  (1986  est);  85% 
agriculture,  8.9%  commerce  and  services, 
2.9%  industry,  3%  government;  about 
64,000  salaried  workers 

Organized  labor:  1%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Central  African  Republic 

Type:  republic,  under  military  rule  since 
September  1981 

Capital:  Bangui 

Administrative  divisions:  14  prefectures, 
47  subprefectures 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  law; 
constitution  (approved  in  a  November 
1986  referendum);  judiciary,  Supreme 
Court,  court  of  appeals,  criminal  court, 
and  numerous  lower  courts 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  13 
August;  National  Day,  1  December 

Branches:  Chief  of  State;  a  national  legis- 
lature; separate  judiciary;  assembly  called 
on  Gen.  Andre  Dieudonne  Kolingba  to 
form  44-member  provisional  council  to 
oversee  party  activities  until  special  con- 
vention elects  ruling  board 

Government  leader:  Gen. 
Andre-Dieudonne  KOLINGBA  is  Chief  of 
State,  chairman  of  the  Centrafrican  Demo- 
cratic Rally  Party,  and  head  of  govern- 
ment since  1981 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 
Elections:  none  scheduled 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  banned  in  September  1981;  Cen- 
trafrican Democratic  Rally  Party  created 
in  February  1987  during  National  Conven- 
tion is  the  only  political  party 


Chad 


Communists:  no  Communist  party;  small 
number  of  Communist  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  CFA  (Franc  Zone), 
Conference  of  East  and  Central  African 
States,  EAMA,  EGA,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  ILO, 
IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  OCAM,  UDEAC,  UEAC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $764  million,  $300  per  capita, 
—8.7%  real  growth;  4%  inflation  rate 
(1984) 

Natural  resources:  diamonds,  uranium, 
timber,  gold,  oil 

Agriculture:  commercial — cotton,  coffee, 
peanuts,  sesame,  tobacco,  timber;  main 
food  crops  manioc,  corn,  millet,  sorghum, 
peanuts,  rice,  potatoes;  livestock 

Major  industries:  sawmills,  breweries, 
diamond  mining,  textiles,  soap,  footwear 

Electric  power:  35,000  kW  capacity;  61 
million  kWh  produced,  22  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $145.2  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
diamonds,  cotton,  coffee,  timber,  tobacco 

Imports:  $139.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1984  est); 
textiles,  petroleum  products,  machinery, 
electrical  equipment,  motor  vehicles, 
chemicals,  Pharmaceuticals 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — France, 
Belgium,  Japan,  US;  imports — France  and 
other  EC  countries,  Japan,  Algeria,  Yugo- 
slavia 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues  $93.3  million; 
current  expenditures  $90.8  million;  official 
foreign  debt  $223  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  20,800  km  total;  454  km  bitu- 
minous, 7,656  km  improved  earth,  12,690 
unimproved  earth 


Inland  waterways:  800  km;  traditional 
trade  carried  on  by  means  of  shallow-draft 
dugouts 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  68  total,  61  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  22  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  facilities  are  mea- 
ger; network  is  composed  of  low-capacity, 
low-powered  radiocommunication  stations 
and  radio-relay  links;  6,000  telephones  (0.2 
per  100  popl.);  1  AM,  1  FM,  and  1  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  592,000; 
309,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1983;  $12.2  million;  about 
14.5%  of  central  government  budget 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,284,000  km2;  land  area: 
1,259,200  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Texas  and  California  combined 

Land  boundaries:  5,987  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Libya  claims 
Aozou  Strip  in  far  north;  Libyan  troops 
occupy  northern  Chad 

Climate:  tropical  in  south  gradually  be- 
coming dry  desert  in  north 

Terrain:  broad,  arid  plains  in  center, 
desert  in  north,  mountains  in  northwest, 
lowlands  in  south 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  36%  meadows  and  pastures; 
11%  forest  and  woodland;  51%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dusty  harmattan 
winds  occur  in  north;  recent  drought  and 
desertification  adversely  affecting  south 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  Lake  Chad 
most  significant  water  body  in  Sahel 


Population:  4,646,054  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.44% 
Nationality:  noun — Chadian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Chadian 

Ethnic  divisions:  some  200  distinct  ethnic 
groups,  most  of  whom  are  Muslims  (Arabs, 
Toubou,  Fulbe,  Kotoko,  Hausa,  Kanem- 
bou,  Baguirmi,  Boulala,  and  Maba)  in  the 


47 


Chad  (continued) 


north  and  center  and  non-Muslims  (Sara, 
Ngambaye,  Mbaye,  Goulaye,  Moudang, 
Moussei,  Massa)  in  the  south;  some  150,000 
nonindigenous,  of  whom  1,000  are  French 

Religion:  44%  Muslim,  23%  indigenous 
beliefs,  33%  Christian 

Language:  French  and  Arabic  (official); 
Sara  and  Sango  in  south;  more  than  100 
different  languages  and  dialects  are  spoken 

Infant  mortality  rate:  142/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  42.0,  women  45.0 
Literacy:  about  17% 

Labor  force:  85%  agriculture  (engaged  in 
unpaid  subsistence  farming,  herding,  and 
fishing) 

Organized  labor:  about  20%  of  wage  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Chad 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  N'Djamena 

Administrative  divisions:  14  prefectures, 
54  subprefectures,  27  administrative  posts, 
9  municipalities 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  Chadian  customary  law;  con- 
stitution adopted  in  1962;  constitution 
suspended  and  National  Assembly  dis- 
solved in  April  1975;  Fundamental  Act,  a 
quasi-constitution  decreed  in  October 
1982,  provides  juridical  framework 
whereby  decrees  are  promulgated  by  the 
President;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  11 
August 

Branches:  presidency;  Council  of  Minis- 
ters; National  Consultative  Council,  Court 
of  Appeal,  and  several  lower  courts 

Government  leaders:  Hissein  HABRE, 
President  (since  June  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  none  planned 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Union  for  Independence  and  Revolution 
(UNIR)  established  June  1984  with  Habre 
as  President;  numerous  dissident  groups 


(several  have  returned  to  the  government 
since  mid-1986) 

Communists:  no  front  organizations  or 
underground  party;  probably  a  few  Com- 
munists and  some  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  the 
development  of  a  stable  government 
continues  to  be  hampered  by  prolonged 
tribal  and  regional  antagonisms;  one  rebel 
group  (with  Libyan  backing)  occupies  the 
northern  third  of  Chad  (Aozou  Strip) 

Member  of:  AfDB,  CEAO,  Conference  of 
East  and  Central  African  States,  EAMA, 
EGA,  EC  (associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  Lake  Chad 
Basin  Commission,  NAM,  OAU,  OGAM, 
QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

During  the  last  decade  droughts  and 
plagues  of  locusts  have  caused  widespread 
food  shortages,  and  years  of  civil  war  have 
devastated  the  economy. 

GDP:  $405.7  million,  $90  per  capita  (1985 
est);  real  annual  growth  rate  —2.8% 
(1960-82  est.) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum  (unexploited 
but  exploration  beginning),  uranium, 
natron,  kaolin 

Agriculture:  commercial — cotton,  gum 
arabic,  livestock,  peanuts,  fish;  food 
crops — millet,  sorghum,  rice,  sweet  pota- 
toes, yams,  cassava,  dates;  imports  food 

Fishing:  catch  110,000  metric  tons  (1983 
est.) 

Major  industries:  agricultural  and  live- 
stock processing  plants  (cotton  textile  mills, 
slaughterhouses,  brewery),  natron 

Electric  power:  38,000  kW  capacity;  66 
million  kWh  produced,  12  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $113.15  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
cotton  (80%),  meat,  fish,  animal  products 

Imports:  $114.38  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
cement,  petroleum,  flour,  sugar,  tea,  ma- 
chinery, textiles,  motor  vehicles 


Major  trade  partners:  France  and  Central 
African  Customs  and  Economic  Union 
countries 

Budget:  total  revenues,  $57.4  million;  total 
expenditures  $76.5  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  31,322  km  total;  32  km 
bituminous,  7,300  km  gravel  and  laterite, 
remainder  unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  about  2,000  km  navi- 
gable 

Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  82  total,  71  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  26  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
radiocommunication  stations  for  intercity 
links;  5,000  telephones  (0.1  per  100  popl.); 
1  FM,  3  AM  stations;  many  facilities, 
including  satellite  ground  station,  inopera- 
tive 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  paramilitary 
Gendarmerie,  Presidential  Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,087,000;  565,000  fit  for  military  service; 
47,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $27.1  million;  about  35% 
of  total  budget 


48 


Chile 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


.SANTIAGO 


Easter  and  Sala  y 
Gomez  islands  are 


Punta  Arenas 
Set  regional  map  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  756,950  km2;  land  area: 

748,800  km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  6,325  km  total 

Coastline:  6,435  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 

Continental  shelf:  200  nm 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 
Argentina  is  indefinite;  Bolivia  has  wanted 
a  sovereign  corridor  to  Pacific  Ocean  since 
Atacama  area  was  lost  to  Chile  in  1884; 
dispute  with  Bolivia  over  Rio  Lauca  water 
rights;  territorial  claim  in  Antarctica 
(Chilean  Antarctic  Territory) 

Climate:  temperate;  desert  in  north;  cool 
and  damp  in  south 

Terrain:  low  coastal  mountains;  fertile 
central  valley;  rugged  Andes  in  west 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
'    manent  crops;  16%  meadows  and  pastures; 
21%  forest  and  woodland;  56%  other; 
includes  2%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  severe  earth- 
quakes, active  volcanism,  tsunami;  At- 
acama Desert  one  of  world's  driest  regions; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  relative  to 
sea  lanes  between  Atlantic  and  Pacific 
Oceans  (Strait  of  Magellan,  Beagle  Chan- 
nel, Drake  Passage) 


Population:  12,448,008  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.54% 

Nationality:  noun — Chilean(s);  adjective — 
Chilean 

Ethnic  divisions:  95%  European  and 
European-Indian,  3%  Indian,  2%  other 

Religion:  89%  Roman  Catholic,  11% 
Protestant,  and  small  Jewish  population 

Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  20/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  63.8,  women  70.4 
Literacy:  94% 

Labor  force:  3.84  million;  38.6%  services 
(including  government— 12%),  31.3% 
industry  and  commerce;  15.9%  agriculture, 
forestry,  and  fishing;  8.7%  mining;  4.4% 
construction  (1985);  unemployed  13.9% 
(1984) 

Organized  labor:  12%  of  labor  force 
organized  into  labor  unions  (1982) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Chile 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Santiago 

Administrative  divisions:  12  regions  plus 
Santiago  metropolitan  region,  41  provincial 
subdivisions 

Legal  system:  based  on  Code  of  1857 
derived  from  Spanish  law  and  subsequent 
codes  influenced  by  French  and  Austrian 
law;  current  constitution  came  into  effect 
in  March  1981;  the  constitution  provides 
for  continued  direct  rule  until  1989,  with  a 
phased  return  to  full  civilian  rule  by  1997; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Court;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  18 
September 

Branches:  four-man  Military  Junta,  which 
exercises  constituent  and  legislative  powers 
and  has  delegated  executive  powers  to 
President;  the  President  has  announced  a 
plan  for  transition  from  military  to  civilian 
rule  pursuant  to  Constitution;  state  of  siege 


lifted  January  1986;  National  Congress 
(Senate,  House  of  Representatives)  dis- 
solved; civilian  judiciary  remains 

Government  leaders:  Gen.  Augusto  PINO- 
CHET Ugarte,  President  (since  September 
1973);  Adm.  Jose  Toribio  MERINO  Castro 
(since  September  1973),  Air  Force  Gen. 
Fernando  MATTHEI  Aubel  (since  July 
1978),  Army  Lt.  Gen.  Humberto 
GORDON  Rubio  (since  December  1986), 
Gen.  Rodolfo  STANCE  Oecklers  (since 
August  1985),  Junta  members 

Elections:  none;  voters  are  being  regis- 
tered for  constitutionally  mandated  presi- 
dential plebiscite  in  1989  and  congres- 
sional election  in  1990 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  all  political 
parties  are  officially  recessed  or  outlawed 
but  have  been  allowed  to  function  on  a 
very  limited  basis  since  1982  (a  law  allow- 
ing political  parties  to  renew  restricted 
activities  has  been  approved  by  the  Junta 
and  is  slated  for  enactment  in  March 
1987);  National  Renovation  (RN),  Ricardo 
Rivadeneira;  Radical  Party  (PR),  Enrique 
Silva  Cimma;  Social  Democratic  Party 
(PSD),  Rene  Abeliuk;  Christian  Democratic 
Party  (PDC),  Gabriel  Valdes;  Republican 
Right,  Hugo  Zepeda;  Socialist  Party,  Ri- 
cardo Nunez;  the  PR,  PSD,  PDC,  Republi- 
can Right,  and  one  faction  of  the  Socialist 
Party  form  the  Democratic  Alliance  (AD); 
Movement  of  Unitary  Popular  Action 
(MAPU);  Movement  of  Unitary  Popular 
Action— Workers/Peasants  (MAPU-OC), 
Oscar  Garreton  Purcell  (in  exile);  Christian 
Left  (1C),  Luis  Maira;  Communist  Party  of 
Chile  (PCCh),  Luis  Corvalan  Leppe  (in 
exile);  Socialist  Party — Almeyda  faction 
(PSCh/Alm),  Clodomiro  Almeyda  (in 
exile);  Socialist  Party — Altamirano  faction 
(PSCh/Alt),  Carlos  Altamirano  (in  exile); 
Movement  of  the  Revolutionary  Left 
(MIR),  Andres  Pascal  Allende  (in  exile);  the 
MIR,  PSCh/Alm,  and  PCCh  form  the 
leftist  Popular  Democratic  Movement 
(MDP) 

Voting  strength:  (1970  presidential  elec- 
tion) 36.6%  Popular  Unity  coalition,  35.3% 
conservative  independent,  28.1%  Christian 
Democrat;  (1973  congressional  election) 
56%  Democratic  Confederation  (PDC  and 


49 


Chile  (continued) 


China 

(Taiwan  entry  on  page  274) 


PN),  44%  Popular  Unity  coalition  (socialists 
and  Communists) 

Communists:  120,000  when  PCCh  was 
legal  in  1973;  active  militants  now  esti- 
mated at  about  20,000-50,000 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  revi- 
talized university  student  federations  at  all 
major  universities  dominated  by  political 
groups;  labor — National  Workers  Com- 
mand (CNT)  includes  trade  unionists  from 
the  country's  five  largest  labor  confedera- 
tions; Roman  Catholic  Church 

Member  of:  CIPEC,  ECOSOC,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IDE — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU, 
LAIA,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $16.1  billion,  $1,330  per  capita; 
51.6%  private  consumption,  26.9%  govern- 
ment consumption;  13.7%  gross  invest- 
ment; real  growth  rate  2.4%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  copper,  timber,  iron 
ore,  nitrates,  precious  metals,  molybdenum 

Agriculture:  main  crops — wheat,  potatoes, 
corn,  sugar  beets,  onions,  beans,  fruits;  net 
agricultural  importer 

Fishing:  catch  4  million  metric  tons 
(1983);  exports  $275.5  million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  copper,  other  minerals, 
foodstuffs,  fish  processing,  iron  and  steel, 
pulp,  paper,  and  forestry  products 

Crude  steel:  765,000  metric  tons  capacity 
(1980);  684,000  metric  tons  produced 
(1985),  55  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  3,315,000  kW  capacity; 
13,950  million  kWh  produced,  1,100  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  copper, 
molybdenum,  iron  ore,  paper  products, 
steel  products,  fishmeal,  fruits,  wood 
products 

Imports:  $3.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, sugar,  wheat,  capital  goods,  vehicles 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 26%  US, 
11%  Japan,  10%  FRG,  6.2%  Brazil,  5.4% 
UK  (1984);  imports— 21.5%  US,  9%  Japan, 


8.5%  Brazil,  7.2%  Venezuela,  6.2%  FRG 
(1983) 

Budget:  revenues,  $4.6  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $5.1  billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  202 
pesos=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  8,613  km  total;  4,257  km  1.676- 
meter  gauge,  135  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  4,221  km  1.000-meter  gauge;  elec- 
trification, 1,578  km  1.676-meter  gauge,  76 
km  1.000-meter  gauge 

Highways:  79,065  km  total;  9,365  km 
paved,  37,700  km  gravel,  32,000  km 
improved  and  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  725  km 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  755  km;  refined 
products,  785  km;  natural  gas,  320  km 

Ports:  10  major,  13  minor 

Civil  air:  22  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  393  total,  356  usable;  47  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  13  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  52  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  modern  telephone 
system  based  on  extensive  radio-relay 
facilities;  629,000  telephones  (5.4  per  100 
popl.);  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  antennas; 
3  domestic  satellite  stations;  154  AM,  119 
TV,  14  shortwave  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army  of  the  Nation,  National 
Navy,  Air  Force  of  the  Nation,  Carabin- 
eros  of  Chile 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
3,321,000;  2,490,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 117,000  reach  military  age  (19) 
annually 


1200km 


Sec  regional  map  VIII 


Oao        South  China 
Sea 


Geography 

Total  area:  9,596,960  km2;  land  area: 

9,326,410  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 

conterminous  US 

Land  boundaries:  24,000  km  total 

Coastline:  14,500  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  India,  USSR  (Pamir, 
Argun,  Amur,  and  Khabarovsk  areas);  short 
section  with  North  Korea  is  indefinite; 
British  colony  of  Hong  Kong  will  become 
a  Special  Administrative  Region  in  1997; 
Portuguese  territory  of  Macau  will  become 
a  Special  Administrative  Region  in  1999; 
sporadic  border  clashes  with  Vietnam; 
involved  in  complex  dispute  over  Spratly 
Islands  with  Malaysia,  Philippines,  Taiwan, 
Vietnam,  and  possibly  Brunei;  maritime 
dispute  with  Vietnam;  dispute  with  Viet- 
nam over  Paracel  Islands 

Climate:  extremely  diverse;  tropical  in 
south  to  subarctic  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains,  high  plateaus, 
deserts  in  west;  plains,  deltas,  and  hills  in 
east 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  31%  meadows  and 
pastures;  14%  forest  and  woodland;  45% 
other;  includes  5%  irrigated 

Environment:  frequent  typhoons  (about 
five  times  per  year  along  southern  and 


50 


eastern  coasts),  damaging  floods,  earth- 
quakes; deforestation;  soil  erosion;  indus- 
trial pollution;  water  pollution;  desertifica- 
tion 

Special  notes:  world's  third  largest  coun- 
try (after  USSR  and  Canada) 


Population:  1,064,147,038  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  0.99% 
Nationality:  noun — Chinese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Chinese 

Ethnic  divisions:  93.3%  Han  Chinese; 
6.7%  Zhuang,  Uygur,  Hui,  Yi,  Tibetan, 
Miao,  Manchu,  Mongol,  Buyi,  Korean,  and 
numerous  lesser  nationalities 
Religion:  officially  atheist,  but  traditionally 
pragmatic  and  eclectic;  most  important 
elements  of  religion  are  Confucianism, 
Taoism,  and  Buddhism;  about  2-3%  Mus- 
lim, 1%  Christian 

Language:  Standard  Chinese  (Putonghua) 
or  Mandarin  (based  on  the  Beijing  dialect); 
also  Yue  (Cantonese),  Wu  (Shanghainese), 
Minbei  (Fuzhou),  Minnan  (Hokkien- 
Taiwanese),  Xiang,  Gan,  Hakka  dialects, 
and  minority  languages  (see  ethnic  divi- 
sions) 

Life  expectancy:  68 
Literacy:  over  75% 

Labor  force:  476  million  (1984  est);  68.2% 
agriculture  and  forestry,  18.2%  industry 
and  commerce,  3.9%  construction  and 
mining,  3.7%  social  services,  6%  other 
Organized  labor:  All-China  Federation  of 
Trade  Unions  (ACFTU)  follows  the  leader- 
ship of  the  Chinese  Communist  Party; 
membership  over  80  million  (about  65%  of 
the  urban  work  force)  (1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  China 
Type:  Communist  state;  real  authority  lies 
with  Communist  Party's  Politburo;  the 
National  People's  Congress,  in  theory  the 
highest  organ  of  government,  usually 
ratifies  the  party's  programs;  the  State 
Council  actually  directs  the  government 
Capital:  Beijing 

Administrative  divisions:  22  provinces,  3 
centrally  governed  municipalities,  5  auton- 
omous regions 


Legal  system:  a  complex  amalgam  of 
custom  and  statute,  largely  criminal;  little 
ostensible  development  of  uniform  code  of 
administrative  and  civil  law;  highest  judi- 
cial organ  is  Supreme  People's  Court, 
which  reviews  lower  court  decisions;  laws 
and  legal  procedure  subordinate  to  priori- 
ties of  party  policy;  regime  has  attempted 
to  write  civil  and  Communist  codes;  new 
legal  codes  in  effect  since  1  January  1980; 
party  and  state  constitutions  revised  in 
September  and  November  1982,  respec- 
tively; continuing  efforts  are  being  made 
to  improve  civil  and  commercial  law 
National  holiday:  National  Day,  1  Octo- 
ber 

Branches:  control  is  exercised  by  Chinese 
Communist  Party,  through  State  Council, 
which  supervises  ministries,  commissions, 
bureaus,  etc.,  all  technically  under  the 
Standing  Committee  of  the  National 
People's  Congress 

Government  leaders:  ZHAO  Ziyang, 
Premier  of  State  Council  (since  September 
1980);  LI  Xiannian,  President  (since  June 
1983);  PENG  Zhen,  Chairman  of  NPC 
Standing  Committee  (since  June  1983) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  elections  held  for  People's 
Congress  representatives  at  county  level 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Chinese 
Communist  Party  (CCP),  headed  by  Zhao 
Ziyang  as  Acting  General  Secretary  of 
Central  Committee 
Communists:  about  45  million  party 
members  (1986) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  such 
opposition  as  exists  consists  of  loose  coali- 
tions that  vary  by  issue  rather  than  orga- 
nized groups 

Member  of:  ADB,  ESCAP,  FAO,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  ITU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $262  billion,  $250  per  capita  (1986 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  iron,  petroleum, 
mercury,  tin,  tungsten,  antimony,  manga- 
nese, molybdenum,  vanadium,  magnetite, 
aluminum,  lead,  zinc,  uranium,  hydroelec- 
tric power  (world's  largest  potential) 


51 


Agriculture:  main  crops — rice,  wheat, 
other  grains,  oilseed,  cotton;  agriculture 
mainly  subsistence;  grain  imports  5.4 
million  metric  tons;  grain  exports  (mostly 
corn)  9  million  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  iron,  steel,  coal,  ma- 
chine building,  armaments,  textiles,  petro- 
leum 

Shortages:  complex  machinery  and  equip- 
ment, highly  skilled  scientists  and  techni- 
cians, energy,  and  transport 

Crude  steel:  46.6  million  metric  tons 
produced,  45  kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  91,300,000  kW  capacity; 
430,000  million  kWh  produced,  410  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $31.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  agricultural  products,  oil, 
minerals 

Imports:  $39.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  grain, 
chemical  fertilizer,  steel,  industrial  raw 
materials,  machinery,  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  Japan,  Hong  Kong, 
US,  FRG,  Singapore,  USSR,  Italy,  Brazil 

(1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.71  renminbi 
yuan = US$1  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  total  about  52,500  km  common 
carrier  lines;  600  km  1.000-meter  gauge; 
rest  1.435-meter  standard  gauge;  all  single 
track  except  9,500  km  double  track  on 
standard  gauge  lines;  4,200  km  electrified; 
10,000  km  industrial  lines  (gauges  range 
from  0.762  to  1.067  meters) 
Highways:  about  930,000  km  all  types 
roads;  about  240,000  km  unimproved 
natural  earth  roads  and  tracks,  540,000  km 
improved  earth  roads,  150,000  km  paved 
roads 

Inland  waterways:  138,600  km;  about 
109,300  km  navigable 
Pipelines:  crude,  6,500  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 1,100  km;  natural  gas,  4,200  km 
Ports:  15  major,  about  180  minor 
Airfields:  325  total;  266  with  permanent- 
surface  runways;  11  with  runways  3,500  m 
and  over;  80  with  runways  2,500  to  3,499 
m;  203  with  runways  1,200  to  2,499  m;  28 
with  runways  less  than  1,200  m;  2  sea- 


China  (continued) 


Christmas  Island 


plane  stations;  4  heliports,  5  airfields  under 
construction 

Telecommunications:  domestic  and  inter- 
national services  exist  primarily  for  official 
purposes;  unevenly  distributed  internal 
system  serves  principal  cities,  industrial 
centers,  and  most  townships;  services  in 
interior  and  border  regions  limited;  nearly 
4  million  telephone  exchange  lines,  includ- 
ing 40,000  long-distance  telephone  ex- 
change lines  with  direct,  automatic  service 
to  over  24  cities;  6.0  million  telephones 
(3-5  telephones  per  100  popl.  in  large 
cities,  1  telephone  per  170  popl.  national 
average);  53,000  post  and  telegraph  offices 
with  about  700  main  telegraph  centers 
capable  of  general  message  service  at  the 
county  level  and  above;  subscriber  tele- 
printer exchange  (telex)  services  available 
in  25  main  metropolitan  areas;  unknown 
number  of  facsimile  and  data  transmission 
points;  domestic  audio  radiobroadcast 
coverage  provided  by  122  main  AM  cen- 
ters and  about  525  transmitter  relay  sta- 
tions; unknown  number  of  FM  radio  and 
wired  rebroadcast  stations  with  215  million 
receivers;  2  domestic  telecommunications 
satellites,  5  ground  stations,  over  2,000  TV 
receiving  stations;  at  least  202  TV  centers; 
over  400  local  and  network  TV  relay 
transmitter  stations;  7,000  supplementary 
video  recorder  and  redistribution  facilities; 
50  million  monochrome  and  10  million 
color  TV  receiver  sets  (domestically  pro- 
duced); 2  major  international  switching 
centers;  satellite  communications,  long- 
haul  point-to-point  radio  circuits,  regional 
cable  and  wire  landlines,  directional  radio- 
relay,  and  seabed  coaxial  telephone  cable 
(damaged)  permit  linkage  with  most  coun- 
tries; direct  voice  and  message  communi- 
cations with  46  countries  and  regions;  TV 
exchange  to  major  cities  on  5  continents 
through  INTELSAT  Pacific  and  Indian 
Ocean  earth  satellite;  AM  radio  broadcasts 
in  38  languages  to  140  countries  and 
regions 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Chinese  People's  Liberation 
Army  (CPLA),  CPLA  Navy  (including 
marines),  CPLA  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
310,258,000;  173,945,000  fit  for  military 
service;  13,317,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Indian  Ocean 

THE  SETTLEMENT/ 


Indian  Ocean 

See  region*!  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  130  km2;  land  area:  130  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Washington,  B.C. 

Coastline:  about  54  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  heat  and  humidity 
moderated  by  trade  winds 

Terrain:  steep  cliffs  along  coast  rise 
abruptly  to  central  plateau 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  almost  completely  sur- 
rounded by  a  reef 

Special  notes:  located  along  major  sea 
lanes  of  Indian  Ocean 

People 

Population:  2,243  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  -0.76% 

Nationality:  noun — Christmas  Islander(s), 
adjective — Christmas  Island 

Ethnic  divisions:  61%  Chinese,  25% 
Malay,  11%  European,  3%  other;  no  indig- 
enous population 

Language:  English 


Labor  force:  all  workers  are  employees  of 
the  Phosphate  Mining  Company  of  Christ- 
mas Island,  Ltd. 

Government 

Official  name:  Territory  of  Christmas 
Island 

Type:  Australian  territory 
Capital:  The  Settlement 

Legal  system:  Australian  territory  since  10 
October  1958;  administrator  appointed  by 
Governor  General  of  Australia;  Supreme 
Court;  legislative,  judicial,  and  administra- 
tive system  regulated  by  the  Christmas 
Island  Act  of  1958 

Branches:  Advisory  Council  advises  ap- 
pointed administrator 

Government  leader:  T.  F.  PATERSON, 

Administrator 

Communists:  none 

Economy 

National  resources:  phosphates 

Major  industries:  phosphate  extraction 
(near  depletion) 

Electric  power:  11,000  kW  capacity;  38 
million  kWh  produced,  12,670  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  about  1.2  million  metric  tons  of 
phosphate  exported  to  Australia,  New 
Zealand,  and  some  Asian  nations 

Major  trade  partners:  Australia,  New 

Zealand 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.55  Australian 

dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Ports:  Flying  Fish  Cove 

Airfields:  1  usable  with  permanent-surface 
runway  1,220-2,439 

Telecommunications:  4,000  radio  receiv- 
ers (1982) 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  Australia 


52 


Colombia 


Sea 


400  km 


Barranq 


San  Felipe 


Providence.  Malpelo,  and 
San  Andtes  islands  are 
not  shown. 

See  regional  map  III  and  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,138,910  km2;  land  area: 
1,038,700  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Mexico  and  Texas  combined 

Land  boundaries:  6,342  km  total 

Coastline:  3,208  km  total  (1,448  km  Pa- 
cific Ocean;  1,760  Caribbean  Sea) 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Venezuela;  territorial  dispute 
with  Nicaragua  over  San  Andres  and 
Providencia  Archipelago 

Climate:  tropical  along  coast  and  eastern 
plains;  cooler  in  highlands 

Terrain:  mixture  of  flat  coastal  lowlands, 
plains  in  east,  central  highlands,  some  high 
mountains 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  29%  meadows  and  pastures;  49% 
forest  and  woodland;  16%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  highlands  subject  to  volca- 
nic eruptions;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  only  South  American  coun- 
try with  coastlines  on  both  Pacific  Ocean 
and  Caribbean  Sea 


Population:  30,660,504  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.07% 

Nationality:  noun — Colombian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Colombian 

Ethnic  divisions:  58%  mestizo,  20%  white, 
14%  mulatto,  4%  black,  3%  mixed  black- 
Indian,  1%  Indian 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic 
Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  56/1,000  (1985); 
Indians  about  233/1,000 

Life  expectancy:  65  (1985);  Indians  about 
34 

Literacy:  87.8%  (1985  est.);  Indians  about 
40% 

Labor  force:  11  million  (1986);  53%  ser- 
vices, 26%  agriculture,  21%  industry 
(1981);  14%  official  unemployment  (1985) 

Organized  labor:  900,000  members  (1986), 
about  8  percent  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Colombia 

Type:  republic;  executive  branch  domi- 
nates government  structure 

Capital:  Bogota 

Administrative  divisions:  23  departments, 
4  intendancies,  5  commissariats,  Bogota 
Special  District 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  law; 
religious  courts  regulate  marriage  and 
divorce;  constitution  decreed  in  1886,  with 
amendments  codified  in  1946  and  1968; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Court;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  20 
July 

Branches:  President,  bicameral  legislature 
(Congress — Senate,  House  of  Representa- 
tives), judiciary 

Government  leader:  Virgilio  BARCO 
Vargas,  President  (since  August  1986); 
term  ends  1990 

Suffrage:  age  18  and  over 


Elections:  every  fourth  year;  presidential 
election  held  May  1986;  congressional 
election  held  March  1986;  municipal  and 
departmental  elections  every  two  years, 
next  elections  scheduled  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Liberal 
Party — Virgilio  Barco  Vargas,  Alfonso 
Lopez  Michelsen;  New  Liberal  faction  is 
headed  by  Luis  Carlos  Galan;  Conservative 
Party — Alvaro  Gomez  Hurtado,  Misael 
Pastrana  Borrero;  Belisario  Betancur  leads 
a  small  faction;  Communist  Party  (PCC), 
Gilberto  Vieira  White;  Communist 
Party/Marxist-Leninist  (PCC/ML),  Maoist 
orientation;  Patriotic  Union,  (UP),  political 
movement  formed  by  Revolutionary 
Armed  Forces  of  Colombia  (FARC)  and 
PCC,  Braulio  Herrera  (Jaime  Pardo  Leal 
was  1986  presidential  candidate) 

Voting  strength:  (1986  presidential  elec- 
tion) Virgilio  Barco  Vargas  59%,  Alvaro 
Gomez  Hurtado  36%,  Jaime  Pardo  Leal 
4%,  others  1% 

Communists:  18,000  members  est.,  includ- 
ing Communist  Party  Youth  Organization 
(JUCO) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Com- 
munist Party  (PCC),  Gilberto  Vieira 
White;  PCC/ML,  Chinese  Line  Commu- 
nist Party;  Revolutionary  Armed  Forces  of 
Colombia's  Patriotic  Union  Party  (FARC- 
UP) 

Member  of:  Contadora  Group,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  LAIA  and  Andean  Sub- 
Regional  Group,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPEB,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $31  billion;  $1,129  per  capita  (1986 
est.);  73%  private  consumption,  19%  gross 
investment,  11%  public  consumption 
(1984);  growth  rate  5%  (1986);  21.0% 
inflation  rate  (1986) 
Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural 
gas,  coal,  iron  ore,  nickel,  gold,  copper, 
emeralds 


Colombia  (continued) 


Comoros 


Agriculture:  main  crops — coffee,  rice, 
corn,  sugarcane,  plantains,  bananas,  cotton, 
tobacco;  an  illegal  producer  of  coca  and 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  75,351  metric  tons  (1984) 

Major  industries:  textiles,  food  processing, 
clothing  and  footwear,  beverages,  chemi- 
cals, metal  products,  cement;  mining — 
gold,  coal,  emeralds,  iron,  nickel,  silver, 
salt 

Crude  steel:  498,600  metric  tons  produced 
(1984),  18  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  8,438,000  kW  capacity; 
29,580  million  kWh  produced,  990  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  coffee, 
coal,  fuel  oil,  cotton,  tobacco,  sugar,  tex- 
tiles, cattle  and  hides,  bananas,  fresh  cut 
flowers 

Imports:  $4.1  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  trans- 
portation equipment,  machinery,  industrial 
metals  and  raw  materials,  chemicals  and 
Pharmaceuticals,  fuels,  fertilizers,  paper 
and  paper  products,  foodstuffs,  beverages 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 40%  US, 
14%  FRG,  4%  UK,  4%  Netherlands,  4% 
Japan,  3%  Italy;  imports— 33%  US,  11% 
Japan,  8%  Venezuela,  7%  FRG,  4% 
France,  3%  Canada,  3%  UK,  3%  Spain,  3% 
Brazil,  3%  Italy  (1985) 

Budget:  revenues,  $5. 1  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $5.6  billion  (1987  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  212.56 
pesos=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,563  km,  all  0.914-meter 
gauge,  single  track 

Highways:  75,450  km  total;  9,350  km 
paved,  66,100  km  earth  and  gravel  sur- 
faces 

Inland  waterways:  14,300  km,  navigable 
by  river  boats 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  3,585  km;  refined 
products,  1,350  km;  natural  gas,  830  km; 
natural  gas  liquids,  125  km 

Ports:  6  major  (Barranquilla,  Buenaven- 
tura, Cartagena,  San  Andres,  Santa  Marta, 
Tumaco) 


Civil  air:  106  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  636  total,  620  usable;  65  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  10  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  96  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  nationwide  radio- 
relay  system;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite 
station  with  2  antennas  and  1 1  domestic 
satellite  stations;  1.89  million  telephones 
(6.5  per  100  popl.);  404  AM,  85  TV 
stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army  (Ejercito  Nacional),  Air 
Force  (Fuerza  Aerea  de  Colombia),  Navy 
(Armada  Nacional) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
8,049,000;  5,483,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 364,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending 
1987,  $340.3  million;  7%  of  the  central 
government  budget 


Indian  Ocean 


^Fpmboni      ^~^\     V  [ 

5^.-  \J 


Channel 


See  regional  map  VII 


MayolM 

Administered  by  France  .( 
claimed  by  Comoros 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,170  km2;  land  area:  2,170 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  half  the  size  of 
Delaware 

Coastline:  340  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  French- 
administered  Mayotte 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  rainy  season 
(November  to  May) 

Terrain:  interiors  vary  from  steep  moun- 
tains to  low  hills 

Land  use:  35%  arable  land;  8%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  16% 
forest  and  woodland;  34%  other 

Environment:  soil  degradation  and  ero- 
sion; deforestation;  cyclones  possible  dur- 
ing rainy  season 

Special  notes:  important  location  at  north- 
ern end  of  Mozambique  Channel 


Population:  415,220  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.32% 

Nationality:  noun — Comoran(s);  adjec- 
tive— Comoran 

Ethnic  divisions:  Antalote,  Cafre,  Makoa, 
Oimatsaha,  Sakalava 

Religion:  86%  Sunni  Muslim,  14%  Roman 
Catholic 


54 


Congo 


Language:  Shaafi  Islam  (a  Swahili  dialect), 
Malagasy,  French 

Infant  mortality  rate:  92.3/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  48.8 
Literacy:  15% 

Labor  force:  140,000  (1982);  80%  agricul- 
ture, 3%  government;  significant  unem- 
ployment 

Government 

Official  name:  Federal  Islamic  Republic 
of  the  Comoros 

Type:  independent  republic 
Capital:  Moroni 

Administrative  divisions:  each  of  the 
three  main  islands  is  an  administrative 
unit  under  a  governor  appointed  by  the 
President,  three  separate  municipalities 
(Moroni,  Mutsamudu,  Domoni) 

Legal  system:  French  and  Muslim  law  in 
a  new  consolidated  code 

Branches:  presidency;  38-member  legisla- 
ture (Federal  Assembly) 

Government  leader:  Ahmed  ABDALLAH 
ABDEREMANE,  President  (since  October 
1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  Abdallah  Abderemane  won 
1984  presidential  election  with  99%  major- 
ity; Federal  Assembly  elected  in  March 
1982 

Political  party:  sole  legal  political  party  is 
Comoran  Union  for  Progress  (UCP) 

Voting  strength:  UCP  holds  37  seats  in  the 
Federal  Assembly 

Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  IBRD, 
IDA,  IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  ILO,  IMF,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  QIC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $114  million,  about  $290  per  capita 
(1985  est.) 

Agriculture:  food  crops — rice,  manioc, 
maize,  fruits,  vegetables,  coconuts,  cinna- 
mon, yams;  export  crops — essential  oils  for 
perfumes  (mainly  ylang-ylang),  vanilla, 
copra,  cloves 

Major  industry:  perfume  distillation 


Electric  power:  4,000  kW  capacity;  5 
million  kWh  produced,  1 1  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $15  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.); 
perfume  oils,  vanilla,  copra,  cloves 

Imports:  $25  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.);  rice 
and  other  foodstuffs,  cement,  fuels,  chemi- 
cals, textiles 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — France, 
FRG,  US;  imports — France,  Kenya,  Re- 
union 

Budget:  domestic  revenues,  $11  million; 
external  grants,  $29  million;  current  ex- 
penditures, $14  million;  capital  expendi- 
tures, $7  million;  extrabudgetary  expendi- 
tures, $44  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331  Commun- 
aute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (September  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  1,110  km  total;  about  400  km 
bituminous,  remainder  crushed  stone  or 
gravel 

Ports:  1  major  (Mutsamudu);  2  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  4  total,  4  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  sparse  system  of 
radio-relay  and  high  frequency  radio 
communication  stations  for  interisland  and 
external  communications  to  Madagascar 
and  Reunion;  1,800  telephones  (0.4  per 
100  popl.);  2  AM  stations,  1  FM  station,  no 
TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Presidential  Guard, 
Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  86,000; 
51,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1981,  $2.9  million;  about  16% 
of  the  central  government  budget 


Gull at 

Guinea       "Pointe 

Noire 

See  regional  map  VII 


BRAZZAVILLE 


Boundary  representation  is 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


Geography 

Total  area:  342,000  km2;  land  area: 
341,500  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Montana 

Land  boundaries:  4,514  km  total 
Coastline:  169  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  section  with  Zaire  is 
indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (March  to 
June);  dry  season  (June  to  October);  con- 
stantly high  temperatures  and  humidity; 
particularly  enervating  climate  astride  the 
Equator 

Terrain:  coastal  plain,  southern  basin, 
central  plateau,  northern  basin 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  29%  meadows  and  pastures; 
62%  forest  and  woodland;  7%  other 

Environment:  deforestation 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  2,082,154  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.38% 

Nationality:  noun — Congolese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Congolese  or  Congo 

Ethnic  divisions:  about  15  ethnic  groups 
divided  into  some  75  tribes,  almost  all 
Bantu;  most  important  ethnic  groups  are 
Kongo  (48%)  in  the  south,  Sangha  (20%) 


55 


Congo  (continued) 


and  M'Bochi  (12%)  in  the  north,  Teke 
(17%)  in  the  center;  about  8,500  Europe- 
ans, mostly  French 

Religion:  42%  animist,  50%  Christian,  2% 
Muslim 

Language:  French  (official);  many  African 
languages  with  Lingala  and  Kikongo  most 
widely  used 

Infant  mortality  rate:  200/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  46.5 
Literacy:  over  80% 

Labor  force:  about  40%  of  population 
economically  active  (1985);  75%  agricul- 
ture, 25%  commerce,  industry,  govern- 
ment; 79,100  wage  earners;  40,000-60,000 
unemployed 

Organized  labor:  20%  of  total  labor  force 
(1979  est.) 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of  the 
Congo 

Type:  people's  republic 
Capital:  Brazzaville 
Administrative  divisions:  nine  regions, 
divided  into  districts,  and  capital  district 
Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  8  July  1979 
National  holiday:  National  Day,  15  Au- 
gust 

Branches:  presidential  executive,  Council 
of  State;  judiciary;  all  policy  made  by 
Congolese  Labor  Party  Central  Committee 
and  Politburo 

Government  leaders:  Col.  Denis  SASSOU- 
NGUESSO,  President  and  party  chairman 
(since  1979);  Ange  Edouard  POUNGUI, 
Prime  Minister  (since  July  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  elections  for  local  and  regional 
organs  and  the  National  Assembly  were 
held  in  July  1979 — the  first  elections  since 
June  1973 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Congolese 
Labor  Party  (PCT)  is  the  only  legal  party; 
Party  Congress  held  in  July  1984 — Sassou 
unanimously  elected  to  another  five-year 
term  as  President  and  party  chairman 


Communists:  unknown  number  of  Com- 
munists and  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Union 
of  Congolese  Socialist  Youth  (UJSC),  Con- 
golese Trade  Union  Congress  (CSC),  Revo- 
lutionary Union  of  Congolese  Women 
(URFC),  General  Union  of  Congolese 
Pupils  and  Students  (UGEEC) 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Conference  of  East 
and  Central  African  States,  EAMA,  ECA, 
EIB  (associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  UDEAC,  UEAC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  about  $1.8  billion,  $1,140  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  2.5%  per  year  (1984);  80% 
of  economy  is  private  sector,  predomi- 
nantly French  owned  and  operated 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  wood, 
potash,  lead,  zinc,  uranium,  phosphates, 
natural  gas 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — sugarcane,  wood, 

coffee,  cocoa  beans,  palm  kernels,  bananas, 

peanuts,  tobacco;  food  crops — root  crops, 

rice,  corn,  bananas,  manioc,  fish,  goats, 

chickens 

Fishing:  catch  31,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  crude  oil,  cement, 
sawmills,  brewery,  sugar  mill,  palm  oil, 
soap,  cigarettes 

Electric  power:  120,000  kW  capacity;  262 
million  kWh  produced,  140  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  1984);  oil 
(90%),  lumber,  tobacco,  veneer,  plywood, 
coffee,  cocoa,  sugar 

Imports:  $618  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  ma- 
chinery, transport  equipment,  manufac- 
tured consumer  goods,  iron  and  steel, 
foodstuffs,  chemical  products, 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  Italy,  FRG, 

US 

Budget:  revenues,  $721  million;  current 

expenditures,  $508  million;  development 

expenditures,  $241  million  (1984) 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  727  km,  1.067-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  11,970  km  total;  555  km  bitu- 
minous surface  treated;  848  km  gravel, 
laterite,  5,347  km  improved  earth,  and 
5,220  km  unimproved  roads 
Inland  waterways:  the  Congo  and  Ubangi 
Rivers  provide  1,120  km  of  commercially 
navigable  water  transport;  the  remainder 
of  the  inland  waterways  are  used  for  local 
traffic  only 

Pipelines:  crude  oil  25  km 
Ports:  1  major  (Pointe-Noire) 
Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  55  total,  51  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  21  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  services  adequate 
for  government  use;  primary  network  is 
composed  of  radio-relay  routes  and  coaxial 
cables;  key  centers  are  Brazzaville,  Pointe- 
Noire,  and  Loubomo;  18,100  telephones 
(1.1  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  1  FM,  4  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military National  People's  Militia 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  426,000; 
215,000  fit  for  military  service;  about 
20,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annually 


56 


Cook  Islands 


Pukapuka. 


Rakahanga.  Panrhyn 

"Manihiki 


Nassau 
Island 


Suwarrow 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


Aitutaki 


Mitiaro 
Takutaa 

Mauke 


Palmarslon 


~  Rarotonga 

See  retloiul  mip  X  'Mongaia 


Geography 

Total  area:  230  km2;  land  area:  230  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  120  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  edge 
of  continental  margin 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  trade 
winds 

Terrain:  low  coral  atolls  in  north;  volcanic, 
hilly  islands  in  south 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  22%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  74%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  typhoons  from 
November  to  March 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  17,898  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.55% 

Nationality:  noun — Cook  Islanders); 
adjective — Cook  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  81.3%  Polynesian  (full 
blood),  7.7%  Polynesian  and  European, 
7.7%  Polynesian  and  other,  2.4%  Euro- 
pean, 0.9%  other 

Religion:  Christian,  majority  of  populace 
members  of  Cook  Islands  Christian  Church 
Language:  English 


Government 

Official  name:  Cook  Islands 

Type:  self-governing  in  free  association 
with  New  Zealand;  Cook  Islands  Govern- 
ment fully  responsible  for  internal  affairs 
and  has  the  right  at  any  time  to  move  to 
full  independence  by  unilateral  action; 
New  Zealand  retains  responsibility  for 
external  affairs,  in  consultation  with  the 
Cook  Islands  Government 

Capital:  Avarua 

Branches:  New  Zealand  Governor  General 
appoints  Representative  to  Cook  Islands, 
who  represents  the  Queen  and  the  New 
Zealand  Government;  Representative 
appoints  the  Prime  Minister;  popularly 
elected  24-member  Parliament; 
15-member  House  of  Arikis  (chiefs),  ap- 
pointed by  Representative,  is  an  advisory 
body  only 

Government  leader:  Sir  Thomas  DAVIS, 
Prime  Minister  (since  July  1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  every  five  years,  latest  in  No- 
vember 1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders: -Democratic 
Party,  Sir  Thomas  Davis;  Cook  Islands 
Party,  Geoffrey  Henry 

Voting  strength:  (1983)  Parliament- 
Democratic  Party,  13  seats;  Cook  Islands 
Party,  11  seats 

Member  of:  ADB,  IDA,  IFC,  IMF,  SPF, 
SPEC,  ESCAP  (associate  member) 

Economy 

GDP:  $21.0  million,  $1,170  per  capita 
(1983) 

Agriculture:  export  crops  include  copra, 
citrus  fruits,  pineapples,  tomatoes,  and 
bananas,  with  subsistence  crops  of  yams 
and  taro 

Major  industry:  fruit  processing,  tourism 

Electric  power:  4,750  kW  capacity;  15 
million  kWh  produced,  830  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $4.20  million  (1983);  copra,  fresh 
and  canned  fruit 

Imports:  $24.36  million  (1983);  foodstuffs, 
textiles,  fuels 


Major  trade  partners:  (1970)  exports — 
98%  New  Zealand;  imports— 76%  New 
Zealand,  7%  Japan 

Aid:  $9.34  million  (1983)  New  Zealand, 
Australia,  and  Western  sources 

Budget:  $121  million  (1977) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  $1.94  New 
Zealand=US$l  (November  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  187  km  total  (1980);  35  km 
paved,  35  km  gravel,  84  km  improved 
earth,  33  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  2  minor 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  7  total,  5  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  2  AM,  no  FM,  no 
TV  stations;  10,000  radio  receivers;  2,052 
telephones;  1  satellite  station 


57 


Costa  Rica 


lOOkm 


North  Pacific  Ocean 


Isla  del  Coco 
is  not  shown. 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  50,700  km2;  land  area:  50,660 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
West  Virginia 

Land  boundaries:  670  km  total 
Coastline:  1,290  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Nicaraguan 
interruption  of  transit  in  the  Rio  San  Juan 
(the  international  boundary)  is  an  occa- 
sional source  of  friction 

Climate:  tropical;  dry  season  (December  to 
April);  rainy  season  (May  to  November) 

Terrain:  coastal  plains  separated  by  rugged 
mountains 

Land  use:  6%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  43%  meadows  and  pastures;  32% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  occasional  earth- 
quakes, hurricanes  along  Atlantic  coast; 
frequent  flooding  of  lowlands  at  onset  of 
rainy  season;  active  volcanoes;  deforesta- 
tion; soil  erosion 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  2,811,652  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.78% 


Nationality:  noun — Costa  Rican(s);  adjec- 
tive— Costa  Rican 

Ethnic  divisions:  96%  white  (including 
mestizo),  3%  black,  1%  Indian 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Spanish  (official),  with  Jamai- 
can dialect  of  English  spoken  around 
Puerto  Union 

Infant  mortality  rate:  18.8/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  67.5,  women  71.9 
Literacy:  93% 

Labor  force:  868,300  (1985  est.);  34% 
industry  and  commerce,  27%  agriculture, 
21%  government  and  services,  8%  other; 
10%  unemployment  (1985  est.) 

Organized  labor:  about  15.1%  of  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Costa  Rica 

Type:  democratic  republic 

Capital:  San  Jose 

Administrative  divisions:  7  provinces 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  civil  law 
system;  constitution  adopted  in  1949; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Court;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
September 

Branches:  executive — President  (head  of 
government  and  chief  of  state),  elected  for 
a  single  four-year  term;  two  vice  presi- 
dents; legislative — 57-delegate  unicameral 
Legislative  Assembly  elected  at  four-year 
intervals;  judiciary — Supreme  Court  of 
Justice  (17  magistrates  elected  by  Legisla- 
tive Assembly  at  eight-year  intervals) 

Government  leader:  Oscar  ARIAS  San- 
chez, President  (since  May  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  age  18 
and  over 

Elections:  every  four  years;  last  held  in 
February  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Liberation  Party  (PLN),  Jose  (Fepe) 
Figueres,  Luis  Alberto  Monge,  Daniel 
Oduber,  Oscar  Arias  Sanchez;  the  Social 
Christian  Unity  Party  (PUSC)  comprises 


the  four  Unity  Coalition  (UNIDAD)  par- 
ties— Republican  Calderonista  Party 
(PRC),  Rafael  Angel  Calderon  Fournier; 
Democratic  Renovation  Party  (PRD), 
leader  unknown;  Christian  Democratic 
Party  (PDC),  Rafael  Grille  Rivera;  Popular 
Unity  Party  (PUP),  Christian  Tattenbach 
Iglesias;  the  Popular  Alliance  (PA)  is  a 
coalition  comprising  two  parties — Marxist 
Popular  Vanguard  Party  (PVP),  Humberto 
Vargas  Carbonell,  and  Leftist  Broad  Dem- 
ocratic Front  (FAD),  Rodrigo  Gutierrez; 
the  United  People  (PU)  is  a  leftist  coalition 
comprising  four  parties — New  Republic 
Movement  (MNR),  Sergio  Erick  Ardon; 
Socialist  Party  (PS),  Alvaro  Montero  Mejia; 
People's  Party  of  Costa  Rica  (PPC), 
Manuel  Mora  Valverde;  and  Radical 
Democratic  Party  (PRD),  Juan  Jose  Echev- 
erria  Brealey 

Voting  strength:  (1986  election)  PLN,  29 
seats;  UNIDAD,  25  seats;  PVP,  1  seat; 
PPC,  1  seat;  other,  1  seat 

Communists:  7,500  members  and  sympa- 
thizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Costa 
Rican  Confederation  of  Democratic  Work- 
ers (CCTD;  Liberation  Party  affiliate), 
Confederated  Union  of  Workers  (CUT; 
Communist  Party  affiliate),  Authentic 
Confederation  of  Democratic  Workers 
(CATD;  Communist  Party  affiliate),  Cham- 
ber of  Coffee  Growers,  National  Associa- 
tion for  Economic  Development  (ANFE), 
Free  Costa  Rica  Movement  (MCRL; 
rightwing  militants),  National  Association 
of  Educators  (ANDE) 

Member  of:  CACM,  Central  American 
Democratic  Community,  FAO,  G-77, 
IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDB — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Wheat  Council,  OAS,  ODECA, 
PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPEB, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $3.7  billion  (1985  est.),  $1,427  per 
capita;  62%  private  consumption,  16% 
public  consumption,  23%  gross  domestic 
investment,  —1%  net  foreign  balance;  2% 
real  growth  rate  (1986) 


58 


Cuba 


Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  main  products — coffee,  ba- 
nanas, sugarcane,  rice,  corn,  cocoa,  live- 
stock products;  an  illegal  producer  of 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  10,902  metric  tons  (1982) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  textiles 
and  clothing,  construction  materials,  fertil- 
izer 

Electric  power:  820,000  kW  capacity; 
2,770  million  kWh  produced,  1,020  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $994  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  coffee, 
bananas,  beef,  sugar,  cocoa 

Imports:  $1,126  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
manufactured  products,  machinery,  trans- 
portation equipment,  chemicals,  fuels, 
foodstuffs,  fertilizer 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 47%  US, 
18%  CACM,  9%  FRG;  imports— 40%  US, 
12%  Japan,  11%  CACM,  4%  FRG  (1983) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments — US  autho- 
rized (FY70-85),  including  Ex-Im,  $823 
million,  other  Western  countries  ODA  and 
OOF  (1970-85),  $401  million,  Communist 
countries  (1971-85),  $27  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $32 
million 

Budget:  consolidated  public  sector — total 
revenues,  $1,009  million;  total  expendi- 
tures, including  debt  amortization,  $1,058 
million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  58 
colones=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  800  km  total,  all  1.067-meter 
gauge;  243  km  electrified 

Highways:  15,400  km  total;  7,030  km 
paved,  7,010  km  gravel,  1,360  km  unim- 
proved earth 

Inland  waterways:  about  730  km,  season- 
ally navigable 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  95  km 

Ports:  1  major  (Puerto  Limon),  4  second- 
ary (Caldera,  Golfito,  Moin,  Puntarenas) 

Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  199  total,  188  usable;  27  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  9  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  very  good  domestic 
telephone  service;  292,000  telephones  (11.8 
per  100  popl.);  connection  into  Central 
American  microwave  net;  62  AM,  17  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Civil  Guard,  Rural  Assistance 

Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  741,000; 

502,000  fit  for  military  service;  29,000 

reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $19.6  million  for  Ministry 
of  Public  Security,  including  the  Civil 
Guard;  about  2.8%  of  total  central  govern- 
ment budget;  $8.0  million  for  Rural 
Guard;  1.1%  of  total  central  government 
budget 


300km 


North  Atlantic 
Ocean 


Isla  de  la 
Juventud 


Caribbean  Sea 


See  regional  mip  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  110,860  km2;  land  area: 

110,860  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 

Pennsylvania 

Land  boundary:  29. 1  km  with  Guantan- 

amo  (US  Naval  Base) 

Coastline:  3,735  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  m 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Guantanamo 
(US  Naval  Base)  leased  to  US 
Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  trade 
winds;  dry  season  (November  to  April); 
rainy  season  (May  to  November) 
Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  rolling  plains  with 
some  hills  and  mountains 
Land  use:  23%  arable  land;  6%  permanent 
crops;  23%  meadows  and  pastures;  17% 
forest  and  woodland;  31%  other;  includes 
10%  irrigated 

Environment:  averages  one  hurricane 
every  other  year 

Special  notes:  largest  country  in  Carib- 
bean; 145  km  south  of  Florida 


Population:  10,259,473  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.90% 
Nationality:  noun— Cuban(s);  adjective- 
Cuban 


Cuba  (continued) 


Ethnic  divisions:  51%  mulatto,  37%  white, 
11%  black,  1%  Chinese 

Religion:  at  least  85%  nominally  Roman 
Catholic  before  Castro  assumed  power 

Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  15/1,000  (1985) 

Life  expectancy:  74 

Literacy:  96% 

Labor  force:  3.0  million;  47%  industry  and 
commerce,  28%  services  and  government, 
25%  agriculture  (1982) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Cuba 
Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Havana 

Administrative  divisions:  14  provinces 
and  169  municipalities 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  and 
American  law,  with  large  elements  of 
Communist  legal  theory;  new  constitution 
2  December  1976;  does  not  accept  com- 
pulsory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Anniversary  of  the 
Revolution,  1  January 

Branches:  executive;  legislature  (National 
Assembly  of  the  People's  Power);  con- 
trolled judiciary 

Government  leader:  Fidel  CASTRO  Ruz, 
President  (since  January  1959) 

Suffrage:  universal  but  not  compulsory 
over  age  16 

Elections:  National  People's  Assembly 
(indirect  election)  every  five  years;  last 
election  held  December  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Cuban 
Communist  Party  (PCC),  First  Secretary 
Fidel  Castro  Ruz,  Second  Secretary  Raul 
Castro  Ruz 

Communists:  about  500,000  party  mem- 
bers 

Member  of:  CEMA,  ECLA,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IADB  (nonparticipant),  IAEA, 
ICAO,  IFAD,  ICO,  IHO,  ILO,  IMO,  IRC, 
ISO,  ITU,  IWC— International  Wheat 
Council,  NAM,  OAS  (nonparticipant), 
PAHO,  Permanent  Court  of  Arbitration, 


Postal  Union  of  the  Americas  and  Spain, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UNIDO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $18.0  billion  in  1974  dollars;  $1,757 
per  capita  in  1974  dollars;  real  growth  rate 
2.3%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  cobalt,  nickel,  iron, 
copper,  manganese,  salt,  forests 

Agriculture:  sugar,  tobacco,  rice,  potatoes, 
tubers,  citrus,  coffee 

Fishing:  catch  198,400  metric  tons  (1984); 
exports  $102  million  (1984  est.) 

Major  industries:  sugar  milling,  petroleum 
refining,  food  and  tobacco  processing, 
textiles,  chemicals,  paper  and  wood  prod- 
ucts, metals,  cement 

Shortages:  spare  parts  for  transportation 
and  industrial  machinery,  consumer  goods 

Crude  steel:  412,900  metric  tons  produced 
(1985);  40  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  3,461,000  kW  capacity; 
14,030  million  kWh  produced,  1,370  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $6.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  sugar, 
nickel,  shellfish,  tobacco,  coffee,  citrus 

Imports:  $8.6  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  capital 
goods,  industrial  raw  materials,  food, 
petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 72% 
USSR,  17%  other  Communist  countries; 
imports— 66%  USSR,  18%  other  Commu- 
nist countries  (1984) 

Budget:  $15.1  billion  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.93 
peso=US$l  (December  1986  official) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  14,925  km  total;  Cuban  Na- 
tional Railways  operates  5,295  km  of 
1.435-meter  gauge  track;  199  km  electri- 
fied; 9,630  km  of  sugar  plantation  lines  of 
0.914-1.435-meter  gauge 

Highways:  about  21,000  km  total;  9,000 
km  paved,  12,000  km  gravel  and  earth 
surfaced 


Inland  waterways:  240  km 

Ports:  10  major,  26  secondary,  34  minor 

Civil  air:  59  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  202  total,  186  usable;  66  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  13  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  18  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  143  AM,  5  FM,  52 
TV  stations;  1,525,000  TV  sets;  2,140,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Revolutionary  Armed  Forces, 
Ground  Forces,  Revolutionary  Navy,  Air 
and  Air  Defense  Force,  Ministry  of  Inte- 
rior Special  Troops,  Border  Guard  Troops, 
Territorial  Militia  Troops,  Youth  Labor 
Army 

Military  manpower:  eligible  15-49, 
5,765,000;  of  the  2,893,000  males  15-49, 
1,819,000  are  fit  for  military  service;  of 
the  2,871,000  females  15-49,  1,802,000  are 
fit  for  military  service;  112,000  males  and 
108,000  females  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 


Cyprus 


50km 


Mediterranean  Sea 


United  Nation- 
Buffer  Zonal     '' 


Rizokarpaso 


amagusta 


Epiikopl\_J  Limassol 


likot 


Mediterranean  Sea 


Stt  refional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  9,250  km2;  land  area:  9,240 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Connecticut 

Coastline:  648  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  has  been  di- 
vided de  facto  into  two  autonomous  areas 
since  1974  hostilities — one  controlled  by 
the  Cyprus  Government  or  Greek  area 
(60%)  and  the  other  administered  by 
Turkish  Cypriots  (35%);  those  areas  are 
separated  by  a  UN  buffer  zone  and  two 
UK  sovereign  base  areas  (5%) 

Climate:  temperate;  hot,  dry  summers; 
cool,  rainy  winters 

Terrain:  central  plain  with  mountains  to 
north  and  south 

Land  use:  40%  arable  land;  7%  permanent 
crops;  10%  meadows  and  pastures;  18% 
forest  and  woodland;  25%  other;  includes 
10%  irrigated 

Environment:  moderate  earthquake  activ- 
ity; water  resource  problems  (no  natural 
reservoir  catchments  and  seasonal  disparity 
in  rainfall) 

Special  notes:  occupies  important  location 
in  eastern  Mediterranean,  gateway  to  the 
Middle  East 


People 

Population:  683,651  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.26% 

Nationality:  noun — Cypriot(s);  adjective — 
Cypriot 

Ethnic  divisions:  78%  Greek;  18%  Turk- 
ish; 4%  Armenian,  Maronite,  and  other 

Religion:  78%  Greek  Orthodox;  18% 
Muslim;  4%  Maronite,  Armenian,  Apos- 
tolic, and  other 

Language:  Greek,  Turkish,  English 
Infant  mortality  rate:  17/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  men  72.3,  women  76.0 
(1981) 

Literacy:  about  99% 

Greek  Sector  labor  force:  251,406;  42% 
services,  33%  industry,  22%  agriculture; 
3.4%  unemployed  (1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Cyprus 
Type:  republic;  a  disaggregation  of  the  two 
ethnic  communities  inhabiting  the  island 
began  after  the  outbreak  of  communal 
strife  in  1963;  this  separation  was  further 
solidified  following  the  Turkish  invasion  of 
the  island  in  July  1974,  which  gave  the 
Turkish  Cypriots  de  facto  control  in  the 
north;  Greek  Cypriots  control  the  only 
internationally  recognized  government;  on 
15  November  1983  Turkish  Cypriot  Presi- 
dent Rauf  Denktash  declared  indepen- 
dence and  the  formation  of  a  Turkish 
Republic  of  Northern  Cyprus,  which  has 
been  recognized  only  by  Turkey;  both 
sides  publicly  call  for  the  resolution  of 
intercommunal  differences  and  creation  of 
a  new  federal  system  of  government 
Capital:  Nicosia 

Administrative  divisions:  6  administrative 
districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  common  law,  with 
civil  law  modifications;  negotiations  to 
create  the  basis  for  a  new  or  revised  con- 
stitution to  govern  the  island  and  relations 
between  Greek  and  Turkish  Cypriots  have 
been  held  intermittently 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  1 

October 

Branches:  currently  the  Government  of 

Cyprus  has  effective  authority  over  only 

the  Greek  Cypriot  community;  headed  by 


President  of  the  Republic  and  comprising 
Council  of  Ministers,  House  of  Representa- 
tives, and  Supreme  Court;  Turkish  Cypri- 
ots declared  their  own  constitution  and 
governing  bodies  within  the  Turkish  Fed- 
erated State  of  Cyprus  in  1975;  state 
renamed  Turkish  Republic  of  Northern 
Cyprus  in  1983;  new  constitution  for  the 
Turkish  sector  passed  by  referendum  in 
May  1985 

Government  leaders:  Spyros 
KYPRIANOU,  President  (since  1977); 
Turkish  Sector— Rauf  DENKTASH,  Presi- 
dent (since  1975) 
Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18 
Elections:  officially  every  five  years  (last 
presidential  election  held  in  February 
1983);  parliamentary  elections  held  in 
December  1985;  Turkish  sector  presiden- 
tial elections  last  held  in  June  1985;  assem- 
bly elections  held  in  June  1985 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Greek 
Cypriot — Progressive  Party  of  the  Work- 
ing People  (AKEL;  Communist  Party), 
Ezekias  Papaioannou;  Democratic  Rally 
(DESY),  Glafkos  Clerides;  Democratic 
Party  (DEKO),  Spyros  Kyprianou;  United 
Democratic  Union  of  the  Center  (EDEK), 
Vassos  Lyssarides;  Turkish  sector — Na- 
tional Unity  Party  (NUP),  Dervis  Eroglu; 
Communal  Liberation  Party  (CLP),  Ismail 
Bozkurt;  Republican  Turkish  Party  (RTP), 
Ozker  Ozgur;  New  Birth  Party  (NBP), 
Aytac  Besheshler 

Voting  strength:  in  the  1983  presidential 
election,  incumbent  Spyros  Kyprianou 
retained  his  position  by  winning  56%  of 
the  vote;  in  the  1985  parliamentary  elec- 
tion, the  pro- Western  Democratic  Rally 
received  19  of  the  56  seats;  Kyprianou 's 
center-right  Democratic  Party  won  16 
seats;  Communist  AKEL  secured  15  seats; 
and  socialist  EDEK  won  6  seats;  in  1985 
presidential  elections  in  the  Turkish  Cyp- 
riot sector,  Rauf  Denktash  won  with  70 
percent  of  the  vote;  in  the  1985  assembly 
elections  the  conservative  National  Unity 
Party  won  24  of  50  seats;  the  Communist 
Republican  Turkish  Party  received  12 
seats;  center-right  Communal  Liberation 
Party  secured  10  seats;  and  the  rightwing 
New  Birth  Party  received  4  seats 
Communists:  about  12,000 


CyprUS  (continued) 


Czechoslovakia 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  United 
Democratic  Youth  Organization  (EDON; 
Communist  controlled);  Union  of  Cyprus 
Farmers  (EKA;  Communist  controlled); 
Cyprus  Farmers  Union  (PEK;  pro- West); 
Pan-Cyprian  Labor  Federation  (PEO; 
Communist  controlled);  Confederation  of 
Cypriot  Workers  (SEK;  pro- West);  Federa- 
tion of  Turkish  Cypriot  Labor  Unions 
(Turk-Sen);  Confederation  of  Revolution- 
ary Labor  Unions  (Dev-Is) 

Member  of:  Commonwealth,  Council  of 
Europe,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO;  Turkish  Federated 
State  of  Cyprus  OIC  (observer) 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.4  billion  (1984),  $3,609  per  cap- 
ita; real  growth  rate  1.3%  (1984  est); 
Turkish  sector— $205.9  million,  $1,344  per 
capita  (1983) 

Natural  resources:  copper,  pyrites,  asbes- 
tos, gypsum,  lumber,  salt,  marble,  clay 
earth  pigment 

Agriculture:  potatoes  and  other  vegetables, 
grapes,  citrus,  wheat,  carob  beans,  olives 

Major  industries:  mining  (iron  pyrites, 
gypsum,  asbestos),  manufactures  princi- 
pally for  local  consumption — beverages, 
footwear,  clothing,  cement 

Electric  power:  620,000  kW  capacity; 
1,520  million  kWh  produced,  2,260  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $561.2  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
principal  items — food  and  beverages, 
including  citrus,  raisins,  potatoes,  wine; 
also  cement  and  clothing;  Turkish  sector — 
$48.8  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  principal 
items — citrus,  potatoes,  metal  pipes,  py- 
rites 

Imports:  $1,469.7  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
principal  items  manufactured  goods, 
machinery  and  transport  equipment,  fuels, 
food;  Turkish  sector — $170  million  (c.i.f., 
1984);  principal  items — foodstuffs,  raw 
materials,  fuels,  machinery 


Major  trade  partners:  imports  (1984) — 
12.1%  UK,  12%  Japan,  10.5%  Italy,  8.3% 
FRG,  5.2%  Iraq;  exports  (1984)— 17%  UK, 
14.1%  Lebanon,  11.4%  Libya,  7.5%  Saudi 
Arabia,  3.4%  USSR;  Turkish  sector- 
imports  (1984)— 46%  Turkey,  36%  EC, 
17%  Arab  countries;  exports  (1984)— 61% 
EC,  22%  Turkey,  16%  Arab  countries 

Budget:  revenues,  $663.2  million;  expendi- 
tures, $804.9  million;  deficit,  $141.7  mil- 
lion (1984);  Turkish  sector — revenues, 
$46.3  million;  expenditures,  $110.9  million; 
deficit,  $64.6  million  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .52  Cyprus 
pound=US$l  (January  1987);  Turkish 
sector — 755  Turkish  liras=US$l  (January 
1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  10,780  km  total;  5,170  km 
bituminous  surface  treated;  5,610  km 
gravel,  crushed  stone,  and  earth 
Ports:  3  major  (Famagusta,  Larnaca, 
Limassol),  2  secondary  (Vasilikos,  Kyrenia), 
11  minor;  Famagusta  and  Kyrenia  under 
Turkish-Cypriot  control 
Civil  air:  8  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  15  total,  14  usable;  12  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  moderately  good 
telecommunication  systems  in  both  Greek 
and  Turkish  sectors;  185,000  telephones 
(25  per  100  popl.);  10  AM,  14  FM,  29  TV 
stations;  tropospheric  scatter  circuits  to 
Greece  and  Turkey;  3  submarine  coaxial 
cables;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  antenna 
and  1  Indian  Ocean  antenna 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Cyprus  National  Guard;  Turk- 
ish sector — Turkish  Cypriot  Security  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  176,000; 
122,000  fit  for  military  service;  about 
5,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 
Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1984,  $60  million;  11.6%  of 
central  government  budget 


See  refionil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  127,870  km2;  land  area: 
125,460  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
York  State 

Land  boundaries:  3,540  km  total 

Climate:  temperate;  cool  summers;  cold, 
cloudy,  humid  winters 

Terrain:  mixture  of  hills  and  mountains 
separated  by  plains  and  basins 

Land  use:  40%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  13%  meadows  and  pastures;  37% 
forest  and  woodland;  9%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  infrequent  earthquakes; 
acid  rain;  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategically 
located  astride  some  of  oldest  and  most 
significant  land  routes  in  Europe;  Morav- 
ian Gate  is  a  traditional  military  corridor 
between  northern  Europe  and  Danube 

People 

Population:  15,581,993  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.26% 

Nationality:  noun — Czechoslovak(s);  adjec- 
tive— Czechoslovak 

Ethnic  divisions:  64.3%  Czech,  30.5% 
Slovak,  3.8%  Hungarian,  0.4%  German, 
0.4%  Polish,  0.3%  Ukrainian,  0.1%  Russian, 
0.2%  other  (Jewish,  Gypsy) 

Religion:  77%  Roman  Catholic,  20% 
Protestant,  2%  Orthodox,  1%  other 


62 


Language:  Czech  and  Slovak  (official), 
Hungarian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  16/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  71.6  (1985) 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  7.6  million  (1985);  38.1% 
industry;  12.5%  agriculture;  49.4%  con- 
struction, communications,  and  other 

(1982) 

Government 

Official  name:  Czechoslovak  Socialist 
Republic  (CSSR) 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Prague 

Administrative  divisions:  2  ostensibly 
separate  and  nominally  autonomous  repub- 
lics (Czech  Socialist  Republic  and  Slovak 
Socialist  Republic);  7  regions  (kraj)  in 
Czech  lands,  3  regions  in  Slovakia;  repub- 
lic capitals  of  Prague  and  Bratislava  have 
regional  status 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  based  on 
Austro-Hungarian  codes,  modified  by 
Communist  legal  theory;  revised  constitu- 
tion adopted  1960,  and  amended  in  1968 
and  1970;  no  judicial  review  of  legislative 
acts;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Liberation  Day,  9  May 

Branches:  executive — President  (elected 
by  Federal  Assembly),  Cabinet  (appointed 
by  President);  legislative  (Federal  Assem- 
bly; elected  directly — Chamber  of  Nations, 
Chamber  of  the  People),  Czech  and  Slovak 
National  Councils  (also  elected  directly) 
legislate  on  limited  area  of  regional  mat- 
ters; judiciary,  Supreme  Court  (elected  by 
Federal  Assembly);  entire  governmental 
structure  dominated  by  Communist  Party 

Government  leaders:  Gustav  HUSAK, 
President  (since  1975);  Lubomir 
STROUGAL,  Premier  (since  1970) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  governmental  bodies  and  presi- 
dent every  five  years;  last  election  June 
1986 

Dominant  political  party  and  leader: 

Communist  Party  of  Czechoslovakia  (KSC), 
Gustav  Husak,  General  Secretary  (since 


1969);  Communist  Party  of  Slovakia  (KSS) 
has  status  of  provincial  KSC  organization 

Voting  strength:  (1986  election)  99.96% 
for  Communist-sponsored  single  slate 

Communists:  1.6  million  party  members 
(August  1984) 

Other  political  groups:  puppet  parties — 
Czechoslovak  Socialist  Party,  Czechoslovak 
People's  Party,  Slovak  Freedom  Party, 
Slovak  Revival  Party 

Member  of:  CEMA,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
ICAO,  ICO,  ILO,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  IMO,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC, 
ITU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  Warsaw  Pact, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $135.6  billion  in  1985  (in  1985 
dollars),  $8,700  per  capita;  1985  real 
growth  rate  1.6% 

Natural  resources:  coal,  coke,  timber, 
lignite,  uranium,  magnesite 

Agriculture:  diversified  agriculture;  main 
crops — wheat,  rye,  oats,  corn,  barley, 
potatoes,  sugar  beets,  hogs,  cattle,  horses; 
net  food  importer — meat,  wheat,  vegetable 
oils,  fresh  fruits  and  vegetables 

Major  industries:  iron  and  steel,  machin- 
ery and  equipment,  cement,  sheet  glass, 
motor  vehicles,  armaments,  chemicals, 
ceramics,  wood,  paper  products 

Shortages:  ores,  crude  oil 

Crude  steel:  15.0  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985),  965  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  21,445,000  kW  capacity; 
83,000  million  kWh  produced,  5,260  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $17.84  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  54.8% 
machinery  and  equipment;  16.2%  manu- 
factured consumer  goods;  14.2%  fuels, 
minerals,  and  metals;  6.7%  agricultural 
and  forestry  products,  8.1%  other  products 
(1984  est.) 

Imports:  $17.94  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
41.1%  fuels,  minerals,  and  metals;  33.2% 
machinery  and  equipment;  12.1%  agricul- 
tural and  forestry  products;  5.7%  manufac- 
tured consumer  goods;  7.9%  other  products 
(1984) 


Major  trade  partners:  USSR,  GDR,  Po- 
land, Hungary,  FRG,  Yugoslavia,  Austria, 
Bulgaria,  Romania;  80%  with  Communist 
countries,  20%  with  non-Communist 
countries  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.875 
koronas=US$l  (1985  average) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  13,114  km  total;  12,866  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  102  km 
1.524-meter  broad  gauge,  146  km  0.750- 
and  0.760-meter  narrow  gauge;  2,868  km 
double  track;  3,307  km  electrified;  govern- 
ment owned  (1984) 

Highways:  74,891  km  total;  including  450 
km  superhighway  (1984) 
Inland  waterways:  475  km  (1984) 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  1,448  km;  refined 
products,  1,500  km;  natural  gas,  8,000  km 
Freight  carried:  rail — 298.8  million  metric 
tons,  74  billion  metric  tons/km;  highway — 
1,258  million  metric  tons,  20.90  billion 
metric  tons/km;  waterway — 13.40  million 
metric  tons,  4.4  billion  metric  tons/km 
(excluding  international  transit  traffic) 
(1984) 

Ports:  no  maritime  ports;  outlets  are 
Gdynia,  Gdansk,  and  Szczecin  in  Poland; 
Rijeka  and  Koper  in  Yugoslavia;  Hamburg, 
FRG;  Rostock,  GDR;  principal  river  ports 
are  Prague,  Decin,  Komarno,  Bratislava 
Civil  air:  40  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  135  total;  18  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  54  AM,  14  FM,  45 
TV  stations;  11  Soviet  TV  relays;  4,360,000 
TV  sets;  4,208,538  receiver  sets;  at  least  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Czechoslovak  People's  Army, 
Frontier  Guard,  Air  and  Air  Defense 
Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
3,867,000;  2,969,000  fy  for  military  ser- 
vice; 121,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  28.3  billion 
koronas,  7.5%  of  total  budget 


Denmark 


Skagerrak  100^ 

'Skaaen  Faroe  lslands  «nd 

Greenland  are  separate 


Kattegat 


COPENHAGEN 


Bornholi 


Mfn 


Baltic 
Sea 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  43,070  km2;  land  area:  42,370 
km2  (excluding  Greenland  and  Faroe 
Islands) 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Massachusetts 

Land  boundaries:  68  km  total 
Coastline:  3,379  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  4  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Rockall  conti- 
nental shelf  dispute  involving  Iceland, 
Ireland,  and  UK 

Climate:  temperate;  humid  and  overcast; 
mild  winters  and  cool  summers 

Terrain:  low  and  flat  to  gently  rolling 
plains 

Land  use:  61%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  6%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures; 12%  forest  and  woodland;  21% 
other;  includes  9%  irrigated 

Environment:  air  and  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  controls  Danish  Straits 
linking  Baltic  and  North  Seas 


Population:  5,121,766  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.07% 


Nationality:  noun — Dane(s);  adjective — 
Danish 

Ethnic  divisions:  Scandinavian,  Eskimo, 
Faroese,  German 

Religion:  97%  Evangelical  Lutheran,  2% 
other  Protestant  and  Roman  Catholic,  1% 
other 

Language:  Danish,  Faroese,  Greenlandic 
(an  Eskimo  dialect);  small  German- 
speaking  minority 

Infant  mortality  rate:  7.7/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  71.5,  women  77.5 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  2,779,000  (1985);  33.2% 
government;  20.7%  manufacturing;  13.2% 
commerce;  2.0%  agriculture,  forestry,  and 
fishing;  5.9%  construction;  7.5%  banking 
and  business  services;  7.2%  transportation; 
10.3%  unemployment  rate 

Organized  labor:  65%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Denmark 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capita!:  Copenhagen 

Administrative  divisions:  14  counties,  275 
communes  (88  towns  are  included  in 
communes) 

Dependent  areas:  Faroe  Islands,  Green- 
land 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system;  constitu- 
tion adopted  1953;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 
National  holiday:  birthday  of  the  Queen, 
16  April 

Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 
with  Crown  and  parliament  (Folketing); 
executive  power  vested  in  Crown  but 
exercised  by  Cabinet  responsible  to  parlia- 
ment; Supreme  Court,  2  superior  courts, 
106  lower  courts 

Government  leaders:  MARGRETHE  II, 
Queen  (since  January  1972);  Poul  SCHLU- 
TER,  Prime  Minister  (since  September 
1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 
Elections:  on  call  of  prime  minister  but  at 
least  every  four  years;  last  election  10 
January  1984 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Dem- 
ocratic, Anker  J0rgensen;  Liberal,  Uffe 
Ellemann-Jensen;  Conservative,  Poul 
Schlter;  Radical  Liberal,  Niels  Helveg 
Petersen;  Socialist  People's,  Gert  Petersen; 
Communist,  Jorgen  Jensen;  Left  Socialist, 
Preben  Wilnjelm;  Center  Democratic, 
Erhard  Jakobsen;  Christian  People's,  Chris- 
tian Christensen;  Justice,  Poul  Gerhard 
Kristiansen;  Trade  and  Industry  Party, 
Asger  J.  Lindinger;  Free  Democratic 
Party,  Mogens  Glistrup;  Socialist  Workers 
Party,  no  chairman;  Communist  Workers' 
Party  (KAP),  Benito  Scocozza 
Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  31.6% 
Social  Democratic,  23.4%  Conservative, 
12.1%  Liberal,  11.5%  Socialist  People's, 
5.5%  Radical  Liberal,  4.6%  Center  Demo- 
cratic, 3.6%  Progress,  2.7%  Christian 
People's,  2.6%  Left  Socialist,  1.5%  Justice, 
0.7%  Communist,  0.2%  others 
Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EC,  ELDO  (observer),  EMS,  ESRO, 
FAQ,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ICES,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE,  Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc 
Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  NATO, 
Nordic  Council,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $38.4  billion,  $7,533  per  capita; 
56.3%  private  consumption,  20.0%  private 
investment,  26.4%  government  consump- 
tion, investment;  —3.7%  net  exports  of 
goods  and  services;  1%  increase  in  stocks; 
growth  rate,  2.7%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  gas,  fish 

Agriculture:  highly  intensive,  specializes  in 
dairying  and  animal  husbandry;  main 
crops — cereals,  root  crops;  food  imports — 
oilseed,  grain,  animal  feedstuffs 

Fishing:  catch  1.67  million  metric  tons, 
exports  $842  million,  imports  $360  million 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  ma- 
chinery and  equipment,  textiles  and  cloth- 
ing, chemical  products,  electronics,  con- 
struction, furniture,  and  other  wood  prod- 
ucts 


64 


Djibouti 


Crude  steel:  0.5  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  100  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  9,973,000  kW  capacity; 
28,290  million  kWh  produced,  5,550  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $17.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  princi- 
pal items — meat,  dairy  products,  industrial 
machinery  and  equipment,  textiles  and 
clothing,  chemical  products,  transport 
equipment,  fish,  furs,  furniture 

Imports:  $18.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  princi- 
pal items — industrial  machinery,  transport 
equipment,  petroleum,  textile  fibers  and 
yarns,  iron  and  steel  products,  chemicals, 
grain  and  feedstuffs,  wood  and  paper 

Major  trade  partners:  1985  exports — 
42.3%  EC,  15.4%  FRG,  12.2%  Sweden, 
12.0%  UK,  10.1%  US,  6.8%  Norway 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84)  $3.6  billion 

Budget:  expenditures,  $32.55  billion; 
revenues,  $32.56  billion  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.64 
kroner=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,770  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge;  Danish  State  Railways  (DSB)  oper- 
ate 2,120  km  (1,999  km  rail  line  and  121 
km  rail  ferry  services);  97  km  electrified, 
730  km  double  tracked;  650  km  of 
standard-gauge  lines  are  privately  owned 
and  operated 

Highways:  66,482  km  total;  64,551  km 
concrete,  bitumen,  or  stone  block;  1,931 
km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  417  km 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  110  km;  refined 
products,  508  km;  natural  gas,  640  km 

Ports:  4  major,  15  secondary,  41  minor 
Civil  air:  58  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  132  total,  117  usable;  25  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  9  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  7  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  excellent  telephone, 
telegraph,  and  broadcast  services;  4.0 
million  telephones  (78.3  per  100  popl.);  2 
AM,  46  FM,  35  TV  stations;  13  submarine 
coaxial  cables;  7  satellite  earth  stations  for 
domestic  service 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Danish  Army,  Royal 
Danish  Navy,  Royal  Danish  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,351,000;  1,173,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 38,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $1.7  billion;  7.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


Gotte  de  Tadjoura 
— — -9k 
DJIBOUTI 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  22,000  km2;  land  area:  21,980 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Hampshire 

Land  boundaries:  517  km  total 
Coastline:  314  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  possible  claim 
by  Somalia  based  on  unification  of  ethnic 
Somalis 

Climate:  desert;  torrid,  dry 

Terrain:  coastal  plain  and  plateau  sepa- 
rated by  central  mountains 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  9%  meadows  and  pastures;  NEGL% 
forest  and  woodland;  91%  other 

Environment:  vast  wasteland  with  impor- 
tant geothermal  resources 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  near 
world's  busiest  shipping  lanes  and  close  to 
Arabian  oilfields 


Population:  312,405  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.53% 

Nationality:  noun — Djiboutian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Djiboutian 


65 


Djibouti  (continued) 


Dominica 


Ethnic  divisions:  60%  Somali  (Issa);  35% 
Afar,  5%  French,  Arab,  Ethiopian,  and 
Italian 

Religion:  94%  Muslim,  6%  Christian 

Language:  French  (official);  Arabic,  So- 
mali, and  Afar  widely  used 

Infant  mortality  rate:  140/1,000(1985) 
Life  expectancy:  50 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  a  small  number  of  semi- 
skilled laborers  at  port;  3,000  railway 
workers 

Organized  labor:  3,000  railway  workers 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Djibouti 
National  holiday:  27  June 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Djibouti 

Administrative  divisions:  5  cercles  (dis- 
tricts) 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system,  traditional  practices,  and  Islamic 
law;  partial  constitution  ratified  January 
1981  by  National  Assembly 
Branches:  legislative — 65-member  parlia- 
ment (National  Assembly),  executive, 
judiciary 

Government  leader:  Hassan  GOULED 
Aptidon,  President  (since  June  1977) 
Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Elections:  parliament  elected  May  1982 
Political  party  and  leader:  Peoples 
Progress  Assembly  (RPP),  Hassan  Gouled 
Aptidon;  sole  legal  party 
Communists:  possibly  a  few  sympathizers 
Member  of:  AfDB,  Arab  League,  FAO, 
G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAU,  OIC,  UN,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $344  million;  per  capita  income 

$1,130  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  none 

Agriculture:  livestock;  limited  commercial 

crops,  including  fruit  and  vegetables 


Major  industries:  transit  trade,  port, 
railway,  services;  live  cattle  and  sheep 
exports  to  Saudi  Arabia;  secondary  services 
to  French  military 

Electric  power:  80,000  kW  capacity;  140 
million  kWh  produced,  460  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $96  million  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
hides  and  skins  and  transit  of  coffee;  a 
large  portion  consists  of  reexports  to  for- 
eign residents  of  Djibouti 
Imports:  $197  million  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
almost  all  domestically  needed  goods — 
foods,  machinery,  transport  equipment 
Budget:  estimated  in  percent  of  GDP — 
revenues  30.7%,  grants  4.0%,  expenditures 
45.7%  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  176.14 
Djibouti  francs=US$l  (average  January- 
September  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  the  Ethiopian-Djibouti  railroad 
extends  for  97  km  through  Djibouti 
Highways:  2,800  km  total;  279  km  bitumi- 
nous surface,  229  km  improved  earth, 
2,292  km  unimproved  earth 
Ports:  1  major  (Djibouti) 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  12  total,  10  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of  urban 
facilities  in  Djibouti  and  radio-relay  sta- 
tions at  outlying  places;  7,300  telephones 
(2.4  per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  1  FM,  2  TV 
stations;  1  Indian  Ocean  satellite  ground 
station,  1  ARABSAT  station,  1  submarine 
cable  to  Saudi  Arabia 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force;  para- 
military National  Security  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  about 
84,000;  about  49,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $29.9  million;  23%  of 
central  government  budget 


10km 


Sw  rctlonil  mip  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  750  km2;  land  area:  750  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-fourth  the 

size  of  Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  148  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  northeast 
trade  winds;  heavy  rainfall 

Terrain:  rugged  mountains  of  volcanic 
origin 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  13%  permanent 
crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures;  41% 

forest  and  woodland;  34%  other 

. .  • 

Environment:  flash  floods  a  constant 
hazard;  occasional  hurricanes 

Special  notes:  northernmost  and  largest  of 
Windward  Islands 


Population:  94,191  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.80% 
Nationality:  noun — Dominican(s);  adjec- 
tive— Dominican 

Ethnic  divisions:  mostly  black;  some 
Carib-Indians 

Religion:  80%  Roman  Catholic;  Anglican, 
Methodist 

Language:  English  (official);  French  patois 
widely  spoken 

Infant  mortality  rate:  24.1/1,000  (1981) 
Life  expectancy:  men  57,  women  59. 


Dominican  Republic 


Literacy:  about  80% 

Labor  force:  25,000;  40%  agriculture,  32% 
industry  and  commerce,  28%  services; 
15-20%  unemployment  (1984) 
Organized  labor:  25%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Commonwealth  of  Domin- 
ica 

Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth 

Capital:  Roseau 

Administrative  divisions:  10  parishs 
Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  three  local  magistrate  courts  and  the 
British  Caribbean  Court  of  Appeals 
Branches:  legislative,  51-member  bicam- 
eral House  of  Assembly  (1  ex-officio  mem- 
ber, 9  appointed  members,  and  21  popu- 
larly elected  members;  executive,  Cabinet 
headed  by  Prime  Minister;  judicial, 
magistrate's  courts  and  regional  court  of 
appeals 

Government  leaders:  (Mary)  Eugenia 
CHARLES,  Prime  Minister  (since  July 
1980);  Sir  Clarence  SEIGNORET,  Presi- 
dent (since  December  1983) 
Suffrage:  universal  adult  suffrage  at  age  18 
Elections:  every  five  years;  last  held  2  July 
1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Labor  Party 
of  Dominica  (DLP,  a  leftist-dominated 
coalition),  Michael  Douglas;  Dominica 
Freedom  Party  (DFP),  (Mary)  Eugenia 
Charles 

Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  House  of 
Assembly  seats— DFP  15,  LPD  5,  indepen- 
dent 1 

Communists:  negligible 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
Dominica  Liberation  Movement  (DLM),  a 
small  leftist  group 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  GATT  (de  facto),  G-77,  IBRD,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
OAS,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $85.4  million  (1984  est.),  $1,034  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  1.2%  (1986  est.) 
Natural  resources:  timber 
Agriculture:  bananas,  citrus,  coconuts, 
cocoa,  essential  oils 


Major  industries:  agricultural  processing, 
tourism,  soap  and  other  coconut-based 
products,  cigars 

Electric  power:  7,000  kW  capacity;  16 
million  kWh  produced,  220  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $28.7  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ba- 
nanas, coconuts,  lime  juice  and  oil,  cocoa, 
reexports 

Imports:  $57.0  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  equipment,  foodstuffs,  manu- 
factured articles,  cement 
Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  exports — 
46%  UK,  16%  Jamaica,  15%  Trinidad  and 
Tobago,  2%  US,  0.3%  other  EC;  imports— 
27%  US,  13%  UK,  8%  Trinidad  and  To- 
bago, 6%  other  EC 

Aid:  bilateral  ODA  and  OOF  (1970-80), 
from  Western  (non-US)  countries,  $22.6 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $33.4  million;  expendi- 
tures, $38.5  million  (FY84) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  750  km  total;  370  km  paved, 
380  km  gravel  and  earth 
Ports:  1  major  (Roseau),  1  minor  (Port- 
smouth) 

Civil  air:  unknown  number  of  major 
transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  4,600  telephones  in 
fully  automatic  network  (5.6  per  100 
popl.);  VHP  and  UHF  link  to  St.  Lucia; 
new  SHF  links  to  Martinique  and  Guad- 
eloupe; 3  AM,  1  FM,  1  cable  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Commonwealth  of  Dominica 

Police  Force 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  1986,  $2.9 

million;  4.6%  of  the  central  government 

budget 


100km 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 


Caribbean  Sea 


Sec  refionil  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  48,730  km2;  land  area:  48,380 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Hampshire  and  Vermont  combined 

Land  boundary  361  km  with  Haiti 
Coastline:  1,288  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  outer  edge  of  conti- 
nental margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  6  nm 

Climate:  tropical  maritime;  little  seasonal 

temperature  variation 

Terrain:  rugged  highlands  and  mountains 

Land  use:  23%  arable  land;  7%  permanent 
crops;  43%  meadows  and  pastures;  13% 
forest  and  woodland;  14%  other;  includes 
4%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  occasional  hurri- 
canes; deforestation 

Special  notes:  shares  island  of  Hispaniola 
with  Haiti 


Population:  6,960,743  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.49% 

Nationality:  noun — Dominican(s);  adjec- 
tive— Dominican 

Ethnic  divisions:  73%  mixed,  16%  white, 
11%  black 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic 


67 


Dominican  Republic  (continued) 


Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  63/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  60 

Literacy:  68% 

Labor  force:  over  2  million  (1986);  45% 
agriculture,  34%  industry,  16%  services 

Organized  labor:  between  200,000  and 
250,000  (1986);  10-15%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Dominican  Republic 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Santo  Domingo 
Administrative  divisions:  29  provinces 
and  the  National  District 
Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  codes; 
1966  constitution 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  27 
February 

Branches:  President  popularly  elected  for 
a  four-year  term;  bicameral  legislature 
(National  Congress — 30-seat  Senate  and 
120-seat  Chamber  of  Deputies  elected  for 
four-year  terms);  Supreme  Court 
Government  leader:  Joaquin  BALAGUER 
Ricardo,  President  (since  August  1986) 
Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory,  over 
age  18  or  married,  except  members  of  the 
armed  forces  and  police,  who  cannot  vote 
Elections:  last  national  election  16  May 
1986;  next  election  16  May  1990 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Dominican 
Revolutionary  Party  (PRD),  Salvador  Jorge 
Blanco,  Jacobo  Majluta,  and  Jose  Francisco 
Pefia  Gomez;  Social  Christian  Reformist 
Party  (PRSC),  Joaquin  Balaguer  Ricardo 
(formed  in  1984  by  merger  of  Reformist 
Party  and  Social  Christian  Revolutionary 
Party);  Dominican  Liberation  Party  (PLD), 
Juan  Bosch  Gavino;  The  Structure  (LE), 
Andres  Van  Der  Horst;  Democratic 
Quisqueyan  Party  (PQ D),  Elias  Wessin  y 
Wessin;  Constitutional  Action  Party  (PAC), 
Luis  Arzeno  Rodriguez;  National  Progres- 
sive Force  (FNP),  Marino  Vinicio  Castillo; 
Popular  Christian  Party  (PPC),  Rogelio 
Delgado  Bogaert;  Dominican  Communist 
Party  (PCD),  Narciso  Isa  Conde;  Anti- 
Imperialist  Patriotic  Union  (UPA),  Ivan 
Rodriguez;  in  1983  several  leftist  parties, 
including  the  PCD,  joined  to  form  the 
Dominican  Leftist  Front  (FID);  however 
they  still  retain  individual  party  structures 


Voting  strength:  (1986  election)  72%  voter 
turnout;  40.6%  PRSC,  33.5%  PRD,  18.3% 
PLD;  5.3%  LE;  2.3%  minor  parties 
Communists:  an  estimated  8,000  to  10,000 
members  in  several  legal  and  illegal  fac- 
tions; effectiveness  limited  by  ideological 
differences  and  organizational  inadequa- 
cies 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IRC, 
ISO,  ITU,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $14.9  billion,  $858  per  capita;  real 
GDP  growth  2.0%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  nickel,  bauxite,  gold, 
silver 

Agriculture:  sugarcane,  coffee,  cocoa, 
tobacco,  rice,  corn 

Major  industries:  tourism,  sugar  process- 
ing, nickel  mining,  gold  mining,  textiles, 
cement 

Electric  power:  1,332,000  kW  capacity; 
3,800  million  kWh  produced,  560  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $735  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  sugar, 
nickel,  coffee,  tobacco,  cocoa,  gold,  silver 

Imports:  $1.5  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, petroleum,  industrial  raw  materials, 
capital  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 77%  US, 
including  Puerto  Rico  (1984  est.);  im- 
ports— 45%  US,  including  Puerto  Rico 
(1980) 

Aid:  US  economic  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  from  US,  $868  million; 
ODA  and  OOF  from  other  Western  coun- 
tries (1970-84),  $330  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (1970-85),  $48 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $828  million;  expendi- 
tures, $750  million  (1985  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.05 
pesos=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 

Railroads:  1,655  km  total  in  numerous 
segments;  4  different  gauges  from  .558  m 
to  1.435  m 

Highways:  12,000  km  total;  5,800  km 
paved,  5,600  km  gravel  and  improved 
earth,  600  km  unimproved 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  96  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 8  km 

Ports:  4  major  (Santo  Domingo,  Haina,  San 
Pedro  de  Macoris,  Puerto  Plata),  17  minor 

Civil  air:  14  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  46  total,  34  usable;  14  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  9  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  relatively  efficient 
domestic  system  based  on  islandwide 
radio-relay  network;  190,000  telephones  (3 
per  100  popl.);  123  AM,  18  TV  stations;  1 
coaxial  submarine  cable;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,782,000;  1,129,000  fit  for  military 
service;  84,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


68 


Ecuador 


ndary  representation  is 
'Ssa'Hy  aulhonlative 


See  regional  map  IV 


Islands  not  shown  in  true 
geographical  position. 


Galapagos  Islands 


Geography 

Total  area:  283,560  km2;  land  area: 
276,840  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Colorado 

Land  boundaries:  1,931  km  total 
Coastline:  2,237  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  m 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Peru  (two  areas) 

Climate:  tropical  along  coast  becoming 
cooler  inland 

Terrain:  coastal  plain  (Costa),  Andes 
Mountains  and  central  highlands  (Sierra), 
flat  to  rolling  eastern  jungle  (Oriente) 

Land  use:  6%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  17%  meadows  and  pastures;  51% 
forest  and  woodland;  23%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  frequent  earth- 
quakes, landslides,  volcanic  activity,  tsuna- 
mis; deforestation;  desertification;  soil 
erosion 

Special  notes:  Cotopaxi  in  Andes  is  high- 
est active  volcano  in  world 


Population:  9,954,609  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.80% 

Nationality:  noun — Ecuadorean(s);  adjec- 
tive— Ecuadorean 


Ethnic  divisions:  55%  mestizo  (mixed 
Indian  and  Spanish),  25%  Indian,  10% 
Spanish,  10%  black 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic  (majority 
nonpracticing) 

Language:  Spanish  (official);  Indian  lan- 
guages, especially  Quechua 

Infant  mortality  rate:  68.4/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  64  (1984) 
Literacy:  85%  (1981) 

Labor  force:  (1983)  2.8  million;  52% 
agriculture,  13%  manufacturing,  7%  com- 
merce, 4%  construction,  4%  public  admin- 
istration, 16%  other  services  and  activities 

Organized  labor:  less  than  15%  of  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Ecuador 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  10 
August 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Quito 

Administrative  divisions:  20  provinces 
including  Galapagos  Islands 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 
progressive  new  constitution  passed  in 
January  1978  referendum;  came  into  effect 
following  the  installation  of  a  new  civilian 
government  in  August  1979;  has  not  ac- 
cepted compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

Branches:  executive;  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (Chamber  of  Representatives);  inde- 
pendent judiciary 

Government  leader:  Leon  FEBRES- 
CORDERO  Ribadeneyra,  President  (since 
August  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  compul- 
sory for  literate 

Elections:  parliamentary  and  presidential 
elections  held  January  1984;  second-stage 
presidential  election  held  May  1984; 
government  and  legislature  took  office  in 
August  1984;  an  amendment  to  the  consti- 
tution in  August  1983  changed  the  term  of 
office  for  the  President  from  five  to  four 
years;  the  59  deputies  elected  by  the 
provinces  serve  for  two  years;  the  12 
at-large  deputies  serve  for  four  years;  next 
presidential  election  scheduled  for  1988 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Chris- 
tian Party  (PSC,  the  party  of  President 
Leon  Febres-Cordero),  center-right;  Popu- 
lar Democracy  (DP),  Osvaldo  Hurtado; 
Christian  Democratic,  Julio  Cesar  Trujillo; 
Democratic  Left  (ID),  Xavier  Ledesma; 
Social  Democratic,  Rodrigo  Borja;  Radical 
Alfarist  Front  (FRA),  Cecilia  Calderon  de 
Castro,  populist;  Democratic  Party  (PD), 
Francisco  Huerta,  center-left;  Radical 
Liberal  Party,  Eudoro  Loor  Rivadeneira, 
center-right;  Conservative  Party,  Jose 
Teran,  center-right;  Concentration  of 
Popular  Forces  (CFP),  Averroes  Bucaram, 
populist;  People,  Change,  and  Democracy 
(PCD),  Aquiles  Rigail  Santistevan,  center- 
left;  Democratic  Popular  Movement 
(MPD),  Jaime  Hurtado,  Communist;  Revo- 
lutionary Nationalist  Party  (PNR),  Carlos 
Julio  Arosemena,  center-right;  Broad 
Leftist  Front  (FADI),  Rene  Mauge,  pro- 
Moscow  Communist 

Voting  strength:  results  of  May  1984 
presidential  runoff  election — Leon  Febres- 
Cordero  of  the  Social  Christian  Party,  who 
headed  the  coalition  National  Reconstruc- 
tion Front,  52.2%;  Rodrigo  Borja  of  the 
Democratic  Left,  47.8% 

Communists:  Communist  Party  of  Ecua- 
dor (PCE,  pro-Moscow,  Rene  Mauge — 
secretary  general),  6,000  members;  Com- 
munist Party  of  Ecuador/ Marxist  Leninist 
(PCMLE,  Maoist),  6,000  members;  Revolu- 
tionary Socialist  Party  of  Ecuador  (PSRE, 
pro-Cuba),  100  members  plus  an  estimated 
5,000  sympathizers 

Member  of:  Andean  Pact,  ECOSOC, 
FAO,  G-77,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American  Develop- 
ment Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC,  ITU, 
LAIA,  NAM,  OAS,  OPEC,  PAHO,  SELA, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPEB,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $10.7  billion  (1985),  $1,140  per 
capita;  66%  private  consumption,  21% 
gross  investment,  12%  public  consumption, 
27%  foreign  (1984);  real  growth  rate  3.2% 
(1985);  inflation  rate  24.5%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  fish,  timber 


69 


Ecuador  (continued) 


Egypt 


Agriculture:  main  crops — bananas,  coffee, 
cocoa,  sugarcane,  corn,  potatoes,  rice;  an 
illegal  producer  of  coca  for  the  interna- 
tional drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  307,300  metric  tons  (1983); 
shrimp  production  36,230  metric  tons 
(1985);  exports  $260  million  (1985),  imports 
negligible 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  textiles, 
chemicals,  fishing,  petroleum 

Electric  power:  1,791,000  kW  capacity; 
4,540  million  kWh  produced,  470  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  petro- 
leum, shrimp,  fish  products,  coffee,  ba- 
nanas, cocoa 

Imports:  $1.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  agricul- 
tural and  industrial  machinery,  industrial 
raw  materials,  building  supplies,  chemical 
products,  transportation  and  communica- 
tion equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 54%  US, 
10%  Latin  America  and  Caribbean,  4% 
EC,  2%  Japan;  imports — 33%  US,  16% 
Latin  America  and  Caribbean,  23%  EC, 
12%  Japan  (1985) 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  ODA  and  OOF 
commitments  (1970-84),  $721  million;  US 
economic  (FY70-85),  $330  million;  Com- 
munist countries  (1970-85),  $64  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85)  $71 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $1,718  million;  expendi- 
tures, $1,876  million  (1987) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  146 

sucres=US$l  (1  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  965  km  total;  all  1.067-meter 
gauge  single  track 

Highways:  28,000  km  total;  3,600  km 
paved,  17,400  km  gravel  and  improved 
earth,  7,000  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,500  km 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  800  km;  refined 
products,  1,358  km 

Ports:  4  major  (Guayaquil,  Manta,  Puerto 
Bolivar,  Esmeraldas),  6  minor 

Civil  air:  44  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  176  total,  174  usable;  32  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  21  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  domestic  facilities 
generally  adequate;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station;  318,000  telephones  (3.9 
per  100  popl.);  285  AM,  24  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Ecuadorean  Army  (Ejercito 
Ecuatoriano),  Ecuadorean  Air  Force 
(Fuerza  Aerea  Ecuatoriana),  Ecuadorean 
Navy  (Armada  Ecuatoriana) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,399,000;  1,628,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 108,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  estimated  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  $242  million; 
about  10.9%  of  the  central  government 
budget 


Mediterranean 

Sea  port 


Bur  Saf  ajah 
Al  Kh.rijah^  .Luxot 

Atwsn 


See  rtfionil  nup  VI  »nd  VII 


Boundary  representation  is 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,001,450  km2;  land  area: 
995,450  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Oregon  and  Texas  combined 

Land  boundaries:  2,580  km  total 
Coastline:  2,450  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  18  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  disputes  with 

Israel  over  Taba  area  and  precise  location 

of  some  individual  boundary  markers; 

Administrative  Boundary  and  international 

boundary  with  Sudan;  West  Bank  and 

Gaza  Strip  are  Israeli  occupied  with  status 

to  be  determined 

Climate:  desert;  hot,  dry  summers  with 

moderate  winters 

Terrain:  vast  desert  plateau  interrupted  by 

Nile  valley  and  delta 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NEGL%  forest  and  woodland;  98%  other; 
includes  2%  irrigated 

Environment:  Nile  is  only  perennial  water 
source;  increasing  soil  salinization  below 
Aswan  High  Dam;  hot,  driving  windstorm 
called  khamsins  occurs  in  spring;  water 
pollution;  desertification 


Special  notes:  controls  Sinai  Peninsula, 
only  land  bridge  between  Africa  and 
remainder  of  Eastern  Hemisphere;  controls 
Suez  Canal,  shortest  sea  link  between 
Indian  Ocean  and  Mediterranean;  size  and 
juxtaposition  to  Israel  establishes  its  major 
role  in  Middle  East  geopolitics 


Population:  51,929,962  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.74% 

Nationality:  noun — Egyptian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Egyptian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  Eastern  Hamitic 
stock;  10%  Greek,  Italian,  Syro-Lebanese 

Religion:  (official  estimate)  94%  Muslim 
(mostly  Sunni),  6%  Coptic  Christian  and 
other 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English  and 
French  widely  understood  by  educated 
classes 

Infant  mortality  rate:  94/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  60 
Literacy:  40% 

Labor  force:  about  13.0  million  (1985); 
40-45%  agriculture,  36%  government  (local 
and  national),  public  sector  enterprises, 
and  armed  forces;  20%  privately  owned 
service  and  manufacturing  enterprises 
(1984);  shortage  of  skilled  labor;  unemploy- 
ment about  7%  (official  estimate);  esti- 
mated 2.0  million  Egyptians  work  abroad, 
mostly  in  Iraq  and  the  Gulf  Arab  states 
(1986) 

Organized  labor:  about  2.5  million 

Government 

Official  name:  Arab  Republic  of  Egypt 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Cairo 

Administrative  divisions:  26  governorates 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law,  Islamic  law,  and  Napoleonic  codes; 
permanent  constitution  written  in  1971; 
judicial  review  of  limited  nature  in  Su- 
preme Court,  also  in  Council  of  State, 
which  oversees  validity  of  administrative 
decisions;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion, with  reservations 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  23  July 


Branches:  executive  power  vested  in 
President,  who  appoints  Cabinet;  People's 
Assembly  is  principal  legislative  body,  with 
Slmra  Council  having  consultative  role; 
independent  judiciary  administered  by 
Minister  of  Justice 

Government  leaders:  Mohammed  Hosni 
MUBARAK,  President  (since  1981);  'Atif 
SIDQI  (since  November  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  regular  elections  to  People's 
Assembly  every  five  years  (next  slated  for 
April  1987);  two-thirds  of  Shura  Council  is 
elected  for  six-year  term  (first  elections 
were  in  September  1980)  with  remaining 
members  appointed  by  President;  presi- 
dential election  every  six  years;  last  held 
October  1981 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  formation  of 
political  parties  must  be  approved  by 
government;  National  Democratic  Party, 
led  by  Mubarak,  is  the  dominant  party; 
legal  opposition  parties  are  Socialist  Lib- 
eral Party,  Kamal  Murad;  Socialist  Labor 
Party,  Ibrahim  Shukri;  National  Progres- 
sive Unionist  Grouping,  Khalid  Muhyi-al- 
Din;  Umma  Party,  Ahmad  al-Sabahi;  and 
New  Wafd  Party,  Fu'ad  Siraj  al-Din 

Communists:  about  500  party  members 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Is- 
lamic groups  are  illegal,  but  the  largest 
one,  the  Muslim  Brotherhood,  is  tolerated 
by  the  government;  trade  unions  and 
professional  associations  are  officially 
sanctioned 

Member  of:  AAPSO,  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  OAU,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WPC,  WSG,  WTO; 
Egypt  suspended  from  Arab  League  and 
OAPEC  in  April  1979 

Economy 

GDP:  $21.2  billion,  $430  per  capita;  3.5% 
real  growth  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural  gas, 
iron  ore,  phosphates,  manganese,  lime- 
stone, gypsum,  talc,  asbestos,  lead,  zinc 


Agriculture:  main  cash  crop — cotton;  other 
crops — rice,  onions,  beans,  citrus  fruit, 
wheat,  corn,  barley;  not  self-sufficient  in 
food 

Major  industries:  textiles,  food  processing, 
chemicals,  petroleum,  construction,  cement 

Electric  power:  8,427,000  kW  capacity; 
40,600  million  kWh  produced,  800  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985/86  est); 
crude  petroleum,  raw  cotton,  cotton  yarn, 
fabric 

Imports:  $9.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985/86  est.); 
foodstuffs,  machinery  and  equipment, 
fertilizers,  woods 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  EC  countries 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  official  rate 
0.70  Egyptian  pound=US$l;  commercial 
bank  rate  1.35  Egyptian  pounds=US$l; 
free  market  rate  1.95  Egyptian 
pounds=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,857  km  total;  951  km  double 
track;  25  km  electrified;  4,510  km  1,435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  347  km  0.750-meter 
gauge 

Highways:  28,500  km  total;  15,000  km 
surfaced,  13,500  km  unsurfaced 
Inland  waterways:  3,360  km  (including 
the  Nile  River,  Lake  Nasser,  Alexandria- 
Cairo  Waterway,  the  Ismailia  Canal,  and 
numerous  smaller  canals  in  the  Delta); 
Suez  Canal,  162  km  long,  used  by  ocean- 
going vessels  drawing  up  to  16.1  meters  of 
water 

Freight  carried:  Suez  Canal — 257.6  mil- 
lion metric  tons,  of  which  94  million 
metric  tons  were  petroleums,  oils,  and 
lubricants  (1985) 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  1,107  km;  refined 
products,  596  km;  natural  gas,  460  km 
Ports:  4  major  (Alexandria,  Port  Said, 
Suez,  Bur  Safajah);  15  minor;  9  petroleum, 
oil,  and  lubricant  terminals 
Civil  air:  42  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  102  total,  86  usable;  64  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  45  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  22  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


71 


Egypt  (continued) 


El  Salvador 


Telecommunications:  system  is  large  but 
still  inadequate  for  needs;  principal  centers 
are  Alexandria,  Cairo,  Al  Man;urah, 
Ismailia,  and  Tan(a;  intercity  connections 
by  coaxial  cable  and  microwave;  extensive 
upgrading  in  progress;  est.  600,000  tele- 
phones (1.2  per  100  popl.);  25  AM,  5  FM, 
47  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  and  1 
Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  station;  3  sub- 
marine coaxial  cables;  tropospheric  scatter 
to  Sudan;  radio-relay  to  Libya 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Air 
Defense  Command 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
12,203,000;  7,949,000  fit  for  military 
service;  513,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  operating  expenditures 
for  fiscal  year  ending  30  June  1985,  $3.7 
billion;  13%  of  central  government  budget 


Boundary  repres 
not  necessarily  a 


North  Pacific  Ocean 

Stt  regional  map  111 

Geography 

Total  area:  21,040  km2;  land  area:  20,720 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Massachusetts 

Land  boundaries:  515  km  total 
Coastline:  307  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm  (overflight  and 
navigation  permitted  beyond  12  nm) 

Boundary  disputes:  Honduras 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (May  to 
October);  dry  season  (November  to  April) 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  narrow 
coastal  belt  and  central  plateau 

Land  use:  27%  arable  land;  8%  permanent 
crops;  29%  meadows  and  pastures;  6% 
forest  and  woodland;  30%  other;  includes 
5%  irrigated 

Environment:  The  Land  of  Volcanoes; 
subject  to  frequent  and  sometimes  very 
destructive  earthquakes;  deforestation;  soil 
erosion;  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  smallest  Central  American 
country  and  only  one  without  a  coastline 
on  Caribbean  Sea 


Population:  5,260,478  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.37% 

Nationality:  noun — Salvadoran(s);  adjec- 
tive— Salvadoran 


Ethnic  divisions:  89%  mestizo,  10%  In- 
dian, 1%  white 

Religion:  about  97%  Roman  Catholic,  with 
activity  by  Protestant  groups  throughout 
the  country 

Language:  Spanish,  Nahua  (among  some 
Indians) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  41/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  62.6,  women  66.3 
Literacy:  65% 

Labor  force:  1.7  million  (est.  1982);  40% 
agriculture,  16%  manufacturing,  16% 
commerce,  13%  government,  9%  financial 
services,  6%  transportation  (1984  est.); 
shortage  of  skilled  labor  and  large  pool  of 
unskilled  labor,  but  manpower  training 
programs  improving  situation;  significant 
unemployment  and  underemployment 

Organized  labor:  8%  total  labor  force; 
10%  agricultural  labor  force;  7%  urban 
labor  force  (1982) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  El  Salvador 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  San  Salvador 

Administrative  divisions:  14  departments 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  law,  with 
traces  of  common  law;  new  constitution 
enacted  in  December  1983;  judicial  review 
of  legislative  acts  in  the  Supreme  Court; 
accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with 
reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
September 

Branches:  Legislative  Assembly  (60  seats), 
Executive,  Supreme  Court 

Government  leaders:  Jose  Napoleon 
DUARTE,  President  (since  June  1984); 
Rodolfo  CASTILLO  Claramount,  Vice 
President  (since  June  1984);  Abraham 
RODRIGUEZ,  First  Presidential  Designate 
(since  September  1984);  Rene  FORTIN, 
Magafla,  Second  Presidential  Designate 
(since  September  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 


72 


Elections:  Legislative  Assembly  (formerly 
Constituent  Assembly),  28  March  1982; 
presidential  election,  25  March  1984; 
presidential  runoff  election,  6  May  1984 
(next  scheduled  for  1989);  Legislative 
Assembly  election,  31  March  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Party  (PDC),  Jose  Antonio 
Morales  Erlich;  National  Conciliation 
Party  (PCN),  Hugo  Carrillo;  Democratic 
Action  (AD),  Ricardo  Gonzalez  Camacho; 
Salvadoran  Popular  Party  (PPS),  Francisco 
Quifionez;  National  Republican  Alliance 
(ARENA),  Alfredo  Cristiani;  Salvadoran 
Authentic  Institutional  Party  (PAISA), 
Roberto  Escobar  Garcia;  Social  Democratic 
Party  (PSD),  Mario  Rene  Roldan;  Patria 
Libre,  Hugo  Barrera 

Voting  strength:  Legislative  Assembly — 
PDC,  33  seats;  ARENA,  13  seats;  PAISA,  1 
seat;  PCN,  12  seats;  independent,  1  seat 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  leftist 
revolutionary  movement — Unified  Revolu- 
tionary Directorate  (DRU)  and  Farabundo 
Marti  National  Liberation  Front  (FMLN), 
leadership  bodies  of  the  insurgency;  Popu- 
lar Liberation  Forces  (FPL),  Armed  Forces 
of  National  Resistance  (FARN),  People's 
Revolutionary  Army  (ERP),  Salvadoran 
Communist  Party/ Armed  Forces  of  Liber- 
ation (PCES/FAL),  and  Central  American 
Workers'  Revolutionary  Party  (PRTC)/ 
Popular  Liberation  Revolutionary  Armed 
Forces  (FARLP);  militant  front  organiza- 
tions— Revolutionary  Coordinator  of 
Masses  (CRM;  alliance  of  front  groups), 
Popular  Revolutionary  Bloc  (BPR),  Unified 
Popular  Action  Front  (FAPU),  Popular 
Leagues  of  28  February  (LP-28),  National 
Democratic  Union  (UDN),  and  Popular 
Liberation  Movement  (MLP);  Revolution- 
ary Democratic  Front  (FDR),  coalition  of 
CRM  and  Democratic  Front  (FD),  con- 
trolled by  DRU;  FD  consists  of  moderate 
leftist  groups — Independent  Movement  of 
Professionals  and  Technicians  of  El  Salva- 
dor (MIPTES),  National  Revolutionary 
Movement  (MNR),  and  Popular  Social 
Christian  Movement  (MPSC);  extreme 
rightist  vigilante  organizations  or  death 
squads — Secret  Anti-Communist  Army 
(ESA);  Maximiliano  Hernandez  Brigade; 
Organization  for  Liberation  From  Com- 
munism (OLC) 


Labor  organizations:  Federation  of  Con- 
struction and  Transport  Workers  Unions 
(FESINCONSTRANS),  independent; 
Salvadoran  Communal  Union  (UCS), 
peasant  association;  Unitary  Federation  of 
Salvadoran  Unions  (FUSS),  leftist;  National 
Federation  of  Salvadoran  Workers  (FE- 
NASTRAS),  leftist;  Democratic  Workers 
Central  (CTD),  moderate;  General  Confed- 
eration of  Workers  (CGT),  moderate; 
Popular  Democratic  Unity  (UPD),  moder- 
ate labor  coalition  which  includes  FESIN- 
CONSTRANS, and  other  democratic  labor 
organizations 

Business  organizations:  National  Associa- 
tion of  Private  Enterprise  (ANEP),  conser- 
vative; Productive  Alliance  (AP),  conserva- 
tive; National  Federation  of  Salvadoran 
Small  Businessmen  (FENAPES),  conserva- 
tive 

Member  of:  CACM,  FAO,  G-77,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council,  OAS,  ODECA,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 


Economy 

GDP:  $4.36  billion,  $870  per  capita  (1985 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  and 
geothermal  power 

Agriculture:  coffee,  cotton,  corn,  sugar, 
beans,  rice,  sorghum,  wheat 

Fishing:  catch  10,500  metric  tons  (1984 
est.) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  textiles, 
clothing,  petroleum  products 

Electric  power:  705,000  kW  capacity; 
1,710  billion  kWh  produced,  340  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $772  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  coffee, 
cotton,  sugar,  shrimp 

Imports:  $1,052  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
machinery,  intermediate  goods,  petroleum, 
construction  materials,  fertilizers,  food- 
stuffs 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — 33%  US, 
15%  FRG,  12%  Guatemala;  imports— 39% 
US,  18%  Guatemala,  9%  Mexico 

Aid:  authorized  from  US,  including  Ex-Im 
(FY70-85),  $1.3  billion;  ODA  and  OOF 
commitments  by  other  Western  countries 
(1970-84),  $170  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $548 
million 

Budget:  government  revenues,  $502  mil- 
lion; expenditures,  $582  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  5.0 
colones=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  602  km  0.914-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  10,000  km  total;  1,500  km 
paved,  4,100  km  gravel,  4,400  km  im- 
proved and  unimproved  earth 
Inland  waterways:  Rio  Lempa  partially 
navigable 

Ports:  2  major  (Acajutla,  La  Union),  1 
minor 

Civil  air:  7  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  161  total,  135  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  6  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  nationwide  trunk 
radio-relay  system;  connection  into  Central 
American  microwave  net;  116,000  tele- 
phones (2.3  per  100  popl.);  77  AM,  2 
shortwave,  5  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Na- 
tional Guard,  National  Police,  Treasury 
Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,223,000;  780,000  fit  for  military  service; 
63,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  estimated  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  $166.8  million; 
about  24.6%  of  the  central  government 
budget 


73 


Equatorial  Guinea 


-MALABO 

^•^/ 


Bioko 
Gulf  of  Guinea 


Island  not 
shown  in  true 
geographical 

position. 

H, 
Annobon 


1««* 

XJMM 

^-VS»__ 


RIO  MUNI 


Acalayong 


S«  refloiul  m.p  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  28,050  km2;  land  area:  28,050 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Maryland 

Land  boundaries:  539  km  total 
Coastline:  296  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Gabon 

Climate:  tropical;  always  hot,  humid 
Terrain:  coastal  plains  rise  to  interior  hills 

Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  61% 
forest  and  woodland;  26%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  violent  wind- 
storms 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  340,434  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.83%;  includes  Rio 
Muni  265,281,  average  annual  growth  rate 
1.83%,  and  Bioko  75,153,  average  annual 
growth  rate  1.83% 

Nationality:  noun — Equatorial  Guinean(s); 
adjective — Equatorial  Guinean 

Ethnic  divisions:  indigenous  population  of 
Bioko,  primarily  Bubi,  some  Fernandinos; 
Rio  Muni,  primarily  Fang;  less  than  1,000 
Europeans,  mostly  Spanish 


Religion:  natives  all  nominally  Christian 
and  predominantly  Roman  Catholic;  some 
pagan  practices  retained 

Language:  Spanish  (official),  pidgin  En- 
glish, Fang 

Infant  mortality  rate:  142.9/1,000(1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  44,  women  48 
Literacy:  55% 

Labor  force:  most  involved  in  subsistence 
agriculture;  labor  shortages  on  plantations 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Equatorial 

Guinea 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Malabo 

Administrative  divisions:  6  provinces  with 

appointed  governors 

Legal  system:  in  transition;  constitution 

approved  15  August  1982  by  popular 

referendum;  in  part  based  on  Spanish  civil 

law  and  custom 

National  holiday:  12  October 
Branches:  constitution  provides  for  presi- 
dent with  broad  powers,  prime  minister, 
unicameral  legislature  (House  of  Represen- 
tatives of  the  People),  and  free  judiciary 
Government  leader:  Col.  Teodoro 
OBIANG  NGUEMA  MBASOGO,  Presi- 
dent (since  August  1979) 
Suffrage:  universal  for  adults 
Elections:  parliamentary  elections  held 
October  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  suspended;  before  coup  of  3  August 
1979,  National  Unity  Party  of  Workers 
(PUNT)  was  the  sole  legal  party 
Communists:  no  significant  number  of 
Communists  but  some  sympathizers 
Member  of:  AfDB,  Conference  of  East 
and  Central  African  States,  ECA,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO 

Economy 

GNP:  $75  million,  $420  per  capita  (1983); 
economy  destroyed  during  regime  of 
former  President  Masie  Nguema 
Natural  resources:  timber,  petroleum 
minerals,  agriculture 


Agriculture:  major  cash  crops — Rio  Muni, 
timber,  coffee;  Bioko,  cocoa;  main  food 
products — rice,  yams,  cassava,  bananas,  oil 
palm  nuts,  manioc,  livestock 
Major  industries:  fishing,  sawmilling 
Electric  power:  10,000  kW  capacity;  17 
million  kWh  produced,  47  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $16.9  million  (1982  est);  cocoa, 
coffee,  wood 

Imports:  $41.5  million  (1982  est.);  food- 
stuffs, chemicals  and  chemical  products, 
textiles 

Major  trade  partner:  Spain 
Budget:  receipts,  $17.67  million;  expendi- 
tures $16.96  million  (1985) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  ekuele  re- 
placed by  Communaute  Financiere 
Africaine  (CFA)  franc  in  1985;  415  CFA 
francs=US$l  (1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  Rio  Muni — 2,460  km,  includ- 
ing 185  km  bituminous,  remainder  gravel 
and  earth;  Bioko — 300  km,  including  146 
km  bituminous,  remainder  gravel  and 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  no  significant  water- 
ways 

Ports:  1  major  (Malabo),  3  minor 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  3  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  poor  system  with 
adequate  government  services;  interna- 
tional communications  from  Bata  and 
Malabo  to  African  and  European  coun- 
tries; 2,000  telephones  (0.6  per  100  popl.); 
2  AM,  no  FM,  and  1  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  and  possibly  Air 

Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  72,000; 

36,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 

March  1981,  $6.2  million;  21%  of  central 

government  budget 


74 


Ethiopia 


Set  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,221,900  km2;  land  area: 

1,101,000km2 

Comparative  area:  four-fifths  the  size  of 

Alaska 

Land  boundaries:  5,198  km  total 

Coastline:  1,094  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  southern  half  of 
boundary  with  Somalia  is  a  Provisional 
Administrative  Line;  possible  claim  by 
Somalia  based  on  unification  of  ethnic 
Somalis;  territorial  dispute  with  Somalia 
over  the  Ogaden 

Climate:  tropical  monsoon  with  wide 
topographic-induced  variation 

Terrain:  high  plateau  with  central  moun- 
tain range  divided  by  Great  Rift  Valley 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  41%  meadows  and  pastures;  24% 
forest  and  woodland;  22%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  geologically  active  Great 
Rift  Valley  susceptible  to  earthquakes, 
volcanic  eruptions;  deforestation;  overgraz- 
ing; soil  erosion;  desertification 
Special  notes:  strategic  geopolitical  posi- 
tion along  world's  busiest  shipping  lanes 
and  close  to  Arabian  oilfields 


People 

Population:  46,706,229  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.69% 
Nationality:  noun — Ethiopian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Ethiopian 

Ethnic  divisions:  40%  Oromo,  32% 
Amhara  and  Tigrean,  9%  Sidamo,  6% 
Shankella,  6%  Somali,  4%  Afar,  2% 
Gurage,  1%  other 

Religion:  40-45%  Muslim,  35-40%  Ethio- 
pian Orthodox,  15-20%  animist,  5%  other 

Language:  Amharic  (official),  Tigrinya, 
Orominga,  Arabic,  English  (major  foreign 
language  taught  in  schools) 
Infant  mortality  rate:  145/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  38 
Literacy:  about  35% 

Labor  force:  90%  agriculture  and  animal 
husbandry;  10%  government,  military,  and 
quasi-government 

Organized  labor:  All  Ethiopian  Trade 
Union  formed  by  the  government  in 
January  1977  to  represent  273,000  regis- 
tered trade  union  members 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  Ethiopia 
Type:  under  military  rule  since  September 
1974;  monarchy  abolished  in  March  1975, 
republic  to  be  formed  in  1987 
Capital:  Addis  Ababa 
Administrative  divisions:  14  provinces 
Legal  system:  complex  structure  with 
civil,  Islamic,  common,  and  customary  law 
influences;  constitution  suspended  Septem- 
ber 1974 — military  leaders  have  promised 
a  referendum  on  a  new  constitution  in 
early  1987;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Popular  Revolution 
Commemoration  Day,  12  September 
Branches:  executive  power  exercised  by 
the  Provisional  Military  Administrative 
Council  (PMAC),  dominated  by  its  chair- 
man and  small  circle  of  associates;  pre- 
dominantly civilian  Cabinet  holds  office  at 
sufferance  of  military;  legislature  dissolved 
September  1974;  judiciary  at  higher  levels 
based  on  Western  pattern,  at  lower  levels 
on  traditional  pattern,  without  jury  system 
in  either 


Government  leader:  Lt.  Col.  MENGISTU 
Haile-Mariam,  Chairman  of  the  Provi- 
sional Military  Administrative  Council 
(since  February  1977) 
Suffrage:  none 

Elections:  referendum  on  new  constitution 
promised  for  early  1987  to  be  followed  by 
elections  for  president  and  National  As- 
sembly 

Political  party  and  leader:  Ethiopian 
Workers  Party  (WPE),  Mengistu  Haile- 
Mariam 

Communists:  government  is  officially 
Marxist-Leninist 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  impor- 
tant dissident  groups  include  Eritrean 
Liberation  Front  (ELF),  Eritrean  People's 
Liberation  Front  (EPLF)  in  Eritrea; 
Tigrean  People's  Liberation  Front  (TPLF) 
in  Tigray  and  Welo  Provinces;  Western 
Somali  Liberation  Front  (WSLF)  in  the 
Ogaden  region 

Member  of:  AfDB,  EGA,  FAO,  G-77, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICO,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $5.0  billion,  $120  per  capita 
(1983/84  est.) 

Natural  resources:  potash,  salt,  gold, 
copper,  platinum 

Agriculture:  main  crop — coffee;  also 

cereals,  pulses,  oilseeds,  meat,  hides  and 

skins 

Major  industries:  cement,  sugar  refining, 

cotton  textiles,  food  processing,  oil  refinery 

Electric  power:  330,000  kW  capacity;  722 

million  kWh  produced,  14  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $520  million  (f.o.b.,  1985/86  est.); 

75%  coffee 

Imports:  $1,037  million  (c.i.f.,  1985/86) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US,  FRG, 

Djibouti,  Japan,  Saudi  Arabia,  France, 

Italy;  imports— USSR,  Italy,  FRG,  Japan, 

UK,  US 

Budget:  as  shares  of  GDP— revenues, 

25.1%;  expenditures,  31.8%;  deficit,  6.7% 

(1986) 


75 


Ethiopia  (continued) 


Falkland  Islands 
(Islas  M alvinas) 


External  debt:  $1.7  billion,  1985;  total 
debt  service  as  a  share  of  exports  of  goods 
and  services  22%  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.07  Ethiopian 
birr=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  8  July-7  July 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,089  km  total;  782  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  of  which  97  km  are  in 
Djibouti;  307  km  0.950-meter  gauge 

Highways:  44,300  km  total;  3,888  km 
bituminous,  8,344  km  gravel,  2,456  km 
improved  earth,  29,612  km  unimproved 
earth 

Ports:  2  major  (Aseb,  Mits'iwa) 
Civil  air:  22  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  171  total,  136  usable;  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  10  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  50  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  4  AM,  0  FM,  and  1 
TV  stations;  40,000  TV  sets;  2,000,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Air 
Defense;  paramilitary  Emergency  Strike 
Force  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
10,351,000;  5,346,000  fit  for  military 
service;  500,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  7 
July  1986,  $433.2  million;  20.4%  of  central 
government  budget 


South  Sandwich  Islands. 
Soulh  Georgia.  Shag,  and 
Clerke  Rocks  are  not  shown 


South  Atlantic  Ocean 


West 
Falkland 


Administered  by  U.K  . 
claimed  by  Argentina 


See  regional  map  IV 


Scolit  S»t 


Geography 

Total  area:  12,170  km2;  land  area:  12,170 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Connecticut 

Coastline:  1,288  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm  (enforc- 
ing only  to  150  nm,  1  February  1987) 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  territorial  dis- 
pute— islands  administered  by  UK, 
claimed  by  Argentina 

Climate:  cold  marine;  strong  westerly 
winds,  cloudy,  humid;  rain  occurs  on  more 
than  half  of  days  in  year;  occasional  snow 
all  year,  does  not  accumulate 

Terrain:  rocky,  hilly,  mountainous  with 
some  boggy,  undulating  plains 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  99%  meadows  and  pastures;  0% 
forest  and  woodland;  1%  other 

Environment:  some  smaller  islands  in 
dependencies  are  volcanically  active 

Special  notes:  deeply  indented  coastline 
provides  good  natural  harbors 


Population:  1,821  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.00%;  population  may 
be  declining  slightly  each  year 


Nationality:  noun — Falkland  Islanders); 
adjective — Falkland  Island 

Ethnic  divisions:  almost  totally  British 
Religion:  predominantly  Anglican 
Language:  English 

Literacy:  compulsory  education  up  to  age 
14 

Labor  force:  1,100  (est);  about  95%  in 
agriculture,  mostly  sheepherding 

Government 

Official  name:  Colony  of  the  Falkland 
Islands 

Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  Stanley 

Administrative  divisions:  Falkland,  South 
Georgia,  and  South  Sandwich  Islands  (the 
latter  two  are  administered  from  Stanley) 

Legal  system:  English  common  law 

Branches:  under  the  1985  Constitution  an 
Executive  Council  was  established;  it 
consists  of  three  elected  members  from  the 
eight-member  popularly  elected  Legisla- 
tive Counil 

Government  leaders:  Gordon  W. 
JEWKES,  Governor  (since  1985);  Rear 
Admiral  Christopher  CAYMAN,  Com- 
mander of  the  British  Armed  Forces  (since 
1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 

Economy 

Agriculture:  predominantly  sheep  farming 

Major  industry:  wool  processing 

Electric  power:  3,500  kW  capacity;  6 
million  kWh  produced,  3,050  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  to  UK,  $21.9  million  (1986);  wool, 
hides  and  skins,  and  other 

Imports:  from  UK,  $17.9  million  (1986); 
food,  clothing,  fuels,  and  machinery 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — nearly  all 
to  the  UK,  some  to  the  Netherlands  and 
Japan;  imports — Curacao,  Japan,  and  UK 

Aid:  (1970-79)  Western  (non-US)  countries, 
ODA  and  OOF,  $24  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $5  million;  expendi- 
tures, $4.8  million  (1982) 


76 


Faroe  Islands 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.70  Falkland 
Island  pound=0.70  pound  sterling=US$l 
(November  1986) 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  510  km  total;  30  km  paved,  80 
km  gravel,  and  400  km  unimproved  earth 
Ports:  1  major  (Port  Stanley),  4  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  5  total,  4  usable,  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 
Telecommunications:  government- 
operated  radiotelephone  networks  provid- 
ing effective  service  to  almost  all  points  on 
both  islands;  about  590  telephones  (24.2 
per  100  popl.);  1  AM,  1  FM,  and  1  Atlan- 
tic satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


Atlantic 
Ocean 


See  rcgioni!  mip  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,400  km2;  land  area:  1,400 

km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 

Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  764  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  4  nm 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 
Climate:  mild  winters,  cool  summers; 
usually  overcast;  foggy,  windy 
Terrain:  rugged,  rocky,  some  low  peaks; 
cliffs  along  most  of  coast 
Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadcws  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  98%  other 
Environment:  precipitous  terrain  limits 
habitation  to  small  coastal  lowlands;  archi- 
pelago consists  of  18  inhabited  islands  and 
a  few  uninhabited  islets 

Special  notes:  strategically  located  along 
important  sea  lanes  in  northeastern  Atlan- 
tic about  midway  between  Iceland  and 
Shetland  Islands 


Population:  46,429  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.91% 
Nationality:  noun— Faroese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Faroese 


Ethnic  divisions:  homogeneous  white 

population 

Religion:  Evangelical  Lutheran 

Language:  Faroese  (derived  from  Old 

Norse),  Danish 

Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  17,585;  largely  engaged  in 

fishing,  manufacturing,  transportation,  and 

commerce 

Government 

Official  name:  Faroe  Islands 

Type:  self-governing  province  within  the 

Kingdom  of  Denmark;  2  representatives  in 

Danish  parliament 

Capital:  Torshavn  on  the  island  of 

Streymoy 

Administrative  divisions:  7  districts,  49 

communes,  1  town 

Legal  system:  based  on  Danish  law;  Home 

Rule  Act  enacted  1948 

Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 

with  Crown,  acting  through  appointed 

High  Commissioner,  and  32-member 

provincial  parliament  (Lagting)  in  matters 

of  strictly  Faroese  concern;  executive 

power  vested  in  Crown,  acting  through 

High  Commissioner,  but  exercised  by 

provincial  cabinet  responsible  to  provincial 

parliament 

Government  leaders:  MARGRETHE  II, 

Queen  (since  January  1972);  Atli  DAM, 

Lagmand,  Prime  Minister  (since  December 

1984);  Niels  BENTSEN,  Danish  Governor 

(since  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal,  but  not  compulsory, 

over  age  21 

Elections:  held  every  four  years;  most 

recent,  8  November  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  four-party 

ruling  coalition— Social  Democratic,  Atli 

Dam;  Republican,  Erlendur  Patursson; 

Home  Rule,  Tobj0rn  Poulsen;  Peoples, 

Jogvan  Sundstei  i 

Voting  strength:  (January  1985)  four-party 

coalition— 17  of  32  seats 

Communists:  insignificant  number 

Member  of:  Nordic  Council 


77 


Faroe  Islands  (continued) 


f-l»  •  • 

Fiji 


Economy 

GDP:  $369.3  million,  about  $8,800  per 
capita  (1980) 

Natural  resources:  fish 
Agriculture:  sheep  and  cattle  grazing 

Fishing:  catch  329,900  metric  tons  (1983); 
exports,  $162.3  million  (1980) 

Major  industry:  fishing 

Electric  power:  80,000  kW  capacity;  225 
million  kWh  produced,  4,890  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $178.7  million  (f.o.b.,  1980); 
mostly  fish  and  fish  products 

Imports:  $222.1  million  (c.i.f.,  1980); 
machinery  and  transport  equipment, 
petroleum  and  petroleum  products,  food 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports  21.3% 
Denmark,  13.4%  UK,  12.4%  FRG,  11.7% 
US  (1980) 

Budget:  expenditures,  $98.8  million;  reve- 
nues, $98.8  million  (FY81) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.37  Danish 
kroner=US$l  (December  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 
Highways:  200  km 
Ports:  2  major,  8  minor 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  international 
communications;  fair  domestic  facilities; 
27,900  telephones  (61.0  per  100  popl.);  1 
AM,  3  FM  stations;  3  coaxial  submarine 
cables 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  Denmark 

Military  manpower:  included  with  Den- 
mark 


;  Rotuma 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


Vanua  LevtJ 


'  Taveuni 


Kandavu 


Ceva-i-Ra 
See  regional  map  X 


200km 


Geography 

Total  area:  18,270  km2;  land  area:  18,270 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Massachusetts 

Coastline:  1,129  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 
archipelagic  baselines) 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  only  slight 
seasonal  temperature  variation 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  of  volcanic 
origin 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  5%  permanent 
crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures;  65% 
forest  and  woodland;  19%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  from 
November  to  January 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  727,902  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.25% 

Nationality:  noun — Fijian(s);  adjective — 
Fijian 

Ethnic  divisions:  50%  Indian,  45%  Fijian; 
5%  European,  other  Pacific  Islanders, 
overseas  Chinese,  and  others 
Religion:  Fijians  are  mainly  Christian, 
Indians  are  Hindu  with  a  Muslim  minority 


Language:  English  (official);  Fijian; 
Hindustani 

Infant  mortality  rate:  29/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  72 

Literacy:  80% 

Labor  force:  176,000  (1979);  40%  of  total 

work  force  paid  employees;  remainder 

involved  in  subsistence  agriculture;  43.4% 

agriculture,  15.6%  industry 

Organized  labor:  about  45,000  employees 

belong  to  some  46  trade  unions,  which  are 

organized  along  lines  of  work  and  ethnic 

origin  (1983) 

Government 

Official  name:  Fiji 

Type:  independent  parliamentary  state 
within  Commonwealth;  Elizabeth  II  recog- 
nized as  chief  of  state 
Capital:  Suva 

Administrative  divisions:  4  divisions 
Legal  system:  based  on  British  system 
National  holiday:  Fiji  Day,  10  October 
Branches:  executive — Prime  Minister  and 
Cabinet;  legislative — 52-member  House  of 
Representatives;  22-member  appointed 
Senate;  judicial — Supreme  Court,  Court  of 
Appeal,  Magistrate's  Courts 
Government  leader:  Ratu  Sir  Kamisese 
MARA,  Prime  Minister  (since  1966;  was 
Chief  Minister  before  independence) 
Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Elections:  every  five  years  unless  House 
dissolves  earlier;  last  held  July  1982 
Political  parties:  Alliance,  primarily 
Fijian,  headed  by  Ratu  Mara;  National 
Federation,  primarily  Indian,  headed  by 
Siddiq  Koya;  Western  United  Front, 
Fijian,  Ratu  Osea  Gavidi;  Fiji  Labor  Party 
(founded  in  mid-1985),  headed  by  Dr. 
Timoci  Bavadra 

Voting  strength:  (July  1982)  House  of 
Representatives — Alliance  Party  28  seats, 
National  Federation  Party/Western  United 
Front  coalition  24  seats 
Communists:  some 

Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  Com- 
monwealth, EC  (associate),  ESCAP,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  SPF, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO 


78 


Finland 


Economy 

GDP:  $1.099  billion  (1986  est),  $1,254  per 
capita;  annual  growth  rate,  2.5%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  timber,  fish,  gold, 
copper 

Agriculture:  sugar,  copra,  ginger,  rice; 
major,  deficiency,  grains 

Major  industries:  sugar  refining,  tourism, 
gold,  lumber,  small  industries 

Electric  power:  213,000  kW  capacity;  220 
million  kWh  produced,  310  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $240  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  70% 
sugar;  also  copra 

Imports:  $447  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  24% 
manufactured  goods,  20.0%  machinery, 
16.3%  foodstuffs,  16%  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  Australia,  New 
Zealand,  Japan,  UK,  Singapore,  US 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries  (1980-84), 
$527  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $323  million;  expendi- 
tures, $402  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.16  Fiji 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  644  km  0.610-meter  narrow 
gauge,  belonging  to  the  government-owned 
Fiji  Sugar  Corporation 

Highways:  3,300  km  total  (1984)— 390  km 
paved;  1200  km  bituminous  surface  treat- 
ment; 1,290  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
stabilized  soil  surface;  420  unimproved 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  203  km;  122  km 
navigable  by  motorized  craft  and  200- 
metric-ton  barges 

Ports:  1  major,  6  minor 

Civil  air:  1  DC-3  and  1  light  aircraft 

Airfields:  27  total,  27  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  modern  local, 
interisland,  and  international  (wire/radio 
integrated)  public  and  special-purpose 
telephone,  telegraph,  and  teleprinter 
facilities;  regional  radio  center;  important 
COMPAC  cable  link  between  US/Canada 
and  New  Zealand/ Australia;  49,540  tele- 
phones (6.9  per  100  popl.);  7  AM,  1  FM  , 
no  TV  stations;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  integrated  ground  and  naval 
forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  187,000; 
104,000  fit  for  military  service;  7,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


300km 


Sec  refionil  mip  V 


HELSINKI 


Geography 

Total  area:  337,030  km2;  land  area: 
305,470  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Montana 

Land  boundaries:  2,534  km  total 

Coastline:  1,126  km  excluding  islands  and 
coastal  indentations 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  6  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  4  nm 

Climate:  cold  temperate;  potentially 
subarctic,  but  comparatively  mild  because 
of  moderating  influence  of  Gulf  Stream, 
Baltic  Sea,  more  than  60,000  lakes 

Terrain:  mostly  low,  flat  to  rolling  plains 
interspersed  with  low  hills 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and  pastures; 
76%  forest  and  woodland;  16%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  permanently  wet  ground 
covers  about  30%  of  land;  population 
concentrated  on  small  southwestern  coastal 
plain 

Special  notes:  long  boundary  with  USSR; 
Helsinki  is  northernmost  national  capital 
on  European  continent 


79 


Finland  (continued) 


People 

Population:  4,939,880  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.36% 

Nationality:  noun — Finn(s);  adjective — 
Finnish 

Ethnic  divisions:  Finn,  Swede,  Lapp, 
Gypsy,  Tatar 

Religion:  97%  Evangelical  Lutheran,  1.2% 
Greek  Orthodox,  1.8%  other 

Language:  93.5%  Finnish,  6.3%  Swedish 
(both  official);  small  Lapp-  and  Russian- 
speaking  minorities 

Infant  mortality  rate:  6.2/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  70.1,  women  78.1 
Literacy:  almost  100% 

Labor  force:  2.437  million  (1985);  24.5% 
mining  and  manufacturing;  27.9%  services; 
20.9%  commerce;  11.5%  agriculture, 
forestry,  and  fishing;  7.3%  construction; 
7.6%  transportation  and  communications; 
6.2%  unemployed  (1985  average) 

Organized  labor:  80%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Finland 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Helsinki 

Administrative  divisions:  12  provinces, 
377  communes,  84  towns 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  based  on 
Swedish  law;  constitution  adopted  1919; 
Supreme  Court  may  request  legislation 
interpreting  or  modifying  laws;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  6 
December 

Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 
with  President  and  unicameral  legislature 
(Eduskunta);  executive  power  vested  in 
President  and  exercised  through  coalition 
Cabinet  responsible  to  parliament;  Su- 
preme Court,  four  superior  courts,  193 
lower  courts 

Government  leaders:  Dr.  Mauno 
KOIVISTO,  President  (since  January 
1982);  Kalevi  SORSA,  Prime  Minister 
(since  February  1982) 


Suffrage:  universal,  18  years  and  over;  not 
compulsory 

Elections:  parliamentary,  every  four  years 
(next  in  March,  1991);  presidential,  every 
six  years  (next  in  1988) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Dem- 
ocratic Party,  Kalevi  Sorsa;  Center  Party, 
Paavo  Vayrynen;  People's  Democratic 
League  (majority  Communist  front),  Esko 
Helle;  National  Coalition  (Conservative) 
Party,  Ilkka  Suominen;  Liberal  People's 
Party,  KyGsti  Lallukka;  Swedish  People's 
Party,  Christoffer  Taxell;  Rural  Party, 
Pekka  Vennamo;  Finnish  Communist 
Party  (majority  Communist  faction),  Arvo 
Aalto;  Finnish  Communist  Party-Unity 
(minority  faction),  Taisto  Sinisalo;  Demo- 
cratic Alternative  (minority  Communist 
front),  Kristiina  Halkola;  Finnish  Christian 
League,  Esko  Almgren;  Constitutional 
Rightist  Party,  Georg  Ehrnrooth;  Finnish 
Pensioners  Party;  Greens 

Voting  strength:  (1987  parliamentary 
election)  24.3%  Social  Democratic  (56 
seats),  23.9%  Conservative  (53  seats),  18.6% 
Center-Liberal  (40  seats),  9.4%  People's 
Democratic  League  (16  seats),  6.3%  Rural 
(9  seats),  5.3%  Swedish  Peoples  (13  seats), 
4.3%  Democratic  Alternative  (4  seats), 
4.0%  Greens  (4  seats),  2.6%  Christian 
League  (5  seats),  1.2%  Pensioners  (no  seats), 
0.1%  Constitutional  Rightist  (no  seats) 

Communists:  28,000  registered  members; 
an  additional  45,000  persons  belong  to 
People's  Democratic  League 

Member  of:  ADB,  CEMA  (special  cooper- 
ation agreement),  DAC,  EC  (free  trade 
agreement),  EFTA  (associate),  FAO, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES, 
ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American  Develop- 
ment Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  Inter- 
national Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
Nordic  Council,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $54.4  billion  (1985),  $11,100  per 
capita;  55.6%  private  consumption,  23.4% 
gross  fixed  capital  formation;  20.2%  gov- 
ernment consumption;  0.8%  net  exports  of 


goods  and  services;  1985  growth  rate  2.9% 

(1980  prices) 

Natural  resources:  forests,  copper,  zinc, 

iron,  farmland 

Agriculture:  animal  husbandry,  especially 

dairying,  predominates;  forestry  important 

secondary  occupation  for  rural  population; 

main  crops — cereals,  sugar  beets,  potatoes; 

85%  self-sufficient;  shortages — food  and 

fodder  grains 

Fishing:  catch  157,100  metric  tons  (1983) 
Major  industries:  metal  manufacturing 
and  shipbuilding,  forestry  and  wood  pro- 
cessing (pulp,  paper),  copper  refining, 
foodstuffs,  textiles,  clothing 
Shortages:  fossil  fuels;  industrial  raw 
materials  (except  wood,  iron  ore) 
Crude  steel:  2.5  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  530  kg  per  capita 
Electric  power:  12,389,000  kW  capacity; 
45,590  million  kWh  produced,  9,250  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $13.54  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  tim- 
ber, paper  and  pulp,  ships,  machinery, 
clothing  and  footwear 
Imports:  $13.14  billion  (c.i.f,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, petroleum  and  petroleum  products, 
chemicals,  transport  equipment,  iron  and 
steel,  machinery,  textile  yarn  and  fabrics 
Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  exports — 
35.2%  EC  (10.6%  UK,  9.0%  FRG),  21.4% 
USSR,  13.1%  Sweden,  6.2%  US;  imports— 
36.9%  EC  (14.9%  FRG,  7.2%  UK),  20.6% 
USSR,  11.7%  Sweden,  5.4%  US 
Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $998  million 
Budget:  expenditures,  $16.3  billion;  reve- 
nues, $14.4  billion  (1985) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.206  Finn- 
marks  (Fim)=US$l  (30  December  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  6,071  km  total;  Finnish  State 
Railways  (VR)  operate  a  total  of  6,010  km 
1.524-meter  gauge,  of  which  480  km  are 
multiple  track  and  1,257  km  are  electrified 
Highways:  about  103,000  km  total,  includ- 
ing 35,000  km  paved  (bituminous,  con- 
crete, bituminous-treated  surface)  and 
38,000  km  unpaved  (stabilized  gravel, 
gravel,  earth);  additional  30,000  km  of 
private  (state  subsidized)  roads 


80 


France 


Inland  waterways:  6,675  km  total  (includ- 
ing Saimaa  Canal);  3,700  km  suitable  for 
steamers 

Pipelines:  natural  gas,  161  km 
Ports:  11  major,  34  minor 
Civil  air:  39  major  transport 

Airfields:  163  total,  160  usable;  47  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  22  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  20  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  service  from 
cable  and  radio-relay  network;  2.95  mil- 
lion telephones  (57  per  100  popl.);  6  AM, 
105  FM,  235  TV  stations;  3  submarine 
cables 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,315,000;  1,102,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 31,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $1.03  billion;  5.7%  of 
central  government  budget 


English  Channel 


30Okm 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Corsica  >,   i 
Mediterranean    ** 
Sea 


Geography 

Total  area:  547,030  km2;  land  area: 
545,630  km2 

Comparative  area:  four-fifths  the  size  of 
Texas 

Land  boundaries:  2,888  km  total 

Coastline:  3,427  km  (includes  Corsica,  644 
km) 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Canada;  Madagascar  claims 
Bassas  da  India,  Europa  Island,  Glorioso 
Islands,  Juan  de  Nova  Island,  and  Trome- 
lin  Island;  Comoros  claims  Mayotte; 
Mauritius  claims  Tromelin  Island;  Seychel- 
les claims  Tromelin  Island;  Suriname 
claims  part  of  French  Guiana;  territorial 
claim  in  Antarctica  (Adelie  Land) 

Climate:  generally  cool  winters  and  mild 
summers,  but  mild  winters  and  hot  sum- 
mers along  the  Mediterranean 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  plains  or  gently  rolling 
hills;  rest  is  mountainous 

Land  use:  32%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  23%  meadows  and  pastures;  27% 
forest  and  woodland;  16%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 


Environment:  most  of  large  urban  areas 
and  industrial  centers  in  Rhone,  Garonne, 
Seine,  or  Loire  river  basins;  occasional 
warm  tropical  wind  known  as  mistral 

Special  notes:  largest  West  European 
nation 


Population:  55,596,030  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.38% 

Nationality:  noun  —  Frenchman(men); 
adjective  —  French 

Ethnic  divisions:  Celtic  and  Latin  with 
Teutonic,  Slavic,  North  African,  Indo- 
chinese,  and  Basque  minorities 

Religion:  90%  Roman  Catholic,  2%  Protes- 
tant, 1%  Jewish,  1%  Muslim  (North  Afri- 
can workers),  6%  unaffiliated 

Language:  French  (100%  of  population); 
rapidly  declining  regional  dialects  (Proven- 
cal, Breton,  Germanic,  Corsican,  Catalan, 
Basque,  Flemish) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  9/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  75 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  23.98  million;  60.8%  services, 
24.0%  industry,  7.6%  agriculture,  7.6% 
other;  10.6%  unemployed  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  about  20%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  French  Republic 

Type:  republic,  with  President  whose 
previously  wide  powers  have  been  some- 
what curtailed  by  current  power-sharing 
arrangement  with  Prime  Minister 

Capital:  Paris 

Administrative  divisions:  22  regions  with 
96  metropolitan  departments 

Dependent  areas:  Bassas  da  India,  Clip- 
perton  Island,  Europa  Island,  French 
Guiana,  French  Polynesia,  French  South- 
ern and  Antarctic  Lands,  Glorioso  Islands, 
Guadeloupe,  Juan  de  Nova  Island,  Martin- 
ique, Mayotte,  New  Caledonia,  Reunion, 
St.  Pierre  and  Miquelon,  Tromelin  Island, 
Wallis  and  Futuna  Island 


France  (continued) 


Legal  system:  civil  law  system  with  indig- 
enous concepts;  new  constitution  adopted 
1958,  amended  concerning  election  of 
President  in  1962;  judicial  review  of  ad- 
ministrative but  not  legislative  acts 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  14  July 

Branches:  presidentially  appointed  Prime 
Minister  heads  Council  of  Ministers,  which 
is  formally  responsible  to  National  Assem- 
bly; bicameral  legislature — National  As- 
sembly (577  members),  Senate  (317  mem- 
bers)— restricted  by  a  delaying  action; 
judiciary  independent  in  principle 

Government  leaders:  Francois  MITTER- 
RAND, President  (since  May  1981); 
Jacques  CHIRAC,  Prime  Minister  (since 
March  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  not  com- 
pulsory 

Elections:  National  Assembly — every  five 
years,  last  election  March  1986,  two- round 
majority  system  enacted  in  October  1986; 
Senate — indirect  collegiate  system  for  nine 
years,  renewable  by  one-third  every  three 
years,  last  election  September  1986;  Presi- 
dent, direct,  universal  suffrage  every  seven 
years,  two  ballots,  last  election  May  1981 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  majority 
coalition— Rally  for  the  Republic  (RPR, 
formerly  UDR),  Jacques  Chirac;  Union  for 
French  Democracy  (UDF,  federation  of 
PR,  CDS,  and  RAD),  Jean  Lecanuet; 
Republicans  (PR),  Francois  Leotard;  Cen- 
ter for  Social  Democrats  (CDS),  Pierre 
Mehaignerie;  Radical  (RAD),  Andre  Rossi- 
not;  left  opposition — Socialist  Party  (PS), 
Lionel  Jospin;  Left  Radical  Movement 
(MRG),  Francois  Doubin;  Communist 
Party  (PCF),  Georges  Marchais;  extreme 
right  party  National  Front  (FN),  Jean- 
Marie  Le  Pen 

Voting  strength:  (1986  election) 
UDF/RPR/CNIP,  44.9%;  PS/MRG  31.6%; 
Communist,  9.8%;  National  Front,  9.7%; 
diverse  left,  1.0%;  extreme  left,  1.5%; 
extreme  right,  0.2%;  other  1.2% 

Communists:  700,000  claimed  but  proba- 
bly closer  to  150,000;  Communist  voters, 
2.7  million  in  1986  elections 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
Communist-controlled  labor  union  (Confed- 
eration Generale  du  Travail)  nearly  2.4 


million  members  (claimed);  Socialist- 
leaning  labor  union  (Confederation  Fran- 
caise  Democratique  du  Travail — CFDT) 
about  800,000  members  est;  independent 
labor  union  (Force  Ouvriere)  about 
1,000,000  members  est.;  independent  white 
collar  union  (Confederation  Generale  des 
Cadres)  340,000  members  (claimed);  Na- 
tional Council  of  French  Employers  (Con- 
seil  National  du  Patronat  Francais — CNPF 
or  Patronat) 

Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EC,  EIB,  ELDO,  EMA,  EMS, 
ESCAP,  ESRO,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IATP, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDB — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  International  Lead 
and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU, 
IRC,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Whaling  Commission,  NATO  (signatory), 
OAS  (observer),  OECD,  South  Pacific 
Commission,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WEU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $510.3  billion  (1985),  $9,280  per 
capita;  65%  private  consumption,  18.9% 
investment  (including  government),  16.5% 
government  consumption;  -0.4%  net  for- 
eign balance;  1985  real  growth  rate,  1.2%; 
average  annual  growth  rate  (1975-84), 
2.1% 

Natural  resources:  coal,  iron  ore,  bauxite, 
fish,  forests 

Agriculture:  Western  Europe's  foremost 
producer;  beef,  dairy  products,  cereals, 
sugar  beets,  potatoes,  wine  grapes;  self- 
sufficient  for  most  temperate  zone  food- 
stuffs; agricultural  shortages  include  fats 
and  oils,  tropical  produce 

Fishing:  catch  721,809  metric  tons;  exports 
of  fish  and  fish  products  $363  million, 
imports  $1,014  million  (1985) 

Major  industries:  steel,  machinery  and 
equipment,  textiles  and  clothing,  chemi- 
cals, automobiles,  food  processing,  metal- 
lurgy, aircraft,  electronics 

Shortages:  crude  oil,  natural  gas,  textile 
fibers,  most  nonferrous  ores,  coking  coal, 
fats  and  oils 


Crude  steel:  23.0  million  metric  tons 
capacity,  18.6  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985);  337  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  94,577,000  kW  capacity; 
348,620  million  kWh  produced,  6,310 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $100.9  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  transportation  equipment, 
chemicals,  foodstuffs,  agricultural  products, 
iron  and  steel  products,  textiles  and  cloth- 
ing 

Imports:  $107.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  crude 
petroleum,  machinery  and  equipment, 
agricultural  products,  chemicals,  iron  and 
steel  products 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  imports — 
51.3%  EC,  9.7%  petroleum  exporting 
countries,  11.2%  other  West  European 
countries,  7.6%  US,  2.8%  Japan,  2.3% 
USSR,  2.0%  other  Communist  countries; 
exports— 49.6%  EC,  7.4%  petroleum  ex- 
porting countries,  12.1%  other  West  Euro- 
pean countries,  8.6%  US,  1.9%  USSR,  2.5% 
other  Communist  countries,  1.2%  Japan 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $37.8  billion 

Budget:  revenues,  $144.8  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $164.9  billion;  deficit,  $20.1  billion, 
2.5%  of  GDP  (1987  proposed) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.39  French 
francs=US$l  (6  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  French  National  Railways 
(SNCF)  operates  34,577  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge;  11,358  km  electrified, 
15,132  km  double  or  multiple  track;  2,138 
km  of  various  gauges  (1.000-meter  to 
1.440-meter),  privately  owned  and  oper- 
ated 

Highways:  1,551,400  km  total;  33,400  km 
national  highway;  347,000  km  departmen- 
tal highway;  421,000  km  community 
roads;  750,000  km  rural  roads;  5,401  km  of 
controlled-access  divided  autoroutes;  about 
803,000  km  paved 

Inland  waterways:  14,932  km;  6,969  km 
heavily  traveled 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  3,059  km;  refined 
products,  4,487  km;  natural  gas,  24,746  km 


French  Guiana 


Ports:  14  major,  12  secondary,  6  minor 

Civil  air:  355  major  transport  aircraft 
(1982) 

Airfields:  474  total,  461  usable;  258  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  34  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  132  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  highly  developed 
system  provides  satisfactory  telephone, 
telegraph,  radio  and  TV  broadcast  services; 
35.0  million  telephones  (60  per  100  popl.); 
41  AM,  797  FM,  8,500  TV  stations  (includ- 
ing repeaters);  24  submarine  coaxial  cables; 
3  communication  satellite  ground  stations 
with  total  of  1 1  antennas  for  international 
service 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army  of  the  Ground,  Navy, 
Army  of  the  Air,  National  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
13,995,000;  fit  for  military  service 
11,864,000;  441,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  proposed  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  $28.4  billion; 
about  19.3%  of  proposed  central  govern- 
ment budget 


North 

A  tlantic 
»nt-L8ur«rif-\          Ocean 


See  regional  map  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  91,000  km2;  land  area:  89,150 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Maine 

Land  boundaries:  1,183  km  total 
Coastline:  378  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Suriname  claims  area 
between  Litani  Rivier  and  Riviere 
Marouini  (both  headwaters  of  the  Lawa) 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  little  sea- 
sonal temperature  variation 

Terrain:  low  lying  coastal  plains  rising  to 
hills  and  small  mountains 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and 
pastures;  82%  forest  and  woodland;  18% 
other 

Environment:  mostly  an  unsettled  wilder- 
ness 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  92,038  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  4.06% 

Nationality:  noun — French  Guianese 
(sing.,  pi.);  adjective — French  Guiana 


Ethnic  divisions:  66%  black  or  mulatto; 
12%  Caucasian;  12%  East  Indian,  Chinese, 
Amerindian;  10%  other 

Religion:  predominantly  Roman  Catholic 
Language:  French 
Literacy:  73% 

Labor  force:  23,265;  services,  government, 
and  commerce  60.6%;  industry  21.2%; 
agriculture  18.2%;  10%  unemployment 
(1980) 

Organized  labor:  7%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Department  of  French 
Guiana 

Type:  overseas  department  and  region  of 
France;  represented  by  one  deputy  in 
French  National  Assembly  and  one  senator 
in  French  Senate 
Capital:  Cayenne 

Administrative  divisions:  2  arrondisse- 
ments,  19  communes  each  with  a  locally 
elected  municipal  council 
Legal  system:  French  legal  system;  highest 
court  is  Court  of  Appeals  based  in  Martin- 
ique with  jurisdiction  over  Martinique, 
Guadeloupe,  and  French  Guiana 
Branches:  executive — Prefect  appointed 
by  Paris;  legislative — popularly  elected 
16-member  General  Council  and  a  Re- 
gional Council  composed  of  members  of 
the  local  General  Council  and  of  the 
locally  elected  deputy  and  senator  to  the 
French  parliament;  judicial,  under  jurisdic- 
tion of  French  judicial  system 
Government  leader:  Bernard  COURTOIS, 
Prefect  of  the  Republic  (since  1984) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  General  Council  elections 
normally  are  held  every  five  years;  last 
election  February  1983 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Guianese 
Socialist  Party  (PSG),  Raymond  Tarcy 
(senator),  Leopold  Helder;  Union  of  the 
Guianese  People  (UPG),  weak  leftist  party 
allied  with  and  reported  to  have  been 
absorbed  by  the  PSG;  Rally  for  the  Repub- 
lic (RPR),  Hector  Rivierez;  National  Anti- 
Colonist  Guianese  Party  (PANGA),  Michel 
Kapel;  Popular  and  National  Party  of 
Guiana  (PNPG),  Michael  Alain 


83 


French  Guiana  (continued) 


French  Polynesia 


Communists:  Communist  party  member- 
ship negligible 

Member  of:  WFTU 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.0  billion,  $3,239  per  capita  (1981) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  timber,  gold 
(widely  scattered),  cinnabar,  clay,  low- 
grade  iron  ore 

Agriculture:  limited  vegetables  for  local 
consumption;  rice,  corn,  manioc,  cocoa, 
bananas,  sugar 

Fishing:  catch  1,430  metric  tons  (1983  est.) 

Major  industries:  construction,  shrimp 
processing,  forestry  products,  rum,  gold 
mining 

Electric  power:  31,000  kW  capacity;  156 
million  kWh  produced,  1,770  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $37.0  million  (1982);  shrimp, 
timber,  rum,  rosewood  essence 

Imports:  $276.0  million  (1982);  food 
(grains,  processed  meat),  other  consumer 
goods,  producer  goods,  and  petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 54%  US, 
17%  Japan,  15%  France,  5%  Martinique; 
imports — 53%  France,  15%  Trinidad  and 
Tobago,  10%  US  (1981) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  ODA  and 
OOF  (FY70-79),  from  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  $700  million 

Budget:  $101  million  (1982) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  680  km  total;  510  km  paved, 
170  km  improved  and  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  460  km,  navigable  by 
small  oceangoing  vessels  and  river  and 
coastal  steamers;  3,300  km  possibly  naviga- 
ble by  native  craft 


Ports:  1  major  (Cayenne),  7  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  11  total,  11  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  open-wire  and 
radio-relay  system  with  about  18,100 
telephones  (27.2  per  100  popl.);  6  AM,  7 
FM,  9  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  21,000; 
15,000  fit  for  military  service  (1986  est.) 


lies       , . 
Marquises  '   f 

South  Pacific  Ocean 

**    -•" 

'«><•£       ,    .  .//es 

""    ..PAPEETE  V'1       Tuamotu 
lies  de    -<f   . 

la  Societe    '•"'''  \-  '>     •-      • 


AM  • 

Tubuai 


See  regional  mi p  X 


Rapa 


500km 


Geography 

Total  area:  4,000  km2;  land  area:  3,660 
km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  Rhode 
Island 

Coastline:  2,525  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical,  but  moderate 

Terrain:  mixture  of  rugged  high  islands 
and  low  islands  with  reefs 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  19%  permanent 
crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures;  31% 
forest  and  woodland;  44%  other 

Environment:  occasional  cyclonic  storm  in 
January 

Special  notes:  Makatea  is  one  of  three 
great  phosphate  rock  islands  in  the  Pacific 
(others  are  Banaba  or  Ocean  Island  in 
Kiribati  and  Nauru) 


Population:  185,683  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.84% 

Nationality:  noun — French  Polynesian(s); 
adjective — French  Polynesian 

Ethnic  divisions:  78%  Polynesian,  12% 
Chinese,  6%  local  French,  4%  metropolitan 
French 


84 


Gabon 


Religion:  mainly  Christian;  55%  Protes- 

•  tant,  32%  Catholic 

Government 

Official  name:  Territory  of  French  Poly- 
;  nesia 

•  Type:  overseas  territory  of  France 
Capital:  Papeete 

,  Administrative  divisions:  48  communes 

I  Legal  system:  based  on  French;  lower  and 
:  higher  courts 

Branches:  30-member  Territorial  Assem- 
bly, popularly  elected;  five-member  Coun- 
i  cil  of  Government,  elected  by  Assembly; 
j  popular  election  of  two  deputies  to  Na- 
!  tional  Assembly  and  one  senator  to  Senate 

•  in  Paris 

Government  leaders:  Pierre  ANGELI, 

High  Commissioner  appointed  by  French 
i  Government  (since  April  1986);  Jacques 
j  TEUIRA,  President  of  the  Territorial 

Government  (since  February  1987); 

Jacques  TEHEIURA,  Vice  President  of  the 

Territorial  Government 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  every  five  years;  last  held  in 
May  1982 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Tahoeraa 
Huiraatira  (Gaullist),  Gaston  Flosse;  Ai'a 
Api  (New  Country  Party),  Emile  Vern- 
audon;  Here  Ai'a,  Jean  Juventin;  la  Mana 
'  (Socialist),  Jacques  Crollet;  Te  E'a  Api 
(Socialist),  Jacques  VII 

:  Voting  strength:  (1982  election)  Tahoeraa 
Huiraatira,  13  seats;  Ai'a  Api,  3  seats;  Here 
Ai'a,  6  seats;  la  Mana,  3  seats;  Indepen- 
dents, 4  seats;  Te  E'a  Api,  1  seat 

Economy 

GDP:  A$931.3  million,  US$6,400  per 
capita  (1980) 

Agriculture:  coconuts 

Major  industries:  maintenance  of  French 
nuclear  test  base,  tourism 

Electric  power:  72,000  kW  capacity;  265 
million  kWh  produced,  1,470  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

'  Exports:  $21  million  (1977);  79%  coconut 
products,  14%  mother-of-pearl,  vanilla 


Imports:  $419  million  (1977);  fuels,  food- 
stuffs, equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — 59% 
France,  14%  US;  exports— 86%  France 

Budget:  $180  million  in  1979;  ODA  and 
OOF  commitments  from  Western  (non-US 
countries) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  127.05  Colo- 
nial Francs  Pacifique  (CFP)=US$1  (Febru- 
ary 1984) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 
Highways:  600  km  (1982) 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  1  major  (Papeete),  6  minor 

Airfields:  41  total,  41  usable;  25  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  14  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Civil  air:  about  6  major  transport  aircraft 

Telecommunications:  33,200  telephones 
(18.3  per  100  popl.);  80,000  radio  and 
26,000  TV  sets;  5  AM,  2  FM,  6  TV  sta- 
tions; 1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  France 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  267,670  km2;  land  area: 
257,670  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Colorado 

Land  boundaries:  2,422  km  total 
Coastline:  885  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  150  nm 
Territorial  sea:  100  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Equatorial  Guinea 

Climate:  tropical;  always  hot,  humid 
Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain;  hilly  inter- 
ior; savanna  in  east  and  south 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures;  78% 
forest  and  woodland;  2%  other 

Environment:  deforestation 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  1,039,006  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.31% 
Nationality:  noun — Gabonese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Gabonese 
Ethnic  divisions:  about  40  Bantu  tribes, 
including  4  major  tribal  groupings  (Fang, 
Eshira,  Bapounou,  Bateke);  about  100,000 
expatriate  Africans  and  Europeans,  includ- 
ing 35,000  French 


85 


Gabon  (continued) 


Religion:  55-75%'Christian,  less  than  1% 
Muslim,  remainder  animist 

Language:  French  (official),  Fang,  Myene, 
Bateke,  Bapounou/Eschira,  Bandjabi 

Infant  mortality  rate:  117/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  50 
Literacy:  65% 

Labor  force:  120,000  salaried  (1983); 
65.0%  agriculture,  30.0%  industry  and 
commerce,  2.5%  services,  2.5%  govern- 
ment 

Organized  labor:  there  are  38,000  mem- 
bers of  the  national  trade  union,  the  Ga- 
bonese  Trade  Union  Confederation 
(COSYGA) 

Government 

Official  name:  Gabonese  Republic 

Type:  republic;  one-party  presidential 
regime  since  1964 

Capital:  Libreville 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  provinces 
subdivided  into  36  prefectures 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  1961;  judicial  review  of  legislative 
acts  in  Constitutional  Chamber  of  the 
Supreme  Court;  legal  education  at  Center 
of  Higher  and  Legal  Studies  at  Libreville; 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction  not  accepted 

National  holidays:  Renovation  Day,  12 
March;  Independence  Day,  17  August; 
major  Islamic  and  Christian  holidays 

Branches:  power  centralized  in  President, 
elected  by  universal  suffrage  for  seven- 
year  term;  unicameral  legislature  (93- 
member  National  Assembly,  including 
nine  members  chosen  by  Omar  Bongo)  has 
limited  powers;  constitution  amended  in 
1979  so  that  Assembly  deputies  will  serve 
five-year  terms;  independent  judiciary 

Government  leader:  El  Hadj  Omar 
BONGO,  President  (since  December  1967) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  presidential  election  last  held 
autumn  1986;  parliamentary  election  last 
held  February-March  1985;  constitutional 
change  separates  dates  for  presidential  and 
parliamentary  elections 


Political  party  and  leader:  Gabonese 
Democratic  Party  (PDG)  led  by  President 
Bongo  is  only  legal  party 

Communists:  no  organized  party;  probably 
some  Communist  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  African  Wood  Organi- 
zation, Conference  of  East  and  Central 
African  States,  BDECA  (Central  African 
Development  Bank),  EAMA,  EIB  (associ- 
ate), FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  ICCO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDB— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  QIC,  OPEC,  UDEAC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $3.3  billion,  $3,300  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  -  5.0%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  manganese,  ura- 
nium, gold,  wood,  iron  ore 

Agriculture:  commercial— cocoa,  coffee, 
wood,  palm  oil,  rice;  main  food  crops — 
pineapples,  bananas,  manioc,  peanuts,  root 
crops;  imports  food 

Fishing:  catch  52,638  metric  tons  (1982) 

Major  industries:  petroleum  production, 
sawmills,  petroleum  refinery,  food  and 
beverage  processing;  mining  of  increasing 
importance;  major  minerals — manganese, 
uranium,  iron  (not  produced) 

Electric  power:  280,000  kW  capacity;  981 
million  kWh  produced,  960  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1984);  crude 
petroleum,  wood  and  wood  products, 
minerals  (manganese,  uranium  concen- 
trates, gold) 

Imports:  $0.9  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  mining, 
roadbuilding  machinery,  electrical  equip- 
ment, transport  vehicles,  foodstuffs,  textiles 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  US,  FRG 

Budget:  revenues,  $1.25  billion;  current 
expenditures,  $1.31  billion  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 

Railroads:  970  km  1.437-meter  standard 
gauge  under  construction;  338  km  are 
completed 

Highways:  7,393  km  total;  300  km  paved, 
3,493  km  gravel  and  improved,  3,600  km 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  about  1,600  km  peren- 
nially navigable 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  270  km;  refined 
products,  14  km 

Ports:  2  major  (Owendo  and  Port-Gentil), 
3  minor 

Civil  air:  7  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  80  total,  74  usable;  9  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  22  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  system  of 
open-wire,  radio-relay,  tropospheric  scatter 
links  and  radiocommunication  stations; 
13,800  telephones  (1.4  per  100  popl.);  6 
AM,  6  FM,  8  TV  stations;  2  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  269,000; 
134,000  fit  for  military  service;  8,000 
reach  military  age  (20)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1984,  $67.2  million;  4.9%  of 
central  government  budget 


86 


The  Gambia 


Brikama 


Boundary  representation  is 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


Sec  regional  mip  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  11,300  km2;  land  area:  10,000 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Delaware 

Land  boundary:  740  km  with  Senegal 
Coastline:  80  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 
Senegal  is  indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  rainy  season  (June 
to  November);  cooler,  dry  season  (Novem- 
ber to  May) 

Terrain:  flood  plain  of  Gambia  River 
flanked  by  some  low  hills 

Land  use:  16%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  9%  meadows  and  pastures;  20% 
forest  and  woodland;  55%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation 

Special  notes:  almost  an  enclave  of 
Senegal 


Population:  760,362  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.44% 

Nationality:  noun — Gambian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Gambian 

Ethnic  divisions:  99%  African  (42%  Man- 
dinka,  18%  Fula,  16%  Wolof,  10%  Jola,  9% 
Serahuli,  4%  other);  1%  non-Gambian 


Religion:  90%  Muslim,  9%  Christian,  1% 
indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  English  (official);  Mandinka, 
Wolof,  Fula,  other  indigenous  vernaculars 

Infant  mortality  rate:  174/1,000 
Life  expectancy:  42 
Literacy:  12% 

Labor  force:  165,000  (1983  est);  75.0% 
agriculture;  18.9%  industry,  commerce, 
and  services;  6.1%  government 

Organized  labor:  25-30%  of  wage  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  The  Gambia 

Type:  republic;  independent  since  Feb- 
ruary 1965;  in  1982  The  Gambia  and 
Senegal  formed  a  loose  confederation 
named  Senegambia  that  calls  for  the 
eventual  integration  of  their  armed  forces 
and  economic  cooperation 

Capital:  Banjul 

Administrative  divisions:  Banjul  and  five 
divisions 

Legal  system:  based  on  a  composite  of 
English  common  law,  Koranic  law,  and 
customary  law;  constitution  came  into 
force  upon  independence  in  1965,  new 
republican  constitution  adopted  in  April 
1970;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction, 
with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  18 
February 

Branches:  unicameral  legislative  branch 
(43-member  parliament),  in  which  four 
seats  are  reserved  for  tribal  chiefs,  four  are 
government  appointed,  35  are  filled  by 
election  for  five-year  terms,  a  Speaker  is 
elected  by  the  House,  and  the  Attorney 
General  is  an  appointed  member;  indepen- 
dent judiciary 

Government  leader:  Sir  Dawda  Kairaba 
JAWARA,  President  (since  February  1970) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  People's 
Progressive  Party  (PPP),  secretary  general, 
Dawda  K.  Jawara;  National  Convention 
Party  (NCP),  Sheriff  Dibba;  Gambian 
People's  Party  (GPP),  Assan  Musa  Camara; 
United  Party  (UP) 


Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  21 

Elections:  general  election  held  March 
1987 

Voting  strength:  PPP  27  seats,  NCP  4 
seats,  others  4  seats 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfBD,  APC,  Commonwealth, 
EGA,  ECOWAS,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IMF, 
IMO,  IRC,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  OIC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $125  million,  about  $200  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  -7.8%  (FY84) 

Natural  resources:  fish 

Agriculture:  peanuts,  millet,  sorghum,  rice, 
maize,  palm  kernels,  cotton 

Fishing:  catch  9,600  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  peanut  processing, 
tourism,  brewing,  soft  drinks,  agricultural 
machinery  assembly,  small  woodworking 
and  metalworking,  clothing 

Electric  power:  29,000  kW  capacity;  63 
million  kWh  produced,  81  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $59  million  (f.o.b.,  FY85  est.) 
peanuts  and  peanut  products,  fish,  palm 
kernels 

Imports:  $73  million  (f.o.b.,  FY85  est.); 
textiles,  foodstuffs,  tobacco,  machinery, 
petroleum  products,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — mainly 
EC,  Africa;  imports — EC,  Africa 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $283  million;  US 
(FY70-85),  $54  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $44.2  million;  current 
expenditures,  $34.90  million;  development 
expenditures,  $19.7  million  (1982-83  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.52 

dalasi=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 


87 


The  Gambia  (continued) 


German  Democratic  Republic 
(East  Germany) 


Highways:  3,083  km  total;  431  km  paved, 
501  km  gravel/laterite,  and  2,151  km 
unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  400  km 

Ports:  1  major  (Banjul) 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  network 
of  radio-relay  and  wire;  3,500  telephones 
(0.5  per  100  popl.);  2  FM,  3  AM  ,  1  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  paramilitary  Gendar- 
merie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  166,000; 
83,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1981,  $2.4  million;  6.2%  of  central 
government  budget;  includes  fire  and 
police  expenditures 


So 

The  final  borders 
Germany  have  not 
been  established 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  108,330  km2;  land  area: 

105,980  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Virginia 

Land  boundaries:  2,309  km  total 

Coastline:  901  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  it  is  US  policy  that 
the  final  borders  of  Germany  have  not 
been  established 

Climate:  temperate;  cloudy,  cold  winters 
with  frequent  rain  and  snow;  cool,  wet 
summers 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  plain  with  hills  and 
mountains  in  south 

Land  use:  45%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  12%  meadows  and  pastures;  28% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 

Environment:  significant  deforestation  due 
to  air  pollution,  acid  rain 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  North- 
ern European  Plain  and  near  entrance  to 
Baltic  Sea;  West  Berlin  is  an  enclave 
(about  100  km  from  FRG) 


People 

Population:  16,610,265,  including  East 
Berlin  (July  1987),  average  annual  growth 
rate -0.10% 

Nationality:  noun — German(s);  adjective — 
German 

Ethnic  divisions:  99.7%  German,  0.3% 
Slavic  and  other 

Religion:  47%  Protestant,  7%  Roman 
Catholic,  46%  unaffiliated  or  other;  less 
than  5%  of  Protestants  and  about  25%  of 
Roman  Catholics  active  participants 

Language:  German,  Serbian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  9.6/1,000  (1985) 

Life  expectancy:  men  69.6,  women  75.4 

(1984) 

Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  8.937  million;  37.9%  indus- 
try, 21.0%  services,  10.2%  commerce, 
10.8%  agriculture  and  forestry,  7.4% 
transport  and  communications,  6.8% 
construction,  3.1%  handicrafts,  2.8%  other 
(1985) 

Organized  labor:  87.7%  of  total  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  German  Democratic  Re- 
public 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  East  Berlin  (not  officially  recog- 
nized by  US,  UK,  and  France,  which 
together  with  the  USSR  have  special  rights 
and  responsibilities  in  Berlin) 

Administrative  divisions:  (excluding  East 
Berlin)  14  districts  (Bezirke),  218  counties 
(Kreise),  7,570  communities  (Gemeinden) 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  modified 
by  Communist  legal  theory;  new  constitu- 
tion adopted  1974;  court  system  parallels 
administrative  divisions;  no  judicial  review 
of  legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  com- 
pulsory ICJ  jurisdiction;  more  stringent 
penal  code  adopted  in  1968  and  amended 
in  1974  and  1979 

National  holiday:  Foundation  of  German 
Democratic  Republic,  7  October 


Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (People's 
Chamber — Volkskammer,  elected  directly); 
executive  (Council  of  State,  Council  of 
Ministers);  judiciary  (Supreme  Court); 
entire  structure  dominated  by  Socialist 
Unity  (Communist)  Party 

Government  leaders:  Erich  HONECKER, 
Chairman,  Council  of  State  (Head  of  State; 
since  October  1976);  Willi  STOPH,  Chair- 
man, Council  of  Ministers  (Premier;  since 
October  1976) 
Suffrage:  all  citizens  age  18  and  over 

Elections:  national  every  five  years;  pre- 
pared by  an  electoral  commission  of  the 
National  Front;  ballot  supposed  to  be 
secret  and  voters  permitted  to  strike  names 
off  ballot;  more  candidates  than  offices 
available;  parliamentary  election  held  8 
June  1986;  local  elections  held  6  May  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Socialist 
Unity  (Communist)  Party  of  Germany 
(SED),  headed  by  General  Secretary  Erich 
Honecker,  dominates  the  regime;  four 
token  parties  (Christian  Democratic  Union, 
National  Democratic  Party,  Liberal  Demo- 
cratic Party,  and  Democratic  Peasants' 
Party)  and  an  amalgam  of  special  interest 
organizations  participate  with  the  SED  in 
National  Front 

Voting  strength:  1986  parliamentary 
elections  and  1984  local  elections;  over 
99%  voted  the  regime  slate 

Communists:  2.195  million  party  members 
(1986) 

Other  special  interest  groups:  Free  Ger- 
man Youth,  Free  German  Trade  Union 
Federation,  Democratic  Women's  League, 
Cultural  League  of  the  German  Demo- 
cratic Republic  (all  Communist  dominated) 

Member  of:  CEMA,  IAEA,  ICES,  ILO, 
IMO,  IPU,  ITU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
Warsaw  Pact,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $174.7  billion,  $10,400  per  capita; 
growth  rate  2.4%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  lignite  coal,  potash, 
uranium,  copper,  natural  gas 

Agriculture:  food  deficit  area;  potatoes, 
rye,  wheat,  barley,  oats 


Fishing:  catch  264,900  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  metal  fabrication, 

chemicals,  light  industry,  brown  coal, 

shipbuilding 

Shortages:  grain,  vegetables,  vegetable  oil, 

beef,  coking  coal,  coke,  crude  oil,  rolled 

steel  products,  nonferrous  metals 

Crude  steel:  7.9  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 471  kg  per  capita  (1985) 
Electric  power:  (including  East  Berlin) 
23,704,000  kW  capacity;  118,000  million 
kWh  produced,  7,070  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $23.9  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.) 
Imports:  $22.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.) 

Major  trade  partners:  66.1%  Socialist 
countries,  29.4%  developed  West,  4.5%  less 
developed  countries  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.95 
marks=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  14,226  km  total;  13,941  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  285  km 
1.000-meter  or  other  narrow  gauge,  3,830 
(est.)  km  1.435-meter  double  track  stan- 
dard gauge;  2,321  km  overhead  electrified 
(1984) 

Highways:  120,314  km  total;  47,261  km 

concrete,  asphalt,  stone  block,  of  which 

1,913  km  are  autobahn  and  limited  access 

roads,  11,251  are  trunk  roads,  and  34,097 

are  regional  roads;  75,053  municipal  roads 

(1984) 

Inland  waterways:  2,319  km  (1984) 

Freight  carried:  rail — 349  million  metric 
tons,  58.8  billion  metric  tons/km;  high- 
way— 558  million  metric  tons,  14.0  billion 
metric  tons/km;  waterway — 16.2  million 
metric  tons,  2.84  billion  metric  tons/km 
(excluding  international  transit  traffic) 
(1985) 

Pipelines:  oil,  1,301  km;  refined  products, 
500  km;  natural  gas  2,000  km 
Ports:  4  major  (Rostock,  Wismar,  Stral- 
sund,  Sassnitz),  13  minor;  principal  inland 
waterway  ports  are  East  Berlin,  Riesa, 
Magdeburg,  and  Eisenhuttenstadt 

Civil  air:  45  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  185  total;  48  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  23  AM,  17  FM,  13 
TV  stations;  15  Soviet  TV  relays;  6,015,400 
TV  sets;  6,509,932  receiver  sets;  at  least  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  National  People's  Army,  Border 
Troops,  Ministry  of  State  Security  Guard 
Regiment,  Air  and  Air  Defense  Command, 
People's  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,263,000;  3,419,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 108,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  14.0  billion 
marks;  5.8%  of  total  budget 


Germany,  Federal  Republic  of 
(West  Germany) 


The  final  borders  of 
Germany  have  not 
been  established 


See  rt(lonil  mip  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  248,580  km2;  land  area: 
244,280  km2  (including  West  Berlin) 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Wyoming 

Land  boundaries:  4,232  km  total 

Coastline:  1,488  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm  (extends,  at  one 
point,  to  16  nm  in  the  Helgolander 
Bucht) 

Boundary  disputes:  it  is  US  policy  that 
the  final  borders  of  Germany  have  not 
been  established 

Climate:  temperate  and  marine;  cool, 
cloudy,  wet  winters  and  summers;  occa- 
sional warm,  tropical  foehn  wind 

Terrain:  lowlands  in  north,  uplands  in 

center,  Bavarian  Alps  in  south 

Land  use:  30%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 

crops;  19%  meadows  and  pastures;  30% 

forest  and  woodland;  20%  other;  includes 

1%  irrigated 

Environment:  air  and  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  separated  from  GDR  by  a 
highly  secured  strip  that  extends  entire 
length  of  frontier;  West  Berlin  is  an  ex- 
clave  (about  100  km  from  FRG) 


Population:  60,989,419,  including  West 

Berlin  (July  1987),  average  annual  growth 

rate  -0.03% 

Nationality:  noun — German(s);  adjective — 

German 

Ethnic  divisions:  primarily  German; 

Danish  minority 

Religion:  45%  Roman  Catholic,  44% 

Protestant,  11%  other 

Language:  German 
Infant  mortality  rate:  11/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  67.2,  women  73.4 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  27.8  million,  including 
armed  forces  (est.  avg.  1985);  41.6%  indus- 
try, 34.7%  services  and  other,  18.2%  trade 
and  transport,  5.4%  agriculture;  9.0% 
unemployment  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  9.3  million  total,  7.76 
million  in  German  Trade  Union  Federa- 
tion (DGB);  union  membership  constitutes 
about  40%  of  union-eligible  labor  force, 
34%  of  total  labor  force,  and  35%  of  wage 
and  salary  earners  (1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Federal  Republic  of  Ger- 
many 

Type:  federal  republic 
Capital:  Bonn 

Administrative  divisions:  10  lander 
(states);  Western  sectors  of  Berlin  are 
ultimately  controlled  by  US,  UK,  and 
France;  Eastern  sector  by  USSR;  the  four 
countries  share  special  rights  and  responsi- 
bilities in  Berlin 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  with  indig- 
enous concepts;  constitution  adopted  1949; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Federal  Constitutional  Court;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

Branches:  bicameral  parliament — Bun- 
desrat  (Federal  Council,  upper  house), 
Bundestag  (National  Assembly,  lower 
house);  President  (titular  head  of  state), 
Chancellor  (executive  head  of  govern- 
ment); independent  judiciary 


Government  leaders:  Richard  von 
WEIZSACKER,  President  (since  July 
1984);  Dr.  Helmut  KOHL,  Chancellor 
(since  October  1982) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  national  election  generally  held 
every  four  years;  last  held  on  25  January 
1987;  next  scheduled  for  1991 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Union  (CDU),  Helmut  Kohl, 
Heiner  Geissler,  Walter  Wallmann, 
Gerhard  Stoltenberg,  Ernst  Albrecht, 
Alfred  Dregger,  Lothar  Spaeth;  Christian 
Social  Union  (CSU),  Franz-Josef  Strauss, 
Gerold  Tandler,  Friedrich  Zimmermann, 
Theo  Waigel;  Free  Democratic  Party 
(FDP),  Martin  Bangemann,  Hans-Dietrich 
Genscher,  Wolfgang  Mischnick,  Helmut 
Haussmann;  Social  Democratic  Party 
(SPD),  Hans-Jochen  Vogel,  Johannes  Rau, 
Horst  Ehmke,  Egon  Bahr,  Oskar  Lafon- 
taine;  National  Democratic  Party  (NPD), 
Martin  Mussgnug;  Communist  Party 
(DKP),  Herbert  Mies;  Green  Party 
(Greens),  Rainer  Trampert,  Otto  Schily, 
Lukas  Beckmann,  Joschka  Fischer,  Jutta 
Ditfurth,  Thomas  Ebermann 
Voting  strength:  (1987  election)  44.3% 
CDU/CSU,  37.0%  SPD,  9.1%  FDP,  8.3% 
Greens,  1.3%  other 

Communists:  about  40,000  members  and 
supporters 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  expel- 
lee, refugee,  and  veterans  groups 
Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EC,  EIB,  ELDO,  EMS,  ESRO, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ICES,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IEA,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc 
Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITC,  ITU,  NATO,  OAS 
(observer),  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WEU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $628.2  billion,  $10,300  per  capita; 
56.4%  private  consumption,  19.4%  invest- 
ment, 19.8%  public  consumption,  3.9%  net 
foreign  balance;  real  growth  rate  2.5%; 
average  annual  exchange  rate 
DM2.94=US$1  (1985) 


90 


Ghana 


Natural  resources:  iron,  coal,  potash 

Agriculture:  grains,  potatoes,  sugar  beets; 
75%  self-sufficient 

Fishing:  catch  293,170  metric  tons,  $112.1 
million;  exports  $192  million,  imports  $589 
million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  among  world's  largest 
producers  of  iron,  steel,  coal,  cement, 
chemicals,  machinery,  ships,  vehicles, 
machine  tools 

Shortages:  fats  and  oils,  pulses,  tropical 
products,  sugar,  cotton,  wool,  rubber, 
petroleum,  iron  ore,  bauxite,  nonferrous 
metals,  sulfur 

Crude  steel:  60  million  metric  tons  capac- 
ity (est);  37.1  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 610  kg  per  capita  (1986) 

Electric  power:  (including  West  Berlin) 
99,670,000  kW  capacity;  414,000  million 
kWh  produced,  6,820  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $174  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  manu- 
factures 85%  (including  machines  and 
machine  tools,  chemicals,  motor  vehicles, 
iron  and  steel  products),  agricultural  prod- 
ucts 6%,  fuels  3%,  raw  materials  3%,  other 
3% 

Imports:  $145.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
manufactures  56%,  fuels  20%,  agricultural 
products  12%,  raw  materials  9%,  other  3% 

Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  EC  47.8% 
(France  11.6%,  Netherlands  10.3%,  UK 
8%,  Italy  7.8%,  Belgium-Luxembourg 
6.8%),  other  Europe  16.7%,  less  developed 
countries  14.5%,  US  8.4%,  Communist 
6.5%,  OPEC  5.7% 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $43.4  billion 

Budget:  revenues,  $80.3  billion;  federal 
government  expenditures,  $88. 1  billion; 
deficit,  $7.8  billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.03 
marks=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  31,800  km  total;  27,778  km 
1.435-meter  government  owned,  standard 
gauge,  12,491  km  double  track;  11,396  km 


electrified;  4,022  km  nongovernment 
owned;  3,598  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge;  214  km  electrified,  424  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge;  186  km  electrified 

Highways:  466,305  km  total;  169,568  km 
classified,  includes  6,435  km  autobahn, 
32,460  km  national  highways  (Bundes- 
strassen),  65,425  km  state  highways  (Lan- 
desstrassen),  65,248  km  county  roads 
(Kreisstrassen);  296,737  km  of  unclassified 
communal  roads  (Gemeindestrassen) 

Inland  waterways:  5,222  km,  of  which 
almost  70%  usable  by  craft  of  990-metric 
ton  capacity  or  larger 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  2,343  km;  refined 
products,  3,389  km;  natural  gas,  95,414  km 

Ports:  9  major,  3  secondary,  15  minor 
Civil  air:  194  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  479  total,  440  usable;  237  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  34  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  42  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  highly  developed, 
modern  telecommunication  service  to  all 
parts  of  the  country;  fully  adequate  in  all 
respects;  37.9  million  telephones  (62.1  per 
100  popl.);  80  AM,  472  FM,  and  6,200  TV 
stations  (including  repeaters);  6  submarine 
coaxial  cables;  3  satellite  stations  with  total 
of  10  antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
16,251,000;  14,090,000  fit  for  military 
service;  391,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $27.1  billion;  22.98%  of 
the  proposed  central  government  budget 


See  regional  mip  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  238,540  km2;  land  area: 
230,020  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Oregon 

Land  boundaries:  2,285  km  total 
Coastline:  539  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  100  fathoms  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  warm  and  compar- 
atively dry  along  southeast  coast;  hot  and 
humid  in  southwest,  hot  and  dry  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  low  plains  with  dissected 
plateau  in  south-central  area 

Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  7%  permanent 
crops;  15%  meadows  and  pastures;  37% 
forest  and  woodland;  36%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recent  drought  in  north 
severely  affecting  marginal  agricultural 
activities;  deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil 
erosion;  dry,  northeasterly  harmattan  wind 
(January  to  March) 

Special  notes:  Lake  Volta  is  world's  largest 
artificial  lake 


Population:  13,948,925  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.89% 

Nationality:  noun  —  Ghanaian(s);  adjec- 
tive —  Ghanaian 


91 


Ghana  (continued) 


Ethnic  divisions:  99.8%  black  African 
(major  tribes  Akan,  Ewe,  Ga),  0.2%  Euro- 
pean and  other 

Religion:  38%  indigenous  beliefs,  30% 
Muslim,  24%  Christian,  8%  other 

Language:  English  (official);  African  lan- 
guages include  44%  Akan,  16%  Mole- 
Dagbani,  13%  Ewe,  and  8%  Ga-Adangbe 

Infant  mortality  rate:  97/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  49 
Literacy:  30% 

Labor  force:  3.7  million;  54.7%  agriculture 
and  fishing;  18.7%  industry;  15.2%  sales 
and  clerical;  7.7%  services,  transportation, 
and  communications;  3.7%  professional; 
400,000  unemployed 

Organized  labor:  467,000  (about  13%  of 
labor  force) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Ghana 

Type:  military;  31  December  1981  coup 
ended  two-year-old  civilian  government, 
suspended  constitution  and  political 
activity 

Capital:  Accra 

Administrative  divisions:  8  administrative 
regions  and  separate  Greater  Accra  Area; 
regions  subdivided  into  58  districts  and 
267  local  administrative  districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  customary  law;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  6 
March 

Branches:  executive  authority  vested  in 
seven-member  Provisional  National  De- 
fense Council  (PNDC);  on  21  January  1982 
PNDC  appointed  secretaries  to  head  most 
ministries 

Government  leader:  Fit.  Lt.  (Ret.)  Jerry 
John  RAWLINGS,  Chairman  of  PNDC 
(since  December  1981) 

Elections:  none  scheduled  since  1981  coup 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  outlawed  after  31  December  1981 
coup 

Communists:  a  small  number  of  Commu- 
nists and  sympathizers 


Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  ECA, 
ECOWAS,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  World  Confederation  of 
Labor,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $10.5  billion;  real  growth  rate 

-7.2%  (1982  est.) 

Natural  resources:  gold,  timber,  industrial 
diamonds,  bauxite,  manganese,  fish 

Agriculture:  main  crop — cocoa;  others — 
root  crops,  corn,  sorghum,  millet,  coffee, 
peanuts;  not  self-sufficient  but  has  that 
potential 

Fishing:  catch  241,000  metric  tons  (1982) 

Major  industries:  mining,  lumbering,  light 
manufacturing,  fishing,  aluminum 

Electric  power:  1,200,000  kW  capacity; 
3,680  million  kWh  produced,  270  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $617  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  cocoa 
(about  60%),  wood,  gold,  diamonds,  man- 
ganese, bauxite,  aluminum  (aluminum 
regularly  excluded  from  balance-of- 
payments  data) 

Imports:  $731  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  textiles 
and  other  manufactured  goods,  food,  fuels, 
transport  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  EC,  US 

Budget:  revenues,  $1.8  billion;  expendi- 
tures and  net  lending,  $3.5  billion 
(1981/82) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  90.09 
cedis=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  953  km,  all  1.067-meter  gauge; 
32  km  double  track;  diesel  locomotives 
gradually  replacing  steam  engines 

Highways:  32,250  km  total;  6,084  km 
concrete  or  bituminous  surface,  26,166  km 
gravel,  laterite,  and  improved  earth 
surfaces 


Inland  waterways:  Volta,  Ankobra,  and 
Tano  rivers  provide  168  km  of  perennial 
navigation  for  launches  and  lighters;  Lake 
Volta  reservoir  provides  1,125  km  of 
arterial  and  feeder  waterways 

Pipelines:  3  km  (refined  products) 
Ports:  2  major  (Tema,  Takoradi) 
Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  10  total,  9  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
open-wire  and  cable,  radio-relay  links; 
68,900  telephones  (0.6  per  100  popl.);  6 
AM,  9  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Palace  Guard,  paramilitary 
People's  Militia 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
3,203,000;  1,797,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 162,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1984,  $64.4  million;  8%  of  central 
government  budget 


92 


Gibraltar 


Mediterranean 
Sea 


Strait  of  Gibraltar 
See  regional  map  V 


Lighthouse 


Geography 

Total  area:  6.5  km2;  land  area:  6.5  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-twenty- 
seventh  the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Land  boundaries:  1.6  km  total 
Coastline:  12  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  occasional 
source  of  friction  between  Spain  and  UK 

Climate:  Mediterranean  with  mild  winters 
and  warm  summers 

Terrain:  a  narrow  coastal  lowland  borders 
The  Rock 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  natural  fresh  water  sources 
are  very  meager  so  large  water  catchments 
(concrete  or  natural  rock)  collect  rain 
water 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  Strait 
of  Gibraltar  that  links  Atlantic  Ocean  and 
Mediterranean  Sea 


Population:  29,048  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.36% 

Nationality:  noun — Gibraltarian;  adjec- 
tive— Gibraltar 


Ethnic  divisions:  mostly  Italian,  English, 
Maltese,  Portuguese,  and  Spanish  descent 

Religion:  75%  Roman  Catholic,  8% 
Church  of  England,  2.25%  Jewish 

Language:  English  and  Spanish  are  pri- 
mary languages;  Italian,  Portuguese,  and 
Russian  also  spoken;  English  used  in  the 
schools  and  for  official  purposes 

Literacy:  about  99% 

Labor  force:  about  14,800  (including 
non-Gibraltar  laborers) 

Organized  labor:  over  6,000 

Government 

Official  name:  Gibraltar 

Type:  British  dependent  territory 

Capital:  Gibraltar 

Legal  system:  English  law;  constitutional 
talks  in  July  1968;  new  system  effected  in 
1969  after  electoral  inquiry 

Branches:  parliamentary  system  compris- 
ing the  Gibraltar  House  of  the  Assembly 
(15  elected  members  and  3  ex  officio 
members),  the  Council  of  Ministers  headed 
by  the  Chief  Minister,  and  the  Gibraltar 
Council;  the  Governor  is  appointed  by  the 
Crown 

Government  leaders:  Air  Chief  Marshal 
Sir  Peter  TERRY,  Governor  and  Com- 
mander in  Chief  (since  1985);  Sir  Joshua  A. 
HASSAN,  Chief  Minister  (1964-69  and 
since  1972) 

Suffrage:  all  adult  Gibraltarians,  plus  other 
UK  subjects  resident  six  months  or  more 

Elections:  every  four  years;  last  held  in 
January  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Gibraltar 
Labor  Party/Association  for  the  Advance- 
ment of  Civil  Rights  (GCL/AACR),  Sir 
Joshua  Hassan;  Democratic  Party  of  Brit- 
ish Gibraltar  (DPBG),  Peter  Isola;  Socialist 
Labor  Party,  Joe  Bossano 

Voting  strength:  (January  1984)  House  of 
the  Assembly— GCL/AACR,  8  seats; 
Socialist  Labor,  7  seats 

Communists:  negligible 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 

Housewives  Association,  Chamber  of 
Commerce,  Gibraltar  Representatives 
Organization 


Economy 

Economic  activity  in  Gibraltar  centers  on 
commerce  and  large  British  naval  and  air 
bases;  nearly  all  trade  in  the  well- 
developed  port  is  transit  trade  and  port 
serves  also  as  important  supply  depot  for 
fuel,  water,  and  ships'  wares;  recently  built 
dockyards  and  machine  shops  provide 
maintenance  and  repair  services  to  3,500- 
4,000  vessels  that  call  at  Gibraltar  each 
year;  UK  military  establishments  and  the 
civil  government  employ  nearly  half  the 
insured  labor  force,  and  a  recently  an- 
nounced decision  to  close  the  Royal  Navy 
dockyard  will  significantly  add  to  unem- 
ployment; local  industry  is  confined  to 
manufacture  of  tobacco,  roasted  coffee, 
ice,  mineral  waters,  candy,  beer,  and 
canned  fish;  some  factories  for  manufac- 
ture of  clothing  are  being  developed;  a 
small  segment  of  the  local  population 
makes  its  livelihood  by  fishing;  in  recent 
years  tourism  has  increased  in  importance 

Electric  power:  60,000  kW  capacity;  200 
million  kWh  produced,  6,570  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $47.8  million  (1983);  principally 
reexports  of  tobacco,  petroleum,  and  wine 

Imports:  $136.8  million  (1983);  principally 
manufactured  goods,  fuels,  and  foodstuffs; 
65%  from  UK 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  Morocco, 
Portugal,  Netherlands 

Budget:  revenues,  $89  million;  expendi- 
tures, $84.2  million  (FY82) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.70  Gibraltar 
pound=0.70  pound  sterling=US$l  (No- 
vember 1986) 

Communications 

Railroads:  1.000-meter  gauge  system  in 
dockyard  area  only 

Highways:  50  km,  mostly  good  bitumen 
and  concrete 

Ports:  1  major  (Gibraltar) 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m 


93 


Gibraltar  (continued) 


Greece 


Telecommunications:  adequate  interna- 
tional radiocommunication  facilities; 
automatic  telephone  system  serving  9,400 
telephones  (31.5  per  100  popl.);  1  AM,  6 
FM,  4  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 

Branches:  Gibraltar  Regiment 


'50km 


Corfu 


Sea 


OfLtmnos 


Aegean  Sea 

'  SVfc/OS 
ATHENS       V 


.^g. 
•'*-        '      ', 

*  ' 


Mediterranean  Sea          r~^\ ^-^-.  _n      * 


Srr  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  131,940  km2;  land  area: 
130,800  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
York  State 

Land  boundaries:  1,191  km  total 
Coastline:  13,676  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  6  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  complex  mari- 
time and  air  (but  not  territorial)  disputes 
with  Turkey  in  Aegean  Sea;  Cyprus  ques- 
tion with  Turkey;  Macedonia  question 
with  Bulgaria  and  Yugoslavia;  Northern 
Epirus  question  with  Albania 

Climate:  temperate;  mild,  wet  winters; 
hot,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  ranges 
extending  into  sea  as  peninsulas  or  chains 
of  islands 

Land  use:  23%  arable  land;  8%  permanent 
crops;  40%  meadows  and  pastures;  20% 
forest  and  woodland;  9%  other;  includes 
7%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  severe  earth- 
quakes; archipelago  of  2,000  islands;  air 
pollution 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  dominat- 
ing the  Aegean  Sea  and  southern  approach 
to  Turkish  Straits 


Population:  9,987,785  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.28% 
Nationality:  noun — Greek(s);  adjective — 
Greek 

Ethnic  divisions:  97.7%  Greek,  1.3% 
Turkish;  1.0%  Vlach,  Slav,  Albanian, 
Pomach  (note — the  Greek  Government 
states  there  are  no  ethnic  divisions  in 
Greece) 

Religion:  98%  Greek  Orthodox,  1.3% 
Muslim,  0.7%  other 

Language:  Greek  (official);  English  and 
French  widely  understood 
Infant  mortality  rate:  13.8/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  72,  women  75 
Literacy:  95% 

Labor  force:  3.86  million  (1985);  43% 
services,  27%  agriculture,  20%  manufactur- 
ing and  mining,  7%  construction;  8.3% 
unemployment 

Organized  labor:  10-15%  of  total  labor 
force,  20-25%  of  urban  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Hellenic  Republic 
Type:  presidential  parliamentary  govern- 
ment; monarchy  rejected  by  referendum  8 
December  1974 
Capital:  Athens 

Administrative  divisions:  51  departments 
(nomoi) 

Legal  system:  new  constitution  enacted  in 
June  1975 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 
March 

Branches:  executive  consisting  of  a  Presi- 
dent, elected  by  the  Vouli  (Parliament),  a 
Prime  Minister,  and  a  Cabinet;  unicameral 
legislature  consisting  of  the  300-member 
Vouli;  and  an  independent  judiciary 
Government  leaders:  Dr.  Andreas 
PAPANDREOU,  Prime  Minister  (since 
1981);  Christos  SARTZETAKIS,  President 
(since  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  age  18  and  over 
Elections:  every  four  years;  Papandreou's 
Panhellenic  Socialist  Movement  defeated 
the  incumbent  New  Democracy  govern- 
ment of  George  Rallis  in  elections  held  on 
18  October  1981;  PASOK  was  reelected  in 
June  1985 


94 


Greenland 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Panhellenic 
Socialist  Movement  (PASOK),  Andreas 
Papandreou;  New  Democracy  (ND),  Con- 
stantine  Mitsotakis;  Democratic  Renewal 
(DR),  Constantine  Stefanopoulos;  Commu- 
nist Party-Exterior  (KKE-Ext),  Harilaos 
Florakis;  Communist  Party-Interior 
(KKE-Int),  Leonidas  Kyrkos 

Voting  strength:  Parliament — Panhellenic 
Socialist  Movement,  157  seats;  New  De- 
mocracy, 111  seats;  Democratic  Renewal, 
10  seats;  Communists  (Exterior),  10  seats; 
Communists  (Interior),  1  seat;  indepen- 
dents, 11  seats 

Communists:  an  estimated  60,000  mem- 
bers and  sympathizers 

Member  of:  EC,  EIB  (associate),  EMA, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
NATO,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $32.8  billion,  $3,300  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  2.1%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  lignite,  mag- 
nesite,  oil 

Agriculture:  wheat,  olives,  tobacco,  cotton, 
raisins,  fruit;  nearly  self-sufficient 

Major  industries:  food  and  tobacco  pro- 
cessing, textiles,  chemicals,  metal  products 

Crude  steel:  1.3  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1984  est.),  132  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  11,223,000  kW  capacity; 
29.580  million  kWh  produced,  2,970  kWh 
per  capita 

Exports:  $8.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  tobacco, 
minerals,  fruits,  textiles 

Imports:  $10.1  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  automotive  equipment,  petro- 
leum and  petroleum  products,  manufac- 
tured consumer  goods,  chemicals,  meat 
and  live  animals 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985  est.)  im- 
ports— 18.0%  FRG,  9.8%  Italy,  8.5%  Saudi 
Arabia,  6.7%  France,  6.1%  Netherlands; 
exports— 20.0%  FRG,  11.3%  Italy,  8.1% 
US,  8.0%  France,  4.1%  Netherlands 


Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im,  $525  million 
(1970-81);  other  Western  bilateral  (ODA 
and  OOF),  $1.1  billion  (1970-84);  Commu- 
nist countries  (1970-85),  $430  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85)  $2.6 
billion 

Budget:  central  government  revenues, 
$12.4  billion;  expenditures  $15.8  billion; 
deficit,  $3.4  billion  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  135.0  Greek 
drachmas=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,476  km  total;  1,565  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  of  which  36  km 
electrified  and  100  km  double  track,  889 
km  1.000-meter  gauge;  22  km  0.750-meter 
narrow  gauge;  all  government  owned 
Highways:  38,938  km  total;  16,090  km 
paved,  13,676  km  crushed  stone  and 
gravel,  5,632  km  improved  earth,  3,540 
km  unimproved  earth 
Inland  waterways:  system  consists  of 
three  coastal  canals  and  three  unconnected 
rivers,  which  provide  navigable  length  of 
just  under  80  km 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  26  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 547  km 

Ports:  4  major,  11  secondary,  42  minor 
Civil  air:  39  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  80  total,  78  usable;  58  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  20  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  21  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate,  modern 
networks  reach  all  areas  on  mainland 
islands;  3.52  million  telephones  (35.5  per 
100  popl.);  29  AM,  37  FM,  361  TV  sta- 
tions; 7  submarine  cables;  1  satellite  station 
with  2  Atlantic  Ocean  antennas,  1  Indian 
Ocean  antenna,  1  EUTELSAT  antenna 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Hellenic  Army,  Hellenic  Navy, 
Hellenic  Air  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,387,000;  1,837,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; about  80,000  reach  military  age  (21) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $2.6  billion;  16.1%  of 
central  government  budget 


Arctic  Ocean 


500km 


GODTHAB 

(NUUK) 


Oaqorto 
Sec  regional  map  II 


Ammaisalik 
Denmark  Strait 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,175,600  km2;  land  area: 
341,700  km2  (ice  free) 

Comparative  area:  about  three  times  the 
size  of  Texas 

Coastline:  44,087  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  4  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  arctic  to  subarctic;  cool  summers, 
cold  winters 

Terrain:  flat  to  gradually  sloping  icecap 

covers  all  but  narrow,  barren,  steep,  rocky 

coast 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 

crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  NEGL% 

forest  and  woodland;  99%  other 

Environment:  sparse  population  confined 
to  small  settlements  along  coast 

Special  notes:  dominates  North  Atlantic 
Ocean  between  North  America  and 
Europe 

People 

Population:  54,205  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.00% 

Nationality:  noun — Greenlander(s);  adjec- 
tive— Greenlandic 

Ethnic  divisions:  86%  Greenlander  (Eski- 
mos and  Greenland-born  whites),  14% 
Danish 


95 


Greenland  (continued) 


Grenada 


Religion:  Evangelical  Lutheran 
Language:  Danish,  Eskimo  dialects 
Infant  mortality  rate:  37/1,000  (1976-80) 
Life  expectancy:  men  59.7,  women  67.3 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  21,378;  largely  engaged  in 
fishing,  hunting,  and  sheep  breeding 

Government 

Official  name:  Greenland 

Type:  self-governing  province  of  Kingdom 
of  Denmark;  two  representatives  in  Danish 
parliament;  separate  Minister  for  Green- 
land in  the  Danish  Cabinet  (Ministry  to  be 
phased  out  during  1986-87) 

Capital:  Godthab  (Nuuk) 

Administrative  divisions:  3  counties,  18 
communes 

Legal  system:  Danish  law;  transformed 
from  colony  to  province  in  1953;  limited 
home  rule  began  in  spring  1979 

Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 
with  the  elected  25-seat  Landsting  and 
Danish  parliament;  executive  power  vested 
in  Premier  and  four-person  council;  19 
lower  courts 

Government  leaders:  MARGRETHE  II, 
Queen  (since  January  1972);  Jonathan 
MOTZFELDT,  Prime  Minister  (since  May 
1979) 

Suffrage:  universal,  but  not  compulsory, 
over  age  21 

Elections:  held  every  four  years;  most 
recent,  6  June  1984 

Political  parties:  Siumut,  11  seats  (moder- 
ate socialist,  advocating  more  distinct 
Greenland  identity  and  greater  autonomy 
from  Denmark);  Atassut  Party,  11  seats 
(more  conservative,  favors  continuing  close 
relations  with  Denmark);  Inuit  Ataqatigiit, 
3  seats  (Marxist-Leninist  party  favoring 
complete  independence  from  Denmark 
rather  than  home  rule) 

Economy 

GNP:  included  in  that  of  Denmark 

Natural  resources:  zinc,  lead,  iron  ore, 
coal,  molybdenum,  cryolite,  uranium,  fish 


Agriculture:  arable  areas  largely  in  hay; 
sheep  grazing;  garden  produce 

Fishing:  catch  107,725  tons  (1983);  exports 
$108.6  million  (1980) 

Major  industries:  mining,  fishing,  sealing 

Electric  power:  84,000  kW  capacity;  170 
million  kWh  produced,  3,150  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $168.4  million  (f.o.b.,  1980);  fish 
and  fish  products,  metallic  ores  and  con- 
centrates 

Imports:  $259.4  million  (c.i.f.,  1980); 
petroleum  and  petroleum  products,  ma- 
chinery and  transport  equipment,  food 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  (1980)  Denmark 
49.4%,  Finland  9.5%,  FRG  8.1%,  US  6.3%, 
UK  2.9% 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.37  Danish 
kroner=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  80  km 

Ports:  1  major,  7  secondary,  9  minor 

Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  10  total,  7  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  domestic 
and  international  service  provided  by 
cables  and  radio-relay;  17,900  telephones 
(31.0  per  100  popl.);  6  AM,  35  FM,  9  TV 
stations;  2  coaxial  submarine  cables;  1 
Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  Denmark 

Military  manpower:  included  with  Den- 
mark 


Carriacou 


Caribbean  «* 

Sea  Jf 

V 


Caribbean 
Sea 


Sec  rtjlonml  imp  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  340  km2;  land  area:  340  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  121  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  tempered  by  northeast 
trade  winds 

Terrain:  volcanic  in  origin  with  central 
mountains 

Land  use:  15%  arable  land;  26%  perma- 
nent crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures;  9% 
forest  and  woodland;  47%  other 

Environment:  lies  on  edge  of  hurricane 
belt;  hurricane  season  lasts  from  June  to 
November 

Special  notes:  islands  of  the  Grenadines 
group  are  divided  politically  with  St. 
Vincent  and  the  Grenadines 

People 

Population:  84,748  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  —0.49% 

Nationality:  noun — Grenadian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Grenadian 

Ethnic  divisions:  mainly  of  black  African 
descent 

Religion:  largely  Roman  Catholic;  Angli- 
can; other  Protestant  sects 

Language:  English  (official);  some  French 
patois 


96 


Infant  mortality  rate:  16.7/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  69 
Literacy:  85% 

Labor  force:  36,000;  31%  services,  24% 
agriculture,  8%  construction,  5%  manufac- 
turing, 31%  other;  35-40%  unemployment 

(1985) 

Organized  labor:  80%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Grenada 

Type:  independent  state;  recognizes  Eliza- 
beth II  as  Chief  of  State 

Capital:  St.  George's 
Administrative  divisions:  6  parishes 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  7 
February 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature 
(15-member  elected  House  of  Representa- 
tives and  13-member  appointed  Senate); 
executive  is  Cabinet  led  by  the  Prime 
Minister;  judiciary  consists  of  Grenada 
Supreme  Court,  composed  of  the  High 
Court  of  Justice  and  two-tier  Court  of 
Appeals 

Government  leaders:  Sir  Paul  SCOON, 
Governor  General  (since  1978);  Herbert 
BLAIZE,  Prime  Minister  (since  December 
1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  last  general  election  held  3 
December  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  New  Na- 
tional Party  (NNP)  is  ruling  party  and  was 
formed  in  1984  as  a  three-party  centrist 
coalition — Grenada  National  Party  (GNP), 
National  Democratic  Party  (NDP),  and 
Grenada  Democratic  Movement  (GDM); 
currently  the  NDP,  led  by  George  Brizan, 
and  the  GDM,  led  by  Francis  Alexis,  are 
not  represented  in  the  NNP;  former  Prime 
Minister  Sir  Eric  Gairy  revived  his  Gren- 
ada United  Labor  Party  (GULP)  in  1984; 
Grenada  Democratic  Labor  Party  (GDLP) 
was  formed  by  Marcel  Peters,  who  was 
elected  as  a  GULP  candidate  but  changed 
parties  after  assuming  his  seat  in  the 
House  of  Representatives;  Democratic 


Labor  Congress  (DLC)  was  formed  in  1986 
by  disaffected  NNP  member  Kenny 
Lalsingh  and  Winston  Whyte  of  Christian 
Democratic  Labor  Party  (CDLP);  the 
Maurice  Bishop  Patriotic  Movement 
(MBPM)  was  formed  in  May  1984  and  is 
composed  of  pro-Cuban  Socialists;  the 
New  Jewel  Movement  (NJM)  consists  of 
supporters  of  Bernard  Coard  and  other 
hardliners  accused  of  killing  Bishop  in 
1983;  GDLP  and  DLC  form  the  official 
opposition;  Marcel  Peters  was  recently 
replaced  as  leader  of  the  parliamentary 
opposition  by  Phinsley  St.  Louis,  leader  of 
the  newly  formed  Organization  for  Na- 
tional Equality  (ONE) 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  NNP  59%, 
GULP  36%,  MBPM  5%;  parliamentary 
seats— NNP,  14;  GDLP,  1 

Communists:  the  New  Jewel  Movement 
(which  is  currently  trying  to  revitalize)  and 
the  less  hardline  Maurice  Bishop  Patriotic 
Movement 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  ITU,  NAM,  OAS, 
PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  $86.8  million  (1984  est),  $1,000  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  3.0%  (1986  est.); 
average  inflation  rate  6.0%  (1985  est.) 

Agriculture:  cocoa,  nutmeg,  mace,  and 
bananas 

Electric  power:  11,380  kW  capacity;  24 
million  kWh  produced,  280  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $22.1  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  cocoa 
beans,  nutmeg,  bananas,  mace 

Imports:  $62.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  food, 
machinery  and  transport  equipment,  oil, 
building  materials 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 35%  UK, 
9%  FRG,  6%  Netherlands,  6%  US,  (1984 
est.);  imports— 20%  UK,  17%  US,  17% 
Trinidad  and  Tobago  (1983) 

Budget:  revenues,  $32  million;  expendi- 
tures, $61  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 


Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  1,000  km  total;  600  km  paved, 
300  km  otherwise  improved;  100  km 
unimproved 

Ports:  1  major  (St.  George's),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  3  total,  3  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  automatic,  islan- 
dwide  telephone  system  with  5,650  tele- 
phones (5.1  per  100  popl.);  new  SHF  links 
to  Trinidad  and  Tobago  and  St.  Vincent; 
VHP  and  UHF  links  to  Trinidad  and 
Carriacou;  1  AM  and  1  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Grenada  Police  Force 


97 


Guadeloupe 


20km 


ties  des  Samtes 

•s 

SM  regloni)  map  III 


St   Martin  and  St  Barthelemy 
are  not  shown 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,780  km2;  land  area:  1,760 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  half  the  size  of 
Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  306  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  subtropical  tempered  by  trade 
winds;  relatively  high  humidity 

Terrain:  Basse- Terre  is  volcanic  in  origin 
with  interior  mountains;  Grand-Terre  is 
low  limestone  formation 

Land  use:  18%  arable  land;  5%  permanent 
Drops;  13%  meadows  and  pastures;  40% 
Forest  and  woodland;  24%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  (June 
:o  December) 

special  notes:  none 


Population:  336,354  (July  1987),  average 
innual  growth  rate  0.61% 

Vationality:  noun — Guadeloupian(s); 
idjective — Guadeloupe 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  black  or  mulatto; 
3%  white;  less  than  5%  East  Indian,  Leba- 
nese, Chinese 


Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic,  5%  Hindu 
and  pagan  African 

Language:  French,  Creole  patois 
Infant  mortality  rate:  18.6/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  67 
Literacy:  over  70% 

Labor  force:  120,000;  services,  govern- 
ment, and  commerce  53.0%;  industry 
25.8%;  agriculture  21.2%;  significant  un- 
employment 

Organized  labor:  11%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Department  of  Guadeloupe 
Type:  overseas  department  and  region  of 
France;  represented  by  three  deputies  in 
the  French  National  Assembly  and  two 
senators  in  the  Senate;  last  Assembly 
election,  21  June  1981 
Capital:  Basse-Terre 
Administrative  divisions:  3  arrondisse- 
ments;  34  communes,  each  with  a  locally 
elected  municipal  council 
Legal  system:  French  legal  system;  highest 
court  is  a  court  of  appeal  based  in  Martin- 
ique with  jurisdiction  over  Guadeloupe, 
French  Guiana,  and  Martinique 
Branches:  executive,  Prefect  appointed  by 
Paris;  legislative,  popularly  elected  General 
Council  of  36  members  and  a  Regional 
Council  composed  of  members  of  the  local 
General  Council  and  the  locally  elected 
deputies  and  senators  to  the  French  parlia- 
ment; judicial,  under  jurisdiction  of 
French  judicial  system 
Government  leader:  Yves  BONNET, 
Prefect  of  the  Republic  (since  1985) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  General  Council  elections  are 
normally  held  every  five  years;  last  Gen- 
eral Council  election  took  place  in  June 
1981;  regional  assembly  elections  held  in 
February  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Rally  for 
the  Republic  (RPR),  Gabriel  Lisette;  Com- 
munist Party  of  Guadeloupe  (PCG),  Henri 
Bangou;  Socialist  Party  (MSG),  leader 
unknown;  Progressive  Party  of  Guadeloupe 
(PPG),  Henri  Rodes;  Independent  Republi- 
cans; Federation  of  the  Left;  Union  for 
French  Democracy  (UDF);  Union  for  a 
New  Majority  (UNM);  Socialist  Party 
Federation  of  Guadeloupe  (PS) 


Voting  strength:  3  deputies  in  French 
National  Assembly;  2  senators  in  Senate;  1 
councillor  on  Economic  and  Social  Coun- 
cil; in  Regional  Council  election  of  Febru- 
ary 1983— RPR  21  seats,  PCG  11  seats,  PS 
9  seats 

Communists:  3,000  est. 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Popu- 
lar Union  for  the  Liberation  of  Guade- 
loupe (UPLG),  Caribbean  Revolutionary 
Alliance  (ARC),  Popular  Movement  for 
Independent  Guadeloupe  (MPGI),  Union 
for  the  Liberation  of  Guadeloupe  (UPLG), 
General  Union  of  Guadeloupe  Workers 
(UGTG),  General  Federation  of  Guad- 
eloupe Workers  (CGT-G) 
Member  of:  WFTU 

Economy 

GNP:  $998  million  (1983),  $3,151  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  15.7%  (1979-80 
average) 

Natural  resources:  scenery,  cultivable  land 

Agriculture:  sugarcane,  bananas,  pineap- 
ples, vegetables 

Major  industries:  construction,  cement, 
rum,  light  industry,  tourism 

Electric  power:  103,000  kW  capacity;  315 
million  kWh  produced,  940  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $89.2  million  (1981);  bananas, 
sugar,  rum 

Imports:  $560  million  (1981);  vehicles, 
foodstuffs,  clothing  and  other  consumer 
goods,  construction  materials,  petroleum 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 88%  franc 
zone;  imports — 73%  franc  zone,  3%  Italy 
(1981) 

Aid:  bilateral  ODA  and  OOF  commit- 
ments (1970-79)  from  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  $2.4  billion 

Budget:  $198  million  (1981) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  privately  owned,  narrow-gauge 
plantation  lines 


98 


Guatemala 


Highways:  1,954  km  total;  1,600  km 
paved,  340  km  gravel  and  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Pointe-a-Pitre),  3  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  9  total,  9  usable,  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439 

Telecommunications:  domestic  facilities 
inadequate;  57,300  telephones  (17.4  per 
100  popl.);  interisland  radio-relay  to  An- 
tigua and  Barbuda,  Dominica,  and  Martin- 
ique; 2  AM,  6  FM,  9  TV  stations;  1 
INTELSAT  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  France 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  89,000 


100km 


North 
Pacific 
Ocean 
See  regional  mip  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  108,890  km2;  land  area: 
108,430  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Tennessee 

Land  boundaries:  1,625  km  total 
Coastline:  400  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  Belize 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid  in  lowlands; 
cooler  in  highlands 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  narrow 
coastal  plains  and  rolling  limestone  plateau 
(Peten) 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  12%  meadows  and  pastures;  40% 
forest  and  woodland;  32%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  numerous  volcanoes  in 
mountains  with  frequent  violent  earth- 
quakes; Caribbean  coast  subject  to  hurri- 
canes and  other  tropical  storms;  deforesta- 
tion; soil  erosion;  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  no  natural  harbors  on  west 
coast 


Population:  8,622,387  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.45% 


Nationality:  noun — Guatemalan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Guatemalan 

Ethnic  divisions:  56%  Ladino  (mestizo 
and  westernized  Indian),  44%  Indian 

Religion:  predominantly  Roman  Catholic; 
also  Protestant,  traditional  Mayan 

Language:  Spanish,  but  over  40%  of  the 
population  speaks  an  Indian  language  as  a 
primary  tongue  (18  Indian  dialects,  includ- 
ing Quiche,  Cakchiquel,  Kekchi) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  66/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  60 
Literacy:  50% 

Labor  force  (1985):  2.5  million;  57.0% 
agriculture,  14.0%  manufacturing,  13.0% 
services,  7.0%  commerce,  4.0%  construc- 
tion, 3.0%  transport,  0.8%  utilities,  0.4% 
mining;  unemployment  and  underem- 
ployment 40% 

Organized  labor:  10%  of  labor  force 

(1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Guatemala 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Guatemala 

Administrative  divisions:  22  departments 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system;  constitu- 
tion came  into  effect  1966  but  suspended 
following  March  1982  coup;  Constituent 
Assembly  elected  in  July  1984  completed 
drafting  new  constitution  and  other  elec- 
toral laws  in  June  1985;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
September 

Branches:  traditionally  dominant  execu- 
tive; new  100-member  congress  installed 
14  January  1986;  power  vested  in  Office  of 
President;  seven-member  (minimum) 
Supreme  Court 

Government  leader:  Marco  Vinicio 
CEREZO  Arevalo,  President  (since  Janu- 
ary 1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18,  compul- 
sory for  literates,  optional  for  illiterates 


99 


Guatemala  (continued) 


Elections:  last  congressional  election  held 
3  November  1985;  presidential  runoff 
election  held  8  December  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Party  (DCG),  Marco  Vinicio 
Cerezo  Arevalo;  National  Centrist  Union 
(UCN),  Jorge  Carpio  Nicolle;  National 
Liberation  Movement  (MLN),  Mario 
Sandoval  Alarcon;  Institutional  Democratic 
Party  (PID)  in  coalition  with  MLN; 
People's  Democratic  Force  (FDP)  in  coali- 
tion with  MLN;  Democratic  Party  of 
National  Cooperation  (PDCN),  Jorge 
Serrano  Elias;  Revolutionary  Party  (PR)  in 
coalition  with  PDCN;  Social  Democratic 
Party  (PSD),  Mario  Solarzano  Martinez; 
National  Renewal  Party  (PNR),  Alejandro 
Maldonado  Aguirre;  National  Authentic 
Center  (CAN),  Mario  David  Garcia;  Anti- 
Communist  Democratic  Front  (DUA)  in 
coalition  with  PDA;  emerging  Movement 
for  Harmony  (MEC)  in  coalition  with 
PUA;  14  political  groups  participated  in 
national  election  for  a  civilian  president, 
congress,  and  mayoralties;  in  runoff  elec- 
tions between  Vinicio  Cerezo  (DCG)  and 
Jorge  Carpio  (UCN),  Cerezo  won  by  a  2  to 
1  margin 

Voting  strength:  (November  1985)  DCG, 
38.65%;  UCN,  20.23%;  PDCN/PR, 
13.78%;  MLN/PID,  12.56%;  CAN,  6.28%; 
PSD,  3.41%;  PNR,  3.15%; 
PUA/FUN/MEC,  1.91%;  (December  1985) 
DCB  51  seats,  UCN  22  seats,  MLN  12 
seats,  PDCN/PR  11  seats,  PSD  2  seats, 
PNR  1  seat,  CAN  1  seat 

Communists:  Guatemalan  Labor  Party 
(PGT);  main  radical  left  guerrilla  groups — 
Guerrilla  Army  of  the  Poor  (EGP),  Revolu- 
tionary Organization  of  the  People  in 
Arms  (ORPA),  Rebel  Armed  Forces  (FAR), 
and  PGT  Dissidents 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Feder- 
ated Chambers  of  Commerce  and  Industry 
(CACIF),  Mutual  Support  Group  (GAM) 

Member  of:  CACM,  FAO,  G-77,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council,  OAS, 
ODECA,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPEB,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO 


Economy 

GDP:  $9.2  billion  (1985),  $1,120  per 
capita;  26%  commerce,  25%  agriculture, 
9%  financial  services,  7%  transportation 
and  communication,  6%  government,  27% 
other;  average  annual  real  growth  rate 
5.7%  (1975-80);  real  growth  rate  0.0% 
(1986) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  nickel,  rare  woods, 
fish,  chicle 

Agriculture:  coffee,  cotton,  corn,  beans, 
sugarcane,  bananas,  livestock;  an  illegal 
producer  of  opium  poppy  and  cannabis 

Fishing:  catch  4,300  metric  tons  (1982) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  textiles 
and  clothing,  furniture,  chemicals,  non- 
metallic  minerals,  metals 

Electric  power:  878,000  kW  capacity; 
2,250  million  kWh  produced,  260  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  coffee, 
cotton,  sugar,  bananas,  meat 

Imports:  $1.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  manu- 
factured products,  machinery,  transporta- 
tion equipment,  chemicals,  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  exports  (1985) — 
35%  US,  17%  El  Salvador,  6%  Honduras, 
5%  Costa  Rica;  imports  (1983)— 33%  US, 
10%  El  Salvador,  8%  Netherland  Antilles, 
7%  Mexico,  7%  Venezuela 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $432 
million;  from  other  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  ODA  and  OOF  (1970-84),  $6.7 
billion 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $22 
million 

Budget:  expenditures,  $1.710  billion; 
revenues,  $975  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1 

quetzal = US$1  (official,  November  1986); 
3.30  quetzals=US$l  (unofficial,  December 
1985) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  870  km  0.914-meter  gauge, 
single  track;  780  km  government  owned, 
90  km  privately  owned 


Highways:  26,429  km  total;  2,868  km 
paved,  11,421  km  gravel,  and  12,140 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  260  km  navigable  year 
round;  additional  730  km  navigable  during 
high-water  season 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  275  km 

Ports:  2  major  (El  Quetzal,  Santo  Tomas 
de  Castilla),  3  minor 

Civil  air:  10  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  501  total,  455  usable;  11  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  23  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fairly  modern 
network  centered  on  Guatemala;  97,670 
telephones  (1.6  per  100  popl.);  91  AM,  13 
shortwave,  24  TV  stations;  connection  into 
Central  American  microwave  net;  1  Atlan- 
tic Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,989,000;  1,295,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 94,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  proposed  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1987,  $269.3  million; 
10.5%  of  central  government  budget 


100 


Guernsey 


Alderney 


English  Channel 


Guernsey. 


Sark 


Little  Strk. 


Ste regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  194  km2;  land  area:  194  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  50  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  temperate  with  mild  winters  and 
cool  summers;  about  50%  of  days  are 
overcast 

Terrain:  mostly  level  with  low  hills  in 
southwest 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other; 
about  50%  cultivated 

Environment:  large,  deepwater  harbor  at 
St.  Peter  Port 

Special  notes:  52km  west  of  France 


Population:  52,947  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  -0.12% 

Nationality:  noun — Channel  Islander(s); 
adjective — Channel  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  UK  and  Norman-French 
descent 

Religion:  Anglican,  Roman  Catholic, 
Presbyterian,  Raptist,  Congregational, 
Methodist 


Language:  English,  French;  Norman- 
French  dialect  spoken  in  country  districts 

Literacy:  universal  education 

Government 

Official  name:  Railiwick  of  Guernsey 

Type:  independent  British  crown  depen- 
dency 

Capital:  St.  Peter  Port 

Administrative  divisions:  10  douzaines  or 
parishes 

Legal  system:  English  law  and  local  stat- 
ute; justice  is  administered  by  the  Royal 
Court 

Branches:  the  Lieutenant  Governor  and 
Commander  in  Chief  is  the  personal 
representative  of  the  Crown  and  is  entitled 
to  sit  and  speak  in  the  States  of  Delibera- 
tion (parliament);  parliament  is  composed 
of  the  Bailiff  (President  ex  officio),  12 
Conseillers,  2  nonvoting  Law  Officers  of 
the  Crown,  33  popularly  elected  People's 
Deputies,  10  Douzaine  Representatives,  2 
representatives  of  the  States  of  Alderney; 
States  of  Election  (electoral  college)  elects 
Jurats  and  Conseillers — it  is  composed  of 
the  Bailiff,  12  Jurats,  12  Conseillers,  2  Law 
Officers,  33  People's  Deputies,  34 
Douzaine  Representatives,  and  4  Alderney 
representatives  (for  election  of  Conseillers 
only);  Alderney  has  its  own  popularly 
elected  President  and  States  (12  members) 
and  its  own  Court;  Sark  has  mixture  of 
feudal  and  popular  government 

Government  leaders:  Lt.  Gen.  Sir  Alexan- 
der BOSWELL,  Lieutenant  Governor  and 
Commander  in  Chief  (since  1985);  Sir 
Charles  FROSSARD,  Bailiff  and  President 
of  the  States  (since  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  18 
Communists:  none 

Economy 

Agriculture:  principal  crops — tomatoes 
and  flowers  (mostly  grown  under  glass); 
sweet  peppers,  eggplant,  plants,  other 
vegetables  and  fruit;  Guernsey  cattle 

Major  industries:  tourism,  banking 

Electric  power:  160,000  kW  capacity;  510 
million  kWh  produced,  9,620  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 


Exports:  tomatoes,  flowers  and  ferns,  sweet 
peppers,  eggplant,  other  vegetables,  plants 

Imports:  coal,  gasoline  and  oil 

Major  trade  partners:  UK  (regarded  as 
internal  trade) 

Budget:  total  revenues  for  Guernsey  and 
Alderney,  63,836  million  pounds;  total 
expenditures  for  Guernsey  and  Alderney, 
65,708  million  pounds  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.70  pound 
sterling=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Ports:  St.  Peter  Port,  St.  Sampson 

Airfield:  1  total,  1  usable  with  permanent- 
surface  runway,  1,463  m  (La  Villiaze) 

Telecommunications:  1  AM  radio  station, 
which  broadcasts  24  hours  a  week;  1  TV 
station  with  4  channels;  41,900  telephones 
(74.8  per  100  popl.) 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


101 


Guinea 


200km 


CONAKRY 

North 
Atlantic 
Ocean 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  245,860  km2;  land  area: 
245,860  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Oregon 

Land  boundaries:  3,476  km  total 
Coastline:  320  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  generally  hot  and  humid; 
monsoonal-type  rainy  season  (June  to 
November)  with  southwesterly  winds;  dry 
season  (December  to  May)  with  northeast- 
erly harmattan  winds 

Terrain:  generally  flat  coastal  plain,  hilly 
to  mountainous  interior 

Land  use:  6%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  12%  meadows  and  pastures; 
42%  forest  and  woodland;  40%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dusty  harmattan 
haze  may  reduce  visibility  during  dry 
season;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  6,737,760  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.50% 

Nationality:  noun — Guinean(s);  adjec- 
tive— Guinean 

Ethnic  divisions:  Fulani,  Malinke,  Sousou, 
15  smaller  tribes 


Religion:  85%  Muslim,  5%  indigenous 
beliefs,  10%  Christian 

Language:  French  (official);  each  tribe  has 
its  own  language 

Infant  mortality  rate:  159/1,000 
Life  expectancy:  40 

Literacy:  20%  in  French;  48%  in  local 
languages 

Labor  force:  2.4  million  (1983);  82.0% 
agriculture,  11.0%  industry  and  commerce, 
5.4%  services,  1.6%  government 

Organized  labor:  virtually  100%  of  wage 
labor  force  loosely  affiliated  with  the 
National  Confederation  of  Guinean 
Workers 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Guinea 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Conakry 

Administrative  divisions:  33  provinces, 
divided  into  36  prefectures 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system,  customary  law,  and  decree;  1958 
constitution  suspended  after  military  coup 
on  3  April  1984;  legal  codes  currently 
being  revised;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  2 
October;  Anniversary  of  Committee  for 
National  Redressment,  3  April 

Branches:  coup  on  3  April  1984  estab- 
lished 17-member  Military  Committee  for 
National  Redressment  (CMRN)  to  deter- 
mine government  policy;  the  highest 
ranking  CMRN  member  became  Presi- 
dent, with  other  CMRN  assuming  most 
Cabinet  portfolios 

Government  leader:  Gen.  Lansana 
CONTE,  Head  of  Government  (since  April 
1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  none  scheduled  but  CMRN  has 
promised  to  create  a  true  and  viable 
democracy 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  following  3 
April  1984  coup  all  political  activity  was 
banned 


Communists:  no  Communist  party,  al- 
though there  are  some  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  ECA,  ECOWAS,  FAO, 
G-77,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  Mano  River  Union,  Niger  River 
Commission,  NAM,  OAU,  OATUU,  OIC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $1.6  billion  (1984),  $300  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  1.3%  (1984  est.) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  iron  ore, 
diamonds,  gold,  uranium,  hydroelectric 
power,  fish 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — coffee,  bananas, 
palm  products,  peanuts,  citrus  fruits, 
pineapples;  staple  food  crops — cassava, 
rice,  millet,  corn,  sweet  potatoes;  livestock 
raised  in  some  areas 

Major  industries:  bauxite  mining,  alu- 
mina, diamond  mining,  light  manufactur- 
ing and  processing  industries 

Electric  power:  108,000  kW  capacity;  236 
million  kWh  produced,  41  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $537  million  (f.o.b.,  1984  est.); 
bauxite,  alumina,  diamonds,  coffee,  pine- 
apples, bananas,  palm  kernels 

Imports:  $403  million  (f.o.b.,  1984  est.); 
petroleum  products,  metals,  machinery 
and  transport  equipment,  foodstuffs,  tex- 
tiles 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — France, 
USSR,  US,  Italy;  exports— US,  USSR,  FRG, 
France,  Spain 

Budget:  public  revenues,  $444  million; 
current  expenditures,  $330  million;  devel- 
opment expenditures,  $104  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  400  Guinean 
francs=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,045  km;  806  km  1.000-meter 
gauge,  239  km  1.435-meter  standard  gauge 

Highways:  30,100  km  total;  1,087  km 
paved,  13,013  km  gravel  or  laterite,  16,000 
km  unimproved  earth 


102 


Guinea-Bissau 


Inland  waterways:  1,295  km  navigable  by 
shallow-draft  native  craft 

Ports:  1  major  (Conakry),  2  minor 
Civil  air:  12  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  17  total,  17  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  9  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
open-wire  lines,  small  radiocommunication 
stations,  and  new  radio-relay  system; 
10,000  telephones  (0.2  per  100  popl.);  3 
AM,  1  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  7,700  TV 
sets;  100,000  receiver  sets;  1  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army  (ground  forces),  Navy 
(acts  primarily  as  a  coast  guard),  Air  Force, 
paramilitary  National  Gendaramerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,549,000;  781,000  fit  for  military  service 


100km 


N  '^T^       ,* 
Arquipelago    ' 

dos  Bi/agos 

North  Atlantic  Ocean 

Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  36,120  km2;  land  area:  28,000 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Connecticut  and  New  Hampshire  com- 
bined 

Land  boundaries:  740  km  total 
Coastline:  350  km 
Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  generally  hot  and  hu- 
mid; monsoonal-type  rainy  season  (June  to 
November)  with  southwesterly  winds;  dry 
season  (December  to  May)  with  northeast- 
erly harmattan  winds 

Terrain:  mostly  low  coastal  plain  rising  to 
savanna  in  east 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  46%  meadows  and  pastures;  38% 
forest  and  woodland;  6%  other 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dusty  harmattan 
haze  may  reduce  visibility  during  dry 
season 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  928,425  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.36% 

Nationality:  noun — Guinea-Bissauan(s); 
adjective — Guinea- Bissauan 

Ethnic  divisions:  about  99%  African  (30% 
Balanta,  20%  Fula,  14%  Manjaca,  13% 


Mandinga,  7%  Papel);  less  than  1%  Euro- 
pean and  mulatto 

Religion:  65%  indigenous  beliefs,  30% 
Muslim,  5%  Christian 

Language:  Portuguese  (official);  Criolo  and 
numerous  African  languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  250/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  42 
Literacy:  9% 

Labor  force:  90%  agriculture;  5%  industry, 
services,  and  commerce;  5%  government 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Guinea-Bissau 

Type:  republic;  highly  centralized  one- 
party  regime  since  September  1974 

Capital:  Bissau 

Administrative  divisions:  9  regions,  3 
circumscriptions  (predominantly  indige- 
nous population) 

Legal  system:  new  constitution  approved 
May  1984 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  24 
September 

Branches:  President  and  Cabinet;  150- 
member  National  Popular  Assembly, 
overseen  by  15-member  Council  of  State 

Government  leader:  Brig.  Gen.  Joao 
Bernardo  VIEIRA,  President,  Council  of 
State  (since  November  1980) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  15 

Elections:  legislative  elections  held  March 
1984;  legislature  elected  Vieira  to  serve  a 
five-year  term  as  President  in  May  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  African 
Party  for  the  Independence  of  Guinea- 
Bissau  and  Cape  Verde  (PAIGC),  led  by 
President  Vieira,  only  legal  party;  Guinea- 
Bissau  decided  to  retain  the  binational 
party  title  despite  its  formal  break  with 
Cape  Verde 

Communists:  a  few  Communists,  some 
sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  CEAO,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  ISCON,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAU,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO 


103 


Guinea-Bissau  (continued) 


Guyana 


Economy 

GDP:  $154  million  (FY83),  $180  per 
capita,  real  growth  rate  —5.1%  (1983) 
Natural  resources:  potential  petroleum, 
bauxite,  phosphates 
Agriculture:  rice,  palm  products,  root 
crops,  coconuts,  peanuts,  wood 
Fishing:  catch  6,000  metric  tons  (1983) 
Major  industries:  agricultural  processing, 
beer,  soft  drinks 

Electric  power:  22,000  kW  capacity;  28 
million  kWh  produced,  32  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $8.6  million  (1983);  principally 
peanuts;  also  palm  kernels,  shrimp,  fish, 
lumber 

Imports:  $57.1  million  (1983);  foodstuffs, 
manufactured  goods,  fuels,  transport 
equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  mostly  Portugal, 
Spain,  and  other  European  countries 
Budget:  revenues,  $12.2  million;  current 
expenditures,  $27.4  million;  investment 
expenditures,  $27.9  million  (1983  est.) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  83.528  Guinea 
Bissauan  pesos=US$l  (November  1984) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  3,218  km  (418  km  bituminous, 
remainder  earth) 

Inland  waterways:  scattered  stretches  are 
important  to  coastal  commerce 
Ports:  1  major  (Bissau) 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  54  total,  39  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  limited  system  of 
open-wire  lines,  radio-relay  links,  and 
radiocommunication  stations;  3,000  tele- 
phones (0.5  per  100  popl.);  1  AM,  1  FM, 
no  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  People's  Revolutionary  Armed 
Force  (FARP);  Army,  Navy,  and  Air  Force 
are  separate  components 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  194,000; 
110,000  fit  for  military  service 


20O  km 


North  Atlantic 
Ocean 

GEORGETOWN 

New  Amsterdam^ 


Boundary  represenlalion 
not  necessarily  aulhonlal 


See  refionil  map  IV 


Geography 

Land  area:  214,970  km2;  land  area: 
196,850  km2 

Comparative  area  about  the  size  of  Idaho 
Land  boundaries:  2,575  km  total 
Coastline:  459  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  outer  edge  of  conti- 
nental margin  or  200  nm 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Essequibo  area 
claimed  by  Venezuela;  Suriname  claims 
area  between  New  (Upper  Courantyne) 
and  Courantyne/Kutari  rivers  (all  head- 
waters of  the  Courantyne) 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid,  moderated 
by  northeast  trade  winds;  two  rainy  sea- 
sons (May  to  mid-August,  mid-November 
to  mid-January) 

Terrain:  mostly  rolling  highlands;  low 
coastal  plain;  savanna  in  south 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures; 
83%  forest  and  woodland;  8%  other;  in- 
cludes 1%  irrigated 

Environment:  flash  floods  a  constant  threat 
during  rainy  seasons;  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  765,844  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.03% 


Nationality:  noun — Guyanese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Guyanese 

Ethnic  divisions:  51%  East  Indian,  43% 
black  and  mixed,  4%  Amerindian,  2% 
European  and  Chinese 

Religion:  57%  Christian,  33%  Hindu,  9% 
Muslim,  1%  other 

Language:  English,  Amerindian  dialects 
Infant  mortality  rate:  41/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  70 
Literacy:  85% 

Labor  force:  268,000  (1985);  44.5%  indus- 
try and  commerce,  33.8%  agriculture, 
21.7%  services;  public  sector  employment 
amounts  to  60-80%  of  the  total  labor  force; 
unemployment  and  underemployment 
30%  (1985  est.) 

Organized  labor:  34%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Co-operative  Republic  of 
Guyana 

Type:  republic  within  Commonwealth 
Capital:  Georgetown 

Administrative  divisions:  10  administra- 
tive regions 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  with  certain  admixtures  of  Roman- 
Dutch  law;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  23 
February 

Branches:  Executive  President,  who  ap- 
points and  heads  a  cabinet;  unicameral 
legislature  (53-member  National  Assembly) 
elected  by  proportional  representation 
every  five  years 

Government  leaders:  Hugh  Desmond 
HOYTE,  President  (since  August  1985); 
Hamilton  GREEN,  Prime  Minister  (since 
August  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  age  18 
Elections:  last  held  in  December  1985 


104 


Haiti 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  People's 
National  Congress  (PNC),  Hugh  Desmond 
Hoyte;  People's  Progressive  Party  (PPP), 
Cheddi  Jagan;  Working  People's  Alliance 
(WPA),  Rupert  Roopnarine,  Eusi 
Kwayana,  Moses  Bhagwan;  United  Force 
(UF),  Feilden  Singh;  Vanguard  for  Libera- 
tion and  Democracy  (VLD;  also  known  as 
Liberator  Party),  Ganraj  Kumar,  Dr.  J.  K. 
Makepeace  Richmond;  Democratic  Labor 
Movement  (DLM),  Dr.  Paul  Tennassee 

Voting  strength:  (1985  election,  unofficial 
returns)  78%  PNC  (42  seats),  16%  PPP  (8 
seats),  4%  UF  (2  seats),  2%  WPA  (1  seat) 

Communists:  est.  100  hardcore  within 
PPP;  top  echelons  of  PPP  and  PYO  (Pro- 
gressive Youth  Organization,  militant  wing 
of  the  PPP)  include  many  Communists, 
but  rank  and  file  is  conservative  and 
non-Communist;  small  but  unknown 
number  of  orthodox  Marxist-Leninists 
within  PNC,  some  of  whom  formerly 
belonged  to  the  PPP 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Trades 
Union  Congress  (TUC);  Working  People's 
Vanguard  Party  (WPVP);  Guyana  Council 
of  Indian  Organizations  (GCIO);  Civil 
Liberties  Action  Committee  (CLAC);  the 
latter  two  organizations  are  small  and 
active  but  not  well  organized 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  CDB,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IDE — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAS 
(observer),  PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $480  million  (1984),  $630  per  capita; 
real  growth  4.0%  (1986  est.);  inflation  rate 
4.0%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  gold,  dia- 
monds, hardwood  timber,  shrimp,  fish 

Agriculture:  sugarcane,  rice,  other  food 
crops;  food  shortages — wheat  flour,  cooking 
oil,  processed  meat,  dairy  products 

Major  industries:  bauxite  mining,  sugar 
and  rice  milling,  timber,  fishing  (shrimp), 
textiles,  gold  mining 


Electric  power:  105,000  kW  capacity;  500 
million  kWh  produced,  650  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $214.0  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
bauxite,  sugar,  rice,  shrimp,  molasses, 
timber,  rum 

Imports:  $209.1  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
manufactures,  machinery,  food,  petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 29%  UK, 
17%  US,  17%  CARICOM,  6%  Canada; 
imports— 33%  CARICOM,  21%  US,  11% 
UK,  3%  Canada  (1983) 

Budget:  revenues,  $954.4  million;  expendi- 
tures, $1,531.5  million  (1985  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  4.30  Guyanese 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  187  km  total,  all  single  track 
0.914-meter  gauge 

Highways:  7,665  km  total;  550  km  paved, 
5,000  km  gravel,  1,525  km  earth,  590  km 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  6,000  km  total  of 
navigable  waterways;  Berbice,  Demerara, 
and  Essequibo  rivers  are  navigable  by 
oceangoing  vessels  for  150  km,  100  km, 
and  80  km,  respectively 

Ports:  1  major  (Georgetown),  6  minor 
Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  70  total,  66  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1 1  with 
runways  1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  with 
radio-relay  network  and  over  27,000 
telephones  (3.3  per  100  popl.);  tropospheric 
scatter  link  to  Trinidad;  4  AM,  3  FM,  1 
shortwave,  no  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Guyana  Defense  Force  (includ- 
ing Maritime  Corps  and  Air  Corps), 
Guyana  Police  Force,  Guyana  People's 
Militia,  Guyana  National  Service 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  195,000; 
149,000  fit  for  military  service 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 


Caribbean  Sea 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  27,750  km2;  land  area:  27,560 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Maryland 

Land  boundary:  361  km  with  Dominican 

Republic 

Coastline:  1,771  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  to  depth  of  exploita- 
tion 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  Navassa 
Island  (US  possession) 
Climate:  tropical;  semiarid  where  moun- 
tains in  east  cut  off  trade  winds 
Terrain:  mostly  rough  and  mountainous 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  13%  perma- 
nent crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures; 
4%  forest  and  woodland;  45%  other;  in- 
cludes 3%  irrigated 

Environment:  lies  in  middle  of  hurricane 
belt;  hurricanes  have  caused  extensive 
damage;  occasional  flooding  and  earth- 
quakes; deforestation 

Special  notes:  shares  island  of  Hispaniola 
with  Dominican  Republic 


Population:  6,187,115  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.78% 


105 


Haiti  (continued) 


Nationality:  noun — Haitian(s);  adjective — 
Haitian 

Ethnic  divisions:  95%  black,  5%  mulatto 
and  European 

Religion:  75-80%  Roman  Catholic  (of 
which  an  overwhelming  majority  also 
practice  Voodoo),  10%  Protestant,  10% 
other 

Language:  French  (official)  spoken  by  only 
10%  of  population;  all  speak  Creole 

Infant  mortality  rate:  107/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  45 
Literacy:  23% 

Labor  force:  2.3  million  (1982);  66% 
agriculture,  25%  services,  9%  industry; 
significant  unemployment;  shortage  of 
skilled  labor,  unskilled  labor  abundant 

Organized  labor:  less  than  1%  of  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Haiti 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Port-au-Prince 

Administrative  divisions:  26  provinces,  1 
federal  district 

Legal  system:  based  on  Roman  civil  law 
system;  currently  under  revision,  to  be 
completed  early  1987;  accepts  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  1 
January 

Branches:  interim  government  following 
the  end  of  29  years  of  Duvalier  family 
rule;  Consultative  Council  (45-member 
advisory  body);  Constituent  Assembly 
(61-member  body  drafting  new  constitu- 
tion); judiciary  appointed  by  President 
before  coup 

Government  leaders:  Lt.  Gen.  Henri 
NAMPHY,  President,  National  Council  of 
Government  (CNG),  since  February  1986, 
two  other  CNG  members,  and  13-member 
cabinet 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  National  elections  scheduled  for 
November  1987,  inauguration  7  February 
1988 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Haitian 
Christian  Democratic  Party  (PDCN), 
Sylvio  Claude;  Haitian  Social  Christian 
Party  (PSCH),  Gregoire  Eugene;  Move- 
ment To  Install  Democracy  in  Haiti 
(MIDH),  Marc  Bazin;  National  Progressive 
Democratic  Group  (RDNP),  Leslie 
Manigat 

Voting  strength:  new  voter  registration 
lists  being  compiled 

Communists:  United  Party  of  Haitian 
Communists  (PUCH),  Rene  Theodore 
(roughly  2,000  members) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  United 
Democratic  Committee  (KID);  Liaison 
Committee  of  Democratic  Forces 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDB — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ITU,  OAS,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.8  billion  (1986  est),  $300  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate,  -  2.0%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite 

Agriculture:  coffee,  sugarcane,  rice,  corn, 
sorghum 

Major  industries:  sugar  refining,  textiles, 
flour  milling,  cement  manufacturing, 
bauxite  mining,  tourism,  light  assembly 
industries 

Electric  power:  196,000  kW  capacity;  332 
million  kWh  produced,  940  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $206.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
mangos,  coffee,  light  industrial  products, 
essential  oils,  sisal,  sugar 

Imports:  $337.9  million  (f.o.b.,  1984); 
consumer  durables,  foodstuffs,  industrial 
equipment,  petroleum  products,  construc- 
tion materials 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 59%  US; 
imports— 45%  US  (1978) 

Aid:  US  commitments,  including  Ex-Im 
(FY70-85),  $419  million;  ODA  and  OOF 
from  other  Western  countries  (1970-84), 
$427  million 


Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $5 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $220  million;  expendi- 
tures, $357  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  5.0 

gourdes=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  October-30  September 

Communications 

Railroads:  40  km  0.760-meter  narrow 
gauge,  single-track,  privately  owned  indus- 
trial line 

Highways:  4,000  km  total;  950  km  paved, 
900  km  otherwise  improved,  2,150  km 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  negligible;  less  than 
100  km  navigable 

Ports:  2  major  (Port-au-Prince, 
Cap-Hai'tien),  12  minor 

Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  15  total,  11  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  domestic  facilities 
barely  adequate,  international  facilities 
slightly  better;  36,000  telephones  (0.5  per 
100  popl.);  33  AM,  4  TV  stations;  1  Atlan- 
tic Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Corps 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,491,000;  803,000  fit  for  military  service; 
70,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


106 


Honduras 


Puerto  Corte; 


Caribbean  Sea 

^~'  f 

^        tstas  de  la  Bahia 


Swan  Islands 


Boundary  representation  is 
no!  necessarily  authoritative 


Sec  r<|lontl  mip  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  112,090  km2;  land  area: 
111,890km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Tennessee 

Land  boundaries:  1,530  km  total 
Coastline:  820  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  El  Salvador 

Climate:  subtropical  in  lowlands,  temper- 
ate in  mountains 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  in  interior, 
narrow  coastal  plains 

Land  use:  14%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  30%  meadows  and  pastures;  34% 
forest  and  woodland;  20%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  frequent,  but 
generally  mild,  earthquakes;  damaging 
hurricanes  along  Caribbean  coast;  defores- 
tation; soil  erosion 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  4,823,818  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.33% 

Nationality:  noun — Honduran(s);  adjec- 
tive— Honduran 


Ethnic  divisions:  90%  mestizo  (mixed 
Indian  and  European),  7%  Indian,  2% 
black,  1%  white 

Religion:  about  97%  Roman  Catholic; 
small  Protestant  minority 

Language:  Spanish,  Indian  dialects 
Infant  mortality  rate:  78/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  58.7 
Literacy:  56% 

Labor  force:  1.3  million  (1985);  62% 
agriculture,  20%  services,  9%  manufactur- 
ing, 3%  construction,  6%  other;  25%  unem- 
ployed, 25%  underemployed 

Organized  labor:  40%  of  urban  labor 
force,  20%  of  rural  work  force  (1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Honduras 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Tegucigalpa 

Administrative  divisions:  18  departments 

Legal  system:  rooted  in  Roman  and  Span- 
ish civil  law;  some  influence  of  English 
common  law;  new  constitution  became 
effective  in  January  1982;  the  nine  Su- 
preme Court  justices  are  appointed  by 
Congress;  accepts  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with 
reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
September 

Branches:  constitution  provides  for  elected 
President,  unicameral  legislature  (134- 
member  National  Congress),  and  national 
judicial  branch 

Government  leader:  Jose  AZCONA  Hoyo, 
President  (since  January  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  national  election  for  president 
and  legislature  held  every  four  years;  last 
election  held  November  1985;  legislature 
chosen  by  proportional  representation;  282 
county  councils 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Liberal 
Party  (PLH) — party  president,  Romualdo 
Bueso  Penalba;  faction  leaders,  Carlos 
Flores  Facusse  (Rodista  faction),  Jose 
Azcona  Hoyo  (Azconista  subfaction),  Jorge 
Bueso  Arias  (ALIPO  faction),  Jorge  Arturo 
Reina  (M-Lider  faction);  National  Party 
(PNH) — party  president,  Rafael  Leonardo 
Callejas;  faction  leaders,  Juan  Pablo  Urru- 
tia  (MUC  faction);  Ricardo  Zilniga  Augus- 
tinus  (Officialista  faction),  Mario  Rivera 
Lopez  (Riverista  subfaction),  and  Rafael 
Leonardo  Callejas  (MONARCA  faction); 
National  Innovation  and  Unity  Party 
(PINU) — Miguel  Andonie  Fernandez; 
Christian  Democratic  Party  (PDCH)— 
Ruben  Palma  Carrasco 

Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  1.6  mil- 
lion out  of  1.8  million  eligible  voters  cast 
ballots;  PLH  51%,  PNH  45%,  PINU  1.5%, 
PDCH  1.9%,  legislative  seats— PLH  67, 
PNH  63,  PINU  2,  PDCH  2 

Communists:  up  to  1,500;  Honduran 
leftist  groups — Communist  Party  of  Hon- 
duras (PCH),  Communist  Party  of 
Honduras/Marxist-Leninist  (PCMLH), 
Morazanist  Front  for  the  Liberation  of 
Honduras  (FMLH),  People's  Revolutionary 
Union/Popular  Liberation  Movement 
(URP/MPL),  Popular  Revolutionary 
Forces-Lorenzo  Zelaya  (FPR/LZ),  Socialist 
Party  of  Honduras  Central  American 
Workers  Revolutionary  Party 
(PASO/PRTC) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Na- 
tional Association  of  Honduran  Campesi- 
nos  (ANACH),  Honduran  Council  of 
Private  Enterprise  (COHEP),  Confedera- 
tion of  Honduran  Workers  (CTH),  Na- 
tional Union  of  Campesinos  (UNC),  Gen- 
eral Workers  Confederation  (CGT),  United 
Federation  of  Honduran  Workers  (FUTH), 
Committee  for  the  Defense  of  Human 
Rights  in  Honduras  (CODEH),  Coordinat- 
ing Committee  of  Popular  Organizations 
(CCOP) 

Member  of:  CACM,  FAO,  G-77,  IADB, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
ISO,  ITU,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPEB,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO 


107 


Honduras  (continued) 


Hong  Kong 


Economy 

Real  GDP:  $2.6  billion  (1986),  $560  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  average  —3.1% 
(1980-83);  real  growth  rate  3.0%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  forests,  gold,  silver, 
copper,  lead,  zinc,  iron,  antimony,  coal, 
fish 

Agriculture:  bananas,  coffee,  corn,  beans, 
sugarcane,  rice,  tobacco 

Fishing:  catch  8,400  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  agricultural  processing, 
textiles,  clothing,  wood  products 

Electric  power:  580,000  kW  capacity; 
1,400  million  kWh  produced,  300  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $933  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  ba- 
nanas, coffee,  lumber,  meat,  minerals, 
sugar,  seafood 

Imports:  $873  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  manu- 
factured products,  machinery,  transporta- 
tion equipment,  chemicals,  petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  exports— 48%  US, 
34%  Europe,  8%  Japan,  3%  CACM  (1985); 
imports— 39%  US,  10%  Venezuela,  9% 
CACM,  6%  Japan,  5%  Trinidad  and 
Tobago  (1985) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $809 
million  loans;  other  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  ODA  and  ODF  (1970-84),  $507 
million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY79-85),  $256 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $389  million;  expendi- 
tures, $605  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate: 

2  lempiras=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  545  km  total;  320  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge,  225  km  0.914-meter  gauge 
Highways:  8,950  km  total;  1,700  km 
paved,  5,000  km  otherwise  improved, 
2,250  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  465  km  navigable  by 
small  craft 

Ports:  1  major  (Puerto  Cortes),  4  minor 
Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  198  total,  181  usable;  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  1 1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  improved,  but  still 
inadequate;  connection  into  Central  Amer- 
ican microwave  net;  35,100  telephones  (0.9 
per  100  popl.);  169  AM,  8  shortwave,  21 
TV  stations;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite 
ground  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces,  Naval  Forces, 
Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,090,000;  649,000  fit  for  military  service; 
56,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1987,  $67.5  million;  about  7% 
of  central  government  budget 


Lema  Channel 

Set  re|lonmlm>p  VIII 

Geography 

Total  area:  1,040  km2;  land  area:  990  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 
size  of  Rhode  Island 

Land  boundary:  24  km  with  China 
Coastline:  733  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  will  become  a 
Special  Administrative  Region  of  China  in 
1997 

Climate:  tropical  monsoon;  cool  and 
humid  in  winter,  hot  and  rainy  from 
spring  through  summer,  warm  and  sunny 
in  fall 

Terrain:  hilly  to  mountainous  with  steep 
slopes;  lowlands  in  north 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  12% 
forest  and  woodland;  79%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  more  than  200  islands; 
occasional  typhoons 

Special  notes:  outstanding  natural  harbor 


Population:  5,608,610  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.32% 

Nationality:  adjective — Hong  Kong 
Ethnic  divisions:  98%  Chinese,  2%  other 


108 


Religion:  90%  eclectic  mixture  of  local 
religions,  10%  Christian 

Language:  Chinese  (Cantonese),  English 
Infant  mortality  rate:  9.2/1,000  (1986) 
Life  expectancy:  75  (1986) 
Literacy:  75% 

Labor  force:  (June  1985)  2.64  million; 
36.3%  manufacturing;  22.1%  commerce; 
18.4%  services;  7.6%  construction;  7.6% 
transport  and  communications;  6.8% 
financing,  insurance,  and  real  estate;  1.2% 
agriculture,  fishing,  mining,  and  quarrying; 
unemployment  (seasonally  adjusted)  3.0% 

Organized  labor:  15.2%  of  1984  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Hong  Kong 

Type:  British  colony;  scheduled  to  revert 
to  China  in  1997 

Capital:  Victoria 

Administrative  divisions:  Hong  Kong, 
Kowloon,  and  New  Territories 

Legal  system:  English  common  law 

Branches:  Governor  assisted  by  advisory 
Executive  Council,  legislates  with  advice 
and  consent  of  Legislative  Council;  Execu- 
tive Council  composed  of  governor,  four 
ex-officio  senior  officials,  and  1 1  nominated 
members;  Legislative  Council  composed  of 
governor,  three  ex-officio  members,  10 
official  members,  22  appointed  unofficial 
members  and  24  unofficial  members 
elected  indirectly  by  functional  constituen- 
cies and  by  an  electoral  college;  Urban 
Council,  consisting  of  15  elected  members 
and  15  appointed  by  Governor,  responsible 
for  health,  recreation,  and  resettlement  in 
urban  areas;  Regional  Council  (established 
1  April  1986),  comprising  12  directly 
elected  members,  9  indirectly  elected,  12 
appointed,  and  3  ex  officio,  has  similar 
responsibilities  in  nonurban  areas;  indepen- 
dent judiciary 

Government  leaders:  David  Clive 
WILSON,  Governor  since  April  1987;  Sir 
David  AKERS-JONES,  Chief  Secretary 
since  December  1985 

Suffrage:  limited  to  450,000  to  550,000 
professional  or  skilled  persons 


Elections:  on  three-year  cycle  for  Urban 
and  Regional  Councils;  last  held  March 
1986;  indirect  elections  for  Legislative 
Council  held  for  first  time  in  September 
1985  and  planned  for  three-year  intervals 

Political  parties:  insignificant 

Communists:  an  estimated  4,000  cadres 
affiliated  with  Communist  Party  of  China 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Feder- 
ation of  Trade  Unions  (Communist  con- 
trolled), Hong  Kong  and  Kowloon  Trade 
Union  Council  (Nationalist  Chinese  domi- 
nated), Hong  Kong  General  Chamber  of 
Commerce,  Chinese  General  Chamber  of 
Commerce  (Communist  controlled),  Feder- 
ation of  Hong  Kong  Industries,  Chinese 
Manufacturers'  Association  of  Hong  Kong, 
Hong  Kong  Professional  Teachers'  Union 

Member  of:  ADB,  ESCAP  (associate 
member),  GATT,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
Multifiber  Arrangement,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $34.2  billion,  $6,180  per  capita;  real 
growth,  1.0%  (1985  est.) 

Agriculture:  agriculture  occupies  a  minor 
position  in  the  economy;  rice,  vegetables, 
dairy  products;  less  than  20%  self- 
sufficient;  shortages  of  rice,  wheat,  water 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  clothing, 
tourism,  electronics,  plastics,  toys,  watches, 
and  clocks 

Shortages:  industrial  raw  materials 

Electric  power:  6,383,000  kW  capacity; 
18,000  million  kWh  produced,  3,270  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $30.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985),  includ- 
ing $13.5  billion  reexports;  clothing,  plastic 
articles,  textiles,  electrical  goods,  wigs, 
footwear,  light  metal  manufactures 

Imports:  $29.7  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 31%  US, 
26%  China,  4%  Japan,  4%  UK,  4%  FRG; 
imports— 25%  China,  23%  Japan,  9%  US 

(1985) 

Budget:  $5.1  billion  (1985/86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.81  Hong 
Kong  dollars=US$l  (July  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 


Communications 

Railroads:  35  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  government  owned 

Highways:  1,160  km  total;  794  km  paved, 
306  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Hong  Kong) 

Civil  air:  16  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total;  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  modern  facilities 
provide  excellent  domestic  and  interna- 
tional services;  62  telephone  exchanges,  1.5 
million  telephones;  5  AM  and  9  FM 
radiobroadcast  stations  with  11  transmit- 
ters; 5  TV  stations;  2.5  million  radio  and 
1.1  million  TV  receivers;  10,100  Telex 
subscriber  lines  with  direct  connections  to 
47  countries;  2  INTELSAT  ground  stations 
with  access  to  Pacific  and  Indian  Ocean 
satellites;  coaxial  cable  to  Guangzhou 
(Canton),  China;  3  international  submarine 
cables;  troposcatter  to  Taiwan  available 
but  inactive 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  United 
Kingdom 

Branches:  Headquarters  of  British  Forces, 
Gurkha  Field  Forces,  Royal  Navy,  Royal 
Air  Force,  Royal  Hong  Kong  Auxiliary  Air 
Force,  Royal  Hong  Kong  Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,720,000;  1,340,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 45,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  est.  for  fiscal  year  ending 
30  June  1986,  $205.5  million;  about  4.3% 
of  central  government  budget  and  1%  of 
GDP 


109 


Hungary 


125km 


Sccrcffonil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  93,030  km2;  land  area:  92,340 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Indiana 

Land  boundaries:  2,242  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Transylvania 
question  with  Romania 

Climate:  temperate;  cold,  cloudy,  humid 
winters;  warm  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  rolling  plains 
Land  use:  54%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  14%  meadows  and  pastures;  18% 
forest  and  woodland;  11%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 

Environment:  levies  are  common  along 
many  streams,  but  flooding  occurs  almost 
every  year 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategic  loca- 
tion astride  main  land  routes  between 
Western  Europe  and  Balkan  Peninsula  as 
well  as  between  USSR  and  Mediterranean 
basin 


Population:  10,609,447  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  —0.19% 

Nationality:  noun — Hungarian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Hungarian 

Ethnic  divisions:  96.6%  Hungarian,  1.6% 
German,  1.1%  Slovak,  0.3%  Southern  Slav, 
0.2%  Romanian 


Religion:  67.5%  Roman  Catholic,  20.0% 
Calvinist,  5.0%  Lutheran,  7.5%  atheist  and 
other 

Language:  98.2%  Hungarian,  1.8%  other 
Infant  mortality  rate:  19/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  men  65.6,  women  73.7 
(1984) 

Literacy:  98.9% 

Labor  force:  4,913,000  (1985);  31.3% 
industry;  21.1%  agriculture;  7.2%  construc- 
tion; 40.4%  services,  trade,  government, 
other 

Government 

Official  name:  Hungarian  People's  Repub- 
lic 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Budapest 

Administrative  divisions:  19  megyes 
(counties),  5  autonomous  cities  in  county 
status 

Legal  system:  based  on  Communist  legal 
theory,  with  both  civil  law  system  (civil 
code  of  1960)  and  common  law  elements; 
constitution  adopted  1949  amended  1972; 
Supreme  Court  renders  decisions  of  princi- 
ple that  sometimes  have  the  effect  of 
declaring  legislative  acts  unconstitutional; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  Liberation  Day,  4  April 

Branches:  executive — Presidential  Council 
(elected  by  parliament);  unicameral  legisla- 
ture— National  Assembly  (elected  by  direct 
suffrage);  judicial — Supreme  Court  (elected 
by  parliament) 

Government  leaders:  Pal  LOSONCZI, 
President,  Presidential  Council  (since  April 
1967);  Gyorgy  LAZAR,  Premier,  Council 
of  Ministers  (since  May  1975) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  every  five  years  (last  election 
June  1985);  national  and  local  elections  are 
held  separately 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Hungarian 
Socialist  (Communist)  Workers'  Party 
(MSZMP),  sole  party;  Janos  Kadar,  General 
Secretary  (since  November  1956;  his  title 
was  changed  from  First  Secretary  to  Gen- 
eral Secretary  in  March  1985) 


Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  7,700,000 
(94%)  turnout  for  multiple-candidate 
election,  with  only  some  leading  figures 
running  without  opposition 

Communists:  about  870,992  party  mem- 
bers (January  1985) 

Member  of:  CEMA,  Danube  Commission, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ILO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study 
Group,  IMF,  IMO,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  Warsaw  Pact, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $80.1  billion  in  1985  (at  1985  US 
dollars),  $7,520  per  capita;  1985  growth 
rate,  -  0.8% 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  brown  coal, 
natural  gas 

Agriculture:  normally  self-sufficient;  corn, 
wheat,  potatoes,  sugar  beets,  barley 

Major  industries:  mining,  metallurgy, 
engineering  industries,  processed  foods, 
textiles,  chemicals  (especially  pharmaceuti- 

cals) 

Shortages:  metallic  ores  (except  bauxite), 
copper,  high  grade  coal,  forest  products, 
crude  oil 

Crude  steel:  3.6  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  339  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  6,851,000  kW  capacity; 
27,250  million  kWh  produced,  2,570  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $13.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  34.8% 
fuels,  raw  materials,  and  semifinished 
products;  28.8%  machinery  and  equip- 
ment; 21.3%  agricultural  and  forestry 
products;  15.1%  manufactured  consumer 
goods 

Imports:  $13.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  66.7% 
fuels,  raw  materials,  and  semifinished 
products;  15.8%  machinery  and  equip- 
ment; 10.4%  manufactured  consumer 
goods;  7.1%  agricultural  and  forestry 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  31.8%  USSR,  9.6% 
FRG  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  46.50 
forints=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


110 


Iceland 


Communications 

Railroads:  7,766  km  total;  7,510  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  221  km  narrow 
gauge  (mostly  0.760-meter),  35  km  1.524- 
meter  broad  gauge,  1,130  km  double 
track,  1,801  km  electrified;  government 
owned  (1984) 

Highways:  140,000  km  total;  29,633  km 
concrete,  asphalt,  stone  block;  58,495  km 
country  roads  (66  percent  unpaved),  and 
51,872  km  other  roads  (70  percent 
unpaved)  (1985) 

Inland  waterways:  1,622  km  (1983) 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  1,160  km;  refined 
products,  600  km;  natural  gas,  3,732  km 
(1984) 

Freight  carried:  rail— 117.0  million  metric 
tons,  22.3  billion  metric  tons/km;  high- 
way— 554.5  million  metric  tons,  11.9 
billion  metric  tons/km;  waterway — est. 
12.5  million  metric  tons,  9.5  billion  metric 
tons/km  (public  and  private  use)  (1984) 
River  ports:  2  principal  (Budapest,  Dun- 
aujvaros);  no  maritime  ports;  outlets  are 
Rostock,  GDR;  Gdansk,  Gdynia,  and 
Szczecin  in  Poland;  and  Gala{i  and  Braila 
in  Romania 

Civil  air:  22  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  95  total;  16  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  12  AM,  11  FM,  20 
TV  stations;  8  Soviet  TV  relays;  2,848,000 
TV  sets;  5,500,000  receiver  sets;  at  least  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Hungarian  People's  Army, 
Frontier  Guard,  Air  and  Air  Defense 
Command 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,595,000;  2,077,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; about  77,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  25.1  billion 
forints;  4.2%  of  total  budget 


Greenland  Sea 


Hafnarfjordhur 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 

Stt  regional  m«p  V 

Geography 

Total  area:  103,000  km2;  land  area: 

100,250  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Virginia 

Coastline:  4,988  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 

margin  or  200  nm 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Boundary  disputes:  none;  Rockall  conti- 
nental shelf  dispute  involving  Denmark, 
Ireland,  and  UK 

Climate:  temperate;  Gulf  Stream  influ- 
ence; mild,  windy  winters;  damp,  cool 
summers 

Terrain:  mostly  plateau  interspersed  with 
mountain  peaks,  icefields 
Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  0%  per- 
manent crops;  23%  meadows  and  pastures; 
1%  forest  and  woodland;  76%  other 
Environment:  subject  to  earthquakes  and 
volcanic  activity 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  between 
Greenland  and  Europe;  westernmost 
European  country 


Population:  244,676  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.69% 
Nationality:  noun— Icelander(s);  adjec- 
tive— Icelandic 


Ethnic  divisions:  homogeneous  mixture  of 
descendants  of  Norwegians  and  Celts 
Religion:  95%  Evangelical  Lutheran,  3% 
other  Protestant  and  Roman  Catholic,  2% 
no  affiliation 
Language:  Icelandic 
Infant  mortality  rate:  6.1/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  73.9,  women  79.4 
Literacy:  99.9% 

Labor  force:  122,800;  55.4%  commerce, 
finance,  and  services;  11.3%  agriculture; 
8.0%  fish  processing;  5.0%  fishing;  20.3% 
other  manufacturing  (1985);  0.9%  unem- 
ployment (1985  average) 
Organized  labor:  60%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Iceland 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Reykjavik 

Administrative  divisions:  23  counties,  200 
parishes,  23  incorporated  towns 
Legal  system:  civil  law  system  based  on 
Danish  law;  constitution  adopted  1944; 
does  not  accept  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  Anniversary  of  the 
Establishment  of  the  Republic,  17  June 
Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 
with  President  and  parliament  (Althing); 
executive  power  vested  in  President  but 
exercised  by  Cabinet  responsible  to  parlia- 
ment; Supreme  Court  and  29  lower  courts 
Government  leaders:  Vigdis  FINNBOGA- 
DOTTIR,  President  (since  August  1980); 
Steingrimur  HERMANNSSON,  Prime 
Minister  (since  May  1983) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20  but  not 
compulsory 

Elections:  parliamentary  every  four  years, 
last  held  23  April  1983,  next  elections  in 
April  1987;  presidential  held  every  four 
years;  last  held  August  1984 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Indepen- 
dence (conservative),  Thorsteinn  Palsson; 
Progressive,  Steingrimur  Hermannsson; 
Social  Democratic,  Jon  Baldvin  Hannibals- 
son;  People's  Alliance  (left  socialist),  Svavar 
Gestsson 


111 


Iceland  (continued) 


India 


Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  38.7% 
Independence,  18.5%  Progressive,  17.3% 
People's  Alliance,  11.7%  Social  Demo- 
cratic, 13.8%  other 

Communists:  est.  less  than  100,  some  of 
whom  participate  in  the  People's  Alliance, 
which  drew  22,489  votes  in  the  1983 
parliamentary  elections 

Member  of:  Council  of  Europe,  EC  (free 
trade  agreement  pending  resolution  of 
fishing  limits  issue),  EFTA,  FAO,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICES,  IDA,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Whaling  Commission,  NATO, 
Nordic  Council,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.7  billion  (1985),  $11,300  per 
capita;  60.4%  private  consumption,  21.4% 
private  investment,  17.9%  public  consump- 
tion, 4.3%  net  export  of  goods  and  services; 
change  in  stockbuilding  —0.5%;  real 
growth  rate  -5.5%  (1983) 

Natural  resources:  fish,  hydroelectric  and 
geothermal  power,  diatomite 

Agriculture:  cattle,  sheep,  dairying,  hay, 
potatoes,  turnips 

Fishing:  catch,  1,670,000  metric  tons  (1985 
est.);  marine  product  exports,  $533  million 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  fish  processing,  alumi- 
num smelting,  diatomite  production, 
hydroelectricity 

Shortages:  grains,  sugar,  vegetables  and 
vegetable  fibers,  fuel,  wood,  minerals 

Electric  power:  913,000  kW  capacity; 
4,460  million  kWh  produced,  18,290  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $814  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  fish 
and  fish  products,  animal  products,  alumi- 
num, diatomite 

Imports:  $904  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  transportation  equipment, 
petroleum,  foodstuffs,  textiles 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  exports — EC 
39.3%  (UK  18.0%,  FRG  8.3%),  27.0%  US, 
9.0%  LDC,  6.7%  USSR;  imports— EC 
49.5%  (FRG  13.3%,  Denmark  9.1%,  UK 
9.6%),  LDC  23.0%,  USSR  8.0%,  US  6.8% 


Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im,  $19.1  million 
(FY70-81) 

Budget:  revenues,  $704.9  million;  expendi- 
tures, $647.8  million  (converted  at  41.508 
kronur=US$l  1985  average)  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  40.72 
kronur=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  12,343  km  total;  166  km  bitu- 
men and  concrete;  1,284  km  bituminous 
treated  and  gravel;  10,893  km  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Reykjavik),  3  secondary 
(Akureyri,  Hafnarfjordhur,  Seydhis- 
fjordhur),  and  numerous  minor 
Civil  air:  20  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  100  total,  93  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  12  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  domestic 
service,  wire  and  radio  communication 
system;  135,000  telephones  (52.5  per  100 
popl.);  4  AM,  33  FM,  129  TV  stations;  2 
submarine  cables;  1  satellite  station  with  2 
Atlantic  Ocean  antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Police,  Coast  Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  64,000; 
58,000  fit  for  military  service  (Iceland  has 
no  conscription  or  compulsory  military 
service) 


Bay  of 

Bengal 


•  •    Calicut  ( 

\          Mldurai 
Laccadive   \     •  / 
Sea         \y 
See  region*!  map  VIII 


Andaman  I 
Islands     I' 


Nicobar  •; 
Islands     \ 


Geography 

Total  area:  3,287,590  km2;  land  area: 

2,973,190  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 

size  of  US 

Land  boundaries:  12,700  km  total 

Coastline:  7,000  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 

margin  or  200  nm 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12 

Boundary  disputes:  Bangladesh,  China, 
Cease-Fire  Line  with  Pakistan 
Climate:  varies  from  tropical  monsoon  in 
south  to  temperate  in  north 

Terrain:  upland  plain  (Deccan  Plateau)  in 
south,  flat  to  rolling  plain  along  the  Ganges 
River,  deserts  in  west,  Himalayas  in  north 

Land  use:  55%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  23% 
forest  and  woodland;  17%  other;  includes 
13%  irrigated 

Environment:  droughts,  flash  floods,  severe 
thunderstorms  common;  deforestation;  soil 
erosion;  overgrazing;  air  and  water  pollu- 
tion; desertification 
Special  notes:  dominates  South  Asian 
subcontinent;  near  important  Indian 
Ocean  trade  routes;  Joint  River  Commis- 
sion on  water  sharing  with  downstream 
riparian  Bangladesh 


112 


Population:  800,325,817  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.07% 

Nationality:  noun — Indian(s);  adjective — 
Indian 

Ethnic  divisions:  72%  Indo-Aryan,  25% 
Dravidian,  3%  Mongoloid  and  other 

Religion:  83.5%  Hindu,  11.0%  Muslim, 
2.6%  Christian,  2.0-2.5%  Sikh,  0.7%  Bud- 
dhist, 0.2%  other 

Language:  Hindi,  English,  and  14  other 
official  languages;  24  languages  spoken  by 
a  million  or  more  persons  each;  numerous 
other  languages  and  dialects,  for  the  most 
part  mutually  unintelligible;  Hindi  is  the 
national  language  and  primary  tongue  of 
30  percent  of  the  people;  English  enjoys 
associate  status  but  is  the  most  important 
language  for  national,  political,  and  com- 
mercial communication;  Hindustani,  a 
popular  variant  of  Hindi/Urdu,  is  spoken 
widely  throughout  northern  India 

Infant  mortality  rate:  116/1,000  (1984 
est.) 

Life  expectancy:  54.9 
Literacy:  36% 

Labor  force:  (1984/85)  about  284.4  mil- 
lion; 67%  agriculture;  more  than  10% 
unemployed  and  underemployed 

Organized  labor:  less  than  5%  of  total 
labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  India 
Type:  federal  republic 
Capital:  New  Delhi 

Administrative  divisions:  24  states,  7 
union  territories 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  adopted  1950;  limited 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  26 
January 

Branches:  bicameral  parliament  (Council 
of  States,  House  of  the  People);  relatively 
independent  judiciary 


Government  leaders:  Rajiv  GANDHI, 
Prime  Minister  (since  October  1984);  Zail 
SINGH,  President  (since  July  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  national  and  state  elections 
ordinarily  held  every  five  years;  may  be 
postponed  in  emergency  and  may  be  held 
more  frequently  if  government  loses  confi- 
dence vote;  last  general  election  in  Decem- 
ber 1984;  state  elections  staggered 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Indian 
National  Congress,  controlled  national 
government  from  independence  to  March 
1977;  split  in  January  1978  and  1979; 
party  currently  headed  by  Prime  Minister 
Rajiv  Gandhi;  Lok  Dal  Party  led  by 
Charan  Singh;  Janata  Party  led  by  Chan- 
dra Shekhar;  Bharatiya  Janata  Party  led  by 
L.  K.  Advani;  Communist  Party  of  India 
(CPI),  led  by  C.  Rajeswara  Rao;  Commu- 
nist Party  of  India/Marxist  (CPI/M)  led  by 
E.  M.  S.  Namboodiripad;  Communist 
Party  of  India/Marxist-Leninist  (CPI/ML) 
led  by  Satyanarayan  Singh;  All-India  Anna 
Dravida  Munnetra  Kazagham  (AIADMK), 
a  regional  party  in  Tamil  Nadu,  led  by  M. 
G.  Ramachandran;  Akali  Dal,  led  by  Surjit 
Singh  Barnala,  representing  Sikh  religious 
community  in  the  Punjab;  Telugu  Desam, 
a  regional  party  in  Andhra  Pradesh  led  by 
N.  T.  Rama  Rao;  National  Conference 
(NC),  a  regional  party  in  Jammu  and 
Kashmir,  split  into  factions  led  by  Farcoq 
Abdullah  and  G.  M.  Shah;  Asom  Gana 
Parishad,  a  regional  party  in  Assam  led  by 
Prafulla  Mahanta;  Mizo  National  Front,  a 
regional  party  in  Mizoram  led  by  Lald- 
enga;  Congress  (IG)  Party,  a  breakaway 
faction  of  Congress  (I)  Party,  led  by 
Pranab  Mukherjee  and  Gundu  Rao 

Voting  strength:  India  Congress,  74%; 
Telugu  Desam  Party,  5%;  CPM,  4%; 
Janata,  1.8%;  CPI,  1.1%;  DMKP,  0.5%; 
BJP,  0.4%;  other,  6.6% 

Communists:  466,000  members  claimed 
by  CPI,  270,000  members  claimed  by 
CPI/M;  Communist  extremist  groups, 
about  15,000  members 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  vari- 
ous separatist  groups  seeking  reorganiza- 
tion of  states;  numerous  senas  or  militant/ 
chauvinistic  organizations,  including  Shiv 
Sena  (in  Bombay),  Anand  Marg,  and 
Rashtriya  Swayamsevak  Sangh 

Member  of:  ADB,  AIOEC,  ANRPC, 
Colombo  Plan,  Commonwealth,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO, 
International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council,  NAM,  SAARC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $190  billion  (FY85/86  at  current 
prices),  $250  per  capita;  real  growth  4% 
(FY85/86  est.) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  iron  ore,  manga- 
nese, mica,  bauxite,  chromite,  natural  gas 
Agriculture:  rice,  other  cereals,  pulses, 
oilseed,  cotton,  jute,  sugarcane,  tobacco, 
tea,  coffee;  an  illegal  producer  of  opium 
poppy  and  cannabis  for  the  international 
drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  2.34  million  metric  tons 
(1984);  exports  $337  million  (1982) 
Major  industries:  textiles,  food  processing, 
steel,  machinery,  transportation  equip- 
ment, cement,  jute  manufactures 
Crude  steel:  10.9  million  metric  tons,  14 
kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  46,663,000  kW  capacity; 
170,000  million  kWh  produced,  220  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $8.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  FY85/86); 
engineering  goods,  textiles  and  clothing, 
tea 

Imports:  $15.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  FY85/86); 
machinery  and  transport  equipment, 
petroleum,  edible  oils,  fertilizers 
Major  trade  partners:  US,  UK,  USSR, 
Japan 

Budget:  central  government  revenue  and 
capital  receipts,  $41  billion;  disbursements, 
$45  billion  (FY85/86) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  13.09 
rupees=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 


113 


India  (continued) 


Indonesia 


Communications 

Railroads:  61,850  km  total  (1985);  33,553 
km  1.676-meter  broad  gauge,  24,051  km 
1.000-meter  gauge,  4,246  km  narrow 
gauge  (0.762-meter  and  0.610-meter); 
12,617  km  is  double  track;  6,078  km  is 
electrified 

Highways:  1,633,300  km  total  (1985); 
515,300  km  secondary  and  1,118,000  km 
gravel,  crushed  stone,  or  earth 

Inland  waterways:  16,180  km;  3,631  km 
navigable  by  large  vessels 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  3,497  km;  refined 
products,  1,828  km;  natural  gas,  260  km 

Ports:  9  major,  79  minor 

Civil  air:  93  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  346  total,  299  usable;  194  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  54  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  95  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  domestic  tele- 
phone service  where  available,  good  inter- 
nal microwave  links;  telegraph  facilities 
widespread;  AM  broadcast  adequate; 
international  radio  communications  ade- 
quate; 3.1  million  telephones  (0.4  per  100 
popl.);  about  170  AM  transmitters  at  94 
locations,  14  TV  centers  and  170  TV 
relays;  domestic  satellite  system  for  com- 
munications and  TV;  submarine  cable 
extends  to  Sri  Lanka  and  Malaysia 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Coast 
Guard,  Paramilitary  Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
211,199,000;  124,745,000  fit  for  military 
service;  about  9,211,000  reach  military  age 
(17)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1986;  est.  budget  $6.5  billion; 
15.6%  of  central  government  budget 


1200km 


North 
Pacific 
Ocean 


Java 


Indian  Ocean 


See  regional  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,904,570  km2;  land  area: 
1,811,570km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Alaska  and  California  combined 

Land  boundaries:  2,736  km  total 
Coastline:  54,716  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 

archipelagic  baselines) 

Continental  shelf:  to  depth  of  exploita- 
tion 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Australia;  East  Timor  question 
with  Portugal 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  more  mod- 
erate in  highlands 

Terrain:  mostly  coastal  lowlands;  larger 
islands  have  interior  mountains 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  67% 
forest  and  woodland;  15%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  more  than  13,500  islands; 
occasional  floods;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  straddles  Equator;  strategic 
location  astride  or  along  major  sea  lanes 
from  Indian  Ocean  to  Pacific  Ocean 


Population:  180,425,534;  average  annual 
growth  rate  2.05% 


Nationality:  noun — Indonesian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Indonesian 

Ethnic  divisions:  majority  of  Malay  stock 
comprising  45.0%  Javanese,  14.0%  Sundan- 
ese,  7.5%  Madurese,  7.5%  coastal  Malays, 
26.0%  other 

Religion:  88%  Muslim,  6%  Protestant,  3% 
Roman  Catholic,  2%  Hindu,  1%  other 

Language:  Indonesian  (modified  form  of 
Malay;  official);  English  and  Dutch  leading 
foreign  languages;  local  dialects,  the  most 
widely  spoken  of  which  is  Javanese 

Infant  mortality  rate:  95/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  54 
Literacy:  62% 

Labor  force:  67  million  (1985  est.);  55% 
agriculture,  10%  manufacturing,  4%  con- 
struction, 3%  transport  and  communica- 
tions 

Organized  labor:  3  million  members 
(claimed);  about  5%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Indonesia 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Jakarta 

Administrative  divisions:  28  first-level 
administrative  subdivisions  or  provinces, 
which  are  further  subdivided  into  282 
second-level  areas 

Legal  system:  based  on  Roman-Dutch 
law,  substantially  modified  by  indigenous 
concepts  and  by  new  criminal  procedures 
code;  constitution  of  1945  is  legal  basis  of 
government;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  17 
August 

Branches:  executive  headed  by  President 
who  is  chief  of  state  and  head  of  Cabinet; 
Cabinet  selected  by  President;  unicameral 
legislature  (DPR  or  House  of  Representa- 
tives) of  460  members  (96  appointed,  364 
elected);  second  body  (MPR  or  People's 
Consultative  Assembly)  of  920  members 
includes  the  legislature  and  460  other 
members  (chosen  by  several  processes,  but 
not  directly  elected);  MPR  elects  President 
and  Vice  President  and  theoretically 
determines  national  policy;  judicial,  Su- 
preme Court  is  highest  court 


114 


Government  leader:  Gen.  (Ret.) 
SOEHARTO,  President  (since  March  1968) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18  and  mar- 
ried persons  regardless  of  age 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Golkar 
(quasi-official  party  based  on  functional 
groups),  Lt.  Gen.  Sudharmono;  Indonesia 
Democracy  Party  (federation  of  former 
Nationalist  and  Christian  Parties),  Soeryad 
(chairman)  and  Nicholas  Daryanto  (secre- 
tary general);  United  Development  Party 
(federation  of  former  Islamic  parties),  John 
Naro 

Voting  strength:  (1982  election)  Golkar 
64.1%,  Unity  Development  28%,  Indonesia 
Democracy  7.9% 

Communists:  Communist  Party  (PKI)  was 
officially  banned  in  March  1966;  current 
strength  about  1,000-3,000,  with  less  than 
10%  engaged  in  organized  activity;  pre- 
October  1965  hardcore  membership  about 
1.5  million 

Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  ASEAN, 
Association  of  Tin  Producing  Countries, 
CIPEC,  ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU, 
NAM,  QIC,  OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $85  billion  (1986  est),  about  $510 
per  capita;  real  average  annual  growth, 
3.6%  (1981-85);  real  annual  growth  rate 
0.0%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  tin,  natural  gas, 
nickel,  timber,  bauxite,  copper 

Agriculture:  subsistence  food  production, 
and  smallholder  and  plantation  production 
for  export;  rice,  cassava,  peanuts,  rubber, 
cocoa,  coffee,  copra,  other  tropical  prod- 
ucts; an  illegal  producer  of  cannabis  for 
the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  2.2  million  metric  tons; 
shrimp  exports  $194  million,  imports  $4 
million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  petroleum,  textiles, 
mining,  cement,  chemical  fertilizer  pro- 
duction, timber 


Electric  power:  10,800,000  kW  capacity; 
30,000  million  kWh  produced,  170  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $18.6  billion  (1986);  petroleum 
and  liquefied  natural  gas,  timber,  rubber, 
coffee,  tin,  animal  and  vegetable  oils,  tea, 
copper 

Imports:  $10.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  wheat 
flour,  wheat  grains,  and  other  cereals  and 
cereal  products,  textiles,  chemical  prod- 
ucts, iron  and  steel  products,  machinery, 
transport  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  exports — 
47%  Japan,  21%  US,  9%  Singapore;  im- 
ports—23%  Japan,  18%  US,  12% 
Singapore,  11%  Saudi  Arabia,  4%  FRG 

Budget:  receipts,  $10.5  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $13.9  billion  (1987/88) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1,648 
rupiahs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  6,964  km  total;  6,389  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge,  497  km  0.750-meter  gauge, 
78  km  0.600-meter  gauge;  211  km  double 
track;  101  km  electrified;  government 
owned 

Highways:  119,500  km  total 

Inland  waterways:  21,579  km;  Sumatra 
5,471  km,  Java  and  Madura  820  km, 
Kalimantan  portion  of  Borneo  10,460  km, 
Celebes  241  km,  and  Irian  Jaya  4,587  km 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  2,450  km;  refined 
products,  456  km;  natural  gas,  450  km 

Ports:  15  ocean  ports 

Civil  air:  about  150  major  transport  air- 
craft 

Airfields:  436  total,  414  usable;  100  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  12  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  66  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  interisland  micro- 
wave system  and  HF  police  net;  domestic 
service  fair,  international  service  good; 
radiobroadcast  coverage  good;  741,330 
(est.)  telephones  (0.4  per  100  popl.);  618 
AM,  38  FM,  9  TV  stations;  210  TV  relays; 
1  international  satellite  ground  station  (1 
Indian  Ocean  antenna  and  1  Pacific  Ocean 
antenna),  and  a  domestic  satellite  commu- 
nications system 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Na- 
tional Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
45,740,000;  26,513,000  fit  for  military 
service;  2,706,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


115 


Iran 


See  regional  map  VI 


Bandar 

Gull    Boheihti 
of 
Oman 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,648,000  km2;  land  area: 

1,636,000km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Alaska  and  Pennsylvania  combined 

Land  boundaries:  5,318  km  total 

Coastline:  3,180  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  50  nm  in  the 
Sea  of  Oman;  median-line  boundaries  in 
the  Persian  Gulf 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  on  17  Septem- 
ber 1980  Iraq  abrogated  1975  treaty  with 
Iraq  which  shifted  the  boundary  in  Shaft 
al  Arab  waterway  from  the  low  water 
mark  on  Iranian  side  of  river  to  midpoint 
of  deepest  navigable  channel  (thalweg) — 
heavy  fighting  with  Iraq  began  on  22 
September  1980;  Kurdistan  question  with 
Iraq;  occupies  three  islands  claimed  by 
UAE  in  Strait  of  Hormuz;  periodic  dis- 
putes with  Afghanistan  over  Helmand 
water  rights 

Climate:  mostly  arid  or  semiarid,  sub- 
tropical along  Caspian  coast 

Terrain:  rugged,  mountainous  rim;  high, 
central  basin  with  deserts,  mountains; 
small,  discontinuous  plains  along  both 
coasts 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  27%  meadows  and  pastures; 
11%  forest  and  woodland;  54%  other; 
includes  2%  irrigated 


Environment:  deforestation;  overgrazing; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  50,407,763  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.32%;  figures  do 
not  take  into  account  the  impact  of  the 
Iran- Iraq  war 

Nationality:  noun — Iranian(s);  adjective — 
Iranian 

Ethnic  divisions:  63%  ethnic  Persian,  18% 
Turkic,  13%  other  Iranian,  3%  Kurdish, 
3%  Arab  and  other  Semitic 

Religion:  93%  Shi'a  Muslim;  5%  Sunni 

Muslim;  2%  Zoroastrian,  Jewish,  Christian, 

and  Baha'i 

Language:  Farsi,  Turki,  Kurdish,  Arabic, 

English,  French 

Infant  mortality  rate:  110/1,000  (1986 

est.) 

Life  expectancy:  54 

Literacy:  48% 

Labor  force:  12.0  million,  (1979  est.);  33% 

agriculture,  21%  manufacturing;  shortage 

of  skilled  labor;  unemployment  may  be  as 

high  as  35% 

Government 

Official  name:  Islamic  Republic  of  Iran 

Type:  theocratic  republic 

Capital:  Tehran 

Administrative  divisions:  24  provinces, 
subdivided  into  districts,  subdistricts, 
counties,  and  villages 
Legal  system:  the  new  constitution  codi- 
fies Islamic  principles  of  government 

National  holiday:  Shi'a  Islam  religious 
holidays  observed  nationwide 

Branches:  Ayatollah  ol-Ozma  Ruhollah 
Khomeini,  the  leader  of  the  revolution, 
provides  general  guidance  for  the  govern- 
ment, which  is  divided  into  executive, 
unicameral  legislature  (Islamic  Consulta- 
tive Assembly),  and  judicial  branches 
Government  leaders:  Ayatollah  ol-Ozma 
Ruhollah  KHOMEINI,  Guardian  Jurispru- 
dent (since  February  1979);  Ali  KHAME- 
NEI (cleric),  President  (since  October 


1981);  Mir  Hosein  MUSAVI-KHAMENEI, 
Prime  Minister  (since  October  1981);  Ali 
Akbar  HASHEMI  RAFSANJANI  (cleric), 
Speaker  of  Islamic  Consultative  Assembly 
(since  July  1980);  Ayatollah  Hosein  Ali 
MONTAZERI,  Designated  Successor  to 
Ayatollah  Ruhollah  Khomeini  (22  Novem- 
ber 1985) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  15 

Elections:  elections  to  select  a  President 
held  in  August  1985;  those  to  select  an 
Assembly  of  Experts  to  name  Khomeini's 
successor  held  in  December  1982;  parlia- 
mentary elections  held  in  1984;  next 
presidential  election  to  be  held  during  the 
summer  of  1989;  next  parliamentary 
elections  to  be  held  in  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Islamic 
Republic  Party  (IRP),  Ali  Khamenei; 
Freedom  Movement,  Mehdi  Bazargan 

Voting  strength:  reliable  figures  not  avail- 
able; supporters  of  the  Islamic  Republic 
dominate  the  parliament 

Communists:  1,000  to  2,000  est.  hardcore; 
15,000  to  20,000  est.  sympathizers;  crack- 
down in  1983  crippled  the  party;  trials  of 
captured  leaders  began  in  late  1983  and 
remain  incomplete 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 

Mojahedin  Khalq  Organization  (MKO), 
People's  Fedayeen,  and  Kurdish  Demo- 
cratic Party  are  armed  political  groups 
that  have  been  almost  completely  re- 
pressed by  the  government;  other  powerful 
progovernment  groups  include  Fedayeen 
Islam  Organization,  Hezbollah,  Hojjatiyeh 
Society,  Mojahedin  of  the  Islamic  Revolu- 
tion, Muslim  Students  Following  the  Line 
of  the  Imam,  and  Tehran  Militant  Clergy 
Association 

Member  of:  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP,  FAO, 
G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU, 
NAM,  QIC,  OPEC,  Economic  Cooperation 
Organization,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO; 
continued  participation  in  some  of  these 
organizations  doubtful  under  the  new 
Islamic  constitution 


116 


Iraq 


Economy 

GNP:  $82.4  billion,  $1,690  per  capita,  real 
GNP  - 13.4%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural  gas, 
coal,  chromium,  copper,  iron,  lead,  man- 
ganese, zinc,  barite,  sulfur,  coal,  emeralds, 
turquoise 

Agriculture:  wheat,  barley,  rice,  sugar 
beets,  cotton,  dates,  raisins,  tea,  tobacco, 
sheep,  goats;  an  illegal  producer  of  opium 
poppy  for  the  international  drug  trade 

Major  industries:  crude  oil  production 
(2.0  million  b/d  in  1986)  and  refining, 
textiles,  cement  and  other  building  materi- 
als, food  processing  (particularly  sugar 
refining  and  vegetable  oil  production), 
metal  fabricating  (steel  and  copper) 

Electric  power:  12,601,000  kW  capacity; 
33,120  million  kWh  produced,  710  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $7.8  billion  (1986  est);  90% 
petroleum;  also  carpets,  fruits,  nuts, 
cement 

Imports:  $10.0  billion  (1986  est.);  machin- 
ery, military  supplies,  foodstuffs,  pharma- 
ceuticals,  technical  services,  refined  oil 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Japan, 
Turkey,  Syria,  Italy,  Netherlands,  Spain, 
France,  FRG;  imports — FRG,  Japan, 
Turkey,  UK,  Italy 

Budget:  proposed  expenditures  about  $40 
billion;  actual  expenditures  were  less  as  a 
result  of  slump  in  oil  market  (FY86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  73.36 
rials=US$l  (December  1986);  unofficial 
exchange  rate  on  black  market  up  to  ten 
times  as  many  rials  per  $1 

Fiscal  year:  21  March-20  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,601  km  total;  4,509  km  1.432- 
meter  gauge,  92  km  1.676-meter  gauge 

Highways:  85,000  km  total;  36,000  km 
gravel  and  crushed  stone,  15,000  km 
improved  earth,  19,000  km  bituminous 
and  bituminous-treated  surfaces,  15,000 
km  unimproved  earth 


Inland  waterways:  904  km,  excluding  the 
Caspian  Sea,  104  km  on  the  Shaft  al  Arab 
(closed  since  September  1980  because  of 
Iran-Iraq  conflict);  3  inland  coastal  ports 
on  Caspian  Sea 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  5,900  km;  refined 
products,  3,900  km;  natural  gas,  3,300  km; 
some  pumping  stations  have  been  dam- 
aged by  Iraqi  air  attacks 

Ports:  6  major  (Abadan  and  Khorramshahr 
are  closed,  Bandar-e  'Abbas,  Bandar-e 
Khomeyni,  Chah  Bahar,  Bushehr),  12 
minor 

Civil  air:  43  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  171  total,  144  usable;  78  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  16  with 
runways  over  3,659  m,  15  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  66  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  62  AM,  27  FM,  28 
TV  stations;  2,048,000  TV  sets;  5,500,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Islamic  Ground  Forces,  Navy, 
Air  Force,  and  Revolutionary  Guard 
(includes  Basij  militia),  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
11,490,000;  6,848,000  fit  for  military 
service;  about  540,000  reach  military  age 
(21)  annually 


Set  rcfionil  m«p  VI 


Persian 
Gulf 


Geography 

Total  area:  434,920  km2;  land  area: 
433,970  km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  California 
Land  boundaries:  3,668  km  total 
Coastline:  58  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  on  17  Septem- 
ber 1980  Iraq  abrogated  1975  treaty  with 
Iraq  which  shifted  the  boundary  in  Shatt 
al  Arab  waterway  from  the  low  water 
mark  on  Iranian  side  of  river  to  midpoint 
of  deepest  navigable  channel  (thalweg) — 
heavy  fighting  with  Iran  began  on  22 
September  1980;  Kurdistan  question  with 
Iran;  ownership  of  Warbah  and  Bubiy5n 
islands  disputed  with  Kuwait;  shares  Neu- 
tral Zone  with  Saudi  Arabia;  periodic 
disputes  with  Syria  over  Euphrates  water 
rights;  potential  dispute  over  water  devel- 
opment plans  by  Turkey  for  the  Tigris  and 
Euphrates  rivers 

Climate:  desert;  mild  to  cool  winters  with 
dry,  hot,  cloudless  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  broad  plains;  reedy 
marshes  in  southeast;  mountains  along 
borders  with  Iran  and  Turkey 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  9%  meadows  and  pastures;  3%  forest 
and  woodland;  75%  other;  includes  4% 
irrigated 


117 


Iraq  (continued) 


Environment:  development  of  Tigris- 
Euphrates  river  systems  contingent  upon 
agreements  with  upstream  riparians  (Syria, 
Turkey);  air  and  water  pollution;  soil 
degradation  and  erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  16,970,948  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.56%;  figures  do 
not  take  into  account  the  impact  of  the 
Iran-Iraq  war 

Nationality:  noun — Iraqi(s);  adjective — 
Iraqi 

Ethnic  divisions:  75%  Arab,  15-20% 
Kurdish,  5-10%  Turkoman,  Assyrian,  and 
other 

Religion:  97%  Muslim  (60-65%  Shi'a, 
32-37%  Sunni),  3%  Christian  or  other 

Language:  Arabic  (official),  Kurdish  (offi- 
cial in  Kurdish  regions);  Assyrian,  Arme- 
nian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  76/1,000  (1980) 
Life  expectancy:  56.1 
Literacy:  about  50% 

Labor  force:  3.5  million  (1980);  44% 
agriculture,  26%  industry,  31%  services; 
severe  labor  shortage  due  to  war;  expatri- 
ate labor  force  about  1,000,000 

Organized  labor:  11%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Iraq 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Baghdad 

Administrative  divisions:  18  provinces 
under  centrally  appointed  officials 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  in 
special  religious  courts,  civil  law  system 
elsewhere;  provisional  constitution  adopted 
in  1968;  judicial  review  was  suspended; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holidays:  anniversaries  of  the 
1958  and  1968  revolutions  are  celebrated 
14  July  and  17  July;  various  religious 
holidays 


Branches:  Ba'th  Party  of  Iraq  has  been  in 
power  since  1968  coup;  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (National  Assembly) 

Government  leaders:  Saddam  HUSAYN, 
President  (since  July  1979);  Izzat 
IBRAHIM,  Deputy  Chairman  of  the 
Revolutionary  Command  Council  (since 
July  1979);  Taha  Yasin  RAMADAN,  First 
Deputy  Prime  Minister  (since  July  1979) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  National  Assembly  elections 
held  October  1984;  Legislative  Council  for 
the  Autonomous  Region  held  September 
1980 

Communists:  about  2,000  hardcore  mem- 
bers 

Political  or  pressure  groups:  political 
parties  and  activity  severely  restricted; 
possibly  some  opposition  to  regime  from 
disaffected  members  of  the  regime,  army 
officers,  and  religious  and  ethnic  dissidents 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAPEC,  OIC,  OPEC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $35  billion  (1986  est),  $2,140  per 
capita 

Natural  resources:  oil,  natural  gas,  phos- 
phates, sulfur 

Agriculture:  dates,  wheat,  barley,  rice, 
cotton,  livestock 

Major  industry:  crude  petroleum  1.8 
million  b/d;  petroleum  revenues,  $7.0 
billion  (1986  est.) 

Electric  power:  7,734,000  kW  capacity; 
22,560  million  kWh  produced,  1,410  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $7.45  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
from  nonoil  receipts,  $450  million 
Imports:  $9.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.);  5% 
from  Communist  countries  (1985) 
Major  trade  partners:  exports — France, 
Italy,  Brazil,  Japan,  Turkey,  UK,  Spain, 
USSR,  other  Communist  countries;  im- 
ports—FRG,  Japan,  France,  Italy,  US,  UK, 
Turkey,  USSR,  other  Communist  countries 
(1986) 


Budget:  public  revenues,  $20.0  billion; 
current  expenditures,  $18.6  billion;  devel- 
opment expenditures,  $11.0  billion  (1984 
est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .31  Iraqi 
dinar=US$l  (January  1987) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,200  km  total;  1,680  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  520  km  1.000-meter 
gauge 

Highways:  20,800  km  total;  6,490  km 
paved,  4,654  km  improved  earth,  9,656 
km  unimproved  earth 
Inland  waterways:  1,015  km;  Shatt  al 
Arab  navigable  by  maritime  traffic  for 
about  104  km  (closed  since  September 
1980  because  of  Iran-Iraq  war);  Tigris  and 
Euphrates  navigable  by  shallow-draft 
steamers  (of  little  importance);  Shatt  al 
Basrah  canal  navigable  by  shallow-draft 
vessels 

Ports:  3  major  but  closed  because  of  war 
(Al  Ba$rah,  Umm  Qa$r,  Al  Faw) 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  3,950  km;  725  km 
refined  products;  1,360  km  natural  gas 
Civil  air:  15  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  107  total,  95  usable;  61  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  50  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  12  with  runways 
1, 220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  network 
consists  of  coaxial  cables,  radio-relay  links, 
and  radiocommunication  stations;  about 
632,000  telephones  (4.0  per  100  popl.);  9 
AM,  no  FM,  81  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic 
Ocean,  1  Indian  Ocean,  and  1  Intersputnik 
satellite  station;  coaxial  cable  and  radio- 
relay  to  Kuwait,  Jordan,  Syria,  and  Turkey 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Border 
Guard  Force,  mobile  police  force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
3,795,000;  2,119,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 177,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Ireland 


100km 


onaghan 


Irish 
Sea 


North 

Atlantic 

Ocean 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  70,280  km2;  land  area:  68,890 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
West  Virginia 

Land  boundary:  360  km  with  United 
Kingdom 

Coastline:  1,448  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  UK;  Northern  Ireland  question 
with  UK;  Rockall  continental  shelf  dispute 
involving  Denmark,  Iceland,  and  UK 

Climate:  temperate  marine;  modified  by 
Gulf  Stream;  mild  winters,  cool  summers; 
consistently  humid;  overcast  about  half  the 
time 

Terrain:  mostly  level  to  rolling  interior 
plain  surrounded  by  rugged  hills  and  low 
mountains 

Land  use:  14%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  71%  meadows  and 
pastures;  5%  forest  and  woodland;  10% 
other 

Environment:  deforestation 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  3,534,553  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  —0.08% 


Nationality:  noun — Irishman(men),  Irish 
(collective  pi.);  adjective — Irish 

Ethnic  divisions:  Celtic,  with  English 
minority 

Religion:  94%  Roman  Catholic,  4%  Angli- 
can, 2%  other 

Language:  Irish  (Gaelic)  and  English 
(official);  English  is  widely  spoken 

Infant  mortality  rate:  11/1,000(1983) 
Life  expectancy:  73 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  about  1,299,400  (1985); 
27.5%  manufacturing  and  construction; 
16.4%  agriculture,  forestry,  fishing;  20.4% 
services;  6.6%  government;  6.2%  transpor- 
tation; other  22.9%;  17.4%  unemployment 
(1985  average) 

Organized  labor:  36%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Ireland,  Eire  (Gaelic) 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Dublin 

Administrative  divisions:  26  counties 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law,  substantially  modified  by  indigenous 
concepts;  constitution  adopted  1937;  judi- 
cial review  of  legislative  acts  in  Supreme 
Court;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  St.  Patrick's  Day,  17 
March 

Branches:  elected  President;  bicameral 
parliament  (Seanad,  Dail)  reflecting  pro- 
portional and  vocational  representation; 
judiciary  appointed  by  President  on  advice 
of  government 

Government  leaders:  Dr.  Patrick  J.  HIL- 
LERY,  President  (since  1976);  Charles  J. 
HAUGHEY,  Prime  Minister  (since  March 
1987) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  Dail  (lower  house)  elected  every 
five  years  (last  election  February  1987); 
President  elected  for  seven-year  term  (last 
election  March  1987) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Fianna  Fail, 
Charles  Haughey;  Labor  Party,  Richard 
Spring;  Fine  Gael,  Alan  Dukes;  Commu- 


nist Party  of  Ireland,  Michael  O'Riordan; 
Workers'  Party,  Tomas  MacGiolla;  Sinn 
Fein,  Gerry  Adams;  Progressive  Demo- 
crats, Desmond  O'Malley;  Democratic 
Socialist  Party,  Jim  Kemmy 

Voting  strength:  (1987  election)  Dail— 
Fianna  Fail,  81  seats  (44.1%);  Fine  Gael, 
51  seats  (27.1);  Progressive  Democrats,  14 
seats  (11.8%),  Labor  Party,  12  seats  (6.4%); 
Workers'  Party,  4  seats  (3.8%);  indepen- 
dents, 3  seats;  Democratic  Socialist  Party, 
1  seat;  Sinn  Fein  no  seat  (1.9%) 

Communists:  under  500 

Member  of:  Council  of  Europe,  EC,  EMS, 
ESRO  (observer),  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICES,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  OECD,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $14.3  billion,  $4,040  per  capita; 
64.2%  consumption,  23.6%  investment, 
21.5%  government,  1.2%  inventories; 
—  10.5%  net  foreign  demand;  2.4%  real 
GNP  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  zinc,  lead,  natural  gas, 
barite,  copper,  gypsum,  limestone,  dolo- 
mite, peat,  silver 

Agriculture:  livestock  and  dairy  products, 
turnips,  barley,  potatoes,  sugar  beets, 
wheat;  85%  self-sufficient;  food  shortages — 
grains,  fruits,  vegetables 
Fishing:  catch  179,700  metric  tons;  exports 
of  fish  and  fish  products  $100  million, 
imports  of  fish  and  fish  products  $35 
million  (1985) 

Major  industries:  food  products,  brewing, 
textiles  and  clothing,  chemicals  and  phar- 
maceuticals,  machinery  and  transportation 
equipment 

Crude  steel:  330,000  metric  ton  capacity 
(1984);  203,000  metric  tons  produced,  55 
kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  4,177,000  kW  capacity; 
12,630  million  kWh  produced,  3,490  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 


119 


Ireland  (continued) 


Israel 

(West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry 

on  page  276) 


Exports:  $10.39  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985  con- 
verted at  0.93  IR  pound=US$l);  foodstuffs 
(primarily  dairy  and  meat  products),  data 
processing  equipment,  live  animals,  ma- 
chinery, chemicals,  Pharmaceuticals, 
clothing 

Imports:  $10.05  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985  con- 
verted at  0.93  IR  pound=US$l);  machin- 
ery, petroleum  and  petroleum  products, 
chemicals,  semifinished  goods,  cereals 
Major  trade  partners:  exports — 67.5%  EC 
(33.0%  UK,  10.1%  FRG,  8.4%  France), 
9.8%  US,  0.9%  Communist;  imports— 
64.7%  EC  (42.7%  UK,  7.7%  FRG,  4.8% 
France),  17.0%  US,  1.8%  Communist 
(1985) 

Budget:  expenditures,  $8.65  billion;  reve- 
nues, $7.30  billion;  deficit,  $1.35  billion 
(1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.75  Irish 
pound = US$1  (December  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  Irish  National  Railways  (CIE) 
operates  1,940  km  1.602-meter  gauge, 
government  owned;  485  km  double;  38  km 
electrified 

Highways:  92,294  km  total;  87,422  km 
surfaced,  4,872  km  gravel  or  crushed  stone 
Inland  waterways:  limited  for  commercial 
traffic 

Pipelines:  natural  gas,  225  km 
Ports:  2  major,  6  secondary,  38  minor 
Civil  air:  23  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  42  total,  39  usable;  17  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  small,  modern 
system  using  cable  and  radio-relay  circuits; 
900,000  telephones  (23.5  per  100  popl.);  47 
AM,  33  FM,  86  TV  stations;  4  coaxial 
submarine  cables;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Naval  Service,  Army  Air 
Corps 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  793,000; 
635,000  fit  for  military  service;  37,000 
reach  military  age  (17)  annually 
Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $256.955  million;  2.5%  of 
central  government  budget 


100km 

Haifa 
Nazar 

Mediterranean 
Sea 

Tal  Aviv-Yaf 

Ashdod 


Boundary  representation 
not  necessarily  authontat 


See  regional  map  VI 


Note:  the  Arab  territories  occupied  by 
Israel  since  the  1967  war  are  not  included 
in  the  data  below;  as  stated  in  the  1978 
Camp  David  Accords  and  reaffirmed  by 
the  President's  1  September  1982  peace 
initiative,  the  final  status  of  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza  Strip,  their  relationship  with 
their  neighbors,  and  a  peace  treaty  be- 
tween Israel  and  Jordan  are  to  be  negoti- 
ated among  the  concerned  parties;  Camp 
David  further  specifies  that  these  negotia- 
tions will  resolve  the  location  of  the  re- 
spective boundaries;  pending  the  comple- 
tion of  this  process,  it  is  US  policy  that  the 
final  status  of  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza 
Strip  has  yet  to  be  determined  (see  West 
Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry);  on  25  April 
1982  Israel  relinquished  control  of  the 
Sinai  to  Egypt;  statistics  for  the  Israeli- 
occupied  Golan  Heights  are  included  in 
the  Syria  entry 

Geography 

Total  area:  20,770  km2;  land  area:  20,330 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Massachusetts 

Land  boundaries:  1,036  km  total  (before 
1967  war) 

Coastline:  273  km  (before  1967  war) 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  to  depth  of  exploita- 
tion 
Territorial  sea:  6  nm 


Boundary  disputes:  separated  from  Jor- 
dan, Lebanon,  and  Syria  by  1949  Armi- 
stice Line;  disputes  with  Egypt  over  Taba 
area  and  precise  location  of  some  individ- 
ual boundary  markers;  West  Bank  and 
Gaza  Strip  are  Israeli  occupied  with  status 
to  be  determined;  Golan  Heights  is  Israeli 
occupied;  Israeli  troops  in  southern  Leba- 
non since  June  1982 

Climate:  temperate;  hot  and  dry  in  desert 
areas 

Terrain:  mostly  desert  (Negev)  in  south; 
low  coastal  plain;  central  mountains; 
Jordan  Rift  Valley 

Land  use:  17%  arable  land;  5%  permanent 
crops;  40%  meadows  and  pastures;  6% 
forest  and  woodland;  32%  other;  includes 
11%  irrigated 

Environment:  sandstorms  may  occur 
during  spring  and  summer;  limited  arable 
land  and  natural  water  resources  pose 
serious  constraints;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  4,222,118,  excluding  West 
Bank,  Gaza  Strip,  and  East  Jerusalem  (July 
1987),  average  annual  growth  rate  1.83% 

Nationality:  noun — Israeli(s);  adjective — 
Israeli 

Ethnic  divisions:  83%  Jewish,  17%  non- 
Jewish  (mostly  Arab) 

Religion:  83%  Judaism,  13.1%  Islam,  2.3% 
Christian,  1.6%  Druze 
Language:  Hebrew  (official);  Arabic  used 
officially  for  Arab  minority;  English  most 
commonly  used  foreign  language 

Infant  mortality  rate:  14.1/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  72.1 
Literacy:  88%  Jews,  70%  Arabs 
Labor  force:  1,400,000  (1984  est.);  29.5% 
public  services;  22.8%  industry,  mining, 
and  manufacturing;  12.8%  commerce; 
9.5%  finance  and  business;  6.8%  transport, 
storage,  and  communications;  6.5%  con- 
struction and  public  works;  5.5%  agricul- 
ture, forestry,  and  fishing;  5.8%  personal 
and  other  services;  1.0%  electricity  and 
water  (1983);  unemployment  about  6.7% 
(1985) 


120 


Organized  labor:  90%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  State  of  Israel 
Type:  republic 

Capital:  Jerusalem;  Israel  proclaimed 
Jerusalem  its  capital  in  1950;  the  United 
States,  like  nearly  all  other  countries, 
maintains  its  Embassy  in  Tel  Aviv 
Administrative  divisions:  six  administra- 
tive districts 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  English  common 
law,  British  Mandatory  regulations,  and,  in 
personal  area,  Jewish,  Christian,  and 
Muslim  legal  systems;  commercial  matters 
regulated  substantially  by  codes  adopted 
since  1948;  no  formal  constitution;  some  of 
the  functions  of  a  constitution  are  filled  by 
the  Declaration  of  Establishment  (1948), 
the  basic  laws  of  the  Knesset  (legislature) — 
relating  to  the  Knesset,  Israeli  lands,  the 
president,  the  government — and  the  Israel 
citizenship  law;  no  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  in  December  1985  Israel 
informed  the  UN  Secretariat  that  it  would 
no  longer  accept  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holidays:  Israel  declared  inde- 
pendence on  14  May  1948;  because  the 
Jewish  calendar  is  lunar,  however,  the 
holiday  varies  from  year  to  year;  all  major 
Jewish  religious  holidays  are  also  observed 
as  national  holidays 

Branches:  President  has  largely  ceremo- 
nial functions,  except  for  the  authority  to 
decide  which  political  leader  should  try  to 
form  a  ruling  coalition  following  an  elec- 
tion or  the  fall  of  a  previous  government; 
executive  power  vested  in  Cabinet;  uni- 
cameral  parliament  (Knesset)  of  120  mem- 
bers elected  under  a  system  of  propor- 
tional representation;  legislation  provides 
fundamental  laws  in  absence  of  a  written 
constitution;  two  distinct  court  systems 
(secular  and  religious) 
Government  leaders:  Chaim  HERZOG, 
President  (since  May  1983);  Yitzhak 
SHAMIR,  Prime  Minister  (since  October 
1986),  who  replaced  Shimon  PERES  under 
an  agreement  whereby  the  positions  of 
Prime  Minister  and  that  of  Vice  Prime 
Minister  and  Foreign  Minister  would  be 
traded  in  October  1986 


Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  held  every  four  years  unless 
required  by  dissolution  of  Knesset;  last 
election  held  in  July  1984;  next  election 
must  be  held  by  November  1988 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Israel  cur- 
rently has  a  national  unity  government 
comprising  eight  parties  that  hold  97  of 
the  Knesset's  120  seats;  members  of  the 
unity  government — Labor  Alignment,  Vice 
Premier  and  Foreign  Minister  Shimon 
Peres;  Likud  Bloc,  Prime  Minister  Yitzhak 
Shamir;  Shinui  Party,  Minister  of  Commu- 
nications Amnon  Rubenstein;  National 
Religious  Party,  Minister  of  Religious 
Affairs  Zvulun  Hammer;  SHAS,  Yitzhak 
Peretz;  Agudat  Israel,  Avraham  Shapira; 
Morasha-Po'aley  Agudat  Yisra'el,  Avraham 
Verdiger;  Ometz,  Minister  Without  Portfo- 
lio Yigael  Hurwitz;  opposition  parties — 
Tehiya-Tzomet,  Yuval  Ne'eman;  MAPAM, 
Eliezer  Granot;  Citizens'  Rights  Move- 
ment, Shulamit  Aloni;  RAKAH  (Commu- 
nist party),  Meir  Wilner;  Progressive  List 
for  Peace,  Muhammad  Mi'ari;  TAMI, 
Aharon  Abuhatzeira;  Kakh,  Meir  Kahane 
Voting  strength:  Labor  Alignment,  40 
seats;  Likud,  41  seats;  MAPAM,  6  seats; 
Tehiya-Tzomet,  5  seats;  Citizens'  Rights 
Movement,  4  seats;  RAKAH,  4  seats; 
SHAS,  4  seats;  National  Religious  Party,  5 
seats;  Shinui  Party,  3  seats;  Morasha- 
Po'aley  Agudat  Yisra'el,  1  seat;  Agudat 
Yisra'el,  2  seats;  Progressive  List  for  Peace, 
2  seats;  Ometz,  1  seat;  Kakh,  1  seat;  TAMI, 
1  seat 

Communists:  RAKAH  (predominantly 
Arab  but  with  Jews  in  its  leadership)  has 
some  1,500  members 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Black 
Panthers,  a  loosely  organized  youth  group 
seeking  more  benefits  for  oriental  Jews; 
Gush  Emunim,  Jewish  nationalists  advocat- 
ing Jewish  settlement  on  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza  Strip;  Peace  Now,  critical  of 
government's  West  Bank/Gaza  Strip  and 
Lebanon  policies 

Member  of:  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  IOOC,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Wheat  Council,  OAS  (observer),  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WSG,  WTO 


Economy 

GNP:  $21.0  billion,  $5,070  per  capita;  real 
GNP  growth  rate  1.6%  (est.  1986), 

Natural  resources:  copper,  phosphates, 
bromide,  potash,  clay,  sand,  sulfur,  bitu- 
men, manganese 

Agriculture:  citrus  and  other  fruits,  vege- 
tables, cotton,  beef  and  dairy  products, 
poultry  products 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  dia- 
mond cutting  and  polishing,  textiles  and 
clothing,  chemicals,  metal  products,  trans- 
port equipment,  electrical  equipment, 
miscellaneous  machinery,  potash  mining, 
high-technology  electronics 

Electric  power:  4,284,000  kW  capacity; 
16,320  million  kWh  produced,  3,880  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $6.3  billion  (1985);  polished 
diamonds,  citrus  and  other  fruits,  textiles 
and  clothing,  processed  foods,  fertilizer 
and  chemical  products,  electronics;  tourism 
is  important  source  of  foreign  exchange 
Imports:  $9.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  military 
equipment,  rough  diamonds,  oil,  chemi- 
cals, machinery,  iron  and  steel,  cereals, 
textiles,  vehicles,  ships,  aircraft 
Major  trade  partners:  exports — US,  UK, 
FRG,  France,  Belgium,  Luxembourg, 
Italy;  imports— US,  FRG,  UK,  Switzerland, 
Italy,  Belgium,  Luxembourg 
Budget:  public  revenues,  $11.3  billion, 
expenditures,  $14.8  billion  (FY85/86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.5  new 

sheqalims=US$l  (December  1986);  ex- 
change rate  calculated  from  a  basket  of 
foreign  currencies 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  516  km  1.435-meter  gauge 
single  track;  diesel  operated 
Highways:  4,500  km;  majority  is  bitumi- 
nous surfaced 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Pipelines:  crude  oil,  708  km;  refined 
products,  290  km;  natural  gas,  89  km 
Ports:  3  major  (Haifa,  Ashdod,  Elat),  5 
minor 


121 


Israel  (continued) 


Italy 


Civil  air:  26  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  56  total,  53  usable;  27  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  6  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  11  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  most  highly  devel- 
oped in  the  Middle  East  though  not  the 
largest;  good  system  of  coaxial  cable  and 
radio-relay;  1,500,000  telephones  (35.6  per 
100  popl.);  11  AM,  24  FM,  54  TV  stations; 
2  submarine  cables;  2  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  stations;  1  Indian  Ocean 
INTELSAT  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Israel  Defense  Forces;  histori- 
cally there  have  been  no  separate  Israeli 
military  services;  ground,  air,  and  naval 
components  are  branches  of  Israel  Defense 
Forces 

Military  manpower:  eligible  15-49, 
2,015,000;  of  1,014,000  males  15-49, 
839,000  fit  for  military  service;  of 
1,002,000  females  15-49,  826,000  fit  for 
military  service;  41,000  males  and  39,000 
females  reach  military  age  (18)  annually; 
both  sexes  liable  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1987,  $4.6  billion;  about  24%  of 
central  government  budget 


300km 


Mediterranean 
Sea 

Sec  regional  map  V 


di 

alabria 


Geography 

Total  area:  301,230  km2;  land  area: 
294,020  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Arizona 

Land  boundaries:  1,702  km  total 
Coastline:  4,996  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  m  or  to  depth  of 

exploitation 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  South  Tyrol 
question  with  Austria;  Trieste  question 
with  Yugoslavia 

Climate:  temperate;  Alpine  in  far  north 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  and  mountainous; 
some  plains,  coastal  lowlands 

Land  use:  32%  arable  land;  10%  perma- 
nent crops;  17%  meadows  and  pastures; 
22%  forest  and  woodland;  19%  other; 
includes  10%  irrigated 

Environment:  regional  risks  include  land- 
slides, mudflows,  snowslides,  earthquakes, 
volcanic  eruptions,  flooding,  pollution;  land 
sinkage  in  Venice 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  dominat- 
ing central  Mediterranean  as  well  as  south- 
ern sea  and  air  approaches  to  Western 
Europe 


Population:  57,350,850  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.19% 


Nationality:  noun — Italian(s);  adjective — 
Italian 

Ethnic  divisions:  primarily  Italian  but 
population  includes  small  clusters  of 
German-,  French-,  and  Slovene-Italians  in 
the  north  and  of  Albanian-Italians  in  the 
south 

Religion:  almost  100%  nominally  Roman 
Catholic 

Language:  Italian;  parts  of  Trentino-Alto 
Adige  region  (for  example,  Bolzano)  are 
predominantly  German  speaking;  signifi- 
cant French-speaking  minority  in  Valle 
d'Aosta  region;  Slovene-speaking  minority 
in  the  Trieste-Gorizia  area 

Infant  mortality  rate:  11.3/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  73 
Literacy:  93% 

Labor  force:  22.20  million  (1985);  30.5% 
industry,  10.5%  agriculture,  48.6%  services 
(1984);  10.8%  unemployment 

Organized  labor:  40-45%  (est.)  of  labor 
force 

Government 

Official  name:  Italian  Republic 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Rome 

Administrative  divisions:  20  regions;  95 
provinces;  8,081  communes 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system, 
with  ecclesiastical  law  influence;  constitu- 
tion came  into  effect  1  January  1948; 
judicial  review  under  certain  conditions  in 
Constitutional  Court;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Anniversary  of  the 
Republic,  2  June 

Branches:  executive  (President  empowered 
to  dissolve  Parliament  and  call  national 
election;  Commander  of  the  Armed 
Forces,  presides  over  the  Supreme  Defense 
Council);  otherwise,  authority  to  govern 
invested  in  Council  of  Ministers;  bicameral 
legislature  (popularly  elected  Parliament — 
315-member  Senate,  630-member  Cham- 
ber of  Deputies);  independent  judicial 
establishment 


Government  leaders:  Francesco  COS- 
SIGA,  President  (since  July  1985);  Bettino 
CRAXI,  Premier  (since  August  1983) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18  (except  in 
senatorial  elections,  where  minimum  age  is 
25) 

Elections:  national  election  for  Parliament 
every  five  years  (last  held  June  1983); 
provincial  and  municipal  elections  every 
five  years  with  some  out  of  phase;  regional 
elections  every  five  years  (last  held  May 
1985) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Party  (DC),  Ciriaco  DeMita 
(political  secretary);  Communist  Party 
(PCI),  Alessandro  Natta  (secretary  general); 
Socialist  Party  (PSI),  Bettino  Craxi  (party 
secretary);  Social  Democratic  Party  (PSDI), 
Franco  Nicolazzi  (party  secretary);  Liberal 
Party  (PLI),  Renato  Altissimo  (secretary 
general);  Italian  Social  Movement  (MSI), 
Giorgio  Almirante  (national  secretary); 
Republican  Party  (PRI),  Giovanni  Spado- 
lini  (political  secretary) 

Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  32.5% 
DC,  30.5%  PCI,  11.3%  PSI,  6.6%  MSI, 
5.2%  PRI,  4.0%  PSDI,  3.0%  PLI 

Communists:  1,673,751  members  (1983) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  the 

Vatican;  three  major  trade  union  confeder- 
ations (CGIL — Communist  dominated, 
CISL— Christian  Democratic,  and  UIL— 
Social  Democratic,  Socialist,  and  Republi- 
can); Italian  manufacturers  association 
(Confindustria);  organized  farm  groups 
(Confcoltivatori) 

Member  of:  ADB,  ASSIMER,  CCC,  Coun- 
cil of  Europe,  DAC,  EC,  ECOWAS,  EIB, 
ELDO,  EMS,  ESRO,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Inter-American  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IEA,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  International  Lead 
and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITC,  ITU,  NATO,  OAS  (observer), 
OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WEU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $357.8  billion,  $6,260  per  capita; 
63.5%  private  consumption,  18.0%  gross 
fixed  investment,  20.0%  government, 


—2.1%  net  foreign  balance,  0.7%  change 
in  stocks;  growth  rate  —2.3%  (constant 
market  prices)  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  mercury,  potash,  mar- 
ble, sulfur,  dwindling  natural  gas  reserves, 
fish 

Agriculture:  fruits,  vegetables,  cereals, 
potatoes,  olives;  95%  self-sufficient;  food 
shortages — fats,  meat,  fish,  and  eggs 

Fishing:  catch  478,350  metric  tons  (1983); 
exports  $94  million,  imports  $709  million 

(1984) 

Major  industries:  machinery  and  trans- 
portation equipment,  iron  and  steel,  chem- 
icals, food  processing,  textiles 

Shortages:  coal,  fuels,  minerals 

Crude  steel:  23.7  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985),  415  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  52,068,000  kW  capacity; 
189,270  million  kWh  produced,  3,310 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $78.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  tex- 
tiles, chemicals,  footwear 

Imports:  $90.5  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, machinery  and  transport  equipment, 
foodstuffs,  ferrous  and  nonferrous  metals, 
wool,  cotton 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  45.5%  EC 
(16.4%  FRG,  13.2%  France,  5.9%  UK, 
3.9%  Switzerland),  8.9%  US,  8.3%  Middle 
East  (2.9%  Libya),  2.7%  USSR,  3%  Eastern 
Europe 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $9.0  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1,337.0 
lire=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  20,011  km  total;  16,066  km 
1.435-meter  government-owned  standard 
gauge,  8,843  km  electrified;  3,945  km 
privately  owned — 2,100  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge,  1,155  km  electrified,  and 
1,845  km  0.  950-meter  narrow  gauge,  380 
km  electrified 

Highways:  294,410  km  total;  autostrada 
5,900  km,  state  highways  45,170  km, 
provincial  highways  101,680  km,  commu- 
nal highways  141,660  km;  260,500  km 


concrete,  bituminous,  or  stone  block, 
26,900  km  gravel  and  crushed  stone,  7,010 
km  earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,600  km  for  various 
types  of  commercial  traffic 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  1,703  km;  refined 
products,  2,148  km;  natural  gas,  17,300  km 

Ports:  9  major,  11  secondary,  40  minor 
Civil  air:  132  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  147  total,  140  usable;  85  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  35  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  40  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  well  engineered, 
well  constructed,  and  efficiently  operated; 
25.6  million  telephones  (44.8  per  100 
popl.);  137  AM,  1,841  FM,  1,500  TV 
stations;  21  submarine  cables;  2  communi- 
cation satellite  ground  stations  with  a  total 
of  10  antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
14,474,000;  12,637,000  fit  for  military 
service;  449,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $13.3  billion;  about  4.6% 
of  central  government  budget 


Ivory  Coast 
(Cote  d'lvoire) 


Gulf  of  Guinea 


Srerefionil  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  322,460  km2;  land  area: 
318,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
New  Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  3,227  km  total 
Coastline:  515  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  m 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  along  coast,  semiarid  in 
far  north;  three  seasons — warm  and  dry 
(November  to  March),  hot  and  dry  (March 
to  May),  hot  and  wet  (June  to  October) 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  undulating  plains; 
mountains  in  northwest 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  9%  meadows  and  pastures;  26% 
forest  and  woodland;  52%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  coast  has  heavy  surf  and  no 
natural  harbors;  deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  10,766,632  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.82% 

Nationality:  noun — Ivorian(s);  adjective — 
Ivorian 

Ethnic  divisions:  over  60  ethnic  groups; 
most  important  are  the  Baoule  23%,  Bete 
18%,  Senoufou  15%,  Malinke  11%,  and 


Agni;  about  2  million  foreign  Africans, 
mostly  Burkinabe;  about  130,000  to 
330,000  non-Africans  (30,000  French  and 
100,000  to  300,000  Lebanese) 

Religion:  63%  indigenous,  25%  Muslim, 
12%  Christian 

Language:  French  (official),  over  60  native 
dialects;  Dioula  most  widely  spoken 

Infant  mortality  rate:  127/1,000  (1980) 
Literacy:  24% 

Labor  force:  over  85%  of  population 
engaged  in  agriculture,  forestry,  livestock 
raising;  about  11%  of  labor  force  are  wage 
earners,  nearly  half  in  agriculture  and  the 
remainder  in  government,  industry,  com- 
merce, and  professions 

Organized  labor:  20%  of  wage  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Cote  d'lvoire 

Type:  republic;  one-party  presidential 
regime  established  1960 

Capital:  Abidjan  (capital  city  changed  to 
Yamoussoukro  in  March  1983  but  not 
recognized  by  US) 

Administrative  divisions:  34  prefectures 
subdivided  into  161  subprefectures 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  1960;  judicial  review  in  the  Con- 
stitutional Chamber  of  the  Supreme  Court; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  7  December 

Branches:  President  has  sweeping  powers, 
unicameral  legislature  (175-member  Na- 
tional Assembly),  separate  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Felix  HOUPHOUET- 
BOIGNY,  President  (since  1960) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  legislative  and  municipal  elec- 
tions were  held  in  October  1985; 
Houphouet-Boigny  reelected  in  October 
1985  to  his  fifth  consecutive  five-year 
term;  next  round  of  national  elections 
scheduled  for  October  1990 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Democratic 
Party  of  the  Ivory  Coast  (PDCI),  only 
party;  Houphouet-Boigny  firmly  controls 
party 


Communists:  no  Communist  party;  possi- 
bly some  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  CEAO,  EAMA,  ECA, 
ECOWAS,  EIB  (associate),  Entente,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  Niger 
River  Commission,  NAM,  OAU,  OCAM, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $8  billion,  $772  per  capita  (1986); 
real  average  annual  growth  rate,  4.9% 
(1985  est.) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  diamonds, 
manganese 

Agriculture:  commercial — coffee,  cocoa, 
wood,  bananas,  pineapples,  palm  oil;  food 
crops — corn,  millet,  yams,  rice;  other 
commodities — cotton,  rubber,  tobacco,  fish 

Fishing:  catch  92,469  metric  tons  (1982); 
exports  $44.7  million,  imports  $71.9  mil- 
lion (1979) 

Major  industries:  food  and  lumber  pro- 
cessing, oil  refinery,  automobile  assembly 
plant,  textiles,  soap,  flour  mill,  matches, 
three  small  shipyards,  fertilizer  plant,  and 
battery  factory 

Electric  power:  480,000  kW  capacity; 
2,150  million  kWh  produced,  200  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.5  billion  (1985  est.);  cocoa 
(30%),  coffee  (20%),  tropical  woods  (11%), 
cotton,  bananas,  pineapples,  palm  oil, 
cotton 

Imports:  $1.6  billion  (1985  est.);  manufac- 
tured goods  and  semifinished  products 
(50%),  consumer  goods  (40%),  raw  materi- 
als and  fuels  (10%) 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  ODA  and  OOF 
(1970-84),  $3.4  billion;  US  authorizations, 
including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $341  million 

Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  exports — 
France,  Nigeria,  FRG,  Netherlands,  US 

Budget:  revenues,  $1.4  billion;  current 
expenditures,  $1.4  billion  (1984  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  475  Commun- 
aute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (1985) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


124 


Jamaica 


Communications 

Railroads:  657  km  of  the  1,175  km 
Abidjan  to  Ouagadougou,  Burkina  Faso, 
line,  all  single  track  1.000-meter  gauge; 
only  diesel  locomotives  in  use 

Highways:  46,600  km  total;  3,600  km 
bituminous  and  bituminous-treated  sur- 
face; 32,000  km  gravel,  crushed  stone, 
laterite,  and  improved  earth;  11,000  km 
unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  740  km  navigable 
rivers  and  numerous  coastal  lagoons 
Ports:  2  major  (Abidjan,  San-Pedro),  2 
minor 

Civil  air:  19  major  transport  aircraft, 
including  multinationally  owned  Air 
Afrique  fleet 

Airfields:  50  total,  45  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  15  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  system  above  Afri- 
can average;  consists  of  open-wire  lines 
and  radio-relay  links;  87,700  telephones 
(1.0  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  17  FM,  11  TV 
stations;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  stations; 
2  coaxial  submarine  cables 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Gendarmerie 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,528,000;  1,305,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 98,000  males  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Caribbean  Sea 


cho  Riot 


Port  Antonio 


Caribbean  Sea 


Set  region*)  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  10,990  km2;  land  area:  10,830 

km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 

Connecticut 

Coastline:  1,022  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  temperate 

interior 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  narrow, 

discontinuous  coastal  plain 

Land  use:  19%  arable  land;  6%  permanent 
crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures;  28% 
forest  and  woodland;  29%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes,  espe- 
cially (May  to  December);  deforestation; 
water  pollution 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  between 
Cayman  Trench  and  Jamaica  Channel,  the 
main  sea  lanes  for  Panama  Canal 


Population:  2,455,536  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.17% 
Nationality:  noun — Jamaican(s);  adjec- 
tive— Jamaican 

Ethnic  divisions:  76.3%  African,  15.1% 
Afro-European,  3.4%  East  Indian  and 
Afro- East  Indian,  3.2%  white,  1.2%  Chi- 
nese and  Afro-Chinese,  0.8%  other 


Religion:  predominantly  Protestant  (in- 
cluding Anglican  and  Baptist),  some  Ro- 
man Catholic,  some  spiritualist  cults 

Language:  English,  Creole 

Infant  mortality  rate:  16.8/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  65 

Literacy:  76% 

Labor  force:  728,700  (1984);  32%  agricul- 
ture, 28%  industry  and  commerce,  27% 
services,  13%  government;  shortage  of 
technical  and  managerial  personnel;  30% 
unemployment 

Organized  labor:  about  33%  of  labor  force 
(1980) 

Government 
Official  name:  Jamaica 
Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth, recognizing  Elizabeth  II  as  head  of 
state 

Capital:  Kingston 

Administrative  divisions:  14  parishes  and 
the  Kingston-St.  Andrew  corporate  area 
Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  first 
Monday  in  August 
Branches:  Cabinet  headed  by  Prime 
Minister;  bicameral  legislature — 
21-member  Senate  (13  nominated  by  the 
Prime  Minister,  eight  by  opposition  leader, 
if  any;  currently  no  official  opposition 
because  of  People's  National  Party  boycott 
of  December  1983  election;  eight  non- 
Jamaica  Labor  Party  members  appointed 
to  current  Senate  by  Prime  Minister 
Seaga),  60-member  elected  House  of 
Representatives;  judiciary  follows  British 
tradition  under  a  Chief  Justice 
Government  leaders:  Edward  Philip 
George  SEAGA,  Prime  Minister  (since 
November  1980);  Sir  Florizel  A.  GLAS- 
SPOLE,  Governor  General  (since  1973) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 
Elections:  at  discretion  of  Governor  Gen- 
eral upon  advice  of  Prime  Minister  but 
within  five  years;  last  held  15  December 
1983 


125 


Jamaica  (continued) 


Japan 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Jamaica 
Labor  Party  (JLP),  Edward  Seaga;  People's 
National  Party  (PNP),  Michael  Manley; 
Workers'  Party  of  Jamaica  (WPJ),  Trevor 
Munroe 

Voting  strength:  in  the  1983  general 
elections  54  seats  were  uncontested;  in  six 
contested  seats  the  JLP  won  overwhelm- 
ingly against  several  small  fringe  parties; 
the  PNP  and  WPJ  boycotted  the  election; 
in  1980  general  elections  about  58.8%  JLP 
(51  seats  in  House),  41.2%  PNP  (9  seats) 

Communists:  Workers'  Party  of  Jamaica 
(Marxist-Leninist) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  New 

World  Group  (Caribbean  regionalists, 
nationalists,  and  leftist  intellectual  frater- 
nity); Rastafarians  (black  religious/racial 
cultists,  pan-Africanists);  New  Creation 
International  Peacemakers  Tabernacle 
(leftist  group);  Workers  Liberation  League 
(a  Marxist  coalition  of  students/labor) 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.0  billion,  $820  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  5.0%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  bauxite,  gypsum, 
limestone 

Agriculture:  sugarcane,  citrus  fruits,  ba- 
nanas, pimento,  coconuts,  coffee,  cocoa, 
tobacco;  an  illegal  producer  of  cannabis 
for  the  international  drug  trade 

Major  industries:  tourism,  bauxite  mining, 
textiles,  food  processing,  light  manufac- 
tures 

Electric  power:  1,119,000  kW  capacity; 
1,520  million  kWh  produced,  660  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $568.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
alumina,  bauxite,  sugar,  bananas,  citrus 
fruits  and  fruit  products,  rum,  cocoa 

Imports:  $998.8  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
fuels,  machinery,  transportation  and  elec- 
trical equipment,  food,  fertilizer 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — US  48%, 
Canada  14%,  UK  13%,  Norway  3%,  im- 
ports—US 46%,  Netherlands  Antilles  13%, 
Venezuela  8%,  UK  5%  (1984) 

Budget:  revenues,  $545.0  million;  expendi- 
tures, $818.0  million  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  5.48  Jamaican 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  370  km,  all  1.435-meter  stan- 
dard gauge,  single  track 

Highways:  18,200  km  total;  12,600  km 
paved,  3,200  km  gravel,  2,400  km  im- 
proved earth 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  10  km 

Ports:  2  major  (Kingston,  Montego  Bay),  10 
minor 

Civil  air:  6  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  42  total,  27  usable;  14  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fully  automatic 
domestic  telephone  network  with  127,000 
telephones  (6.0  per  100  popl.);  2  Atlantic 
Ocean  INTELSAT  stations;  9  AM,  16  FM, 
8  TV  stations;  3  coaxial  submarine  cables 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Jamaica  Defense  Force  (in- 
cludes Coast  Guard  and  Air  Wing) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  590,000; 
420,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription; 28,000  reach  minimum  volun- 
teer age  (18)  annually 


North 
Pacific 
Ocean 


Philippine 
Sea 


?  Okinawa 
Stt  rtfionalinip  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  372,310  km2;  land  area: 
371,030  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
California 

Coastline:  13,685  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm  (3  nm  in  interna- 
tional straits — La  Perouse  or  Soya, 
Tsugaru,  Osumi,  and  Eastern  and  West- 
ern channels  of  Tsushima  or  Korea 
Strait) 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Habomai  Is- 
lands, Etorofu,  Kunashiri,  and  Shikotan 
islands  occupied  by  Soviet  Union  since 
1945,  claimed  by  Japan;  Kuril  Islands 
administered  by  Soviet  Union;  Liancourt 
Rocks  disputed  with  South  Korea 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  in  south  to 
cool  temperate  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  and  mountainous 

Land  use:  11%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures;  68% 
forest  and  woodland;  17%  other;  includes 
9%  irrigated 

Environment:  many  dormant  and  some 
active  volcanoes;  about  1,500  seismic 
occurrences  (mostly  tremors)  every  year 
Special  notes:  strategic  location  in  north- 
east Asia 


126 


Population:  122,124,293  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  0.55% 

Nationality:  noun — Japanese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Japanese 

Ethnic  divisions:  99.4%  Japanese,  0.6% 
other  (mostly  Korean) 

Religion:  most  Japanese  observe  both 
Shinto  and  Buddhist  rites;  about  16% 
belong  to  other  faiths,  including  0.8% 
Christian 

Language:  Japanese 
Infant  mortality  rate:  6/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  74.54,  women  80.18 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  (1985)  59.3  million;  53% 
trade  and  services;  33%  manufacturing, 
mining,  and  construction;  9%  agriculture, 
forestry,  and  fishing;  3%  government; 
2.68%  unemployed  (1985  average) 

Organized  labor:  about  30%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Japan 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy 

Capital:  Tokyo 

Administrative  divisions:  47  prefectures 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  with 
English-American  influence;  constitution 
promulgated  in  1946;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  in  the  Supreme  Court; 
accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with 
reservations 

National  holiday:  Foundation  Day,  11 
February 

Branches:  Emperor  is  symbol  of  state; 
executive  power  is  vested  in  Cabinet 
appointed  by  the  Prime  Minister,  chosen 
by  the  lower  house  of  the  bicameral, 
elective  legislature — Diet  (House  of  Coun- 
cilors, House  of  Representatives);  judiciary 
is  independent 

Government  leaders:  HIROHITO,  Em- 
peror (since  December  1926);  Yasuhiro 
NAKASONE,  Prime  Minister  (since  No- 
vember 1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20 


Elections:  general  elections  held  every 
four  years  or  upon  dissolution  of  lower 
house,  triennially  for  half  of  upper  house 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Liberal 
Democratic  Party  (LDP),  Y.  Nakasone, 
president;  Japan  Socialist  Party  (JSP),  T. 
Doi,  chairman;  Democratic  Socialist  Party 
(DSP),  S.  Tsukamoto,  chairman;  Japan 
Communist  Party  (JCP),  T.  Fuwa,  Presid- 
ium chairman;  Komeito  (Clean  Govern- 
ment Party),  J.  Yano,  chairman;  Social 
Democratic  Federation  (SDF),  S.  Eda 

Voting  strength:  (1986  election)  Lower 
House— 49.5%  LDP  (307  seats),  17.2%  JSP 
(88  seats),  9.4%  Komeito  (57  seats),  8.8% 
JCP  (27  seats),  6.4%  DSP  (29  seats),  0.8% 
SDF  (4  seats),  6.1%  independents  and 
minor  parties;  Upper  House — LDP  143 
seats,  JSP  40,  Komeito  25  seats,  JCP  16 
seats,  DSP  12  seats,  SDF  1  seat,  Niin  Club 
3  seats,  Salaryman  3  seats,  Zeikinto  2  seats, 
independents  3  seats 

Communists:  about  470,000  registered 
Communist  Party  members 

Member  of:  ADB,  ASPAC,  Colombo  Plan, 
DAC,  ESCAP,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IEA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO, 
ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International  Whaling 
Commission,  IWC — International  Wheat 
Council,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $1,979  billion  (at  167.1  yen=US$l); 
$16,290  per  capita;  58%  personal  con- 
sumption, 28%  investment,  10%  govern- 
ment current  expenditure,  negligible 
stocks,  and  4%  foreign  balance;  real 
growth  rate  2.1%  (1986);  average  annual 
growth  rate  3.6%  (1981-86) 

Natural  resources:  negligible  mineral 
resources,  fish 

Agriculture:  land  intensively  cultivated; 
rice,  sugar,  vegetables,  fruits;  64%  self- 
sufficient  in  food  (1984);  food  shortages — 
wheat,  corn,  beans 

Fishing:  catch  12.2  million  metric  tons 

(1985) 


Major  industries:  metallurgical  and  engi- 
neering industries,  electrical  and  electronic 
industries,  textiles,  chemicals 

Shortages:  fossil  fuels,  most  industrial  raw 
materials 

Crude  steel:  105.3  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985),  870  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  181,000,000  kW  capacity; 
665,000  billion  kWh  produced,  5,500  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $175.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  97% 
manufactures  (including  30%  machinery, 
25%  motor  vehicles,  8%  consumer  elec- 
tronics 

Imports:  $129.5  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  44% 
fossil  fuels,  25%  manufactures,  14%  food- 
stuffs, 16%  non-fuel  raw  materials 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 37%  US, 
19%  Southeast  Asia,  14%  Western  Europe, 
7%  Middle  East,  9%  Communist  countries; 
imports— 23%  Middle  East,  23%  Southeast 
Asia,  20%  US,  10%  Western  Europe,  7% 
Communist  countries 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic 
commitments  (1970-84),  $36.6  billion 

Budget:  revenues,  $243  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $332  billion;  deficit,  $89  billion 
(general  account  for  fiscal  year  ending 
March  1987  converted  at  162.0  yen=US$l) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  162.0 
yen=US$l  (17  December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  21,387  km  total  (1982);  1,835 
km  1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  19,552 
km  predominantly  1.067-meter  narrow 
gauge,  5,690  km  double-  and  multitrack 
sections,  8,830  km  1.067-meter  narrow- 
gauge  electrified,  1,804  km  1. 435-meter 
standard  gauge  electrified 

Highways:  1,113,388  km  total  (1980); 
510,904  km  paved,  602,484  km  gravel, 
crushed  stone,  or  unpaved;  2,579  km 
national  expressways,  40,212  km  national 
highways,  43,907  km  principal  local  roads, 
86,930  km  prefectural  roads,  939,760  km 
municipal  roads 

Inland  waterways:  about  1,770  km;  sea 
going  craft  ply  all  coastal  inland  seas 


Japan  (continued) 


Jersey 


Pipelines:  crude  oil,  84  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 322  km;  natural  gas,  1,800  km 

Ports:  17  Japanese  Port  Association  specifi- 
cally designated  major  ports,  110  other 
major  ports,  over  2,000  minor  ports 

Civil  air:  265  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  180  total,  160  usable;  127  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  25  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  50  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  domestic 
and  international  service;  64.0  million 
telephones  (53.0  per  100  popl.);  318  AM 
stations,  58  FM  stations  plus  436  relay 
stations;  about  12,350  TV  stations  (196 
major — 1  kw  or  greater),  and  2  satellite 
ground  stations;  submarine  cables  to  US 
(via  Guam),  Philippines,  China,  and  USSR 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Japan  Ground  Self-Defense 
Force  (army),  Japan  Maritime  Self-Defense 
Force  (navy),  Japan  Air  Self-Defense  Force 
(air  force),  Maritime  Safety  Agency  (coast 
guard) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
31,610,000;  27,225,000  fit  for  military 
service;  1,010,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  actual  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  March  1988,  $21.7  billion;  6.4% 
of  total  budget 


5  km 


English  Channel 


English  Channel 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  117  km2;  land  area:  117  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  more  than  half 
the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  70  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  temperate;  mild  winters  and  cool 
summers 

Terrain:  gently  rolling  plain  with  low 
rugged  hills  along  north  coast 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other; 
about  58%  of  land  under  cultivation 

Environment:  about  30%  of  population 
concentrated  in  Saint  Helier 

Special  notes:  largest  and  southernmost  of 
Channel  Islands;  27  km  from  France 


Population:  80,511  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.91% 

Nationality:  noun — Channel  Islanders); 
adjective — Channel  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  UK  and  Norman-French 
descent 

Religion:  Anglican,  Roman  Catholic, 
Baptist,  Congregational  New  Church, 
Methodist,  Presbyterian 


Language:  English  and  French  (official), 
with  the  Norman-French  dialect  spoken  in 
country  districts 

Literacy:  probably  high 

Government 

Official  name:  Bailiwick  of  Jersey 
Type:  British  crown  dependency 
Capital:  Saint  Helier 
Administrative  divisions:  12  parishes 

Legal  system:  English  law  and  local  stat- 
ute; justice  is  administered  by  the  Royal 
Court 

National  holiday:  Birthday  of  the  Queen, 
16  June 

Branches:  the  Lieutenant  Governor  and 
Commander  in  Chief  is  the  personal 
representative  of  the  Crown  and  is  entitled 
to  sit  and  speak  in  the  Assembly  of  the 
States  (legislature)  but  not  vote;  the  Assem- 
bly is  presided  over  by  the  Bailiff  who  has 
a  right  of  dissent  and  a  casting  vote;  it 
consists  of  12  senators  (elected  for  six 
years),  12  constables  (triennial),  and  29 
deputies  (triennial);  the  Crown  is  ulti- 
mately responsible  for  the  island's  good 
government 

Government  leaders:  Adm.  Sir  William 
PILLAR,  Lieutenant  Governor  and  Com- 
mander in  Chief  (since  1985);  Peter 
GRILL,  Bailiff,  President  of  the  Assembly 
of  the  States  and  the  Royal  Court  (since 
1975) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Communists:  probably  none 

Economy 

Agriculture:  potatoes,  cauliflowers,  toma- 
toes; dairy  and  cattle  farming 

Major  industries:  tourism,  banking  and 
finance 

Electric  power:  50,000  kW  standby  capac- 
ity (1986);  power  supplied  by  France 

Exports:  19.8  million  pounds  sterling 
(1983);  light  industry,  electrical  manufac- 
turing, textiles 

Imports:  machinery  and  transport  equip- 
ment, manufactured  goods,  food,  mineral 
fuels,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  UK 


Jordan 

(West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip  entry 

on  page  276) 


Budget:  revenues,  143,680  million  pounds; 
expenditures,  115,902  million  pounds 
(1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .70  Jersey 
pound=.70  pound  sterling=US$l  (Novem- 
ber 1986) 

Fiscal  year:  31  April- 1  May 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Ports:  Saint  Helier,  Gorey,  St.  Aubin 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent- 
surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m  (St.  Peter) 

Telecommunications:  telephones  in  ser- 
vice, 61,400  (80.9  per  100  popl.);  1  radio 
station,  1  TV  station  with  4  channels 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


Note:  the  war  between  Israel  and  the  Arab 
states  in  June  1967  ended  with  Israel  in 
control  of  the  West  Bank;  as  stated  in  the 
1978  Camp  David  Accords  and  reaffirmed 
by  the  President's  1  September  1982  peace 
initiative,  the  final  status  of  the  West  Bank 
and  Gaza  Strip,  their  relationship  with 
their  neighbors,  and  a  peace  treaty  be- 
tween Israel  and  Jordan  are  to  be  negoti- 
ated among  the  concerned  parties;  Camp 
David  further  specifies  that  these  negotia- 
tions will  resolve  the  location  of  the  re- 
spective boundaries;  pending  the  comple- 
tion of  this  process,  it  is  US  policy  that  the 
final  status  of  the  West  Bank  and  Gaza 
Strip  has  yet  to  be  determined 

Geography 

Total  area:  97,740  km2;  land  area:  97,180 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Minnesota 

Land  boundaries:  1,770  km  total  (before 
1967  war) 

Coastline:  26  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  separated  from  Israel 
by  1949  Armistice  Line;  West  Bank  and 
Gaza  Strip  are  Israeli  occupied  with  status 
to  be  determined 

Climate:  mostly  arid  desert;  rainy  season 
in  west  (November  to  March) 


Terrain:  mostly  high  desert  plateau  in  east; 
Great  Rift  Valley  separates  East  and  West 
Banks  of  Jordan  River 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  .5%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  .5% 
forest  and  woodland;  94%  other;  includes 
.5%  irrigated 

Environment:  lack  of  natural  water  re- 
sources; deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil 
erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  2,761,695  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.65% 

Nationality:  noun — Jordanian(s);  adjec- 
tive—Jordanian 

Ethnic  divisions:  98%  Arab,  1%  Circas- 
sian, 1%  Armenian 

Religion:  95%  Sunni  Muslim,  5%  Christian 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English  widely 
understood  among  upper  and  middle 
classes 

Infant  mortality  rate:  62/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  61.7 
Literacy:  about  71% 

Labor  force:  580,000  (1983  est);  20% 
agriculture,  20%  manufacturing  and  min- 
ing 
Organized  labor:  about  10%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Hashemite  Kingdom  of 
Jordan 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Amman 

Administrative  divisions:  eight  governor- 
ates  under  centrally  appointed  officials 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  and 
French  codes;  constitution  adopted  1952; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  a 
specially  provided  High  Tribunal;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 
May 

Branches:  King  holds  balance  of  power; 
Prime  Minister  exercises  executive  author- 
ity in  name  of  King;  Cabinet  appointed  by 


129 


Jordan  (continued) 


Kenya 


King  and  responsible  to  parliament;  bi- 
cameral parliament  with  House  of  Repre- 
sentatives, dissolved  by  King  in  February 
1976,  and  reconvened  in  January  1984, 
following  national  elections;  Senate  last 
appointed  by  King  in  January  1984;  secu- 
lar court  system  based  on  differing  legal 
systems  of  the  former  Transjordan  and 
Palestine;  law  Western  in  concept  and 
structure;  Sharia  (religious)  courts  for 
Muslims,  and  religious  community  council 
courts  for  non-Muslim  communities;  desert 
police  carry  out  quasi-judicial  functions  in 
desert  areas 

Government  leaders:  HUSSEIN  I,  King 
(since  August  1952);  Zayd  al-RIFA'I,  Prime 
Minister  (since  April  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  20 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
party  activity  illegal  since  1957 

Communists:  party  actively  repressed, 
membership  estimated  at  less  than  500 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
ITU,  NAM,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $4.9  billion,  $1,900  per  capita;  2.0% 
real  growth  rate  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  phosphates,  potash, 
shale  oil 

Agriculture:  vegetables,  fruits,  olive  oil, 
wheat;  self-sufficient  in  few  foodstuffs 

Major  industries:  phosphate  mining, 
petroleum  refining,  cement  production, 
light  manufacturing 

Electric  power:  972,000  kW  capacity; 
2,840  million  kWh  produced,  1,030  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $789  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  fruits 
and  vegetables,  phosphates,  fertilizers 

Imports:  $2,733  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  crude 
oil,  petroleum,  textiles,  capital  goods, 
motor  vehicles,  foodstuffs 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (1970-84),  $1.3 
billion;  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $938  million;  Com- 
munist countries  (1970-85),  $71  million 


Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $2.2 
billion 

Budget:  total  revenues,  $1,836  million; 
current  expenditures,  $1,267  million; 
capital  expenditures,  $675  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .35  Jordanian 
dinar=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  817  km  1.050-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  6,332  total;  4,837  paved,  1,495 
gravel  and  crushed  stone 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  209  km 

Ports:  1  major  (Al  'Aqabah) 

Civil  air:  28  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  21  total,  19  usable;  14  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  14  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways  1,220- 
2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  system  of 
radio-relay,  cable,  and  radio;  81,500  tele- 
phones (3  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  2  FM,  24 
TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT 
station,  1  Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  sta- 
tion; 1  ARABSAT  station;  coaxial  cable 
and  radio-relay  to  Iraq,  Saudi  Arabia,  and 
Syria;  radio-relay  to  Lebanon  inactive 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Jordan  Arab  Army,  Royal 
Jordanian  Air  Force,  Royal  Jordanian 
Coast  Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  639,000; 
456,000  fit  for  military  service;  36,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


Victoria 


2OOkm 
Sec  regional  mip  VII  , 


Indian 
Ocean 


Geography 

Total  area:  582,650  km2;  land  area: 
569,250  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 

Texas 

Land  boundaries:  3,368  km  total 

Coastline:  536  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  international 
boundary  and  Administrative  Boundary 
with  Sudan;  possible  claim  by  Somalia 
based  on  unification  of  ethnic  Somalis 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  along  coast 
to  arid  in  interior 

Terrain:  low  plains  rise  to  central  high- 
lands bisected  by  Great  Rift  Valley;  fertile 
plateau  in  west 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  4%  forest 
and  woodland;  85%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  unique  physiography  sup- 
ports abundant  and  varied  wildlife  of 
immense  scientific  and  economic  value; 
deforestation;  soil  erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  22,377,802  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  4.22% 


130 


Nationality:  noun— Kenyan(s);  adjective- 
Kenyan 

Ethnic  divisions:  21%  Kikuyu,  14% 
Luhya,  13%  Luo,  11%  Kalenjin,  11% 
Kamba,  6%  Kisii,  6%  Meru,  1%  Asian, 
European,  and  Arab 
Religion:  38%  Protestant,  28%  Catholic, 
26%  indigenous  beliefs,  6%  Muslim 
Language:  English  and  Swahili  (official); 
numerous  indigenous  languages 
Infant  mortality  rate:  59/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  53,  women  58. 1 
Literacy:  47% 

Labor  force:  7.4  million;  about  1.1  million 
wage  earners;  50%  public  sector,  18% 
industry  and  commerce,  17%  agriculture, 
13%  services 
Organized  labor:  about  390,000 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Kenya 
Type:  republic  within  Commonwealth 
Capital:  Nairobi 

Administrative  divisions:  seven  provinces 
plus  Nairobi  area 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law,  tribal  law,  and  Islamic  law;  constitu- 
tion enacted  1963;  judicial  review  in  High 
Court;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction, 
with  reservations;  constitutional  amend- 
ment in  1982  made  Kenya  a  de  jure  one- 
party  state 

National  holiday:  Jamhuri  Day,  12  De- 
cember 

Branches:  President  and  Cabinet  responsi- 
ble to  unicameral  legislature  (National 
Assembly)  of  200  seats,  188  directly 
elected  by  constituencies  and  12  appointed 
by  the  President;  High  Court,  with  Chief 
Justice  and  at  least  1 1  justices,  has  unlim- 
ited original  jurisdiction  to  hear  and  deter- 
mine any  civil  or  criminal  proceeding; 
provision  for  system  of  courts  of  appeal 
Government  leader:  Daniel  T.  arap  MOI, 
President  (since  1978) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 
Elections:  Assembly  at  least  every  five 
years;  present  National  Assembly  and 
President  elected  September  1983 


Political  party  and  leader:  Kenya  African 
National  Union  (KANU),  Kenya's  sole  legal 
political  party,  Daniel  T.  arap  Moi,  Presi- 
dent 

Voting  strength:  KANU  holds  all  seats  in 
the  National  Assembly 
Communists:  may  be  a  few  Communists 
and  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  labor 
unions 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  OAU,  UN,  UNDP,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $4.8  billion  (1985),  $230  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate,  4.1%  (1985  est.) 
Natural  resources:  gold,  limestone, 
diotomite,  salt  barytes,  magnesite,  feldspar, 
sapphires,  fluorspar,  garnets,  wildlife,  land 
Agriculture:  main  cash  crops — coffee,  tea, 
sisal,  pyrethrum,  cotton,  livestock;  food 
crops — corn,  wheat,  sugarcane,  rice,  cas- 
sava; largely  self-sufficient  in  food 
Major  industries:  small-scale  consumer 
goods  (plastic,  furniture,  batteries,  textiles, 
soap,  cigarettes,  flour),  agricultural  process- 
ing, oil  refining,  cement,  tourism 
Electric  power:  556,000  kW  capacity; 
1,950  million  kWh  produced,  90  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $942  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  reex- 
porting  of  petroleum  products,  coffee,  tea, 
sisal,  livestock  products,  pyrethrum,  soda 
ash,  wattle-bark  tanning  extract 
Imports:  $1,289  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
machinery,  transport  equipment,  crude  oil, 
paper  and  paper  products,  iron  and  steel 
products,  and  textiles 
Major  trade  partners:  EC,  Japan,  Middle 
East,  US,  Rwanda,  Uganda 
Budget:  as  percent  of  GDP— revenues  and 
grants  24%;  total  expenditures  and  net 
lending  -  28%  (1985/86  est.) 
External  debt:  $3.7  billion,  debt  service 
ratio  36%  (1985  est.) 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  16.15  Kenyan 
shillings=US$l  (October  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,040  km  1.000-meter  gauge 
Highways:  64,590  km  total;  7,000  km 
paved,  4,150  km  gravel,  remainder  im- 
proved earth 

Inland  waterways:  part  of  Lake  Victoria 
system  is  within  boundaries  of  Kenya; 
principal  inland  port  is  at  Kisumu 
Pipelines:  refined  products,  483  km 
Ports:  1  major  (Mombasa) 
Civil  air:  10  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  225  total,  205  usable;  10  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  47  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  in  top  group  of 
African  systems;  consists  of  radio-relay 
links,  open-wire  lines,  and  radiocommuni- 
cation  stations;  231,000  telephones  (1.1  per 
100  popl.);  11  AM,  4  FM,  4  TV  stations;  1 
Atlantic  and  1  Indian  Ocean  satellite 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Kenya  Army,  Kenya  Navy,  Air 
Force;  paramilitary  General  Service  Unit 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,554,000;  2,811,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; no  conscription 


131 


Kiribati 


North  Pacific  Ocean 


Banaba 


r—  *  TARAWA 
v., 

Kiribati 
(Gilbert 
Islands) 


Kiritimati 

(Christmas) 


Rawaki 
(Phoeni* 
Islands) 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


See  region*)  mftp  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  710  km2;  land  area:  710  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  four  times  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  1,143  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  marine,  hot  and  humid, 
moderated  by  trade  winds 

Terrain:  mostly  low  lying  coral  atolls 
surrounded  by  extensive  reefs 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  51%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  3%  forest 
and  woodland;  46%  other 

Environment:  typhoons  can  occur  any 
time,  but  usually  November  to  March 

Special  notes:  Banaba  or  Ocean  Island  is 
one  of  three  great  phosphate  rock  islands 
in  the  Pacific  (others  are  Makatea  in 
French  Polynesia  and  Nauru) 

People 

Population:  66,441  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.82% 

Nationality:  noun — Kiribatian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Kiribati 

Ethnic  divisions:  Micronesian 

Religion:  48%  Roman  Catholic,  45% 
Protestant  (Congregational),  some  Seventh- 
Day  Adventist  and  Baha'i 

Language:  English  (official),  Gilbertese 
Literacy: 


Labor  force:  7,870  economically  active 
(1985  est.) 

Organized  labor:  Kiribati  Trades  Union 
Congress — 2,500  members 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Kiribati 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Tarawa 

Administrative  divisions:  20  constituen- 
cies 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature — Na- 
tional Assembly  (comprised  of  36  elected 
members  and  one  nominated  representa- 
tive of  the  Banaban  community);  nation- 
ally elected  President 

Government  leader:  leremia  T.  TABAI, 
President  (since  July  1979) 

Elections:  every  four  years 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Gilbertese 
National  Party,  Christian  Democratic 
Party 

Member  of:  ADB,  Commonwealth, 
ESCAP  (associate  member),  GATT  (de 
facto),  ICAO,  IMF,  SPF,  WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  A$25.839  million  (1985  est.),  $410 
per  capita 

Agriculture:  coconuts,  copra;  subsistence 
crops  of  roots  and  tubers,  vegetables, 
melons,  bananas;  pigs,  chickens;  domestic 
fishing 

Fishing:  catch  24,212  metric  tons  (1983) 

Industry:  formerly  phosphate  production 
(supply  exhausted  by  mid- 1981) 

Electric  power:  2,750  kW  capacity;  8 
million  kWh  produced,  125  kWh  per 
capita 

Exports:  A$4.10  (1986  est.);  54%  copra, 
18%  fish;  phosphate,  formerly  80%  of 
exports,  exhausted  in  1981 

Imports:  A$32.64  million  (1986  est.); 
foodstuffs,  fuel,  transportation  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  Australia,  New 
Zealand,  UK,  Japan,  US,  Papua  New 
Guinea,  Fiji 


Aid:  Western  (non-US)  commitments  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $205  million;  Austra- 
lia (1970-84),  $28  million 

Budget:  A29.7  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  $1.50 
Australian=US$l  (February  1987);  Austra- 
lian dollar  is  the  official  currency 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  640  km  of  motorable  roads 

Inland  waterways:  small  network  of 
canals,  totaling  5  km,  in  Line  Islands 

Ports:  main  ports  are  at  Banaba  and  Betio 
(Tarawa) 

Civil  air:  2  Trislanders;  no  major  transport 
aircraft 

Airfields:  21  total;  18  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  4  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  1,400  telephones 
(2.33  per  100  popl.);  1  AM  station;  1  satel- 
lite ground  station 


132 


Korea,  North 


Najin 


Ye/loi 
Sea 
Sfg  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  120,540  km2;  land  area: 
120,410  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Mississippi 

Land  boundaries:  1,675  km  total 
Coastline:  2,495  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Military  boundary  line:  50  nm  (all 
foreign  vessels  and  aircraft  are  banned 
without  permission) 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 
China  is  indefinite;  Demarcation  Line  with 
South  Korea 

Climate:  temperate  with  rainfall  concen- 
trated in  summer 

Terrain:  mostly  hills  and  mountains  sepa- 
rated by  deep,  narrow  valleys;  coastal 
plains  wide  in  west,  discontinuous  in  east 

Land  use:  18%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and  pastures; 
74%  forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  in- 
cludes 9%  irrigated 

Environment:  mountainous  interior  is 
isolated,  nearly  inaccessible,  and  sparsely 
populated;  late  spring  droughts  often 
followed  by  severe  flooding 

Special  notes:  occupies  northern  half  of 
Korean  peninsula;  strategic  location  bor- 
dering China,  South  Korea,  and  USSR 


People 

Population:  21,447,977  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.52% 

Nationality:  noun — Korean(s);  adjective — 
Korean 

Ethnic  divisions:  racially  homogeneous 

Religion:  Buddhism  and  Confucianism; 
religious  activities  now  almost  nonexistent 

Language:  Korean 

Infant  mortality  rate:  32/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  63,  women  67 
Literacy:  95%  est. 

Labor  force:  6.1  million  (1980);  48% 
agricultural,  52%  nonagricultural;  shortage 
of  skilled  and  unskilled  labor 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  People's  Re- 
public of  Korea 

Type:  Communist  state;  one-man  rule 
Capital:  P'yongyang 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  provinces, 
four  special  cities  (P'yongyang,  Kaesong, 
Namp'o,  and  Ch'ongjin) 
Legal  system:  based  on  German  civil  law 
system  with  Japanese  influences  and  Com- 
munist legal  theory;  constitution  adopted 
1948  and  revised  1972;  no  judicial  review 
of  legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  com- 
pulsory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  9  September 

Branches:  Supreme  People's  Assembly 
theoretically  supervises  legislative  and 
judicial  functions;  State  Administration 
Council  (cabinet)  oversees  ministerial 
operations 

Government  leaders:  KIM  Il-song,  Presi- 
dent (since  December  1972);  YI  Kun-mo, 
Premier  (since  December  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  17 

Elections:  election  to  Supreme  People's 
Assembly  every  four  years,  but  this  consti- 
tutional provision  not  necessarily  fol- 
lowed— last  election  November  1986 

Political  party  and  leaders:  Korean 
Workers'  Party  (KWP);  Kim  Il-song,  Gen- 
eral Secretary,  and  his  son,  Kim  Chong-il, 
Secretary,  Central  Committee 


Communists:  KWP  claims  membership  of 
about  2  million,  or  about  11%  of  popula- 
tion 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  IAEA,  ICAO, 
IPU,  ITU,  NAM,  UNCTAD,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO; 
official  observer  status  at  UN 

Economy 

GNP:  $24  billion  (1985  in  1985  dollars), 
$1,180  per  capita 

Natural  resources:  coal,  lead,  tungsten, 
zinc,  graphite,  magnesite,  iron,  copper, 
gold,  phosphates,  salt,  fluorspar,  hydroelec- 
tric power 

Agriculture:  corn,  rice,  vegetables;  food 
shortages — meat,  cooking  oils;  production 
of  foodstuffs  adequate  for  domestic  needs 

Major  industries:  machine  building, 
electric  power,  chemicals,  mining,  metal- 
lurgy, textiles,  food  processing 

Shortages:  advanced  machinery  and 
equipment,  coking  coal,  coal,  petroleum, 
electric  power,  transport 

Crude  steel:  4.0  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  195  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  5,910,000  kW  capacity; 
40,000  million  kWh  produced,  1,925  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 
Coal:  52  million  tons  (1984) 

Exports:  $1.38  billion  (1985);  minerals, 
metallurgical  products,  agricultural  prod- 
ucts, manufactures 

Imports:  $1.72  billion  (1985);  petroleum, 

machinery  and  equipment,  coking  coal, 

grain 

Major  trade  partners:  total  trade  turnover 

$3.10  billion  (1985);  65%  with  Communist 

countries,  35%  with  non-Communist 

countries 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2  wons=US$l 
(December  1984) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,535  km  total  operating  in 
1980;  3,870  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  665  km  0.762-meter  narrow  gauge, 
159  km  double  track;  about  3,175  km 
electrified;  government  owned 


133 


Korea,  North  (continued) 


Korea,  South 


Highways:  about  20,280  km  (1980);  98.5% 
gravel,  crushed  stone,  or  earth  surface; 
1.5%  concrete  or  bituminous 

Inland  waterways:  2,253  km;  mostly 
navigable  by  small  craft  only 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  37  km 
Ports:  6  major,  26  minor 

Telecommunications:  18  AM,  O  FM,  11 

TV  stations;  150,000  TV  sets;  3,500,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  North  Korean  People's  Army 
(consists  of  the  army,  navy,  and  air  force) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,341,000;  3,266,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 238,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Cheju  -  do/^ — ~y 
See  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  98,480  km2;  land  area:  98,190 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Indiana 

Land  boundary:  241  km  with  North 
Korea 

Coastline:  2,413  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm  (3  nm  in  the 
Korea  Strait) 

Boundary  disputes:  Demarcation  Line 
with  North  Korea;  Liancourt  Rocks  dis- 
puted with  Japan 

Climate:  temperate;  cold,  dry,  clear  win- 
ters with  hot  and  humid  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  and  mountainous 
Land  use:  21%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  67% 
forest  and  woodland;  10%  other;  includes 
12%  irrigated 

Environment:  occasional  typhoons  bring 
high  winds,  floods,  landslides;  water  pollu- 
tion; air  pollution 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
Korea  Strait  and  between  Chinese,  Japa- 
nese, and  Soviet  spheres  of  influence 


Population:  41,986,669  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.53% 


Nationality:  noun — Korean(s);  adjective — 
Korean 

Ethnic  divisions:  homogeneous;  small 
Chinese  minority  (about  20,000) 

Religion:  strong  Confucian  tradition; 
vigorous  Christian  minority  (28%  of  the 
total  population);  Buddhism;  pervasive  folk 
religion  (Shamanism);  Chondokyo  (religion 
of  the  heavenly  way),  eclectic  religion  with 
nationalist  overtones  founded  in  19th 
century,  claims  about  1.5  million  adher- 
ents 

Language:  Korean;  English  widely  taught 
in  high  school 

Infant  mortality  rate:  29/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64,  women  71 
Literacy:  over  90% 

Labor  force:  15.9  million;  47%  services 
and  other;  30%  agriculture,  fishing,  for- 
estry; 21%  mining  and  manufacturing; 
average  unemployment  4.0%  (1986  est.) 

Organized  labor:  about  10%  of  nonagri- 
cultural  labor  force  in  government- 
sanctioned  unions 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Korea 

Type:  republic;  power  centralized  in  a 
strong  executive 

Capital:  Seoul 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  provinces, 
four  special  cities;  governors/mayors 
centrally  appointed 

Legal  system:  combines  elements  of 
continental  European  civil  law  systems, 
Anglo-American  law,  and  Chinese  classical 
thought;  constitution  approved  1980;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
August 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (National 
Assembly),  judiciary 

Government  leaders:  CHUN  Doo  Hwan, 
President  (since  August  1980);  LHO  Shin 
Yong,  Prime  Minister  (since  February 
1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20 


134 


Elections:  under  new  constitution  of 
October  1980,  President  elected  every 
seven  years  indirectly  by  a  5,000-man 
electoral  college;  last  election  February 
1981;  four-year  National  Assembly,  elected 
in  February  1985,  consists  of  276  represen- 
tatives, 184  directly  elected  and  92  ap- 
pointed on  proportional  basis  by  major 
parties 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  major  party 
is  government's  Democratic  Justice  Party 
(DJP),  Chun  Doo  Hwan,  president,  and 
Roh  Tae  Woo,  chairman;  opposition  par- 
ties are  New  Korea  Democratic  Party 
(NKDP),  Lee  Min-woo;  Korean  National 
Party  (KNP),  Lee  Man-sup;  several  smaller 
parties 

Communists:  Communist  activity  banned 
by  government 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Coun- 
cil for  the  Promotion  of  Democracy; 
Korean  National  Council  of  Churches; 
large,  potentially  volatile  student  popula- 
tion concentrated  in  Seoul;  Federation  of 
Korean  Trade  Unions;  Korean  Veterans' 
Association;  Federation  of  Korean  Indus- 
tries; Korean  Traders  Association 

Member  of:  ABD,  AfDB,  Asian-African 
Legal  Consultative  Committee,  Asian 
Parliamentary  Union,  APACL — Asian 
People's  Anti-Communist  League,  ASPAC, 
Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  Geneva  Conventions  of  1949  for 
the  protection  of  war  victims,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
IHO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Whaling  Commission, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
UNCTAD,  UNDP,  UNESCO,  UNICEF, 
UNIDO,  UN  Special  Fund,  UPU, 
WACL — World  Anti-Communist  League, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO;  official 
observer  status  at  UN 

Economy 

GNP:  $94.1  billion  (1986,  in  1986  prices), 
$2,371  per  capita;  real  growth  12.2% 
(1986);  real  growth  8.7%  (1982-86  average) 

Natural  resources:  coal  (limited),  tungsten, 
graphite 


Agriculture:  9.0  million  people  (22%  of  the 
population)  live  in  farm  households,  but 
agriculture,  forestry,  and  fishing  constitute 
15%  of  GNP;  main  crops — rice,  barley, 
vegetables,  and  legumes 

Fishing:  catch  3,102,605  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  clothing, 
footwear,  food  processing,  chemicals,  steel, 
electronics,  automobile  production,  ship 
building 

Shortages:  heavily  dependent  on  imports 
of  iron  ore,  crude  oil,  base  metals,  lumber, 
and  certain  food  grains 

Crude  steel:  13.6  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985),  335  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  18,000,000  kW  capacity; 
65,000  million  kWh  produced,  1,500  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $34.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  textiles 
and  clothing,  electrical  machinery,  foot- 
wear, steel,  automobiles,  ships,  fish 

Imports:  $31.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1986);  ma- 
chinery, oil,  steel,  transport  equipment, 
textiles,  organic  chemicals,  grains 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 40%  US, 
15%  Japan;  imports— 33%  Japan,  21%  US 
(1986) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $3.9 
billion  committed 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $4 
billion 

Budget:  planned  expenditures,  $18.0 
billion  (1987) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  861 
won=US$l  (9  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,106.5  km  operating  in  1983; 
3,059.4  km  1.435-meter  standard  gauge, 
46.9  km  0.610-meter  narrow  gauge,  712.5 
km  double-track,  417.9  km  electrified; 
government  owned 

Highways:  62,936  km  total  (1982);  13,476 
km  national  highway,  49,460  km  provin- 
cial and  local  roads 

Inland  waterways:  1,609  km;  use  re- 
stricted to  small  native  craft 


Freight  carried:  rail  (1983)  51  million 
metric  tons;  highway  126  million  metric 
tons;  air  (1983)  47,000  metric  tons  (domes- 
tic) 

Pipelines:  294  km  refined  products 

Ports:  1 1  major,  32  minor 

Civil  air:  93  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  125  total,  109  usable;  72  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  21  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  15  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  domestic 
and  international  services;  4.8  million 
telephones  (121  per  100  popl.);  79  AM,  46 
FM,  256  TV  stations  (57  of  1  kW  or 
greater);  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Naval 
Marine  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
11,836,000;  7,672,000  fit  for  military 
service;  472,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  proposed  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1987,  $5.65  billion; 
about  31.4%  of  central  government  budget 


135 


Kuwait 


Bubiyan 


See  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  17,820  km2;  land  area:  17,820 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
New  Jersey 

Land  boundaries:  490  km  total 
Coastline:  499  km 
Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  ownership  of 
Warbah  and  Bubiydn  islands  disputed  by 
Iraq 

Climate:  dry  desert;  intensely  hot  sum- 
mers; short,  cool  winters 

Terrain:  flat  to  slightly  undulating  desert 
plain 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  0%  per- 
manent crops;  8%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NEGL%  forest  and  woodland;  92%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  some  of  world's  largest  and 
most  sophisticated  desalination  facilities 
provide  most  of  water;  air  and  water 
pollution;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  at  head  of 
Persian  Gulf  and  close  to  Iran-Iraq  war 
zone 


Population:  1,863,615  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  4.13% 


Nationality:  noun — Kuwaiti(s);  adjective — 
Kuwaiti 

Ethnic  divisions:  39%  Kuwaiti,  39%  other 
Arab,  9%  South  Asian,  4%  Iranian,  9% 
other 

Religion:  85%  Muslim  (30%  Shi'a,  45% 
Sunni),  15%  Christian,  Hindu,  Parsi,  and 
other 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English  widely 
spoken 

Infant  mortality  rate:  26.1/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  69,  women  74 
Literacy:  about  71% 

Labor  force:  566,000  (1985);  45.0%  ser- 
vices, 20.0%  construction,  12.0%  trade, 
8.6%  manufacturing,  2.6%  finance  and  real 
estate,  1.9%  agriculture,  1.7%  power  and 
water,  1.4%  mining  and  quarrying;  70%  of 
labor  force  is  non-Kuwaiti 

Organized  labor:  labor  unions,  first  autho- 
rized in  1964,  formed  in  oil  industry  and 
among  government  personnel 

Government 

Official  name:  State  of  Kuwait 
Type:  nominal  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Kuwait 

Administrative  divisions:  4  governorates 
(Kuwait  City,  Hawalli,  Ahmadi,  Johra),  25 
voting  constituencies 
Legal  system:  civil  law  system  with  Is- 
lamic law  significant  in  personal  matters; 
constitution  took  effect  in  1963;  popularly 
elected  50-man  National  Assembly  (the  15 
cabinet  members  can  also  vote)  reinstated 
in  March  1981  after  being  suspended  in 
1976,  but  in  July  1986  parliament  dis- 
solved by  the  Amir;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  not  yet  determined;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 
National  holiday:  National  Day,  25  Feb- 
ruary 

Branches:  Council  of  Ministers;  legisla- 
ture— National  Assembly 
Government  leader:  Jabir  al-Alnnail 
al-Jabir  Al  SABAH,  Amir  (since  December 
1977) 

Suffrage:  adult  males  who  resided  in 
Kuwait  before  1920  and  their  male  de- 
scendents  (eligible  voters,  8.3%  of  citi- 
zenry) 


Elections:  National  Assembly  elected 
February  1985  (suspended  July  1986) 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  prohibited,  some  small  clandestine 
groups  are  active 
Communists:  insignificant 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  large 
(350,000)  Palestinian  community 
Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  GCC,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  NAM,  OAPEC, 
QIC,  OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $19.7  billion,  $11,510  per  capita 

GNP  (1985);  -4%  annual  growth  rate 

(1986) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  fish,  shrimp 

Agriculture:  virtually  none;  dependent  on 
imports  for  food;  about  75%  of  potable 
water  must  be  distilled  or  imported 

Major  industries:  crude  petroleum  pro- 
duction average  for  1986,  1.4  million  b/d; 
petroleum  refining  (capacity  about  0.6 
million  b/d);  other  major  industries  in- 
clude petrochemicals,  retail  trade,  and 
manufacturing;  water  desalination  capacity 
618  million  liters  per  day  (1983  est.) 

Electric  power:  5,335,000  kW  capacity; 
16,360  million  kWh  produced,  9,240  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $8.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986),  of 
which  crude  petroleum  accounted  for 
about  78% 
Imports:  $7.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986) 

Major  trading  partners:  exports — Japan, 
US,  FRG,  Italy;  imports— Japan,  FRG, 
UK,  US 

Budget:  revenues,  $11.2  billion;  current 
and  capital  expenditures,  $11.1  billion 
(1985/86  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .29  Kuwaiti 
dinar=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 


136 


Laos 


Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,600  km  total;  2,300  km 
bituminous;  300  km  earth,  sand,  light 
gravel 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  877  km;  refined 
products,  40  km;  natural  gas,  140  km 

Ports:  3  major  (Ash  Shuwaykh,  Ash 
Shu'aybah,  Mln5'  al  Ahmadl),  6  minor 

Civil  air:  26  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  9  total,  4  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  interna- 
tional, adequate  domestic  facilities; 
258,000  telephones  (14.6  per  100  popl.);  2 
AM,  2  FM,  3  TV  stations;  1  Indian  Ocean 
and  2  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  stations, 
1  INMARSAT  satellite  station;  1 
ARABSAT  station;  coaxial  cable  and  radio- 
relay  to  Iraq  and  Saudi  Arabia 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Na- 
tional Police  Force,  National  Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  about 
626,000;  about  376,000  fit  for  military 
service 

Military  budget:  operating  expenditures 
for  fiscal  year  ending  30  June  1986,  $876 
million;  7.5%  of  central  government 
budget 


fv 

\     Phongsali 

/^       ( 

f^  Louang  N«mth»Sl' 
;)  Louangphra 

s 

J     Xiimgkhoang 

'VIENTIANE 


See  regional  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  236,800  km2;  land  area: 
230,800  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Utah 

Land  boundaries:  5,053  km  total 

Climate:  tropical  monsoon;  rainy  season 
(May  to  October);  dry  season  (February  to 
May) 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  mountains;  some 
plains  and  plateaus 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures; 
58%  forest  and  woodland;  35%  other; 
includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  soil  erosion; 
subject  to  floods 

Special  notes:  landlocked 

People 

Population:  3,765,887  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.17% 

Nationality:  noun — Lao  (sing.,  Lao  or 
Laotian);  adjective — Lao  or  Laotian 

Ethnic  divisions:  48%  Lao;  25%  Phouth- 
eung  (Kha);  14%  Tribal  Tai;  13%  Meo, 
Yao,  and  other 

Religion:  50%  Buddhist,  50%  animist  and 
other 

Language:  Lao  (official),  French,  and 
English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  159/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  42,  women  45 


Literacy:  85% 

Labor  force:  about  1-1.5  million;  80-90% 
agriculture 

Organized  labor:  only  labor  organization 
is  subordinate  to  the  Communist  Party 

Government 

Official  name:  Lao  People's  Democratic 
Republic 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Vientiane 

Administrative  divisions:  16  provinces 
subdivided  into  districts,  cantons,  and 
villages 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  2  December 

Branches:  President;  37-member  Supreme 
People's  Council;  Cabinet;  Cabinet  is 
totally  Communist  but  Council  contains  a 
few  nominal  neutralists  and 
non-Communists;  National  Congress  of 
People's  Representatives  established  the 
current  government  structure  in  December 
1975 

Government  leaders:  PHOUMI 
VONGVICHIT,  Acting  President  (since 
October  1986);  KAYSONE  PHOMVIHAN, 
Chairman  (since  December  1975) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  elections  for  National  Assembly, 
originally  scheduled  for  1  April  1976,  have 
not  yet  been  held 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Lao  People's 
Revolutionary  Party  (Communist),  Kaysone 
Phomvihan,  party  chairman;  includes  Lao 
Patriotic  Front  and  Alliance  Committee  of 
Patriotic  Neutralist  Forces;  other  parties 
moribund 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  non- 
Communist  political  groups  moribund; 
most  leaders  have  fled  the  country 

Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU, 
Mekong  Committee,  NAM,  UN,  UN- 
CTAD,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO 


137 


LaOS  (continued) 


Lebanon 


Economy 

GNP:  $765  million,  $220  per  capita  (1984 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  tin,  timber,  gypsum, 
hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  rice  (overwhelmingly  domi- 
nant), corn,  vegetables,  tobacco,  coffee, 
cotton;  formerly  self-sufficient;  food  short- 
ages (due  in  part  to  distribution  deficien- 
cies) include  rice;  an  illegal  producer  of 
opium  poppy  and  cannabis  for  the  inter- 
national drug  trade 

Major  industries:  tin  mining,  timber, 
green  coffee,  electric  power 

Shortages:  capital  equipment,  petroleum, 
transportation  system,  trained  personnel 

Electric  power:  175,000  kW  capacity;  900 
million  kWh  produced,  240  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $36  million  (f.o.b.,  1984  est.); 
electric  power,  forest  products,  tin  concen- 
trates; coffee,  undeclared  exports  of  opium 
and  tobacco 

Imports:  $98  million  (c.i.f.,  1984  est.);  rice 
and  other  foodstuffs,  petroleum  products, 
machinery,  transportation  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — Thailand, 
USSR,  Japan,  France,  Vietnam;  exports — 
Thailand,  Malaysia 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries  ODA  and 
OOF  (1970-84),  $409  million;  US  (FY70- 
79),  $276  million 

Budget:  receipts,  $100  million;  expendi- 
tures, $191  million;  deficit,  $91  million 
(1979  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  official — 10 
kips=US$l;  commercial— 35  kips=US$l; 
inward  remittances — 108  kips=US$l 
(December  1985) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Highways:  about  27,527  km  total;  1,856 
km  bituminous  or  bituminous  treated; 
7,451  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or  im- 
proved earth;  18,220  km  unimproved 
earth  and  often  impassable  during  rainy 
season  mid-May  to  mid-September 


Inland  waterways:  about  4,587  km,  pri- 
marily Mekong  and  tributaries;  2,897 
additional  kilometers  are  sectionally  navi- 
gable by  craft  drawing  less  than  0.5  m 

Pipelines:  136  km,  refined  products 
Ports  (river):  5  major,  4  minor 

Airfields:  64  total,  49  usable;  9  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1 1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  service  to  general 
public  considered  poor;  radio  network 
provides  generally  erratic  service  to  gov- 
ernment users;  about  10  AM  stations;  1  TV 
station;  over  5,000  telephones;  1  satellite 
ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Lao  People's  Army  (LPA, 
which  consists  of  an  army  with  naval, 
aviation,  and  militia  elements),  Air  Force, 
National  Police  Department 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  900,000; 
482,000  fit  for  military  service;  41,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually;  no  con- 
scription age  specified 


Boundary  representation  is 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


See  regional  mip  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  10,400  km2;  land  area:  10,230 
km2 

Comparative  area:  smaller  than  Connecti- 
cut 

Land  boundaries:  531  km  total 
Coastline:  225  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  separated  from  Israel 
by  1949  Armistice  Line;  Israeli  troops  in 
southern  Lebanon  since  June  1982 

Climate:  Mediterranean;  mild  to  cool,  wet 
winters  with  hot,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain;  Al  Biqa' 
(Bekaa  Valley)  separates  Lebanon  and 
Anti-Lebanon  Mountains 

Land  use:  21%  arable  land;  9%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  8%  forest 
and  woodland;  61%  other;  includes  8% 
irrigated 

Environment:  rugged  terrain  has  histori- 
cally helped  isolate,  protect,  and  develop 
numerous  factional  groups  based  on  reli- 
gion, clan,  ethnicity;  deforestation;  soil 
erosion;  air  and  water  pollution;  desertifi- 
cation 

Special  notes:  Nahr  al  Litani  only  river  in 
Near  East  not  crossing  an  international 
boundary 


138 


People 

Population:  3,320,522  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.33% 
Nationality:  noun — Lebanese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Lebanese 
Ethnic  divisions:  93%  Arab,  6%  Arme- 
nian, 1%  other 

Religion:  57%  Muslim  (Sunni  and  Shi'a) 
and  Druze,  42%  Christian  (Maronite, 
Greek  Orthodox  and  Catholic,  Roman 
Catholic,  Protestant),  1%  other  (official 
estimates) 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  French  is 
widely  spoken;  Armenian,  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  48/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  63,  women  67 
Literacy:  75% 

Labor  force:  650,000  (1985);  79%  industry, 
commerce,  and  services,  11%  agriculture, 
10%  goverment;  high  unemployment 

Organized  labor:  about  65,000 

Government 

Note:  Between  early  1975  and  late  1976 
Lebanon  was  torn  by  civil  war  between  its 
Christians— then  aided  by  Syrian  troops— 
and  its  Muslims  and  their  Palestinian 
allies.  The  cease-fire  established  in  October 
1976  between  the  domestic  political  groups 
generally  held  for  about  six  years,  despite 
occasional  fighting.  Syrian  troops  consti- 
tuted as  the  Arab  Deterrent  Force  by  the 
Arab  League  have  remained  in  Lebanon. 
Syria's  move  toward  supporting  the  Leba- 
nese Muslims  and  the  Palestinians  and 
Israel's  growing  support  for  Lebanese 
Christians  brought  the  two  sides  into  rough 
equilibrium,  but  no  progress  was  made 
toward  national  reconciliation  or  political 
reforms — the  original  cause  of  the  war. 

Continuing  Israeli  concern  about  the 
Palestinian  presence  in  Lebanon  led  to  the 
Israeli  invasion  of  Lebanon  in  June  1982. 
Israeli  forces  occupied  all  of  the  southern 
portion  of  the  country  and  mounted  a 
summer-long  seige  of  Beirut,  which  re- 
sulted in  the  evacuation  of  the  PLO  from 
Beirut  in  September  under  the  supervision 
of  a  multinational  force  made  up  of  US, 
French,  and  Italian  troops. 


Within  days  of  the  departure  of  the  multi- 
national force  (MNF),  Lebanon's  newly 
elected  president,  Bashir  Gemayel,  was 
assassinated.  In  the  wake  of  his  death, 
Christian  militiamen  massacred  hundreds 
of  Palestinian  refugees  in  two  Beirut 
camps.  This  prompted  the  return  of  the 
MNF  to  ease  the  security  burden  on 
Lebanon's  weak  army  and  security  forces. 
In  late  March  1984  the  last  MNF  units 
withdrew. 

Lebanon  continues  to  be  partially  occu- 
pied by  Syrian  troops.  Israel  withdrew  the 
bulk  of  its  forces  from  the  south  in  1985, 
retaining  a  10-km  deep  security  zone  just 
north  of  the  1949  Armistice  Line.  Israel 
continues  to  arm  and  train  the  Army  of 
South  Lebanon  (ASL),  which  opposes  the 
return  of  Palestinian  fighters  to  South 
Lebanon.  The  ASL  has  increasingly  been 
involved  in  confronting  Shi'a  as  well  as 
leftist  militias  sponsored  by  Syria. 
Sporadic  fighting  between  Shi'a  and  Pales- 
tinian forces  based  in  the  refugee  camps  of 
Beirut,  Sidon,  and  Tyre  escalated  during 
October  1986  to  January  1987,  finally 
breaking  into  major  combat  in  February. 
At  its  height,  fighting  in  West  Beirut  pitted 
the  Shi'a  against  the  Druze  (their  nominal 
allies)  and  the  Sunnis  and  Palestinians.  At 
the  request  of  Prime  Minister  Rashid 
Karami  and  other  Muslim  members  of  the 
government,  Syria  dispatched  troops  to 
West  Beirut  to  restore  order. 

Syria  also  maintains  troops  in  the  Riyaq 
area  of  the  Bekaa  Valley,  while  Special 
Forces  units  are  stationed  in  the  Matn,  and 
in  the  Tripoli  areas,  north  and  northeast. 
In  late  1985  the  Syrian  regime  successfully 
negotiated  a  tripartite  agreement  among 
the  three  major  rival  Christian,  Druze,  and 
Shi'a  militias,  but  implementation  remains 
a  distant  possibility.  The  Christian  and 
Muslim  communities  are  deeply  split  from 
within  over  specific  points  in  the  agree- 
ment. 

Israel  and  Lebanon  signed  a  withdrawal 
agreement  on  17  May  1983.  The  agree- 
ment was  never  implemented  and  was 
subsequently  voided.  A  partial  Israeli 
withdrawal  and  government  attempts  to 
extend  authority  have  led  to  renewed 
factional  fighting.  The  following  descrip- 


tion is  based  on  the  present  constitutional 

and  customary  practices  of  the  Lebanese 

system. 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Lebanon 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Beirut 

Administrative  divisions:  4  provinces 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  Ottoman  law, 
canon  law,  and  civil  law;  constitution 
mandated  in  1926;  no  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  22 
November 

Branches:  power  lies  with  the  President, 
who  is  elected  by  unicameral  legislature 
(National  Assembly);  Cabinet  appointed  by 
President,  approved  by  legislature;  inde- 
pendent secular  courts  on  French  pattern; 
religious  courts  for  matters  of  marriage, 
divorce,  inheritance,  etc.;  by  custom,  the 
President  is  a  Maronite  Christian,  the 
Prime  Minister  is  a  Sunni  Muslim,  and  the 
president  of  the  legislature  is  a  Shi'a  Mus- 
lim; each  of  nine  religious  communities 
are  represented  in  the  legislature  in  pro- 
portion to  their  national  numerical 
strength 

Government  leaders:  Amine  Pierre 
GEMAYEL,  President  (since  September 
1982);  Rashid  KARAMI,  Prime  Minister 
(since  May  1984) 

Suffrage:  compulsory  for  all  males  over 
21;  authorized  for  women  over  21  with 
elementary  education 
Elections:  National  Assembly  held  every 
four  years  or  within  three  months  of 
dissolution  of  Chamber;  security  conditions 
have  prevented  parliamentary  elections 
since  April  1972 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
party  activity  is  organized  along  largely 
sectarian  lines;  numerous  political  group- 
ings exist,  consisting  of  individual  political 
figures  and  followers  motivated  by  reli- 
gious, clan,  and  economic  considerations; 
most  parties  have  well-armed  militias, 
which  are  still  involved  in  occasional 
clashes 


139 


Lebanon  (continued) 


Lesotho 


Communists:  the  Lebanese  Communist 
Party  was  legalized  in  1970;  members  and 
sympathizers  estimated  at  2,000-3,000 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDB— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
ITU,  IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $5.3  billion  (1983  est.) 

Natural  resources:  limestone,  iron 

Agriculture:  fruits,  wheat,  corn,  barley, 
potatoes,  tobacco,  olives,  onions;  not  self- 
sufficient  in  food;  an  illegal  producer  of 
opium  poppy  and  cannabis  for  the  inter- 
national drug  trade 

Major  industries:  service  industries,  food 
processing,  textiles,  cement,  oil  refining, 
chemicals,  some  metal  fabricating 

Electric  power:  1,297,000  kW  capacity; 
2,270  million  kWh  produced,  850  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $482  million  (f.o.b.,  1985) 
Imports:  $2.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Budget:  public  revenues,  $500  million; 
public  expenditures,  $1.5  billion  (1985  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  from  1  Janu- 
ary through  31  December  1986  the  Leba- 
nese pound  fell  from  18  pounds  to  95 
pounds  per  US$1 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  378  km  total;  296  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  82  km  1.050-meter 
gauge;  all  single  track;  system  almost 
inoperable 

Highways:  7,370  km  total;  6,270  km 
paved,  450  km  gravel  and  crushed  stone, 
650  km  improved  earth 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  72  km 

Ports:  2  major  (Beirut,  Tripoli);  one  petro- 
leum terminal;  3  legal  minor  ports;  numer- 
ous illegal  ports  controlled  by  various 
political  factions 

Civil  air:  28  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  10  total,  9  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  rebuilding  program 
disrupted;  had  fair  system  of  radio-relay, 
cable;  about  150,400  telephones  (5.6  per 
100  popl.);  3  FM,  5  AM,  15  TV  stations;  1 
Indian  Ocean  and  2  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  stations,  all  inactive;  3  subma- 
rine coaxial  cables,  all  inactive;  radio-relay 
to  Jordan  and  Syria,  inoperable 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 


Quthtng 
See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  30,350  km2;  land  area:  30,350 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Maryland 

Land  boundary:  805  km  with  South 
Africa 

Climate:  temperate;  cool  to  cold,  dry 
winters;  hot,  wet  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  highland  with  some  pla- 
teaus, hills,  and  mountains 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  66%  meadows  and  pastures;  0% 
forest  and  woodland;  24%  other 

Environment:  population  pressure  forcing 
settlement  in  marginal  areas  resulting  in 
overgrazing,  severe  soil  erosion,  soil  ex- 
haustion; desertification 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  enclave  of 
South  Africa 

People 

Population:  1,621,932  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.69% 

Nationality:  noun — Mosotho  (sing.),  Baso- 
tho  (pi.);  adjective — Basotho 

Ethnic  divisions:  99.7%  Sotho;  1,600 
Europeans,  800  Asians 

Religion:  80%  Christian,  rest  indigenous 
beliefs 

Language:  Sesotho  (southern  Sotho)  and 
English  (official);  also  Zulu  and  Xhosa 

Infant  mortality  rate:  97.7/1,000  (1985) 


140 


Life  expectancy:  54.2  (1985) 
Literacy:  60% 

Labor  force:  426,000  economically  active 
(1976);  87.4%  of  resident  population  en- 
gaged in  subsistence  agriculture; 
150,000-250,000  spend  from  six  months  to 
many  years  as  wage  earners  in  South 
Africa 

Organized  labor:  negligible 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Lesotho 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy  under  King 
Moshoeshoe  II;  independent  member  of 
Commonwealth 

Capital:  Maseru 

Administrative  divisions:  10  administra- 
tive districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  Roman-Dutch  law;  constitution 
came  into  effect  1966;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  in  High  Court  and  Court  of 
Appeal;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  4  October 

Branches:  executive  and  legislative  author- 
ity nominally  vested  in  King;  real  power 
rests  with  six-man  Military  Council,  estab- 
lished after  military  coup  January  1986; 
20-member  Council  of  Ministers  responsi- 
ble for  administrative  duties;  judicial — 63 
Lesotho  courts  administer  customary  law 
for  Africans,  High  Court  and  subordinate 
courts  have  criminal  jurisdiction  over  all 
residents,  Court  of  Appeal  at  Maseru  has 
appellate  jurisdiction 

Government  leaders:  MOSHOESHOE  II, 
King  (since  1966);  Maj.  Gen.  Justinus 
Metsing  LEKHANYA,  chairman  of  Mili- 
tary Council  and  Minister  of  Defense  and 
Internal  Security  (since  January  1986); 
other  members  of  council — Col.  E.  T. 
RAMAEMA,  Col.  A.  K.  MOSOEUNYANE, 
Col.  M.  K.  TSOTETSI,  Lt.  Thabe  LETSIE, 
Lt.  Col.  Joshua  Sekhobe  LETSIE  (since 
January  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  for  adults 


Elections:  elections  scheduled  for  Septem- 
ber 1985  were  boycotted  by  all  opposition 
parties  because  of  procedural  irregularities; 
ruling  BNP  won  all  60  parliamentary  seats 
by  default 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Basotho 
National  Party  (BNP),  Leabua  Jonathan; 
Basutoland  Congress  Party  (BCP),  Ntsu 
Mokhehle;  Basotho  Democratic  Alliance 
(CDA),  C.  D.  Molapo;  National  Indepen- 
dent Party  (NIP),  A.  C.  Manyeli;  Maremat- 
lou  Freedom  Party  (MFP),  B.  Khaketla 

Voting  strength:  National  Assembly  inop- 
erative as  of  20  January  1986 

Communists:  no  information 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  Southern  African  Cus- 
toms Union,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $325  million  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  some  diamonds  and 
other  minerals,  water,  agricultural  and 
grazing  land 

Agriculture:  exceedingly  primitive,  mostly 
subsistence  farming  and  livestock;  princi- 
pal crops  are  corn,  wheat,  pulses,  sorghum, 
barley 

Major  industries:  none 

Electric  power:  power  supplied  by  South 
Africa 

Exports:  labor  to  South  Africa  (remittances 
$300  million  est.  in  1985);  $21  million 
(f.o.b.,  1985),  wool,  mohair,  wheat,  cattle, 
peas,  beans,  corn,  hides,  skins,  tourism, 
diamonds 

Imports:  $326  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  mainly 
corn,  building  materials,  clothing,  vehicles, 
machinery,  medicines,  petroleum,  oil,  and 
lubricants 

Major  trade  partner:  South  Africa 

Budget:  revenues,  $160  million;  current 
expenditures,  $130  million;  development 
(capital)  expenditures,  $50  million 

(FY84/85) 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.25 
maloti=2.25  South  African  rands=US$l 
(November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  1.6  km;  owned,  operated,  and 
included  in  the  statistics  of  the  Republic  of 
South  Africa 

Highways:  5,167  km  total;  508  km  paved; 
1,585  km  crushed  stone,  gravel,  or  stabi- 
lized soil;  946  km  improved  earth,  2,128 
km  unimproved  earth 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  28  total,  28  usable;  2  with  per- 
manent surface  runways;  1  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways  1,220- 
2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  modest  system 
consisting  of  a  few  land  lines,  a  small 
radio-relay  system,  and  minor  radiocom- 
munication  stations;  5,920  telephones  (0.4 
per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  2  FM  stations;  1  TV 
station  planned;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Army  Air  Wing,  Police 
Department 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  346,000; 
187,000  fit  for  military  service 


141 


Liberia 


Buchana 


North  Atlantic  Ocean 


Seer<|ioniln»pVII 


Harper 


Geography 

Total  area:  111,370  km2;  land  area:  96,320 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Pennsylvania 

Land  boundaries:  1,336  km  total 
Coastline:  579  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  dry  winters 
with  hot  days  and  cool  to  cold  nights;  wet, 
cloudy  summers  with  frequent  heavy 
showers 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  rolling  coastal  plains 
rising  to  rolling  plateau  and  low  mountains 
in  northeast 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures;  39% 
forest  and  woodland;  55%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  West  Africa's  largest  tropi- 
cal rainforest  subject  to  deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  2,384,189  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.27% 

Nationality:  noun — Liberian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Liberian 


Ethnic  divisions:  95%  indigenous  African 
tribes,  including  Kpelle,  Bassa,  Gio,  Km, 
Grebo,  Mano,  Krahn,  Gola,  Gbandi,  Loma, 
Kissi,  Vai,  and  Bella;  5%  descendants  of 
repatriated  slaves  known  as  Americo- 
Liberians 

Religion:  70%  traditional,  20%  Muslim, 
10%  Christian 

Language:  English  (official);  more  than  20 
local  languages  of  the  Niger-Congo  lan- 
guage group;  English  used  by  about  20% 

Infant  mortality  rate:  153/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  54 
Literacy:  24% 

Labor  force:  510,000,  of  which  220,000 
are  in  monetary  economy;  non-African 
foreigners  hold  about  95%  of  the  top-level 
management  and  engineering  jobs;  70.5% 
agriculture,  10.8%  services,  4.5%  industry 
and  commerce,  14.2%  other 

Organized  labor:  2%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Liberia 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Monrovia 
Administrative  divisions:  13  counties 

Legal  system:  new  constitution  approved 
by  nationwide  referendum  in  July  1984 
and  implemented  in  January  1986;  judicial 
powers  invested  in  People's  Supreme 
Court  and  lower  courts 

National  holiday:  National  Redemption 
Day,  12  April;  Independence  Day,  26  July 

Branches:  executive  powers  held  by  Presi- 
dent, assisted  by  appointed  Cabinet;  legis- 
lative powers  held  by  bicameral  legisla- 
ture; independent  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Gen.  Samuel  Kanyon 
DOE,  President  and  Commander  in  Chief 
of  the  Armed  Forces  (since  April  1980) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18 

Elections:  presidential  and  legislative 
elections  held  October  1985;  Doe  was 
proclaimed  winner  of  presidential  election 
and  took  office  in  January  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Democratic  Party  of  Liberia,  Miatta  Sher- 
man, Chairman;  Liberian  Action  Party, 


Jackson  Doe,  Chairman;  Liberian  Unity 
Party,  Gabriel  Kpolleh,  Chairman;  Unity 
Party,  Edward  Kesselly,  Chairman;  United 
Peoples  Party,  Gabriel  Baccus  Matthews, 
Chairman 

Communists:  no  Communist  Party  and 
only  a  few  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  EGA,  ECOWAS,  FAO, 
G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  IRC,  ITU,  Mano  River  Union,  NAM, 
OAU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.14  billion,  $490  per  capita;  2% 
real  annual  growth  rate  (1984) 
Natural  resources:  iron  ore,  rubber,  tim- 
ber, diamonds,  gold 

Agriculture:  rubber,  rice,  oil  palm,  cas- 
sava, coffee,  cocoa;  imports  of  rice,  wheat, 
and  livestock  are  necessary  for  basic  diet 
Fishing:  catch  13,553  metric  tons  (1982) 
Major  industries:  rubber  processing,  food 
processing,  construction  materials,  furni- 
ture, palm  oil  processing,  mining  (iron  ore, 
diamonds) 

Electric  power:  374,000  kW  capacity;  655 
million  kWh  produced,  280  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $432  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  iron 
ore,  rubber,  diamonds,  lumber  and  logs, 
coffee,  cocoa 

Imports:  $366  million  (c.i.f.,  1984);  ma- 
chinery, transportation  equipment,  petro- 
leum products,  manufactured  goods, 
foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  FRG,  Nether- 
lands, Italy,  Belgium 
Aid:  Western  (non-US),  ODA  and  OOF 
(1970-84),  $587  million;  US  authorizations 
(including  Ex-Im)  (FY70-85),  $512  million; 
Communist  (1970-85),  $73.0  million 
Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $70 
million 

Budget:  revenues,  $192  million;  current 
expenditures,  $238  million;  development 
and  nonbudgetary  expenditures,  $151 
million  (FY84-85) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  uses  the  US 
dollar  and  the  Liberian  dollar,  which  trade 
officially  at  par 
Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 


Libya 


Communications 

Railroads:  480  km  total;  328  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  152  km  1.067-meter 
narrow  gauge;  all  lines  single  track;  rail 
systems  owned  and  operated  by  foreign 
steel  and  financial  interests  in  conjunction 
with  Liberian  Government 

Highways:  10,087  km  total;  603  km  bitu- 
minous treated,  2,848  km  all-weather, 
4,313  km  dry-weather 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  3  major  (Monrovia,  Buchanan, 
Greenville),  4  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  80  total,  75  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  5  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  telephone  and 
telegraph  service  via  radio-relay  network; 
main  center  is  Monrovia;  8,500  telephones 
(0.4  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  4  FM,  5  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces  of  Liberia, 
Liberia  National  Coast  Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  569,000; 
304,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription 


Mediterranean  Sea 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,759,540  km2;  land  area: 
1,759,540  km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  Alaska 
Land  boundaries:  4,345  km  total 
Coastline:  1,770  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Gulf  of  Sidra  closing  line:  32°  30'  N 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  Aozou 
Strip  in  northern  Chad;  occupies  northern 
Chad;  maritime  dispute  with  Tunisia 
Climate:  Mediterranean  along  coast;  dry, 
extreme  desert  interior 
Terrain:  mostly  barren,  flat  to  undulating 
plains,  plateaus,  depressions 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  8%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  91%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dust-laden  ghibli  is 
a  southern  wind  lasting  1-4  days  in  spring 
and  fall;  desertification;  sparse  natural 
water  resources 

Special  notes:  largest  water  development 
scheme  in  world  being  built  to  bring  water 
from  deep  wells  under  Sahara  Desert  to 
coast 


Population:  3,306,825  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.39% 


Nationality:  noun — Libyan(s);  adjective — 
Libyan 

Ethnic  divisions:  97%  Berber  and  Arab; 
some  Greeks,  Maltese,  Italians,  Egyptians, 
Pakistanis,  Turks,  Indians,  and  Tunisians 
Religion:  97%  Sunni  Muslim 
Language:  Arabic;  Italian  and  English 
widely  understood  in  major  cities 
Infant  mortality  rate:  84/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  56,  women  59 
Literacy:  50-60% 

Labor  force:  1  million,  of  which  about 
280,000  are  resident  foreigners;  31%  indus- 
try, 27%  services,  24%  government,  18% 
agriculture 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  People's  Libyan 
Arab  Jamahiriya 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Tripoli 

Administrative  divisions:  46  municipali- 
ties closely  controlled  by  central  govern- 
ment 

Legal  system:  based  on  Italian  civil  law 
system  and  Islamic  law;  separate  religious 
courts;  no  constitutional  provision  for 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Revolution  Day,  1 
September 

Branches:  officially,  paramount  political 
power  and  authority  rests  with  the  General 
People's  Congress,  which  theoretically 
functions  as  a  parliament  with  a  cabinet 
called  the  General  People's  Committee 
Government  leaders:  Col.  Mu'ammar  Abu 
Minyar  al-QADHAFI  (no  official  title;  runs 
country  and  is  treated  as  chief  of  state); 
Miftah  al-Ista  'UMAR,  Secretary  of  the 
General  People's  Congress  (chief  of  state  in 
theory  but  not  treated  as  such) 
Suffrage:  mandatory  universal  adult 
Elections:  representatives  to  the  General 
People's  Congress  are  drawn  from  popu- 
larly elected  municipal  committees 

Political  parties:  none 
Communists:  no  organized  party,  negli- 
gible membership 


143 


Libya  (continued) 


Liechtenstein 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  vari- 
ous Arab  nationalist  movements  and  the 
Arab  Socialist  Resurrection  (Ba'th)  party 
with  almost  negligible  memberships  may 
be  functioning  clandestinely,  as  well  as 
some  Islamic  elements 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Arab  League,  FAO, 
G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IOOC,  ITU,  NAM,  OAPEC,  OAU,  QIC, 
OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  roughly  $20  billion  (1986  est), 
$6,260  per  capita;  inflation  rate  15%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural  gas, 
gypsum 

Agriculture:  wheat,  barley,  olives,  dates, 
citrus  fruits,  peanuts;  65%  of  food  is  im- 
ported 

Major  industries:  petroleum,  food  process- 
ing, textiles,  handicrafts 

Electric  power:  4,110,000  kW  capacity; 
12,600  million  kWh  produced,  3,250  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $5.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  petro- 
leum 

Imports:  $5.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  manu- 
factures, food 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — Italy, 
FRG;  exports— Italy,  FRG,  Spain,  France, 
Japan,  UK 

Budget:  revenues,  $10  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $9.9  billion,  including  development 
expenditure  of  $5.7  billion  (1985  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .317 
dinars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  19,300  km  total;  10,800  km 
bituminous  and  bituminous  treated,  8,500 
km  gravel,  crushed  stone  and  earth 

Pipelines:  crude  oil  4,383  km;  natural  gas 
1,947  km;  refined  products  443  km  (in- 
cludes 256  km  liquid  petroleum  gas) 


Ports:  4  major  (Tobruk,  Tripoli,  Benghazi, 
Mi$r3tah),  2  secondary,  15  minor,  and  6 
petroleum  terminals 
Civil  air:  75  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  127  total,  115  usable;  45  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  8  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  25  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  38  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  16  AM,  3  FM,  12 
TV  stations;  175,000  TV  sets;  167,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces  of  the  Libyan 
Arab  Jamahariya  (including  Army,  Arab 
Air  Force,  Air  Defense  Command,  Arab 

Navy) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  905,000; 
532,000  fit  for  military  service;  44,000 
reach  military  age  (17)  annually;  conscrip- 
tion now  being  implemented 


Ruggell 


See  ref lonil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  160  km2;  land  area:  160  km2 
Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Washington,  D.C. 

Land  boundaries:  76  km  total 

Climate:  continental;  cold,  cloudy  winters 
with  frequent  snow  or  rain;  cool  to  moder- 
ately warm,  cloudy,  humid  summers 
Terrain:  mostly  mountainous  (Alps)  with 
Rhine  Valley  in  western  third 
Land  use:  25%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  38%  meadows  and  pastures;  19% 
forest  and  woodland;  18%  other 
Environment:  variety  of  microclimatic 
variations  based  on  elevation 
Special  notes:  landlocked 

People 

Population:  27,074  (July  1987),  average 

annual  growth  rate  0.59% 

Nationality:  noun — Liechtensteiner(s); 

adjective — Liechtenstein 

Ethnic  divisions:  95%  Alemannic,  5% 

Italian  and  other 

Religion:  82.7%  Roman  Catholic,  7.1% 

Protestant,  10.2%  other 

Language:  German  (official),  Alemannic 

dialect 

Infant  mortality  rate:  6.3/1,000  (1985) 

Life  expectancy:  men  65,  women  74 

Literacy:  100% 


144 


Labor  force:  12,258;  5,078  foreign  workers 
(mostly  from  Switzerland  and  Austria); 
54.4%  industry,  trade,  and  building;  41.6% 
services;  4.0%  agriculture,  fishing,  forestry, 
and  horticulture;  no  unemployment 

Government 

Official  name:  Principality  of  Liechten- 
stein 

Type:  hereditary  constitutional  monarchy 

Capital:  Vaduz 

Administrative  divisions:  1 1  communes 

Legal  system:  principality  has  its  own 
civil  and  penal  codes;  lowest  court  is 
county  court  (Landgericht)  which  decides 
minor  civil  cases  and  summary  criminal 
offenses;  criminal  court  (Kriminalgericht)  is 
for  major  crimes;  the  court  of  assizes  is  for 
misdemeanors;  Superior  Court 
(Obergericht)  and  Supreme  Court  (Ober- 
ster  Gerichtshof)  are  courts  of  appeal  for 
civil  and  criminal  cases;  an  administrative 
court  of  appeal  from  government  actions 
and  the  State  Court  determine  the  consti- 
tutionality of  laws;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (Diet) 
with  15  deputies  elected  to  four-year 
terms,  hereditary  Prince,  independent 
judiciary 

Government  leaders:  FRANZ  JOSEF  II, 
Prince  (since  1938);  Hans  BRUNHART, 
Head  of  Government  (Prime  Minister; 
since  May  1978);  the  Prince  transferred 
most  of  his  executive  powers  to  his  son, 
Prince  HANS  ADAM,  in  August  1984 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  every  four  years;  last  election 
1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Fatherland 
Union  (VU),  Dr.  Otto  Hasler;  Progressive 
Citizens'  Party  (FBP),  Dr.  Herbert  Bat- 
liner;  Christian  Social  Party,  Fritz  Kaiser 

Voting  strength:  (1986)  VU  50.2%  (8 
seats),  FBP  about  41.9%  (7  seats) 

Communists:  none 


Member  of:  Council  of  Europe,  EFTA, 
IAEA,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
UNCTAD,  UNIDO,  UNICEF,  UPU, 
WIPO;  considering  UN  membership;  has 
consultative  status  in  the  EC;  under  several 
post- World  War  I  treaties  Switzerland 
handles  Liechtenstein's  customs  and  repre- 
sents the  principality  abroad  on  a  diplo- 
matic and  consular  level  whenever  re- 
quested to  do  so  by  the  Liechtenstein 
Government 

Economy 

Note:  Liechtenstein  has  a  prosperous 
economy  based  primarily  on  small-scale 
light  industry  and  some  farming;  industry 
accounts  for  54%  of  total  employment, 
service  sector  42%,  and  agriculture  and 
forestry  4%;  the  sale  of  postage  stamps  to 
collectors,  estimated  at  $10  million  annu- 
ally, provides  for  10%  of  state  budget; 
companies  incorporated  in  Liechtenstein 
solely  for  tax  purposes  provide  an  addi- 
tional 30%  of  the  state  budget;  low  busi- 
ness taxes  (maximum  tax  rate  is  20%)  and 
easy  incorporation  rules  have  induced 
about  25,000  holding  or  so-called  letter 
box  companies,  to  establish  nominal  offices 
there;  economy  is  tied  closely  to  that  of 
Switzerland  in  a  customs  union;  no  na- 
tional accounts  data  are  available 

GNP:  about  $15,000  per  capita  (1984) 
Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  livestock,  vegetables,  corn, 
wheat,  potatoes,  grapes 

Major  industries:  electronics,  metal  manu- 
facturing, textiles,  ceramics,  pharmaceuti- 
cals,  food  products 

Electric  power:  23,000  kW  capacity;  150 
million  kWh  produced,  5,360  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  (1984)  $440  million;  39%  EC, 
32%  EFTA  (24%  Switzerland),  29%  other 

Budget:  revenues,  $108  million;  expendi- 
tures, $86  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.69  Swiss 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 


Communications 

Railroads:  18.5  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  electrified;  owned,  operated,  and 
included  in  statistics  of  Austrian  Federal 
Railways 

Highways:  130.66  km  main  roads,  192.27 
km  byroads 

Civil  air:  no  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  none 

Telecommunications:  automatic  telephone 
system  serving  about  21,400  telephones 
(77.0  per  100  popl.);  no  broadcast  facilities 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  Switzerland 
Branches:  Police  Department 


145 


Luxembourg 


TroitviemM 


20km 


See  reg  ional  mip  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,586  km2;  land  area:  2,586 
km2 

Comparative  area:  smaller  than  Rhode 
Island 

Land  boundaries:  356  km  total 

Climate:  modified  continental  with  mild 
winters,  cool  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  gently  rolling  uplands 
with  broad  shallow  valleys;  uplands  to 
slightly  mountainous  in  north 

Land  use:  24%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  20%  meadows  and  pastures;  21% 
forest  and  woodland;  34%  other 

Environment:  deforestation 
Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  366,127  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.03% 

Nationality:  noun — Luxembourger(s); 
adjective — Luxembourg 

Ethnic  divisions:  Celtic  base,  with  French 
and  German  blend;  also  guest  and  worker 
residents  from  Portugal,  Italy,  and  Euro- 
pean countries 

Religion:  97%  Roman  Catholic,  3%  Protes- 
tant and  Jewish 

Language:  Luxembourgish,  German, 
French;  many  also  speak  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  12/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  70,  women  76.7 


Literacy:  100% 

Labor  force:  (1984)  161,000;  one-third  of 
labor  force  is  foreign,  comprising  mostly 
workers  from  Portugal,  Italy,  France, 
Belgium,  and  FRG;  48.9%  services,  24.7% 
industry,  13.2%  government,  8.8%  con- 
struction, 4.4%  agriculture;  unemployment 
1.5%  (1985  average) 

Government 

Official  name:  Grand  Duchy  of  Luxem- 
bourg 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Luxembourg 
Administrative  divisions:  unitary  state, 
but  for  administrative  purposes  has  3 
districts  (Luxembourg,  Diekirch, 
Grevenmacher)  and  12  cantons 
Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 
constitution  adopted  1868;  accepts  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 
National  holiday:  23  June 
Branches:  parliamentary  democracy; 
seven  ministers  compose  Council  of  Gov- 
ernment headed  by  President,  which 
constitutes  the  executive;  it  is  responsible 
to  the  unicameral  legislature  (Chamber  of 
Deputies);  the  Council  of  State,  appointed 
for  indefinite  term,  exercises  some  powers 
of  an  upper  house;  judicial  power  exer- 
cised by  independent  courts;  coalition 
governments  are  usual 
Government  leaders:  JEAN,  Grand  Duke 
(since  1964);  Jacques  SANTER,  Prime 
Minister  (since  July  1984) 
Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  every  five  years  for  entire 
Chamber  of  Deputies;  latest  elections  June 
1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Social  Party  (CSV),  Jean  Spautz;  Socialist 
Workers  Party  (POSL),  Ben  Fayot;  Liberal 
(DP),  Colette  Flesch;  Communist  (PCL), 
Rene  Urbany;  Independent  Socialists,  Jean 
Gremling;  Green  Alternative  (GAP),  Jean 
Huss 

Voting  strength:  (1984)  Chamber  of  Depu- 
ties— Christian  Social  Party,  25;  Socialist 
Workers  Party,  21;  Liberals,  14;  Commu- 
nists, 2;  Green  Alternative,  2 
Communists:  500  party  members  (1982) 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  group 
of  steel  industries  representing  iron  and 
steel  industry,  Centrale  Paysanne  repre- 
senting agricultural  producers;  Christian 
and  Socialist  labor  unions;  Federation  of 
Industrialists;  Artisans  and  Shopkeepers 
Federation 

Member  of:  Benelux,  BLEU,  Council  of 
Europe,  EC,  EIB,  EMS,  FAO,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IOOC,  IPU,  ITU,  NATO,  OECD,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WEU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $3.2  billion,  $9,240  per  capita; 
57.9%  private  consumption,  22.2%  invest- 
ment, 15.7%  government  consumption, 
3.2%  stockbuilding,  1.0%  net  foreign 
balance;  2.8%  real  GDP  growth  (1984) 
Natural  resources:  iron  ore 
Agriculture:  mixed  farming,  dairy  prod- 
ucts, wine 

Major  industries:  banking,  iron  and  steel, 
food  processing,  chemicals,  metal  products, 
engineering,  tires 

Crude  steel:  3.9  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 10.6  metric  tons  per  capita;  5.4 
metric  ton  capacity  (1985) 
Electric  power:  1,497,000  kW  capacity; 
1,010  million  kWh  produced,  2,740  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports,  imports,  major  trade  partners: 
Luxembourg  has  a  customs  union  with 
Belgium  under  which  foreign  trade  is 
recorded  jointly  for  the  two  countries; 
Luxembourg's  principal  exports  are  iron 
and  steel  products,  principal  imports  are 
minerals,  metals,  foodstuffs,  and  machin- 
ery; most  of  its  foreign  trade  is  with  FRG, 
Belgium,  France,  and  other  EC  countries 
(for  totals,  see  Belgium) 
Budget:  revenues,  $1.37  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $1.26  billion;  surplus,  $0.11  million 
(average  1985  exchange  rate,  LF 
59.378=US$1)  (1985  est.) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  42.0  Luxem- 
bourg francs=US$l  (December  1986); 
under  the  BLEU  agreement,  the  Luxem- 
bourg franc  is  equal  in  value  to  the  Bel- 
gian franc,  which  circulates  freely  in 
Luxembourg 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


146 


Macau 


Communications 

Railroads:  Luxembourg  National  Railways 
(CFL)  operates  270  km  1.435-meter  stan- 
dard gauge;  162  km  double  track;  162  km 
electrified 

Highways:  5,108  km  total;  4,995  km 
paved,  57  km  gravel,  56  km  earth;  about 
80  km  limited  access  divided  highway 

Inland  waterways:  37  km;  Moselle  River 
Pipelines:  refined  products,  48  km 
Port:  (river)  Mertert 
Civil  air:  13  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  and 
efficient  system,  mainly  buried  cables; 
210,000  telephones  (55  per  100  popl.);  2 
AM,  3  FM,  3  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  95,000; 
80,000  fit  for  military  service;  2,000  reach 
military  age  (19)  annually 


2  km 


Zhu Jiang 
Kou 


1 1  ha  da  Taipa 


I/ha  de  Co/cane 


See  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  20  km2;  land  area:  20  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-ninth  the 
size  of  Washington,  B.C. 

Land  boundary:  201  meters  with  China 
Coastline:  40  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  6  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  will  become  a 
Special  Administrative  Region  of  China  in 
1999 

Climate:  tropical;  marine  with  cool  win- 
ters, warm  summers 

Terrain:  generally  flat 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  essentially  urban;  one 
causeway  and  one  bridge  connect  the  two 
islands  to  the  peninsula  on  mainland 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  437,822  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  5.53% 

Nationality:  noun — Macanese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Macau 
Ethnic  divisions:  98%  Chinese,  2%  Portu- 
guese 

Religion:  mainly  Buddhist;  17,000  Catho- 
lics, of  whom  about  half  are  Chinese 


Language:  98%  Chinese,  2%  Portuguese 
Infant  mortality:  12/1,000  (1985) 

Literacy:  almost  100%  among  Portuguese 
and  Macanese;  no  data  on  Chinese  popula- 
tion 

Government 

Official  name:  Macau 
Type:  Chinese  territory  under  Portuguese 
administration 
Capital:  Macau 

Administrative  divisions:  municipality  of 
Macau  and  two  islands —  Ilha  da  Taipa 
and  Ilha  da  Coloane 

Legal  system:  Portuguese  civil  law  system 
Branches:  Governor  assisted  by  five 
Secretaries-Adjunct  (all  appointed  by 
President  of  Portugal),  17-member  Legisla- 
tive Assembly  (five  appointed  by  Gover- 
nor, six  elected  by  universal  suffrage,  six 
elected  by  various  groups  and  associations) 
Government  leader:  Dr.  Joaquim  Pinto 
MACHADO,  Governor  (since  May  1986) 
Suffrage:  Portuguese,  Chinese,  and  foreign 
residents  over  18 

Elections:  conducted  every  four  years 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Association 
to  Defend  the  Interests  of  Macau;  Macau 
Democratic  Center;  Group  to  Study  the 
Development  of  Macau;  Macau  Indepen- 
dent Group 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
wealthy  Macanese  and  Chinese  represent- 
ing local  interests,  wealthy  pro-Communist 
merchants  representing  China's  interests; 
in  January  1967  Macau  Government 
acceded  to  Chinese  demands  that  gave 
China  veto  power  over  administration 
Member  of:  Multifiber  Agreement 

Economy 

GNP:  $1.03  billion  (1985) 
Agriculture:  rice,  vegetables;  food  short- 
ages— rice,  vegetables,  meat;  depends 
mostly  on  imports  for  food  requirements 
Major  industries:  textiles,  toys,  plastic 
products,  furniture 

Electric  power:  123,000  kW  capacity;  335 
million  kWh  produced,  840  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $901  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  textiles 
and  clothing 


147 


Macau  (continued) 


Madagascar 


Imports:  $772  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 32%  US, 
18%  Hong  Kong,  10%  FRG,  10%  France; 
imports — 43%  Hong  Kong,  21%  China 
(1985) 

Budget:  expenditures,  $300  million  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate: 

8  patacas=US$l  (June  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Highways:  42  km  paved 

Ports:  1  major 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  none;  1  seaplane  station 

Telecommunications:  fairly  modern 
communication  facilities  maintained  for 
domestic  and  international  services;  13,000 
telephones;  4  AM  and  3  FM  radio  broad- 
cast transmitters;  est.  75,000  radio  receiv- 
ers; international  high  frequency  radio 
communication  facility;  access  to  interna- 
tional communications  carriers  provided 
via  Hong  Kong  and  China 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  Portugal 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  109,000; 
63,000  fit  for  military  service  (1986  est.) 


300km 


Indian 
Ocean 


Faradofay 


S«  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  587,040  km2;  land  area: 
581,540  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Texas 

Coastline:  4,828  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  150  nm 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  150  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  150  nm 
Territorial  sea:  50  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  French- 
administered  Bassas  da  India,  Europa 
Island,  Juan  de  Nova  Island,  Glorioso 
Islands,  Tromelin  Island 

Climate:  tropical  along  coast,  temperate 
inland,  arid  in  south 

Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain,  high  plateau 
and  mountains  in  center 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  58%  meadows  and  pastures;  26% 
forest  and  woodland;  11%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  periodic  cyclones; 
deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil  erosion; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  world's  fourth  largest 
island;  important  location  along  Mozam- 
bique Channel 


Population:  10,730,754  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.11% 


Nationality:  noun — Malagasy  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Malagasy 

Ethnic  divisions:  basic  split  between 
highlanders  of  predominantly  Malayo- 
Indonesian  origin  (Merina  1,643,000  and 
related  Betsileo  760,000)  on  the  one  hand 
and  coastal  tribes — collectively  termed  the 
Cotiers,  with  mixed  black, 
Malayo-Indonesian,  and  Arab  ancestry 
(Betsimisaraka  941,000,  Tsimihety  442,000, 
Antaisaka  415,000,  Sakalava  375,000)  on 
the  other;  there  are  also  11,000  European 
French,  5,000  Indians  of  French  national- 
ity, and  5,000  Creoles 

Religion:  52%  indigenous  beliefs;  about 
41%  Christian,  7%  Muslim 

Language:  French  and  Malagasy  (official) 
Infant  mortality  rate:  177/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  46 
Literacy:  53% 

Labor  force:  about  4.9  million  (1985),  of 
which  90%  are  nonsalaried  family  workers 
engaged  in  subsistence  agriculture;  of 
175,000  wage  and  salary  earners,  26% 
agriculture,  17%  domestic  service,  15% 
industry,  14%  commerce,  11%  construc- 
tion, 9%  services,  6%  transportation,  2% 
miscellaneous 

Organized  labor:  4%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  Republic  of 
Madagascar 

Type:  real  authority  in  hands  of  the  Presi- 
dent, although  Supreme  Revolutionary 
Council  is  theoretically  ultimate  executive 
authority 

Capital:  Antananarivo 
Administrative  divisions:  6  provinces 
Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  traditional  Malagasy  law; 
constitution  of  1959  modified  in  October 
1972  by  law  establishing  provisional  gov- 
ernment institutions;  new  constitution 
accepted  by  referendum  in  December 
1975;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  26 
June 


148 


Branches:  executive — a  19-member  Su- 
preme Revolutionary  Council  (made  up  of 
military  and  political  leaders);  assisted  by 
cabinet  called  Council  of  Ministers;  uni- 
cameral  legislative — Popular  National 
Assembly;  Military  Committee  for  Devel- 
opment; regular  courts  are  patterned  after 
French  system,  and  a  High  Council  of 
Institutions  reviews  all  legislation  to  deter- 
mine its  constitutional  validity 

Government  leaders:  Adm.  Didier 
RATSIRAKA,  President  (since  June  1975); 
Lt.  Col.  Desire  RAKOTOARIJAONA, 
Prime  Minister  (since  1977) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  referendum  held  in  December 
1975  gave  overwhelming  approval  to 
government  and  new  constitution;  elections 
for  Popular  National  Assembly  held  in 
June  1977  and  in  August  1983;  only  one 
political  group  allowed  to  take  part  in  the 
election,  The  National  Front  for  the  De- 
fense of  the  Revolution,  which  presented  a 
single  list  of  candidates;  a  presidential 
election  in  November  1982  returned 
President  Ratsiraka  with  an  80%  majority; 
the  challenger,  Monja  Jaona,  received  20% 
and  was  later  arrested  after  leading  dem- 
onstrations to  protest  election  fraud 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  seven  par- 
ties are  now  allowed  limited  political 
activity  under  the  national  front  and  are 
represented  on  the  Supreme  Revolutionary 
Council:  Advance  Guard  of  the  Malagasy 
Revolution  (AREMA),  Didier  Ratsiraka; 
Congress  Party  for  Malagasy  Independence 
(AKFM),  Pastor  Richard  Andriamanjato; 
Movement  for  National  Unity  (VONJY), 
Dr.  Marojama  Razanabahiny;  Malagasy 
Christian  Demcratic  Union  (UDECMA), 
Norbert  Andriamorasata;  Militants  for  the 
Establishment  of  a  Proletarian  Regime 
(MFM),  Manandafy  Rakotonirina;  National 
Movement  for  the  Independence  of 
Madagascar  (MONIMA),  Monja  Jaona; 
Socialist  Organization  MONIMA  (VS 
MONIMA),  Remanindry  Jaona 

Voting  strength:  4.8  million  registered 
voters  (1982);  in  1977  local  elections, 
President  Ratsiraka 's  AREMA  captured 
about  89.5%  of  the  73,000  available  posi- 
tions on  11,400  local  executive  committees; 
AKFM  won  about  7.3%  of  the  seats, 


MONIMA  1.7%,  and  VONJY  1.4%; 
UDECMA  won  only  about  45  seats;  in  the 
1983  legislative  election  AREMA  won  117 
out  of  the  137  seats  in  the  Popular  Na- 
tional Assembly 

Communists:  Communist  party  of  virtu- 
ally no  importance;  small  and  vocal  group 
of  Communists  has  gained  strong  position 
in  leadership  of  AKFM,  the  rank  and  file 
of  which  is  non-Communist 

Member  of:  AfDB,  EAMA,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU, 
OCAM,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.4  billion,  about  $250  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  2.1%  (1984) 
Natural  resources:  graphite,  chrome,  coal, 
bauxite,  ilmenite,  tar  sands,  semiprecious 
stones 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — coffee,  vanilla, 
cloves,  sugar,  tobacco,  sisal,  raffia,  pepper, 
cocoa;  food  crops — rice,  cassava,  cereals, 
potatoes,  corn,  beans,  bananas,  coconuts, 
and  peanuts;  animal  husbandry  wide- 
spread; imports  some  rice,  milk,  and  cereal 
Fishing:  catch  54,500  (1983);  marketed 
output— 22,150  metric  tons  fish;  6,695 
metric  tons  shellfish  (1984  est.) 
Major  industries:  agricultural  processing 
(meat  canneries,  soap  factories,  brewery, 
tanneries,  sugar  refining),  light  consumer 
goods  industries  (textiles,  glassware),  ce- 
ment plant,  auto  assembly  plant,  paper 
mill,  oil  refinery 

Electric  power:  114,000  kW  capacity;  479 
million  kWh  produced,  46  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $350  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.); 
coffee,  vanilla,  sugar,  cloves;  agricultural 
and  livestock  products  account  for  about 
85%  of  export  earnings 
Imports:  $353  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.); 
27.5%  raw  materials,  25.3%  equipment, 
23.1%  energy,  12.6%  food,  11.5%  con- 
sumer goods 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 34% 
France,  13.1%  US,  10.4%  Japan,  7.6% 
Indonesia,  5.5%  Italy;  imports— 32.5% 
France,  8.6%  USSR,  6.1%  FRG,  5.7% 
Qatar,  5.6%  US  (1985) 

149 


Budget:  overall  government  operations — 
total  revenues,  $420  million;  current  ex- 
penditures, $300  million;  capital  expendi- 
tures, $150  million;  other  expenditures, 
$90  million  (1984) 

External  debt:  $2.2  billion  disbursed;  debt 
service  payment  33%  of  exports  after 
rescheduling  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  747  Malagasy 
francs=US$l  (September  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,020  km  1.000-meter  gauge 

Highways:  40,000  km  total;  4,694  km 
paved,  811  km  crushed  stone,  gravel,  or 
stabilized  soil;  remainder  improved  and 
unimproved  earth  (est.) 

Inland  waterways:  of  local  importance 
only;  isolated  streams  and  small  portions  of 
Canal  des  Pangalanes 

Ports:  4  major  (Toamasina,  Antsiranana, 
Mahajanga,  Toliara) 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  157  total,  128  usable;  28  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  42  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  includes 
open-wire  lines,  coaxial  cables,  and  radio- 
relay  links;  submarine  cable  to  Bahrain;  1 
Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  station;  96,000 
telephones  (0.9  per  100  popl.);  14  AM,  no 
FM,  24  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Popular  Army,  Aeronaval 
Forces  (includes  Navy  and  Air  Force), 
paramilitary  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,314,000;  1,380,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 93,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $58.9  million;  about  9% 
of  central  government  budget 


Malawi 


Lake 


See  regional  map  VII 


Chisamulg  Island 
oma  Island 


Geography 

Total  area:  118,480  km2;  land  area:  94,080 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Pennsylvania 

Land  boundaries:  2,881  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Tanzania 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (November 
to  May);  dry  season  (May  to  November) 

Terrain:  narrow  elongated  plateau  with 
rolling  plains,  rounded  hills,  some  moun- 
tains 

Land  use:  25%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  20%  meadows  and 
pastures;  50%  forest  and  woodland;  5% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation 
Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  7,437,911  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3. 15% 

Nationality:  noun — Malawian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Malawian 

Ethnic  divisions:  Chewa,  Nyanja,  Tum- 
buko,  Yao,  Lomwe,  Sena,  Tonga,  Ngoni, 
Asian,  European 

Religion:  55%  Protestant,  20%  Roman 
Catholic,  20%  Muslim;  traditional  indige- 
nous beliefs  are  also  practiced  by  some 
members  of  these  groups 


Language:  English  and  Chichewa  (official); 
Tombuka  is  second  African  language 

Infant  mortality  rate:  14/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  47 
Literacy:  25% 

Labor  force:  344,052  wage  earners  em- 
ployed in  Malawi  (1982);  52%  agriculture, 
16%  personal  services,  9%  manufacturing, 
7%  construction,  6%  commerce,  4%  miscel- 
laneous services,  6%  other  permanently 
employed 

Organized  labor:  small  minority  of  wage 
earners  are  unionized 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Malawi 

Type:  one-party  state 

Capital:  Lilongwe 

Administrative  divisions:  3  administrative 
regions  and  24  districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  1964;  judicial  review  of  legislative 
acts  in  the  Supreme  Court  of  Appeals;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  6  July 

Branches:  strong  presidential  system  with 
Cabinet  appointed  by  President;  unicam- 
eral  National  Assembly  of  87  elected  and 
up  to  15  nominated  members;  High  Court 
with  Chief  Justice  and  at  least  two  justices 

Government  leader:  Dr.  Hastings  Kamuzu 
BANDA,  President  (since  1966) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  President  Banda  designated 
President  for  Life  in  1970;  parliamentary 
elections  last  held  June  1983,  next  sched- 
uled for  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Malawi 
Congress  Party  (MCP),  Robson  Chirwa, 
administrative  secretary 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  EC 
(associated  member),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ISO,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 


Economy 

GDP:  $1.11  billion,  $160  per  capita  (1985); 
real  growth  rate  3.0%  (1982) 

Natural  resources:  limestone,  uranium 
potential 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — tobacco,  tea, 
sugar,  peanuts,  cotton,  tung  oil,  maize; 
subsistence  crops — corn,  sorghum,  millet, 
pulses,  root  crops,  fruit,  vegetables,  rice; 
self-sufficient  in  food  production 

Electric  power:  152,000  kW  capacity;  466 
million  kWh  produced,  63  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Major  industries:  agricultural  processing 
(tea,  tobacco,  sugar),  sawmilling,  cement, 
consumer  goods 

Exports:  $271.8  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
tobacco,  tea,  sugar,  peanuts,  cotton,  corn 

Imports:  $291.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  machinery  and  transport 
equipment,  building  and  construction 
materials,  fuel,  fertilizer 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — UK,  FRG, 
US,  Netherlands,  South  Africa;  imports — 
South  Africa,  UK,  Japan,  US,  FRG 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $1.3  billion;  US  autho- 
rized (FY70-85),  $82  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $211.9  million;  expendi- 
tures, $231.9  million  (1983) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.00  Malawi 
kwacha=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  789  km  1.067- meter  gauge 

Highways:  13,135  km  total;  2,364  km 
paved;  251  km  crushed  stone,  gravel,  or 
stabilized  soil;  10,520  km  earth  and  im- 
proved earth 

Inland  waterways:  Lake  Nyasa,  23,300 
km2;  Shire  River,  144  km,  4  lake  ports 

Civil  air:  6  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  50  total,  49  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  9  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


150 


Malaysia 


Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
open-wire  lines,  radio-relay  links,  and 
radio  communication  stations;  36,800 
telephones  (0.5  per  100  popl.);  7  AM,  2 
FM,  and  15  repeaters;  no  TV  stations;  1 
Indian  Ocean  and  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satel- 
lite station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Army  Air  Wing,  Army 
Naval  Detachment,  paramilitary  Police 
Mobile  Unit 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,511,000;  767,000  fit  for  military  service 


SOOkm 


See  regional  map  \\ 


Geography 

Total  area:  329,750  km2;  land  area: 
328,550  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
New  Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  2,295  km  total 
Coastline:  4,675  km  total  (2,068  km  Pen- 
insular Malaysia,  2,607  km  East  Malaysia) 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  involved  in 

complex  dispute  over  Spratly  Islands  with 

China,  Philippines,  Taiwan,  Vietnam,  and 

possibly  Brunei 

Climate:  tropical;  annual  southwest  (April 

to  October)  and  northest  (October  to 

February)  monsoons 

Terrain:  coastal  plains  rising  to  hills  and 

mountains 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  10%  permanent 

crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and  pastures; 

63%  forest  and  woodland;  24%  other; 

includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  flooding;  air  and 

water  pollution 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
Strait  of  Malacca;  occupies  southern  half 
of  Malay  Peninsula  and  northern  quarter 
of  island  of  Borneo 


Population:  16,068,516  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.08%,  includes 
Peninsular  Malaysia— 13,280,754,  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.98%;  Sabah— 
1,281,994,  average  annual  growth  rate 
3.28%;  and  Sarawak— 1,505,768,  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.88% 
Nationality:  noun — Malaysian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Malaysian 

Ethnic  divisions:  59%  Malay  and  other 
indigenous,  32%  Chinese,  9%  Indian 

Religion:  Peninsular  Malaysia — Malays 
nearly  all  Muslim,  Chinese  predominantly 
Buddhists,  Indians  predominantly  Hindu; 
Sabah— 38%  Muslim,  17%  Christian,  45% 
other;  Sarawak — 35%  tribal  religion,  24% 
Buddhist  and  Confucianist,  20%  Muslim, 
16%  Christian,  5%  other 
Language:  Peninsular  Malaysia — Malay 
(official);  English,  Chinese  dialects,  Tamil; 
Sabah— English,  Malay,  numerous  tribal 
dialects,  Mandarin  and  Hakka  dialects 
predominate  among  Chinese;  Sarawak — 
English,  Malay,  Mandarin,  numerous  tribal 
languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  25/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  67.7  male,  72.7  female 
Literacy:  65.0%  overall,  age  20  and  up; 
Peninsular  Malaysia— 80%;  Sabah— 60%; 
Sarawak— 60% 

Labor  force:  5.95  million  (1985);  34.5% 
agriculture;  trade,  hotels,  and  restaurants; 
15.6%  manufacturing,  14.9%  government; 
6.6%  construction,  5%  finance;  4.9%  trans- 
port and  communications;  1.6%  mining; 
1.2%  utilities 

Organized  labor:  620,000,  about  10%  of 
total  labor  force;  unemployment  about 
7.6%  of  total  labor  force,  but  higher  in 
urban  areas  (1985) 

Government 
Official  name:  Malaysia 
Type:  Federation  of  Malaysia  formed  9 
July  1963,  constitutional  monarchy  nomi- 
nally headed  by  Paramount  Ruler  (King),  a 
bicameral  Parliament  consisting  of  a 
58-member  Senate  and  a  154-member 
House  of  Representatives;  Peninsular 
Malaysian  states— hereditary  rulers  in  all 


151 


Malaysia  (continued) 


but  Penang  and  Melaka  where  Governors 
appointed  by  Malaysian  Government, 
powers  of  state  governments  limited  by 
federal  constitution;  Sabah — self-governing 
state,  holds  16  seats  in  House  of  Represen- 
tatives with  foreign  affairs,  defense,  inter- 
nal security,  and  other  powers  delegated  to 
federal  government;  Sarawak — self- 
governing  state  within  Malaysia  in  which 
it  holds  24  seats  in  House  of  Representa- 
tives with  foreign  affairs,  defense,  and 
internal  security,  and  other  powers  dele- 
gated to  federal  government 

Capital:  Kuala  Lumpur 

Administrative  divisions:  14  states  (in- 
cluding Sabah  and  Sarawak) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  came  into  force  1963; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Court  at  request  of  Supreme 
Head  of  the  Federation;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  31  August,  Indepen- 
dence Day 

Branches:  nine  state  rulers  alternate  as 
Paramount  Ruler  for  five-year  terms;  locus 
of  executive  power  vested  in  Prime  Minis- 
ter and  Cabinet,  who  are  responsible  to 
bicameral  Parliament  (Senate,  House  of 
Representatives);  Peninsular  Malaysia — 
executive  branches  of  11  states  vary  in 
detail  but  are  similar  in  design  with  a 
Chief  Minister,  appointed  by  hereditary 
ruler  or  Governor,  heads  an  executive 
council  (cabinet),  which  is  responsible  to 
an  elected,  unicameral  legislature;  Sarawak 
and  Sabah — executive  branch  headed  by 
Governor  appointed  by  central  govern- 
ment, largely  ceremonial  role;  executive 
power  exercised  by  Chief  Minister  who 
heads  parliamentary  cabinet  responsible  to 
unicameral  legislature;  judiciary  part  of 
Malaysian  judicial  system 

Government  leader:  Dr.  MAHATHIR  bin 
Mohamad,  Prime  Minister  (since  July 
1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  minimum  of  every  five  years; 
last  elections  August  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Peninsular 
Malaysia — National  Front,  a  confederation 
of  11  political  parties  dominated  by 


United  Malays  National  Organization 
(UMNO),  Mahathir  bin  Mohamad;  major 
opposition  party  is  Democratic  Action 
Party  (DAP),  Lim  Kit  Siang;  Sabah— 
Berjaya  Party,  Datuk  Haji  Mohamad  Noor 
Haji  Mansodr;  Bersatu  Sabah  (PBS),  Joseph 
Pairin  Kitingan;  United  Sabah  National 
Organization  (USNO),  Tun  Datuk  Mus- 
tapha;  Sarawak — coalition  Sarawak  Na- 
tional Front  composed  of  the  Party  Pesaka 
Bumipatra  Bersatu  (PBB),  Datuk  Abdul 
Taib;  the  United  People's  Party  (SUPP), 
Wong  Soon  Kai;  and  the  Sarawak  National 
Party  (SNAP),  Datuk  James  Wong;  opposi- 
tion is  Parti  Bansa  Dayak  Sarawak  (PBDS), 
Leo  Moggie 

Voting  strength:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 
(1986  parliamentary  election,  lower  house 
of  parliament)  National  Front,  148  seats; 
DAP,  24  seats;  PAS,  1  seat;  independents, 
4  seats;  Sabah — (April  1985  state  election, 
State  Assembly)  Berjaya  Party,  6  seats; 
USNO,  16  seats;  PBS,  26  seats;  Sarawak— 
(December  1983  state  election)  State  As- 
sembly National  Front  controlled  nearly 
two-thirds  of  46  seats 

Communists:  Peninsular  Malaysia — about 
2,000  armed  insurgents  on  Thailand  side 
of  international  boundary;  about  200 
full-time  inside  Malaysia;  Sarawak — less 
than  100,  North  Kalimantan  Communist 
Party;  Sabah — insignificant 

Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  ASEAN, 
Association  of  Tin  Producing  Countries, 
Colombo  Plan,  Commonwealth,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-T7,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITC,  ITU,  NAM, 
OIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $29.0  billion,  $1,870  per  capita; 
annual  growth  -3.2%  (1985);  converted  at 
August  1986  exchange  rate  2.61  Malaysian 
ringgit  (M$)=US$1;  inflation  rate  less  than 
1%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  tin,  petroleum,  timber, 
copper,  iron,  liquefied  natural  gas 

Agriculture:  Peninsular  Malaysia — natural 
rubber,  palm  oil,  rice;  10-15%  of  rice 
requirements  imported;  Sabah — mainly 


subsistence,  main  crops  are  rubber,  timber, 
coconut,  rice  (rice  is  also  a  food  deficit); 
Sarawak — main  crops  are  rubber,  timber, 
pepper  with  rice  a  food  deficit 

Fishing:  catch  741,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 
rubber  and  oil  palm  processing  and  manu- 
facturing, light  manufacturing  industry, 
electronics,  tin  mining  and  smelting, 
logging  and  processing  timber;  Sabah — 
logging,  petroleum  production;  Sarawak — 
agriculture  processing,  petroleum  produc- 
tion and  refining,  logging 

Electric  power:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 
2,821,000  kW  capacity,  10,700  million 
kWh  produced,  820  kWh  per  capita; 
Sabah— 430,000  kW  capacity,  1,250  mil- 
lion kWh  produced,  970  kWh  per  capita; 
Sarawak— 350,000  kW  capacity,  1,020 
million  kWh  produced,  670  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $15.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  natural 
rubber,  palm  oil,  tin,  timber,  petroleum, 
light  manufactures 

Imports:  $12.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 25% 
Japan,  20%  Singapore,  14%  EC,  13%  US; 
imports— 23%  Japan,  16%  Singapore,  15% 
US,  14%  EC  (1985) 

Budget:  operating  expenditures,  $7.4 
billion;  development  expenditures,  $2.9 
billion;  deficit,  $3.5  billion  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.61  Malaysian 
ringgits  (M$)=US$1  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 1,665  km 
1.04-meter  gauge;  13  km  double  track, 
government  owned;  Sabah — 136  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge 

Highways:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 23,600 
km  (19,352  km  hard  surfaced,  mostly 
bituminous  surface  treatment  and  4,248 
km  unpaved);  Sabah — 3,782  km; 
Sarawak — 1,644  km 

Inland  waterways:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 
3,209  km;  Sabah— 1,569  km;  Sarawak— 
2,518  km 


152 


Maldives 


Ports:  Peninsular  Malaysia — 3  major,  14 
minor;  Sabah — 2  major,  3  minor;  Sar- 
awak— 1  major,  9  minor 

Civil  air:  about  28  major  transport  aircraft 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  707  km;  natural  gas, 
379km 

Airfields:  126  total,  123  usable;  31  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  19  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  Peninsular  Malay- 
sia— good  intercity  service  provided 
mainly  by  microwave  relay;  international 
service  good;  good  coverage  by  radio  and 
television  broadcasts;  849,129  telephones 
nationwide  in  1984  (5.3  per  100  popl.);  17 
AM,  2  FM,  20  TV  stations;  submarine 
cables  extend  to  India  and  Sarawak;  con- 
nected to  SEACOM  submarine  cable 
terminal  at  Singapore  by  microwave  relay; 
2  international  satellite  ground  stations;  1 
domestic  satellite  ground  station;  Sabah — 
adequate  intercity  radio-relay  network 
extends  to  Sarawak  via  Brunei;  6  AM,  1 
FM,  7  TV  stations;  SEACOM  submarine 
cable  links  to  Hong  Kong  and  Singapore;  1 
satellite  ground  station;  Sarawak — ade- 
quate intercity  radio-relay  network  ex- 
tends to  Sabah  via  Brunei;  submarine  cable 
to  Peninsular  Malaysia;  5  AM,  no  FM,  6 
TV  stations;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Malaysian  Army,  Royal 
Malaysian  Navy,  Royal  Malaysian  Air 
Force,  Royal  Malaysian  Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,180,000;  2,552,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 172,000  reach  military  age  (21) 
annually 

External  defense  dependent  on  loose  Five 
Power  Defense  Agreement  (FPDA),  which 
replaced  Anglo-Malayan  Defense  Agree- 
ment of  1957  as  amended  in  1963 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1987,  $937  million;  about  9.9% 
of  central  government  budget 


Male  Atoll 

Arabian     ?;,'   '/—  *MALE 
Sea        %    ';'. 


-;.:•.      ••* 
•\     '  '* 

x<  r 


Laccadive 
Sea 


See  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  300  km2;  land  area:  300  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington  D.C. 

Coastline:  644  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  about  100  nm 
(defined  by  geographic  coordinates) 
Extended  economic  zone:  irregular 
polygon  varying  in  breadth  from  about 
35  nm  to  more  than  300  nm 
Territorial  sea:  irregular  polygon  vary- 
ing in  breadth  from  less  than  3  nm  to 
about  55  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  dry,  north- 
west monsoon  (November  to  March);  rainy, 
southwest  monsoon  (June  to  August) 

Terrain:  flat  with  elevations  only  as  high 
as  2.5  meters 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures;  3%  forest 
and  woodland;  84%  other 

Environment:  1,200  coral  islands  grouped 
into  19  atolls 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  astride 
and  along  major  sea  lanes  in  Indian  Ocean 


Population:  195,837  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.65% 

Nationality:  noun — Maldivian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Maldivian 


Ethnic  divisions:  admixtures  of  Sinhalese, 
Dravidian,  Arab,  and  black 

Religion:  Sunni  Muslim 

Language:  Divehi  (dialect  of  Sinhala; 
script  derived  from  Arabic);  English  spo- 
ken by  most  government  officials 

Infant  mortality  rate:  88/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  46.5 
Literacy:  36% 

Labor  force:  about  66,000;  fishing  industry 
employs  80%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Maldives 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Male 

Administrative  divisions:  19  administra- 
tive districts  corresponding  to  19  atolls, 
plus  capital  city 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  with 
admixtures  of  English  common  law  prima- 
rily in  commercial  matters;  has  not  ac- 
cepted compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holidays:  Independence  Day,  26 
July;  Republic  Day,  11  November 

Branches:  popularly  elected  unicameral 
national  legislature,  People's  Council 
(members  elected  for  five-year  terms); 
elected  President,  chief  executive;  ap- 
pointed Chief  Justice  responsible  for 
administration  of  Islamic  law 

Government  leader:  Maumoon  Abdul 
GAYOOM,  President  (since  1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  no  orga- 
nized political  parties;  country  governed 
by  the  Didi  clan  for  the  past  eight 
centuries 

Communists:  negligible 
Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  Com- 
monwealth (special  member),  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD, 
ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IMF,  IMO,  ITU,  NAM, 
QIC,  SAARC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WMO 


153 


Maldives  (continued) 


Mali 


Economy 

GDP:  $76.7  million,  $440  per  capita 
(1984);  10%  real  growth  rate  (1983  est.) 

Natural  resources:  fish 

Agriculture:  crops — coconut,  limited 
production  of  millet,  corn,  pumpkins, 
sweet  potatoes;  shortages — rice,  sugar,  flour 

Fishing:  catch  179,000  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  fishing,  tourism,  some 
coconut  processing,  garment  industry, 
woven  mats,  shipping,  coir  (rope) 

Electric  power:  4,690  kW  capacity;  9 
million  kWh  produced,  50  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $22.8  million  (1985) 
Imports:  $52.0  million  (1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  Japan,  Sri  Lanka, 
Thailand 

Budget:  revenues,  $25.0  million;  expendi- 
tures, $43.00  million  (at  average  1985 
official  rate  of  7.09  rufiyas=US$l)  (1985 
est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.24  Maldivian 
rufiyas=US$l,  official  rate;  7.0  Maldivian 
rufiyas=US$l,  market  rate  (November 
1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  Male  has  9.6  km  of  coral 
highways  within  the  city 

Ports:  2  minor  (Male,  Gan) 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  minimal  domestic 
and  international  facilities;  1,064  tele- 
phones (0.5  per  100  pop!.);  1  TV,  1  FM,  2 
AM  stations;  1  Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1984,  about  $1.8  million 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,240,000  km2;  land  area: 
1,220,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  larger  than  California 
and  Texas  combined 

Land  boundaries:  7,459  km  total 

Climate:  subtropical  to  arid;  hot  and  dry 
February  to  June;  rainy,  humid,  and  mild 
June  to  November;  cool  and  dry  Novem- 
ber to  February 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  rolling  northern 
plains  covered  by  sand;  savanna  in  south, 
rugged  hills  in  northeast 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  25%  meadows  and  pastures; 
7%  forest  and  woodland;  66%  other;  in- 
cludes NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dust-laden  harmattan 
haze  common  during  dry  seasons;  deserti- 
fication; recent  droughts  affecting  marginal 
agriculture 

Special  notes:  landlocked 

People 

Population:  8,422,810  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.80% 

Nationality:  noun — Malian(s);  adjective — 
Malian 

Ethnic  divisions:  50%  Mande  (Bambara, 
Malinke,  Sarakole),  17%  Peul,  12%  Voltaic, 
6%  Songhai,  5%  Tuareg  and  Moor 

Religion:  90%  Muslim,  9%  indigenous 
beliefs,  1%  Christian 


Language:  French  (official);  Bambara 
spoken  by  about  80%  of  the  population 

Infant  mortality  rate:  180/1,000 
Life  expectancy:  42 
Literacy:  10% 

Labor  force:  3.1  million  (1981);  80% 
agriculture,  19%  services,  1%  industry  and 
commerce 

Organized  labor:  National  Union  of 
Malian  Workers  (UNTM)  is  umbrella 
organization  over  13  national  unions 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Mali 

Type:  republic;  single-party  constitutional 
government 

Capital:  Bamako 

Administrative  divisions:  7  regions,  capi- 
tal district 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  1974,  came  into  full  effect  in 
1979;  judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in 
Constitutional  Section  of  Court  of  State; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  22 
September 

Branches:  until  1979  executive  authority 
exercised  by  Military  Committee  of  Na- 
tional Liberation  (MCNL)  composed  of  11 
army  officers;  now  Cabinet  composed  of 
civilians  and  army  officers;  unicameral 
legislature  (National  Council);  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Gen.  Moussa 
TRAORE,  President  (led  Mali  as  President 
of  MCNL  during  1968-79;  President  since 
1979) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Democratic 
Union  of  Malian  People  (UDPM)  is  the 
sole  political  party;  under  civilian  leader- 
ship 

Elections:  constitutional  elections  took 
place  June  1979 

Communists:  a  few  Communists  and  some 
sympathizers  (no  legal  Communist  party) 


154 


Malta 


Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  CEAO,  EGA, 
ECOWAS,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto), 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC,  ITU, 
Niger  River  Commission,  NAM,  OAU, 
QIC,  OMVS  (Organization  for  the  Devel- 
opment of  the  Senegal  River  Valley),  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.1  billion,  $150  per  capita  (1983); 
4.4%  annual  real  growth  rate  (1982) 

Natural  resources:  gold,  phosphates, 
kaolin,  salt,  limestone;  bauxite,  iron  ore, 
manganese,  lithium,  and  uranium  deposits 
are  known  or  suspected  but  not  exploited 

Agriculture:  millet,  sorghum,  rice,  corn, 
peanuts;  cash  crops — peanuts,  cotton, 
livestock 

Fishing:  catch  33,000  tons  (1983  est.) 

Major  industries:  small  local  consumer 
goods  and  processing 

Electric  power:  92,000  kW  capacity;  161 
million  kWh  produced,  20  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $174.5  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
livestock,  peanuts,  dried  fish,  cotton,  skins 

Imports:  $294.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
textiles,  vehicles,  petroleum  products, 
machinery,  sugar,  cereals 

Major  trade  partners:  mostly  franc  zone 
and  Western  Europe;  also  with  USSR, 
China 

Budget:  revenues,  $154  million;  expendi- 
tures and  net  lending,  $169  million  (1982) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  642  km  1.000-meter  gauge 

Highways:  about  15,700  km  total;  1,670 
km  bituminous,  3,670  km  gravel  and 
improved  earth,  10,360  km  unimproved 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,815  km  navigable 
Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  38  total,  30  usable;  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  8  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  domestic  system 
poor  and  provides  only  minimal  service; 
radio-relay,  wire,  and  radio  communica- 
tions stations  in  use;  expansion  of  radio- 
relay  in  progress;  9,500  telephones  (0. 1  per 
100  popl.);  2  AM,  2  FM,  2  TV  stations;  1 
Atlantic  and  1  Indian  Ocean  satellite 
ground  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force;  paramilitary, 
Gendarmerie,  Republican  Guard,  National 
Guard 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,416,000;  798,000  fit  for  military  service; 
no  conscription 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1985,  $26.7  million;  about 
21.9%  of  central  government  budget 


Malta 
VAUE 

FUb.t' 

MaruxJokk 

Biriebbug 


Mediterranean 
Sea 


See  regional  mtp  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  320  km2;  land  area:  320  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  140  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  25  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  Mediterranean  with  mild,  rainy 
winters  and  hot,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  mostly  low,  rocky,  flat  to  dis- 
sected plains;  many  coastal  cliffs 

Land  use:  38%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  59%  other;  includes  3% 
irrigated 

Environment:  numerous  bays  provide 
good  harbors 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  in  central 
Mediterranean,  93  km  south  of  Sicily,  290 
km  north  of  Libya 

People 

Population:  361,704  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.66% 

Nationality:  noun — Maltese  (sing,  and  pi.); 
adjective — Maltese 

Ethnic  divisions:  mixture  of  Arab,  Sicil- 
ian, Norman,  Spanish,  Italian,  English 

Religion:  98%  Roman  Catholic 


155 


Malta  (continued) 


Language:  Maltese  and  English  (official) 
Infant  mortality  rate:  11.2/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  73 
Literacy:  83% 

Labor  force:  121,686  (1984);  30%  services 
(except  government),  24%  manufacturing, 
21%  government  (except  job  corps),  8% 
construction,  5%  utilities  and  drydocks,  4% 
agriculture;  8.7%  registered  unemployed 
(August  1986) 

Organized  labor:  about  40%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Malta 

Type:  parliamentary  democracy,  indepen- 
dent republic  within  the  Commonwealth 
since  December  1974 

Capital:  Valletta 

Administrative  divisions:  2  main  popu- 
lated islands,  Malta  and  Gozo,  divided  into 
13  electoral  districts  (divisions) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  adopted  1961,  came  into 
force  1964;  has  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

Branches:  executive,  consisting  of  Prime 
Minister  and  Cabinet;  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (65-member  House  of  Representa- 
tives); independent  judiciary 

National  holiday:  Freedom  Day,  31 
March 

Government  leaders:  Agatha  BARBARA, 
President  (since  February  1982);  Karmenu 
MIFSUD  BONNICI,  Prime  Minister  (since 
December  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  registra- 
tion required 

Elections:  at  the  discretion  of  the  Prime 
Minister,  but  must  be  held  before  the 
expiration  of  a  five-year  electoral  mandate; 
last  election  December  1981 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Nationalist 
Party,  Edward  Fenech  Adami;  Malta 
Labor  Party,  Karmenu  Mifsud  Bonnici 

Voting  strength:  (1981  election)  House  of 
Representatives— Labor,  34  seats  (49%  of 
the  vote);  Nationalist,  31  seats  (51%  of  the 
vote) 

Communists:  less  than  100  (est.) 


Member  of:  Commonwealth,  Council  of 
Europe,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IFAD,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  UN,  UNDP,  UNESCO,  UNICEF, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.4  billion,  $3,920  per  capita; 
68.9%  private  consumption,  27.4%  gross 
investment;  17.4%  government  consump- 
tion, —  15.2%  net  foreign  sector;  change  in 
stocks  1.0%;  3.1%  real  GDP  growth  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  limestone,  salt 

Agriculture:  overall,  20%  self-sufficient; 
main  products — potatoes,  cauliflower, 
grapes,  wheat,  barley,  tomatoes,  citrus,  cut 
flowers,  green  peppers,  hogs,  poultry,  eggs; 
generally  adequate  supplies  of  vegetables, 
poultry,  milk,  and  pork  products;  seasonal 
or  periodic  shortages  in  grain,  animal 
fodder,  fruits,  other  basic  foodstuffs 

Major  industries:  tourism,  ship  repair 
yard,  clothing,  building  industry,  food 
manufacturing,  textiles 

Shortages:  most  consumer  and  industrial 
needs  (fuels  and  raw  materials)  must  be 
imported 

Electric  power:  217,000  kW  capacity;  835 
million  kWh  produced,  2,360  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $399.8  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
clothing,  textiles,  ships,  printed  matter 

- 

Imports:  $756.7  million  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  74%  EC  (24%  Italy, 
22%  FRG,  17%  UK);  6%  US 

Budget:  revenues,  $475  million;  expendi- 
tures, $486  million  (1984  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.62  Maltese 
lira=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Highways:  1,291  km  total;  1,179  km 
paved  (asphalt),  77  km  crushed  stone  or 
gravel,  35  km  improved  and  unimproved 
earth 

Ports:  2  major  (Valletta,  Marsaxlokk  is 
under  development),  1  secondary,  1  minor 

Civil  air:  8  major  transport  aircraft 


Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  modern  automatic 
system  centered  in  Valletta;  125,000  tele- 
phones (34.6  per  100  popl.);  7  AM,  4  FM, 
2  TV  stations;  1  coaxial  submarine  cable 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Armed  Forces,  Police,  Task 
Force,  Paramilitary  Dejima  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  98,000; 
79,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1984,  $12.2  million;  about  2.5% 
of  central  government  budget 


156 


Man,  Isle  of 


10km 


Irish  Sea 


"astletow 
See  region*!  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  588  km2;  land  area:  588  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  three  times  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  113  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  cool  summers  and  mild  winters; 
humid;  overcast  about  half  the  time 

Terrain:  coastal  plains  in  north  and  south 
connected  by  valley  bisecting  hilly  interior 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other; 
extensive  arable  land  and  forests 

Environment:  strong  westerly  winds 
prevail 

Special  notes:  located  in  Irish  Sea  equidis- 
tant from  England,  Scotland,  and  Ireland 


Population:  64,934  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.01% 

Nationality:  noun — Manxman,  adjective — 
Manx 

Ethnic  divisions:  native  Manx  of  Norse- 
Celtic  descent;  British 

Religion:  Anglican,  Roman  Catholic, 
Methodist,  Baptist,  Presbyterian,  Society  of 
Friends 


Language:  English,  Manx  Gaelic 
Literacy:  compulsory  education  between 
ages  of  5  and  15 

Labor  force:  25,864;  manufacturing  3,467, 
construction  2,921,  transport  and  commu- 
nications 2,300,  retail  2,687,  professional 
and  scientific  services  3,737  (1981);  unem- 
ployment 8%  (1984) 

Organized  labor:  22  labor  unions  pat- 
terned along  British  lines 

Government 

Official  name:  Isle  of  Man 

Type:  self-governing  British  dependent 

territory 

Capital:  Douglas 

Administrative  divisions:  6  sheadings  and 
7  constituencies 

Legal  system:  English  law  and  local 
statute 

National  holiday:  Birthday  of  the  Queen, 
16  June 

Branches:  the  Tynwald  (parliament) 
consists  of  the  Lieutenant  Governor,  ap- 
pointed by  and  representative  of  the 
Crown;  the  Legislative  Council  (upper 
house),  which  includes  members  indirectly 
elected  by  the  House  of  Keys  and  certain 
ex  officio  members;  and  the  elected  24- 
member  House  of  Keys  (lower  house);  an 
Executive  Council  carries  out  administra- 
tive actions;  the  Crown  has  ultimate  re- 
sponsibility for  the  island's  government 

Government  leaders:  Maj.  Gen.  Laurence 
NEW,  Lieutenant  Governor  (since  1985) 
who  is  appointed  by  the  Lord  of  Mann, 
Queen  Elizabeth  II,  Head  of  State;  J.  C. 
NIVISON,  President  of  the  Legislative 
Council  (since  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  21 
Elections:  every  five  years 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  there  is  no 
party  system  and  members  sit  as  indepen- 
dents; affiliations — Manx  Labor  Party, 
Alan  Clague,  chairman;  Manx  National 
Party,  Audrey  Ainsworth,  chairman;  Mec 
Vannin  (Sons  of  Man),  Lewis  Crellin, 
chairman 

Communists:  probably  none 


Economy 

GNP:  195  million  pounds  (1983/4);  finan- 
cial services  21%,  manufacturing  13.7%, 
tourism  10.8%,  construction  10.4%  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  lead,  iron 
Agriculture:  cereals  and  vegetables;  cattle, 
sheep,  pigs,  poultry 

Fishing:  8,300  metric  tons  with  a  value  of 
170,934  pounds  sterling  (1983) 

Major  industries:  an  important  offshore 
financial  center;  financial  services,  light 
manufacturing,  tourism 
Electric  power:  61,000  kW  capacity;  185 
million  kWh  produced,  2,850  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  tweeds,  herring,  processed  shell- 
fish meat 

Imports:  timber,  fertilizers,  fish 
Major  trade  partners:  UK 
Budget:  revenues,  108,214  million  pounds; 
expenditures,  94,949  million  pounds 
(FY84/85  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .70  Isle  of  Man 
pound=.70  pound  sterling)=US$l  (Novem- 
ber 1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  36  km  electric  track,  24  km 
steam  track 

Highways:  640  km  motorable  roads 
Ports:  3  (Douglas,  Ramsey,  Peel) 

Airfields:  2  total;  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  radio  station;  24,435 
telephones 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


157 


Martinique 


Caribbean 
Sea 


Ste  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,100  km2;  land  area:  1,060 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  290  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  trade 
winds;  rainy  season  (June  to  October) 

Terrain:  mountainous  with  indented 
coastline 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  8%  permanent 
crops;  30%  meadows  and  pastures;  26% 
forest  and  woodland;  26%  other;  includes 
5%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes, 
flooding,  and  volcanic  activity  that  results 
in  an  average  of  one  major  natural  disaster 
every  five  years 

Special  notes:  northernmost  of  Windward 
Islands 


Population:  344,922  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.84% 

Nationality:  noun — Martiniquais  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Martiniquais 


Ethnic  divisions:  90%  African  and 
African-Caucasian-Indian  mixture,  5% 
Caucasian,  less  than  5%  East  Indian, 
Lebanese,  Chinese 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic,  5%  Hindu 
and  pagan  African 

Language:  French,  Creole  patois 
Infant  mortality  rate:  12.6/1,000  (1981) 
Life  expectancy:  68 
Literacy:  over  70% 

Labor  force:  100,000;  31.7%  service  indus- 
try, 29.4%  construction  and  public  works, 
13.1%  agriculture,  7.3%  industry,  2.2% 
fisheries,  16.3%  other;  14%  unemployed 

Organized  labor:  11%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Department  of  Martinique 

Type:  overseas  department  and  region  of 
France;  represented  by  three  deputies  in 
the  French  National  Assembly  and  two 
senators  in  the  Senate 

Capital:  Fort-de-France 

Administrative  divisions:  3  arrondisse- 
ments;  34  communes,  each  with  a  locally 
elected  municipal  council 

Legal  system:  French  legal  system;  highest 
court  is  a  court  of  appeal  based  in  Martin- 
ique with  jurisdiction  over  Guadeloupe, 
French  Guiana,  and  Martinique 

Branches:  executive — Prefect  appointed 
by  Paris;  legislative — popularly  elected 
council  of  36  members  and  a  Regional 
Council,  including  all  members  of  the 
local  general  council  and  the  locally 
elected  deputies  and  senators  to  the 
French  parliament;  judicial — under  juris- 
diction of  French  judicial  system 

Government  leader:  Edward  LACROIX, 
Commissioner  (since  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  General  Council  election  nor- 
mally held  every  five  years;  last  General 
Council  election  took  place  in  June  1981; 
regional  assembly  elections  held  February 
1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Rally  for 
the  Republic  (RPR),  Emile  Maurice;  Pro- 
gressive Party  of  Martinique  (PPM),  Aime 
Cesaire;  Communist  Party  of  Martinique 


(PCM),  Armand  Nicolas;  Command  Party 
of  Martinique  (PCM),  Leon-Laurent 
Valere 

Voting  strength:  RPR,  1  seat  in  French 
National  Assembly;  UDF,  1  seat;  Socialist 
Party,  1  seat 

Communists:  1,000  estimated 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Prole- 
tarian Action  Group  (GAP);  Alhed  Marie- 
Jeanne  Socialist  Revolution  Group  (GRS), 
Martinique  Independence  Movement 
(MIM),  Caribbean  Revolutionary  Alliance 
(ARC),  Central  Union  for  Martinique 
Workers  (CSTM),  Marc  Pulvar;  Frantz 
Fanon  Circle;  League  of  Workers  and 
Peasants 

Member  of:  WFTU 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.3  billion,  $4,036  per  capita  (1981) 

Natural  resources:  scenery,  cultivable  land 

Agriculture:  bananas,  pineapples,  vegeta- 
bles, flowers,  sugarcane  for  rum 

Major  industries:  construction,  rum, 
cement,  oil  refining,  light  industry,  tourism 

Electric  power:  108,000  kW  capacity;  330 
million  kWh  produced,  1,010  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $115  million  (1983);  refined 
petroleum  products,  bananas,  rum,  pine- 
apples 

Imports:  $744  million  (1983);  petroleum 
products,  foodstuffs,  construction  materials, 
vehicles,  clothing  and  other  consumer 
goods 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 56% 
France  (1978);  imports— 62%  France,  28% 
EC  and  franc  zone,  4.5%  US,  5.5%  other 
(1977) 

Aid:  bilateral  ODA  and  OOF  commit- 
ments (1970-81)  from  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  $3.1  billion 

Budget:  expenditures,  $215  million  (1981) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 


158 


Mauritania 


Highways:  1,680  km  total;  1,300  km 
paved,  380  km  gravel  and  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Fort-de-France),  5  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  3  total;  3  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  domestic  facilities 
are  adequate;  68,900  telephones  (21.5  per 
100  popl.);  interisland  radio-relay  links  to 
Guadeloupe,  Dominica,  and  St.  Lucia;  2 
Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  antennas;  1  AM,  7 
FM,  10  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  France 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  92,000 


30Okm 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,030,700  km2;  land  area: 
1,030,400  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
California  and  Texas  combined 

Land  boundaries:  5,118  km  total 
Coastline:  754  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  70  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Western  Sahara 
question  with  Morocco 

Climate:  desert;  constantly  hot,  dry,  dusty 

Terrain:  mostly  barren,  flat  plains  of 
Sahara  Desert;  some  central  hills 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  38%  meadows  and 
pastures;  15%  forest  and  woodland;  47% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry,  dust/sand-laden 
sirocco  wind  blows  primarily  in  March 
and  April;  desertification;  only  perennial 
river  is  the  Senegal 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  1,863,208  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.91% 

Nationality:  noun — Mauritanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Mauritanian 


Ethnic  divisions:  40%  mixed  Moor /black; 
30%  Moor,  30%  black 

Religion:  nearly  100%  Muslim 

Language:  Hasaniya  Arabic  (national); 
French  (official);  Toucouleur,  Fula, 
Sarakole,  Wolof 

Infant  mortality  rate:  136/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  44,  women  47 
Literacy:  17% 

Labor  force:  total  labor  force  465,000 
(1981  est);  about  45,000  wage  earners 
(1980  IMF);  47%  agriculture,  29%  services, 
14%  industry  and  commerce,  10%  govern- 
ment; considerable  unemployment 

Organized  labor:  30,000  members  claimed 
by  single  union,  Mauritanian  Workers' 
Union 

Govern  rnent 

Official  name:  Islamic  Republic  of  Mauri- 
tania 

Type:  republic;  military  first  seized  power 
in  bloodless  coup  10  July  1978;  a  palace 
coup  that  took  place  on  12  December 
1984  brought  the  President  to  power 

Capital:  Nouakchott 

Administrative  divisions:  12  regions  and  a 
capital  district 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law;  mili- 
tary constitution  April  1979 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  28 
November 

Branches:  executive,  Military  Committee 
for  National  Salvation  rules  by  decree; 
National  Assembly  and  judiciary  sus- 
pended pending  restoration  of  civilian  rule 

Government  leader:  Col.  Maaouiya  Ould 
Sid  Ahmed  Ould  TAYA,  President  and 
Prime  Minister  (since  December  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  for  adults 

Elections:  municipal  elections  conducted 
December  1986;  last  presidential  election 
August  1976 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  suspended 

Communists:  no  Communist  Party,  but 
there  is  a  scattering  of  Maoist  sympathizers 


159 


Mauritania  (continued) 


Mauritius 


Member  of:  AfDB,  AIOEC,  Arab  League, 
CEAO,  CIPEC  (associate),  EAMA,  EIB 
(associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  QIC,  OMVS  (Organization 
for  the  Development  of  the  Senegal  River 
Valley),  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $800  million,  $450  per  capita  (1985 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  iron  ore,  gypsum,  fish 

Agriculture:  most  Mauritanians  are  no- 
mads or  subsistence  farmers;  livestock, 
cereals,  vegetables,  dates;  cash  crop — gum 
arabic 

Fishing:  catch,  53,800  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  mining  of  iron  ore  and 
gypsum,  fish  processing 

Electric  power:  57,000  kW  capacity;  74 
million  kWh  produced,  43  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $340  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  iron 
ore,  processed  fish,  and  small  amounts  of 
gum  arabic  and  gypsum;  also  unrecorded 
but  numerically  significant  cattle  exports 
to  Senegal 

Imports:  $250  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  food- 
stuffs and  other  consumer  goods,  petro- 
leum products,  capital  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  France  and  other 
EC  members,  Senegal,  and  US 

Budget:  $225  million  budgeted  in  1984; 
$184  million  revenues  (planned  1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  73.7 
ouguiyas=US$l  (30  September  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  740  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  single  track,  privately  owned 

Highways:  7,540  km  total;  1,350  km 
paved;  710  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
otherwise  improved;  5,480  km  unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  800  km 

Ports:  2  major  (Nouadhibou  and 
Nouakchott) 


Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  31  total,  30  usable;  10  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  16  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  poor  system  of 
cable  and  open-wire  lines,  minor  radio- 
relay  links,  and  radio  communications 
stations;  5,200  telephones  (0.3  per  100 
popl.);  2  AM,  no  FM,  1  TV  stations;  1 
Atlantic  Ocean  and  2  ARABSAT  satellite 
ground  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Gendarmerie,  paramilitary  Na- 
tional Guard,  paramilitary  National  Police, 
paramilitary  Presidential  Guard,  paramili- 
tary Nomad  Security  Guards 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  412,000; 
200,000  fit  for  military  service;  conscrip- 
tion law  not  implemented 


Agalega  Islands   Cargadi 
Caraios  Shoals,  and 
Rodnguas  ara  not  shown 


See  region*.]  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,860  km2;  land  area:  1,850 
km2 

Comparative  area:  smaller  than  Rhode 
Island 

Coastline:  177  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  island  of 
Diego  Garcia  in  UK-administered  British 
Indian  Ocean  Territory;  claims  French- 
administered  Tromelin  Island 

Climate:  tropical  modified  by  southeast 
trade  winds;  warm,  dry  winter  (May  to 
November);  hot,  wet,  humid  summer 
(November  to  May) 

Terrain:  small  coastal  plain  rising  to  dis- 
continuous mountains  encircling  central 
plateau 

Land  use:  54%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  31% 
forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  includes 
9%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  cyclones  (Novem- 
ber to  April);  almost  completely  sur- 
rounded by  reefs 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  1,079,627  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.87% 


160 


Nationality:  noun — Mauritian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Mauritian 

Ethnic  divisions:  68%  Indo-Mauritian, 
27%  Creole,  3%  Sino-Mauritian,  2% 
Franco-Mauritian 

Religion:  51%  Hindu,  30%  Christian 
(mostly  Roman  Catholic  with  a  few  Angli- 
cans), 17%  Muslim 

Language:  English  (official),  Creole, 
French,  Hindi,  Urdu,  Hakka,  Bojpoori 

Infant  mortality  rate:  28/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  67 
Literacy:  79% 

Labor  force:  335,000;  29%  government 
services,  27%  agriculture  and  fishing,  22% 
manufacturing,  22%  other;  about  15-20% 
unemployed 

Organized  labor:  about  35%  of  labor 
force,  forming  over  270  unions 

Government 

Official  name:  Mauritius 

Type:  independent  state,  recognizing 
Elizabeth  II  as  Chief  of  State 

Capital:  Port  Louis 

Administrative  divisions:  5  organized 
municipalities  and  various  island  depen- 
dencies 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  with  elements  of  English  common 
law  in  certain  areas;  constitution  adopted  6 
March  1968 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  12 
March 

Branches:  executive  power  exercised  by 
Prime  Minister  and  19-member  Council  of 
Ministers;  unicameral  legislature  (Legisla- 
tive Assembly)  with  62  members  elected 
by  direct  suffrage,  eight  specially  elected 
under  the  so  called  best  loser  system 

Government  leader:  Aneerood 
JUGNAUTH,  Prime  Minister  (since  June 
1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  legislative  August  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  the  govern- 
ment is  currently  controlled  by  a  coalition 
composed  of  the  Militant  Socialist  Move- 
ment (MSM)  led  by  A.  Jugnauth,  the 


Mauritian  Social  Democratic  Party  (PMSD) 
led  by  G.  Duval,  the  Mauritian  Workers' 
Assembly  (RTM)  led  by  Beergoonath 
Ghurburrun,  and  the  Mauritian  Labor 
Party  (MLP)  faction,  led  by  party  head  S. 
Boolell;  the  main  opposition  party  is  the 
Mauritian  Militant  Movement  (MMM)  led 
by  P.  Berenger. 

Voting  strength:  MSM,  30  of  70  seats  in 
the  Assembly;  MMM,  21;  MLP,  11;  PMSD, 
4;  OPR,  2;  and  independents,  2 

Communists:  may  be  2,000  sympathizers; 
several  Communist  organizations;  Maurit- 
ius Lenin  Youth  Organization,  Mauritius 
Women's  Committee,  Mauritius  Commu- 
nist Party,  Mauritius  People's  Progressive 
Party,  Mauritius  Young  Communist 
League,  Mauritius  Liberation  Front,  Chi- 
nese Middle  School  Friendly  Association, 
Mauritius/USSR  Friendship  Society 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  vari- 
ous labor  unions 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
ISO,  ITU,  IWC— International  Wheat 
Council,  NAM,  OAU,  OCAM,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.0  billion,  $940  per  capita;  6% 
real  growth  rate  (1985/86  est.) 

Agriculture:  sugar  crop  is  a  major  eco- 
nomic asset;  about  90%  of  cultivated  land 
area  is  planted  in  sugar;  also  sugar  deriva- 
tives, tea,  tobacco;  most  food  imported 

Major  industries:  mainly  food  manufac- 
turing (largely  sugar  milling),  textiles  and 
wearing  apparel,  chemical  and  chemical 
products,  metal  products,  transport  equip- 
ment, and  nonelectrical  machinery 

Electric  power:  237,000  kW  capacity;  373 
million  kWh  produced,  370  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $442  million  (merchandise,  f.o.b., 
1985);  sugar  about  40%,  Export  Processing 
Zone  exports  about  50% 

Imports:  $463  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  food, 
petroleum  products,  manufactured  goods 


Major  trade  partners:  all  EC  countries 
and  US  have  preferential  treatment,  UK 
buys  almost  all  of  Mauritius's  sugar  export 
at  subsidized  prices;  small  amount  of  sugar 
exported  to  Canada,  US,  and  Italy;  nonoil 
imports  from  UK  and  EC  primarily,  also 
from  South  Africa,  Australia,  US,  and 
Japan;  some  minor  trade  with  China 

Budget:  as  percent  of  GDP,  revenues 
22.7%,  external  grants  1.6%,  current  ex- 
penditures 23.7%;  capital  expenditures, 
4.9%  (1986/87) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  13.34  Mauri- 
tian rupees=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Highways:  2,000  km  total;  1,200  km 
paved,  800  km  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Port  Louis) 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  5  total,  4  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  small  system  with 
good  service;  new  microwave  link  to 
Reunion;  high-frequency  radio  links  to 
several  countries;  48,000  telephones  (4.7 
per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  no  FM,  4  TV  sta- 
tions; 1  Indian  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  paramilitary  Special  Mobile 
Force,  Special  Support  Units,  regular 
Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  297,000; 
154,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1983,  $13.45  million;  3.2%  of  central 
government  budget 


161 


Mayotte 


3  lie  M'Zambourou 


Administered  by  France, 
claimed  by  Comoros 


OZAOUpZI/X 

0  lie 

Pamanzi 


BandrM 


I 

Set  rt|ionil  mip  VII       ~  Mozambique   Channel 

Geography 

Total  area:  375  km2;  land  area:  375  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  165  km  (excluding  islets) 
Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claimed  by 
Comoros 

Climate:  tropical;  marine;  hot,  humid, 
rainy  season  during  northeastern  monsoon 
(November  to  May);  dry  season  is  cooler 
(May  to  November) 

Terrain:  generally  undulating  with  ancient 
volcanic  peaks,  deep  ravines 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  cyclones  during 
rainy  season 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  64,481  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.71% 

Nationality:  noun — Mahorais  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Mahoran 

Religion:  99%  Muslim;  remainder  Chris- 
tian, mostly  Roman  Catholic 


Language:  Mahorian  (a  Swahili  dialect), 
French 

Literacy:  probably  high 

Government 
Official  name:  Mayotte 
Type:  French  overseas  territority 
Capital:  Dzaoudzi 

Legal  system:  represented  in  French 
Parliament  by  one  deputy  in  the  National 
Assembly  and  one  member  in  the  Senate; 
superior  court  of  appeal 

Branches:  elected  17-member  general 
council;  appointed  commissioner 

Government  leaders:  Christian 
PELLERIN,  Commissioner  of  the  Repub- 
lic (since  1983);  Younoussa  BAMANA, 
President  of  the  General  Council  (since 
1976) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Mahoran 
Popular  Movement  (MPM),  Zna  M'Oere; 
Party  for  the  Mahoran  Democratic  Rally 
(PRDM),  Daroueche  Maoulida;  Mahoran 
Rally  for  the  Republic  (RMPR),  Abdoul 
Anizizi 

Communists:  probably  none 

Economy 

Agriculture:  vanilla,  ylang-ylang,  coffee, 
copra 

Fishing:  annual  catch,  about  2,000  tons 

Major  industries:  newly  created  lobster 
and  shrimp  industry 

Electric  power:  no  data 

Exports:  5  million  francs  (1982);  ylang- 
ylang,  vanilla 

Imports:  116  million  francs  (1982);  build- 
ing materials,  transport  equipment,  rice, 
clothing,  flour 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — France 
57%,  Kenya  16%,  South  Africa  11%,  Paki- 
stan 8%;  exports — France  79%,  Reunion 
19%,  Comoros  10% 

Budget:  144.3  million  francs  (1982) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 
Railroads:  none 
Highways:  85  km  tarred 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  none 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  permanent-surface 
runway;  1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  small  system  ad- 
ministered by  French  Department  of  Posts 
and  Telecommunications;  includes  radio- 
relay  and  high-frequency  radio  communi- 
cations for  links  with  Comoros  and  for 
international  communications;  450  tele- 
phones (1  per  100  popl.);  1  AM  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 


,« 


Mexico 


Ciudad 
Juarez 


Ocean 


f  rrgionil  map  II 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,972,550  km2;  land  area: 
1,923,040  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  three  times  the 
size  of  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  4,220  km  total 
Coastline:  9,330  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  2  nm 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  to  desert 

Terrain:  mostly  high,  rugged  mountains 
with  low  coastal  plains  and  high  plateaus 

Land  use:  12%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  39%  meadows  and  pastures;  24% 
forest  and  woodland;  24%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  destructive  earth- 
quakes in  center  and  south;  natural  water 
resources  scarce  in  north,  inaccessible  and 
poor  quality  in  center  and  extreme  south- 
east; deforestation;  soil  erosion  widespread; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  south- 
ern border  of  US 


Population:  81,860,566  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.09% 

Nationality:  noun — Mexican(s);  adjective- 
Mexican 

Ethnic  divisions:  60%  mestizo  (Indian- 
Spanish),  30%  Amerindian  or  predomi- 


nantly Amerindian,  9%  white  or  predomi- 
nantly white,  1%  other 

Religion:  97%  nominally  Roman  Catholic, 
3%  Protestant 

Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  51.0/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  65.4 

Literacy:  88.1% 

Labor  force:  26,320,000  (1985);  31.4% 
services;  26%  agriculture,  forestry,  hunting, 
fishing;  13.9%  commerce;  12.8%  manufac- 
turing; 9.5%  construction;  4.8%  transporta- 
tion; 1.3%  mining  and  quarrying;  0.3% 
electricity;  10%  unemployed,  40%  under- 
employed 

Organized  labor:  35%  of  total  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  United  Mexican  States 

Type:  federal  republic  operating  under  a 
centralized  government 

Capital:  Mexico 

Administrative  divisions:  31  states  and 
the  Federal  District 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  US  constitutional 
theory  and  civil  law  system;  constitution 
established  in  1917;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  16 
September 

Branches:  dominant  executive,  bicameral 
legislature  (National  Congress — Senate, 
Federal  Chamber  of  Deputies),  Supreme 
Court 

Government  leader:  Miguel  DE  LA 
MADRID  Hurtado,  President  (since  De- 
cember 1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  compul- 
sory but  unenforced 

Elections:  next  presidential  election  to  be 
held  in  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  (recognized 
parties)  Institutional  Revolutionary  Party 
(PRI),  Jorge  de  la  Vega;  National  Action 
Party  (PAN),  Pablo  Emilio  Madero;  Popu- 
lar Socialist  Party  (PPS),  Jorge  Cruickshank 
Garcia;  Unified  Socialist  Party  of  Mexico 
(PSUM),  Pablo  Gomez  Alvarez;  Mexican 


Democratic  Party  (PDM),  Ignacio 
Gonzalez  Gollaz;  Socialist  Workers  Party 
(PST),  Pedro  Etiene;  Revolutionary  Work- 
ers Party  (PRT),  Ricardo  Pascoe  Pierce; 
Mexican  Workers  Party  (PMT),  Heberto 
Castillo  Martinez;  Authentic  Party  of  the 
Revolution  (PARM),  Carlos  Enrique  Cantu 
Rosas 

Voting  strength:  (1985  congressional 
election)  66%  PRI,  15%  PAN,  3%  PSUM, 
3%  PDM,  2%  PST,  2%  PPS,  2%  PARM,  2% 
PMT,  1%  PRT,  4%  other  parties  or  an- 
nulled 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Ro- 
man Catholic  Church,  Confederation  of 
Mexican  Workers  (CTM),  Confederation  of 
Industrial  Chambers  (CONCAMIN),  Con- 
federation of  National  Chambers  of  Com- 
merce (CONCANACO),  National  Peasant 
Confederation  (CNC),  National  Confedera- 
tion of  Popular  Organizations  (CNOP), 
Revolutionary  Confederation  of  Workers 
and  Peasants  (CROC) 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Whaling  Commission, 
LAIA,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WSG,  WTO,  Group  of  Six 

Economy 

GDP:  $147.2  billion,  $1,870  per  capita; 
62%  private  consumption,  11%  private 
investment,  9%  public  consumption,  7% 
public  investment;  net  foreign  balance  5%; 
real  growth  rate,  2.7%;  average  inflation 
rate  58%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  silver, 
copper,  gold,  lead,  zinc,  natural  gas, 
timber 

Agriculture:  corn,  cotton,  wheat,  coffee, 
sugarcane,  sorghum,  oilseed,  pulses,  and 
vegetables;  an  illegal  producer  of  opium 
poppy  and  cannabis  for  the  international 
drug  trade 


163 


Mexico  (continued) 


Monaco 


Fishing:  catch  1,500,000  metric  tons 
(1985);  exports  valued  at  $481  million, 
imports  at  $21.9  million  (1982) 

Major  industries:  processing  of  food, 
beverages,  and  tobacco;  chemicals,  basic 
metals  and  metal  products,  petroleum 
products,  mining,  textiles  and  clothing,  and 
transport  equipment 

Crude  steel:  10  million  metric  tons  capac- 
ity (1984);  7.3  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced, 95  kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  23,054,000  kW  capacity; 
90,490  million  kWh  produced,  1,110  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $21.866  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
cotton,  coffee,  nonferrous  minerals  (includ- 
ing lead  and  zinc),  shrimp,  petroleum, 
sulfur,  salt,  cattle  and  meat,  fresh  fruit, 
tomatoes,  machinery  and  equipment 

Imports:  $13.460  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
machinery,  equipment,  industrial  vehicles, 
and  intermediate  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 60%  US, 
10%  EC,  8%  Japan  (1985);  imports— 67% 
US,  11%  EC,  5%  Japan 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $2.9 
billion;  (ODA  and  OOF)  Western  (non-US) 
countries  (1970-84),  $4.3  billion;  Commu- 
nist countries  (1970-85),  $110  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $8 
million 

Budget:  (at  average  controlled  rate  of 
exchange)  public  sector,  budgeted  reve- 
nues, $73.3  billion;  budgeted  expenditures, 
$86.5  billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  dual  exchange 
rates — controlled  rate  1,022  pesos=US$l; 
free  rate  1,019=US$1  (both  rates  as  of  16 
February  1987,  set  daily  by  the  Mexican 
Government) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  20,680  km  total;  19,950  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge;  730  km 
0.914-meter  narrow  gauge 

Highways:  210,000  km  total;  65,000  km 
paved,  30,000  km  semipaved  or  cobble- 
stone, 60,000  km  rural  roads  (improved 
earth)  or  roads  under  construction,  55,000 
km  unimproved  earth  roads 


Inland  waterways:  2,900  km  navigable 
rivers  and  coastal  canals 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  4,100  km;  refined 
products,  6,875  km;  natural  gas,  11,900  km 

Ports:  1 1  major,  20  minor 

Civil  air:  174  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1,905  total,  1,715  usable;  182 
with  permanent-surface  runways;  3  with 
runways  over  3,659  m,  28  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  273  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  highly  developed 
system  with  extensive  radio-relay  links; 
connection  into  Central  American  micro- 
wave net;  6.41  million  telephones  (8.9  per 
100  popl.);  650  AM,  120  TV,  and  about 
180  low-power  TV  relay  stations;  120 
domestic  satellite  terminals;  2  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  ground  antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  Navy,  Marine 
Corps 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
19,784,000;  14,489,000  fit  for  military 
service;  1,030,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $630.1  million;  1.2%  of 
central  government  expenditures,  includ- 
ing support  of  parastatals 


1  km 


Mediterranean 
Sea 


Se«  regional  mip  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  1.9  km2;  land  area:  1.9  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-hundredth 
the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Land  boundary:  3.7  km  with  France 
Coastline:  4.1  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  Mediterranean  with  mild,  wet 
winters  and  hot,  dry  summers 

Terrain:  hilly,  rugged,  rocky 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 
Environment:  almost  entirely  urban 

Special  notes:  second  smallest  indepen- 
dent state  in  world  (after  Vatican  City) 

. 

People 

Population:  28,641  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.99% 

Nationality:  noun — Monacan(s)  or  Mone- 

gasque(s);  adjective — Monacan  or  Mone- 

gasque 

Ethnic  divisions:  47%  French,  16%  Mone- 

gasque,  16%  Italian,  21%  other 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholicism 

Language:  French  (official),  English, 
Italian,  Monegarque 

Literacy:  99% 


164 


Mongolia 


Government 

Official  name:  Principality  of  Monaco 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Monaco 

Administrative  divisions:  1  commune 
composed  of  4  communal  sectors 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  law;  new 
constitution  adopted  1962;  has  not  ac- 
cepted compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  19  November 

Branches:  legislative  branch  is  composed 
of  the  Prince  and  National  Council  of  18 
members;  executive  consists  of  the  Prince 
as  Chief  of  State,  the  Minister  of  State  as 
Head  of  Government  (senior  French  civil 
servant  appointed  by  Prince),  and  the 
Council  of  Government  as  Cabinet;  judi- 
cial authority  is  delegated  by  the  Prince  to 
the  Supreme  Tribunal 

Government  leader:  Prince  RAINIER  III, 
Chief  of  State  (since  November  1949) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  National  Council  every  five 
years;  national  election  held  January  1983; 
municipal  election  held  February  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
and  Democratic  Union  (UND),  Democratic 
Union  Movement  (MUD),  Monaco  Action, 
Monegasque  Socialist  Party  (PSM) 

Voting  strength:  National  Council — UND 
18  seats 

Member  of:  IAEA,  ICAO,  IHO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  UN 
(permanent  observer),  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO 

Economy 

GNP:  55%  tourism;  25-30%  industry  (small 
and  primarily  tourist  oriented);  10-15% 
registration  fees  and  sales  of  postage 
stamps;  about  4%  traceable  to  the  Monte 
Carlo  casino 

Major  industries:  chemicals,  food  process- 
ing, precision  instruments,  glass  making, 
printing 

Electric  power:  8,000  kW  standby  capac- 
ity (1986);  power  supplied  by  France 


Trade:  full  customs  integration  with 
France,  which  collects  and  rebates  Mona- 
can  trade  duties;  also  participates  in  EC 
market  system  through  customs  union  with 
France 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  6.62  French 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Communications 

Railroads:  1.6  km  1.435-meter  gauge 

Highways:  none;  city  streets 

Ports:  1  minor 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1  usable  airfield  with 
permanent-surface  runways 

Telecommunications:  served  by  the 
French  communications  system;  automatic 
telephone  system  with  about  34,600  tele- 
phones (123.6  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  4  FM, 
4  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 


ULAANBAATAR 

S«ynsh»nd 


StrreflonilmipVlII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,565,000  km2;  land  area: 
1,565,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  more  than  twice  the 
size  of  Texas 

Land  boundaries:  8,000  km  total 

Climate:  desert;  cold,  dry,  continental; 
sharp  seasonal  variation 

Terrain:  vast  semidesert  and  desert  plains; 
mountains  in  west  and  southwest;  Gobi 
Desert  in  southeast 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  79%  meadows  and  pastures;  10% 
forest  and  woodland;  10%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  harsh  and  rugged 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategic  loca- 
tion between  China  and  Soviet  Union 


Population:  2,011,066  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.79% 

Nationality:  noun — Mongolian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Mongolian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  Mongol,  4% 
Kazakh,  2%  Chinese,  2%  Russian,  2%  other 

Religion:  predominantly  Tibetan  Bud- 
dhist, about  4%  Muslim,  limited  religious 
activity  because  of  Communist  regime 

Language:  Khalkha  Mongol  used  by  over 
90%  of  population;  minor  languages  in- 
clude Turkic,  Russian,  and  Chinese 

Life  expectancy:  63 


Mongolia  (continued) 


Literacy:  about  80%;  100%  claimed  in 

1985 

Labor  force:  primarily  agricultural;  over 

half  the  adult  population  is  in  the  labor 

force,  including  a  large  percentage  of 

women;  shortage  of  skilled  labor 

Government 

Official  name:  Mongolian  People's 
Republic 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Ulaanbaatar 

Administrative  divisions:  18  provinces 
and  3  autonomous  municipalities 
(Ulaanbaatar,  Darhan,  and  Erdenet) 

Legal  system:  blend  of  Russian,  Chinese, 
and  Turkish  systems  of  law;  new  constitu- 
tion adopted  1960;  no  constitutional  provi- 
sion for  judicial  review  of  legislative  acts; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  People's  Revolution 
Day,  11  July 

Branches:  executive — Council  of  Minis- 
ters; legislative — unicameral  People's  Great 
Hural;  judicial — court  system;  Supreme 
Court  elected  by  People's  Great  Hural 

Government  leaders:  Jambyn 
BATMONH,  Chairman  of  the  Presidium 
of  the  People's  Great  Hural  (since  Decem- 
ber 1984);  Dumaagiyn  SODNOM,  Chair- 
man of  the  Council  of  Ministers  (since 
December  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18  and  over 

Elections:  legislative  election  theoretically 
held  every  four  years;  last  election  held 
June  1986 

Political  party  and  leader:  Mongolian 
People's  Revolutionary  Party  (MPRP), 
Jambyn  Batmonh,  General  Secretary  (since 
August  1984) 

Communists:  estimated  MPRP  member- 
ship, 88,150  (1986) 

Member  of:  CEMA,  ESCAP,  FAO,  IAEA, 
ILO,  IPU,  ITU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 


Economy 

GDP:  $1.67  billion,  $880  per  capita  (1985 
est);  average  annual  real  growth,  3.6% 
(1976-85  est.) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  copper,  molybde- 
num, tungsten,  phosphates,  tin,  nickel, 
zinc,  wolfram,  fluorspar,  gold 

Agriculture:  livestock  raising  predomi- 
nates; wheat,  oats,  barley 

Major  industries:  processing  of  animal 
products;  building  materials;  mining 

Electric  power:  607,000  kW  capacity; 
2,800  million  kWh  produced,  1,410  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  livestock,  animal  products,  wool, 
hides,  fluorspar,  nonferrous  metals, 
minerals 

Imports:  machinery  and  equipment, 
petroleum,  clothing,  building  materials, 
sugar,  tea,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  nearly  all  trade 

with  Communist  countries  (about  80% 

with  USSR);  total  turnover  about  $1.0 

billion 

Aid:  heavily  dependent  on  USSR 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.36 
tugriks=US$l  (February  1984) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Commun  ications 

Railroads:  1,748  km  (1984);  all  1.524- 
meter  broad  gauge 

Highways:  47,600  km  total;  900  km  hard 
surface;  46,700  km  other  surfaces  (1984) 

Inland  waterways:  397  km  of  principal 
routes  (1984) 

Freight  carried:  rail — 10.7  million  metric 
tons,  3,609  million  metric  tons/km;  high- 
way— 32.4  million  metric  tons,  1,837 
million  metric  tons/km;  waterway — 0.03 
million  metric  tons,  4.2  million  metric 
tons/km  (1984) 

Civil  air:  22  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  32  total;  17  with  runways 
2,500  m  or  longer 


Telecommunications:  13  AM  and  1  FM 
stations;  1  main  TV  center  and  18  provin- 
cial relay  stations  plus  relay  of  Soviet  TV; 
60,000  TV  sets;  180,000  receiver  sets;  at 
least  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Mongolian  People's  Army,  Air 
Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  467,000; 
305,000  fit  for  military  service;  23,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1977,  405  million  tugriks,  12% 
of  total  budget 


166 


Montserrat 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  100  km2;  land  area:  100  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-half  the  size 
of  Washington,  B.C. 

Coastline:  40  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  little  daily  or  seasonal 
temperature  variation 

Terrain:  volcanic  islands,  mostly  moun- 
tainous, with  small  coastal  lowland 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  10%  meadows  and  pastures;  40% 
forest  and  woodland;  30%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  severe  hurricanes 
(especially  June  to  December) 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  12,076  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.07% 

Nationality:  noun — Montserratian(s); 
adjective — Montserratian 

Ethnic  divisions:  mostly  black  with  a  few 
Europeans 

Religion:  Anglican,  Methodist,  Roman 
Catholic,  Pentecostal,  Seventh-Day  Adven- 
tist,  other  Christian  denominations 

Language:  English 

Literacy:  77% 

Infant  mortality  rate:  124/1,000(1983) 


Labor  force:  5,100  (1983  est);  40.5% 
community,  social,  and  personal  services, 
13.5%  construction,  12.3%  trade,  restau- 
rants, and  hotels,  10.5%  manufacturing, 
8.8%  agriculture,  forestry,  and  fishing, 
14.4%  other;  7.0%  unemployment  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  3  trade  unions  with 
1,498  members;  about  30%  of  work  force 

(1984) 

Government 

Official  name:  Montserrat 

Type:  British  dependent  territory 

Capital:  Plymouth 

Administrative  divisions:  7  districts 

Legal  system:  English  common  law  and 
statute  law 

Branches:  Executive  Council  presided 
over  by  governor,  consisting  of  two  ex- 
officio  members  (attorney  general  and 
financial  officer)  and  four  unofficial  mem- 
bers (chief  minister  and  three  other  minis- 
ters); Legislative  Council  presided  over  by 
Speaker  chosen  from  outside  the  Council, 
seven  elected,  two  official,  and  two  nomi- 
nated members 

Government  leaders:  Arthur  C. 
WATSON,  Governor  (since  1985);  J.  A. 
OSBORNE,  Chief  Minister  (since  1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  at  least  once  every  five  years; 
last  election  held  February  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  People's 
Liberation  Movement  (PLM),  John  Os- 
borne;  Progressive  Democratic  Party 
(POP),  P.  Austin  Bramble;  United  National 
Front  (UNF),  Dr.  George  Irish;  National 
Development  Party  (NDP),  Bertram 
Osborne 

Voting  strength:  July  1984  elections — 
PLM,  4  seats;  POP,  3  seats 

Communists:  probably  none 

Economy 

GDP:  $32.4  million,  $2,760  per  capita 
(1983);  4.6%  real  GDP  growth  rate  (1986); 
25%  of  GDP  from  tourism 

Agriculture:  cotton,  limes,  potatoes,  toma- 
toes, hot  peppers,  livestock 

Fishing:  catch  150  metric  tons  (1983) 


Major  industries:  tourism;  light  manufac- 
turing— plastic  bags,  textiles,  electronic 
appliances 

Electric  power:  5,000  kW  capacity;  12.5 
million  kWh  produced,  1,040  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $1.6  million  (1983);  plastic  bags, 
electronic  parts,  textiles;  hot  peppers,  live 
plants;  cattle 

Imports:  $20  million  (1983);  machinery 
and  transport  equipment,  foodstuffs,  man- 
ufactured goods,  fuels,  lubricants,  and 
related  materials 

Major  trade  partners:  UK 

Budget:  revenues,  $8.0  million;  expendi- 
tures, $11.0  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  $2.70  East 
Caribbean=US$l  (1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  280  km  total;  about  200  km 
paved,  80  km  gravel  and  earth 

Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  1  major  (Plymouth) 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  with  permanent- 
surface  runway  1,036.32  m 
Telecommunications:  3,000  telephones,  26 
telex  (1984);  9  AM,  1  FM,  2  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the 
United  Kingdom 


167 


Morocco 


300  km 


Mediterranean  Sea 
ita  (Sp.) 


Sec  rtflonil  nup  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  446,550  km2;  land  area: 
446,300  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  same  size  as 
California 

Land  boundaries:  1,996  km  total 
Coastline:  1,835  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claims  and 
administers  Western  Sahara,  but  sover- 
eignty is  unresolved;  Western  Sahara 
question  with  Mauritania;  Spain  controls 
two  coastal  presidios  or  places  of  sover- 
eignty (Ceuta,  Melilla) 

Climate:  Mediterranean,  becoming  more 
extreme  in  the  interior 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  rich 
coastal  plains 

Land  use:  18%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  28%  meadows  and  pastures;  12% 
forest  and  woodland;  41%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  northern  mountains  geologi- 
cally unstable  and  subject  to  earthquakes; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
Strait  of  Gibraltar 


Population:  23,361,495  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.49% 

Nationality:  noun — Moroccan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Moroccan 

Ethnic  divisions:  99.1%  Arab- Berber, 
0.7%  non-Moroccan,  0.2%  Jewish 

Religion:  98.7%  Muslim,  1.1%  Christian, 
0.2%  Jewish 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  several  Berber 
dialects;  French  is  language  of  business, 
government,  diplomacy,  and  postprimary 
education 

Infant  mortality  rate:  117/1,000  (1978) 
Life  expectancy:  54 


Literacy: 

Labor  force:  7.5  million  (1985);  50% 
agriculture,  26%  services,  15%  industry, 
9%  other;  at  least  20%  of  urban  labor 
unemployed 

Organized  labor:  about  5%  of  the  labor 
force,  mainly  in  the  Union  of  Moroccan 
Workers  (UMT)  and  the  Democratic 
Confederation  of  Labor  (CDT) 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Morocco 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy  (constitu- 
tion adopted  1972) 

Capital:  Rabat 

Administrative  divisions:  36  provinces 
(does  not  include  Western  Sahara)  and  2 
prefectures  (Rabat-Sale  and  Casablanca) 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  and 
French  and  Spanish  civil  law  system; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  Consti- 
tutional Chamber  of  Supreme  Court 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  18 
November 

Branches:  constitution  provides  for  Prime 
Minister  and  ministers  named  by  and 
responsible  to  King;  King  has  paramount 
executive  powers;  unicameral  legislature 
(Chamber  of  Representatives),  of  which 
two-thirds  of  the  members  are  directly 
elected  and  one-third  are  indirectly 
elected;  judiciary  independent  of  other 
branches 


Government  leaders:  HASSAN  II,  King 
(since  March  1961);  Azzedine  LARAKI, 
Prime  Minister  (since  September  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20 

Elections:  provincial  elections  held  10 
June  1983;  elections  for  National  Assembly 
held  14  September  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Morocco  has 
15  political  parties;  the  major  ones  are 
Istiqlal  Party,  M'Hamed  Boucetta;  Socialist 
Union  of  Popular  Forces  (USFP),  Abder- 
rahim  Bouabid;  Popular  Movement  (MP), 
Secretariat  General;  National  Assembly  of 
Independents  (RNI)  formed  in  October 
1978  is  progovernment  grouping  of  previ- 
ously unaffiliated  deputies  in  parliament, 
Ahmed  Osman;  National  Democratic 
Party  (PND),  a  splinter  group  from  the 
RNI  formed  July  1981,  Mohamed  Arsalane 
El-Jadidi;  Party  for  Progress  and  Socialism 
(PPS),  legalized  in  August  1974,  is  front  for 
Moroccan  Communist  Party  (PCM),  which 
was  proscribed  in  1959,  Ali  Yata;  new 
promonarchy  party — the  Constitutional 
Union  (UC),  Maati  Bouabid 

Voting  strength:  progovernment  parties 
hold  absolute  majority  in  Chamber  of 
Representatives;  with  palace-oriented 
Popular  Movement  deputies,  the  King 
controls  over  two-thirds  of  the  seats 

Communists:  about  2,000 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Arab  League,  EC 
(associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Devel- 
opment Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  Interna- 
tional Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC, 
IPU,  ITU,  NAM,  OIC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $11.9  billion,  about  $510  per  capita 
(1985);  average  annual  real  growth  4.7% 
(1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  phosphates,  iron,  man- 
ganese, lead,  zinc,  fish 

Agriculture:  not  self-sufficient  in  food; 
cereal  farming  and  livestock  raising  pre- 
dominate; barley,  wheat,  citrus  fruit,  wine, 
vegetables,  olives;  some  fishing;  an  illegal 
producer  of  cannabis  for  the  international 
drug  trade 


168 


Mozambique 


Fishing:  catch  463,000  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  mining  and  mineral 
processing,  food  processing,  textiles,  con- 
struction and  tourism 

Electric  power:  2,080,000  kW  capacity; 
6,920  million  kWh  produced,  290  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  24% 
phosphates,  76%  other 

Imports:  $3.8  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  25% 
petroleum  products,  75%  other 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  FRG,  Italy, 
Saudi  Arabia,  Benelux,  Iraq 

Budget:  revenues,  $4.5  billion;  current 
expenditures,  $3.6  billion;  development 
expenditures,  $2.0  billion  (1984  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  8.84 
dirhams=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,779  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge,  178  km  double  track;  792  km 
electrified 

Highways:  58,000  km  total;  25,750  km 
bituminous  treated,  32,250  km  gravel, 
crushed  stone,  improved  earth,  and  unim- 
proved earth 

Pipelines:  362  km  crude  oil;  491  km 
(abandoned)  refined  products;  241  km 
natural  gas 

Ports:  10  major  (including  Spanish- 
controlled  Ceuta  and  Melilla),  14  minor 

Civil  air:  22  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  78  total,  72  usable;  26  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  14  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  28  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  system  com- 
posed of  wire  lines,  cables,  and  radio-relay 
links;  principal  centers  Casablanca  and 
Rabat,  secondary  centers  Fes,  Marrakech, 
Oujda,  Tangier  and  Tetouan;  270,100 
telephones  (1.2  per  100  popl.);  14  AM,  6 
FM,  47  TV  stations;  5  submarine  cables;  2 
Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  stations;  radio- 
relay  to  Gibraltar,  Spain,  and  Western 
Sahara;  coaxial  cable  to  Algeria 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Moroccan  Army,  Royal 
Moroccan  Navy,  Royal  Moroccan  Air 
Force,  Royal  Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,596,000;  3,561,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 276,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually;  limited  conscription 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $839  million;  15%  of 
central  government  budget 


N.cal. 


Mozambique 
Channel 


Chicualacual 


See  regional  map  VII 


Inhambane 
APUTO 


Geography 

Total  area:  801,590  km2;  land  area: 
784,090  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Texas 
Land  boundaries:  4,627  km  total 
Coastline:  2,470  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  to  subtropical 

Terrain:  mostly  coastal  lowlands,  uplands 
in  center,  high  plateaus  in  northwest, 
mountains  in  west 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  56%  meadows  and  pastures; 
20%  forest  and  woodland;  20%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  severe  drought  and  floods 
occur  in  south;  desertification 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  14,535,805  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.64% 

Nationality:  noun — Mozambican(s);  adjec- 
tive— Mozambican 

Ethnic  divisions:  majority  from  indige- 
nous tribal  groups;  about  10,000  Europe- 
ans, 35,000  Euro-Africans,  15,000  Indians 

Religion:  60%  indigenous  beliefs,  30% 
Christian,  10%  Muslim 

Language:  Portuguese  (official);  many 
indigenous  dialects 


169 


Mozambique  (continued) 


Infant  mortality  rate:  109/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  44,  women  47 
Literacy:  14% 
Labor  force:  95%  engaged  in  agriculture 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Republic  of 
Mozambique 

Type:  people's  republic 
Capital:  Maputo 

Administrative  divisions:  10  provinces 
subdivided  into  112  districts;  administra- 
tors are  appointed  by  central  government 

Legal  system:  based  on  Portuguese  civil 
law  system  and  customary  law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 
June 

Branch:  unicameral  legislature  (People's 
Assembly;  last  convened  in  December 
1985) 

Government  leaders:  Joaquim  Alberto 
CHISSANO,  President  (since  November 
1986);  Mario  da  Graca  MACHUNGO, 
Prime  Minister  (since  July  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  legislative  elections  held  in 
many  areas  of  the  country  in  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Front  for 
the  Liberation  of  Mozambique 
(FRELIMO)  is  the  only  legal  party  and  is  a 
Marxist  organization  with  close  ties  to  the 
USSR 

Communists:  about  50,000  FRELIMO 
members 

Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de 
facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  SADCC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $1.3  billion,  about  $90  per  capita 
(1986  est);  average  annual  growth  rate 
-8.5%  (1981-85  est.) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  natural  gas, 
copper,  bauxite,  titanium 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — cotton,  cashew 
nuts,  sugar,  tea,  copra,  sisal,  rice;  other 
crops — corn,  wheat,  peanuts,  potatoes, 
beans,  sorghum,  cassava;  imports — corn 


Fishing:  13,500  metric  tons  (1984) 

Major  industries:  food  processing  (chiefly 
sugar,  tea,  wheat,  flour,  cashew  kernels); 
chemicals  (vegetable  oil,  oilcakes,  soap, 
paints);  petroleum  products;  beverages; 
textiles;  nonmetallic  mineral  products 
(cement,  glass,  asbestos,  cement  products); 
tobacco 

Electric  power:  2,225,000  kW  capacity; 
1,640  million  kWh  produced,  120  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $90  million  (1986  est.);  cashews, 
shrimp,  sugar,  tea,  cotton 

Imports:  $525  million  (1986  est.);  refined 
petroleum  products,  machinery,  transpor- 
tation goods,  spare  parts,  consumer  goods, 
military  arms  and  equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US,  West- 
ern Europe;  imports — Western  and  East- 
ern Europe,  USSR 

Budget:  deficit  $250  million  (1986  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  42 

meticais=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,436  km  total;  3,288  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge;  148  km  0.750-meter  narrow 
gauge;  (Malawi-Nacala,  Malawi-Beira,  and 
Zimbabwe-Maputo  lines  are  closed  because 
of  insurgency) 

Highways:  26,498  km  total;  4,593  km 
paved;  829  km  gravel,  crushed  stone, 
stabilized  soil;  21,076  km  unimproved 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  about  3,750  km  of 
navigable  routes 

Pipelines:  306  km  crude  oil  (not  operat- 
ing); 289  km  refined  products 

Ports:  3  major  (Maputo,  Beira,  Nacala),  2 
significant  minor 

Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  241  total,  212  usable;  28  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  6  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  32  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
troposcatter,  open-wire  lines,  and  radio- 
relay;  57,400  telephones  (0.5  per  100 
popl.);  9  AM,  3  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  1 
Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  station;  3 
domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Mozambique  Armed  Forces 
(including  Army,  Border  Guard,  Naval 
Command,  Air  Force) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
3,255,000;  1,868,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1985,  $240  million;  38%  of 
central  government  budget 


170 


Namibia 


WINDHOEK          I 

Oobabii 

*R*hoboth 


South 


Ocean         \   K*Mm»nthoop 

Ludetit 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  824,290  km2;  land  area: 

823,290  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 

California 

Land  boundaries:  3,798  km  total 

Coastline:  1,489  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  6  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 

Botswana  is  indefinite;  occupied  by  South 

Africa 

Climate:  desert;  hot,  dry;  rainfall  sparse 

and  erratic 

Terrain:  mostly  high  plateau;  Namib 
Desert  along  coast;  Kalahari  Desert  in  east 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  64%  meadows  and  pastures; 
22%  forest  and  woodland;  13%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  inhospitable  with  very 
limited  natural  water  resources;  desertifi- 
cation 

Special  notes:  Walvis  Bay  area  of  South 
Africa  is  almost  an  enclave 


Population:  1,273,263  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.39% 

Nationality:  noun — Namibian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Namibian 


Ethnic  divisions:  85.6%  black,  7.5%  white, 
6.9%  mixed;  about  half  the  blacks  belong 
to  Ovambo  tribe 

Religion:  whites  predominantly  Christian, 
nonwhites  either  Christian  or  indigenous 
beliefs 

Language:  Afrikaans  principal  language  of 
about  60%  of  white  population,  German  of 
33%,  and  English  of  7%  (all  official);  sev- 
eral indigenous  languages 
Literacy:  100%  whites,  16%  nonwhites 

Labor  force:  about  500,000  (1981);  60% 
agriculture,  19%  industry  and  commerce, 
8%  services,  7%  government,  6%  mining; 
15-17%  unemployment 
Organized  labor:  7  trade  unions,  whose 
membership  is  almost  exclusively  white 
and  mulatto,  except  new  mineworkers 
union  which  has  sizable  black  membership 

Government 
Official  name:  Namibia 
Type:  former  German  colony  of  South- 
West  Africa  mandated  to  South  Africa  by 
League  of  Nations  in  1920;  UN  formally 
ended  South  Africa's  mandate  on  27 
October  1966,  but  South  Africa  has  re- 
tained administrative  control 

Capital:  Windhoek 

Administrative  divisions:  10  tribal  home- 
lands, mostly  in  northern  sector,  and  zone 
open  to  white  settlement  with  26  magiste- 
rial districts  similar  to  a  province  of  South 
Africa 

Legal  system:  based  on  Roman-Dutch  law 
and  customary  law 

Branches:  since  September  1977  Adminis- 
trator General,  appointed  by  South  African 
Government,  has  exercised  coordinative 
functions  over  zone  of  white  settlement 
and  tribal  homelands,  where  traditional 
chiefs  and  representative  bodies  exercise 
limited  autonomy;  veto  power  over  legisla- 
tion proposed  by  National  Assembly; 
interim  government  established  June  1985 
with  eight-member  Cabinet,  16-member 
Constitutional  Council  and  62-member 
National  Assembly 

Government  leader:  Louis  A.  PIENAAR, 
Administrator  General  (since  July  1985) 


Suffrage:  universal  white  adult  suffrage  at 
territorial  level;  lower  level  elections  open 
to  blacks 

Elections:  last  election  of  Namibian  Na- 
tional Assembly,  December  1978 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  six  parties 
belong  to  multiracial  South  African- 
appointed  Transitional  Government  of 
National  Unity  Democratic  Turnhalle 
Alliance  (DTA),  Dirk  Mudge;  South- West 
African  National  Union  (SWANU),  Moses 
Katjiuongua;  South- West  African  People's 
Organization  Democrats  (SWAPO-D), 
Andreas  Shipanga;  South- West  African 
National  Party  (SWANP),  Kosie  Pretorius; 
Colored  Labor  Party,  David  Bezuidenhout; 
Rehoboth  Free  Democratic  Party  (RFDP), 
Hans  Diergaardt;  other  parties — United 
Democratic  Party,  formed  in  September 
1985  after  merger  of  two  Caprivi  parties, 
Mishake  Muyongo;  Federal  Party,  largely 
white,  English-speaking,  liberal;  Christian 
Democratic  Action  Party,  a  primarily 
Ovambo  party  formed  in  early  1982  as  a 
result  of  a  split  in  the  DTA,  Peter 
Kalangula 

Voting  strength:  (1978  election)  Namibian 
National  Assembly— DTA,  22  seats; 
SWANP,  8  seats;  SWANU,  8  seats; 
SWAPO-D,  8  seats;  CP,  8  seats;  RFDP,  8 
seats;  Assembly  appointed  in  June  1985 
Communists:  no  Communist  Party; 
SWAPO  guerrilla  force  is  supported  by 
USSR,  Cuba,  and  other  Communist  states 
as  well  as  the  Organization  for  African 
Unity 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  South- 
West  African  People's  Organization 
(SWAPO),  led  by  Sam  Nujoma,  maintains 
a  foreign-based  guerrilla  movement;  is 
predominantly  Ovambo  but  has  some 
influence  among  other  tribes;  is  the  only 
Namibian  group  recognized  by  the  UN 
General  Assembly  and  the  Organization  of 
African  Unity 

Member  of:  FAO,  ILO,  UNESCO, 
WFTU,  WHO 


171 


Namibia  (continued) 


Nauru 


Economy 

Natural  resources:  diamonds,  copper, 
uranium,  lead,  tin,  zinc,  salt,  vanadium 
Agriculture:  livestock  raising  (cattle  and 
sheep)  predominates;  subsistence  crops 
(millet,  sorghum,  corn,  and  some  wheat) 
are  raised,  but  most  food  must  be  im- 
ported 

Fishing:  catch  341,000  metric  tons  (1983); 
processed  mostly  in  Walvis  Bay,  South 
Africa 

Major  industries:  (nearly  all  for  export) 
meatpacking,  fish  processing,  dairy  prod- 
ucts, copper,  lead,  zinc,  diamond,  and 
uranium  mining 

Electric  power:  395,000  kW  capacity;  692 
million  kWh  produced,  610  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.5  South 
African  rands=US$l  (29  January  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,340  km  1.067-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  54,500  km;  4,079  km  paved, 
2,540  gravel,  remainder  earth  roads  and 
tracks 

Ports:  1  minor  (Luderitz);  relies  on  Walvis 
Bay,  South  Africa 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  154  total,  141  usable;  21  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m;  4  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  66  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  urban,  fair 
rural  services;  radio-relay  connects  major 
towns,  wires  extend  to  other  population 
centers;  62,800  telephones  (5.5  per  100 
popl.);  2  AM,  13  FM,  3  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  Republic  of 
South  Africa;  however,  a  South- West 
African  Territory  Force  was  established  1 
August  1980  (includes  an  air  element) 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  281,000; 
167,000  fit  for  military  service 
Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1984,  $128.3;  8%  of  central  govern- 
ment budget 


Language:  Nauruan,  a  distinct  Pacific 
Island  language  (official);  English  widely 
understood  and  spoken 

Literacy:  ' 


Stc  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  20  km2;  land  area:  20  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-ninth  the 

size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  24  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Climate:  tropical;  monsoonal;  rainy  season 
(November  to  February) 
Terrain:  sandy  beach  rises  to  fertile  ring 
around  raised  coral  reefs  with  phosphate 
plateau  in  center 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 
Environment:  only  53  km  south  of 
Equator 

Special  notes:  one  of  three  great  phos- 
phate rock  islands  in  the  Pacific  (others  are 
Banaba  or  Ocean  Island  in  Kiribati  and 
Makatea  in  French  Polynesia) 

People 

Population:  8,748  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.80% 
Nationality:  noun— Nauruan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Nauruan 

Ethnic  divisions:  58%  Nauruan,  26%  other 
Pacific  Islander,  8%  Chinese,  8%  European 
Religion:  Christian  (two-thirds  Protestant, 
one-third  Catholic) 


Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Nauru 
Type:  republic 

Capital:  no  capital  city  as  such;  govern- 
ment offices  in  Yaren  District 
Administrative  divisions:  14  districts 

National  holidays:  Independence  Day,  31 
January;  Constitution  Day,  17  May; 
Angram  Day,  26  October 
Branches:  President  elected  from  and  by 
Parliament  for  an  unfixed  term;  popularly 
elected  18-member  unicameral  legislature 
(Parliament);  four-member  Cabinet  to 
assist  the  President  appointed  by  him  from 
Parliament  members 
Government  leader:  Hammer 
DEROBURT,  President  (since  May  1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Elections:  last  held  in  January  1987 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  governing 
faction,  President  DeRoburt;  opposition 
Nauru  Party,  Lagumot  Harris 
Member  of:  Commonwealth  (special 
member),  ESCAP,  ICAO,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  South  Pacific  Commission,  SPF,  UPU 

Economy 

GNP:  over  $160  million,  $20,000  per 
capita  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  phosphates 
Agriculture:  negligible;  almost  completely 
dependent  on  imports  for  food  and  water 
Major  industries:  mining  of  phosphates, 
about  2  million  tons  per  year 
Electric  power:  13,250  kW  capacity;  48 
million  kWh  produced,  6,000  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $93  million  (f.o.b.,  1984) 
Imports:  $14  million  (c.i.f.,  1982);  food, 
fuel,  water 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 75% 
Australia  and  New  Zealand;  imports- 
Australia,  UK,  New  Zealand,  Japan 


172 


Nepal 


Budget:  revenues,  A$59.5  million 
(FY86/87  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.50  Australian 
dollars=US$l  (February  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  about  27  km  total;  21  km 
paved,  6  km  improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  1  minor 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft,  one 
on  order 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  adequate  intraisland 
and  international  radio  communications 
provided  via  Australian  facilities;  1,600 
telephones  (20.8  per  100  popl.);  4,000  radio 
receivers,  1  AM,  no  FM,  no  TV  stations;  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

No  formal  defense  structure  and  no  regu- 
lar armed  forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  2,300; 
fit  for  military  service,  1,200;  100  reach 
military  age  (18)  annually 


200km 


. 


Birgan 


Set  regional  map  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  140,800  km2;  land  area: 
136,800  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  North 
Carolina 

Land  boundaries:  2,800  km  total 

Climate:  varies  from  cool  summers  and 
severe  winters  in  north  to  subtropical 
summers  and  mild  winter  in  south 

Terrain:  Tarai  or  flat  river  plain  of  the 
Ganges  in  south,  central  hill  region,  rugged 
Himalayas  in  north 

Land  use:  17%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  13%  meadows  and 
pastures;  33%  forest  and  woodland;  37% 
other;  includes  2%  irrigated 

Environment:  contains  eight  of  world's  ten 
highest  peaks;  deforestation;  soil  erosion; 
water  pollution 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  strategic  loca- 
tion between  China  and  India 


Population:  17,814,294  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.43% 

Nationality:  noun — Nepalese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Nepalese 

Ethnic  divisions:  Newars,  Indians,  Tibet- 
ans, Gurungs,  Magars,  Tamangs,  Bhotias, 
Rais,  Limbus,  Sherpas,  as  well  as  many 
smaller  groups 


Religion:  only  official  Hindu  kingdom  in 
world,  although  no  sharp  distinction  be- 
tween many  Hindu  (about  88%)  and  Bud- 
dhist groups;  small  groups  of  Muslims  and 
Christians 

Language:  Nepali  (official);  20  mutually 
unintelligible  languages  divided  into  nu- 
merous dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  143/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  47,  women  45 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  4.1  million;  93%  agriculture, 
5%  services,  2%  industry;  great  lack  of 
skilled  labor 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Nepal 

Type:  nominally  a  constitutional  mon- 
archy; King  Birendra  exercises  autocratic 
control  over  multitiered  panchayat  system 
of  government 

Capital:  Kathmandu 

Administrative  divisions:  75  districts,  14 
zones 

Legal  system:  based  on  Hindu  legal  con- 
cepts and  English  common  law;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Birthday  of  the  King 
and  National  Day,  28  December 

Branches:  Council  of  Ministers  appointed 
by  the  King;  Rastriya  Panchayat  (National 
Assembly;  112  directly  elected,  28  ap- 
pointed by  King) 

Government  leaders:  BIRENDRA  Bir 
Bikram  Shah  Dev,  King  (since  1973); 
Marich  Man  SINGH  (Shrestha),  Prime 
Minister  (since  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  village,  town,  and  district  coun- 
cils (panchayats)  elected  by  universal 
suffrage;  a  constitutional  amendment  in 
1980  provided  for  direct  elections  to  the 
National  Panchayat,  which  consists  of  140 
members  (including  28  appointed  by  the 
King),  who  serve  five-year  terms;  Nepal's 
first  general  election  in  22  years  was  held 
in  May  1981;  general  elections  successfully 
held  in  May  1986;  local  district  elections 
scheduled  for  Spring  1987 


173 


Nepal  (continued) 


Netherlands 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  all  political 
parties  outlawed  but  operate  more  or  less 
openly;  Nepali  Congress  Party  (NCP), 
Ganesh  Man  Singh,  K.  P.  Bhattarai,  G.  P. 
Koirala 

Communists:  Communist  Party  of  Nepal 
(CPN);  factions  include  V.  B.  Manandhar, 
Man  Mohan  Adhikari,  Bharat  Raj  Joshi, 
Rai  Majhi,  Tulsi  Lai,  Krishna  Raj  Burma, 
Sahana  Pradhan 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  nu- 
merous small,  left-leaning  student  groups 
in  the  capital;  Indian  merchants  in  Tarai 
and  capital;  several  small,  radical  Nepalese 
antimonarchist  groups  operating  from 
north  India 

Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITU,  NAM,  SAARC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.4  billion  (FY85/86  current 
prices),  $140  per  capita;  3%  real  growth 
(FY84/85  est.) 

Natural  resources:  quartz,  water,  timber, 
hydroelectric  potential,  scenic  beauty 

Agriculture:  over  90%  of  population 
engaged  in  agriculture;  rice,  corn,  wheat, 
sugarcane,  oilseeds;  an  illegal  producer  of 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 

Major  industries:  small  rice,  jute,  sugar, 
and  oilseed  mills;  match,  cigarette,  and 
brick  factories 

Electric  power:  160,000  kW  capacity;  395 
million  kWh  produced,  25  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $162  million  (FY85/86  est.);  rice 
and  other  food  products,  jute,  timber, 
manufactured  goods 

Imports:  $460  million  (FY85/86);  manu- 
factured consumer  goods,  fuel,  construc- 
tion materials,  fertilizers,  food  products 

Major  trade  partner:  India 

Budget:  domestic  revenues,  $300  million; 
expenditures,  $536  million  (FY84/85  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  21.8  Nepalese 
rupees=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  15  July-14  July 


Communications 

Railroads:  52  km  (1985),  all  0.762-meter 
narrow  gauge;  all  in  Tarai  close  to  Indian 
border;  10  km  from  Raxaul  to  Blrganj  is 
government  owned 

Highways:  5,958  km  total  (1986);  2,645 
km  paved,  815  km  gravel  or  crushed 
stone,  2,257  km  improved  and  unim- 
proved earth;  additionally  241  km  of 
seasonally  motorable  tracks 

Civil  air:  5  major  and  11  minor  transport 
aircraft 

Airfields:  38  total,  38  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  8  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  poor  telephone  and 
telegraph  service;  fair  radio  communica- 
tion and  broadcast  service;  international 
radio  communication  service  is  poor; 
18,400  telephones  (0.1  per  100  popl.);  4 
AM,  1  TV  stations;  1  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Nepalese  Army,  Royal 
Nepalese  Army  Air  Service,  Nepalese 
Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,171,000;  2,157,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 197,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  15 
July  1987,  $32  million;  5%  of  central 
government  budget 


75  km 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  37,310  km2;  land  area:  33,940 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Massachusetts,  Connecticut,  and  Rhode 

Island  combined 

Land  boundaries:  1,022  km  total 
Coastline:  451  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  temperate;  marine;  cool  summers 
and  mild  winters 

Terrain:  mostly  coastal  lowland  and  re- 
claimed land  (polders);  some  hills  in  south- 
east 

Land  use:  25%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  34%  meadows  and  pastures;  9% 
forest  and  woodland;  31%  other;  includes 
15%  irrigated 

Environment:  dikes  protect  30%  of  land 
area  that  is  below  sea  level  from  North  Sea 

Special  notes:  located  at  mouths  of  three 
major  European  rivers  (Rhine,  Maas  or 
Meuse,  Schelde) 


Population:  14,641,554  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.51% 
Nationality:  noun — Netherlander(s);  adjec- 
tive— Netherlands 


174 


Ethnic  divisions:  99%  Dutch,  1%  Indo- 
nesian and  other 

Religion:  40%  Roman  Catholic,  31% 
Protestant,  24%  unaffiliated,  5%  none 

Language:  Dutch 

Infant  mortality  rate:  8/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  76 

Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  5.3  million  (1984);  50.1% 
services,  27.8%  manufacturing  and  con- 
struction, 16.1%  government,  6.0%  agricul- 
ture; unemployment  rate  14.4%  (1985 
average) 

Organized  labor:  29%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  the  Nether- 
lands 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 

Capital:  Amsterdam,  but  government 
resides  at  The  Hague 

Administrative  divisions:  12  provinces 
and  4  special  municipalities  governed  by 
centrally  appointed  commissioners  of 
Queen 

Dependent  areas:  Aruba,  Netherlands 
Antilles 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  incorporat- 
ing French  penal  theory;  constitution  of 
1815  frequently  amended,  reissued  1947; 
judicial  review  in  the  Supreme  Court  of 
legislation  of  lower  order  rather  than  Acts 
of  Parliament;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Queen's  Day,  30  April 

Branches:  executive  (Queen  and  Cabinet 
of  Ministers),  which  is  responsible  to  bi- 
cameral parliament  (States  General)  con- 
sisting of  a  First  Chamber  (75  indirectly 
elected  members)  and  a  Second  Chamber 
(150  directly  elected  members);  indepen- 
dent judiciary;  coalition  governments  are 
usual 

Government  leaders:  BEATRIX  Wilhel- 
mina  Armgard,  Queen  (since  April  1980); 
Ruud  LUBBERS,  Prime  Minister  (since 
November  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 


Elections:  must  be  held  at  least  every  four 
years  for  lower  house  (last  held  in  May 
1986);  following  an  amendment  to  the 
constitution  that  took  effect  in  1983,  elec- 
tions are  held  for  the  upper  house  every 
four  years  (most  recent  August  1983) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Appeal  (CDA)  Willem  van 
Velzen;  Labor  (PvdA),  Marianne  Sint; 
Liberal  (VVD),  Leendert  Ginjaar;  Demo- 
crats 66  (D'66),  Saskia  van  der  Loo;  Com- 
munist (CPN),  Henk  Hoekstra;  Pacifist 
Socialist  (PSP),  Marko  Mazeland;  Political 
Reformed  (SGP),  H.  Slagboom;  Reformed 
Political  Union  (GPV),  J.  Blokland;  Radical 
Party  (PPR),  Janneke  van  der  Plaat;  Dem- 
ocratic Socialist  70  (DS'70),  Z.  Hartog; 
Rightist  Peoples  Party  (RVP),  Hendrik 
Koekoek;  Reformed  Political  Federation 
(RPF),  P.  Lamgeler;  Center  Party  (CP),  H. 
Janmatt;  Evangelical  People's  Party  (EVP), 
J.  Renes;  Party  for  Better  Housing  (PVA), 
J.  H.  Borsboom;  Roman  Catholic  Party  of 
the  Netherlands  (RKPN),  Klaas  Beuker; 
Netherlands  Christian  Democrats  (NCD), 
J.  A.  Tacx 

Voting  strength:  (May  1986  election)  CDA 
54  seats,  PvdA  52  seats,  VVD  27  seats, 
D'66  9  seats,  SGP  3  seats,  PPR  2  seats,  PSP 
1  seat,  GPV  1  seat,  RPF  1  seat;  two  mem- 
bers of  the  CDA  were  expelled  from  the 
party  in  1984  and  are  now  serving  as 
independents 

Communists:  about  6,000 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  large 
multinational  firms;  Federation  of  Nether- 
lands Trade  Union  Movement  (comprising 
Socialist  and  Catholic  trade  unions)  and  a 
Protestant  trade  union;  Federation  of 
Catholic  and  Protestant  Employers  Associ- 
ations; the  nondenominational  Federation 
of  Netherlands  Enterprises;  and  IKV — 
Interchurch  Peace  Council 

Member  of:  ADB,  Benelux,  Council  of 
Europe,  DAC,  EC,  ECE,  EIB,  ELDO, 
EMS,  ESCAP,  ESRO,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  IDA, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INRO,  INTELSAT,  International  Lead 
and  Zinc  Study  Group,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council  (with  respect  to  interests  of 


the  Netherlands  Antilles  and  Suriname), 
NATO,  OAS  (observer),  OECD,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WEU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $124.2  billion,  $8,570  per  capita; 
59.2%  private  consumption,  18.4%  invest- 
ment, 16.3%  government  consumption, 
1.1%  inventories,  5.1%  net  foreign  de- 
mand, 2.0%  real  GNP  growth  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  natural  gas,  oil 
Agriculture:  animal  husbandry  predomi- 
nates; horticultural  crops,  grains,  potatoes, 
sugar  beets;  food  shortages — grains,  fats, 
oils 

Fishing:  catch  480,000  metric  tons;  exports 
of  fish  and  fish  products,  $535.6  million; 
imports,  $303.3  million  (1985) 
Major  industries:  food  processing,  metal 
and  engineering  products,  electrical  and 
electronic  machinery  and  equipment, 
chemicals,  petroleum  products,  natural  gas 
Shortages:  crude  petroleum,  raw  cotton, 
base  metals  and  ores,  pulp,  pulpwood, 
lumber,  feedgrains,  oilseeds 
Crude  steel:  7.4  million  metric  ton  capac- 
ity, 5.5  million  metric  tons  produced,  380 
kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  20,956,000  kW  capacity; 
63,090  million  kWh  produced,  4,340  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $67.9  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  food- 
stuffs, machinery,  chemicals,  petroleum 
products,  natural  gas,  textiles 
Imports:  $64.9  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, transportation  equipment,  crude 
petroleum,  foodstuffs,  chemicals,  raw 
cotton,  base  metals  and  ores,  pulp 
Major  trade  partners:  (1984)  exports — 
71.9%  EC  (29.8%  FRG,  13.8%  Belgium- 
Luxembourg,  10.5%  France,  9.4%  UK), 
5.0%  US,  1.9%  Communist  countries; 
imports— 53.3%  EC  (21.8%  FRG,  11.4% 
Belgium-Luxembourg,  8.7%  UK),  8.8%  US, 
5.3%  Communist  countries 
Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $12.0  billion 
Budget:  revenues,  $40.6  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $49.5  billion;  deficit,  $8.9  billion 
(1985  est);  3.3214  guilders=US$l  (1985 
average) 


175 


Netherlands  (continued) 


Netherlands  Antilles 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.3 

guilders=US$l  (October  1985) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  Netherlands  Railways  (NS) 
operates  2,824  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge;  3,033  km  total  track;  1,824  km 
electrified,  1,800  km  double  track;  166  km 
privately  owned 

Highways:  108,360  km  total;  92,525  km 
paved  (including  2,185  km  of  limited 
access,  divided  highways);  15,835  km 
gravel,  crushed  stone 

Inland  waterways:  6,340  km,  of  which 
35%  is  usable  by  craft  of  900  metric  ton 
capacity  or  larger 

Pipelines:  418  km  crude  oil;  965  km 
refined  products;  10,230  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  10  major,  2  minor 

Civil  air:  98  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  29  total,  28  usable;  19  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  13  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  highly  developed, 
well  maintained,  and  integrated;  extensive 
system  of  multiconductor  cables,  supple- 
mented by  radio-relay  links;  8.84  million 
telephones  (57.5  per  100  popl.);  6  AM,  41 
FM,  30  TV  stations;  9  submarine  cables;  1 
satellite  station  with  2  Atlantic  Ocean  and 
2  Indian  Ocean  antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Netherlands  Army,  Royal 
Netherlands  Navy/Marine  Corps,  Royal 
Netherlands  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,064,000;  3,620,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 124,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $5.3  billion;  about  9.3% 
of  central  government  budget 


50km 


Islands  not  shown  in  true 
geographical  position 


Caribbean  Sea 


Sint  Maarten 

I  *fK 

Philipiburg* 


Saba 


Sint  Eustatius. 


Sabana 


W1LLEMSTAD 


See  rc|ion«l  mip  111 


•         Bonaire 


Geography 

Total  area:  960  km2;  land  area:  960  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one  third  the 
size  of  Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  364  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  modified  by  northeast 
trade  winds 

Terrain:  generally  hilly,  volcanic  interiors 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  92%  other 

Environment:  south  of  Carribean  hurri- 
cane belt,  so  rarely  threatened 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  182,218  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.28% 

Nationality:  noun — Netherlands  Antil- 
lean(s);  adjective — Netherlands  Antillean 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  mixed  African; 
remainder  Carib  Indian,  European,  Latin, 
and  Oriental 

Religion:  predominantly  Roman  Catholic; 
Protestant,  Jewish,  Seventh-Day  Adventist 

Language:  Dutch  (official);  Papiamento,  a 
Spanish-Portuguese-Dutch-English  dialect 
predominates;  English  widely  spoken; 
Spanish 

Literacy:  95% 

176 


Labor  force:  89,000  (1983);  65%  govern- 
ment, 28%  industry  and  commerce,  1.5% 
agriculture;  unemployment  about  16% 

(1984  est.) 

Organized  labor:  60-70%  of  labor  force 
Government 


Official  name:  Netherlands  Antilles 

Type:  autonomous  territory  within  King- 
dom of  the  Netherlands 

Capital:  Willemstad  on  Curacao 

Administrative  divisions:  three  island 
territories — Bonaire,  Curagao,  and  the 
Windward  Islands 

Legal  system:  based  on  Dutch  civil  law 
system,  with  some  English  common  law 
influence;  constitution  adopted  1954 

Branches:  federal  executive  power  rests 
nominally  with  Governor  (appointed  by 
the  Crown);  actual  power  exercised  by 
eight-member  Council  of  Ministers  or 
cabinet  presided  over  by  Minister- 
President;  legislative  power  rests  with 
22-member  Legislative  Council;  indepen- 
dent court  system  under  control  of  Chief 
Justice  of  Supreme  Court  of  Justice  (ad- 
ministrative functions  under  Minister  of 
Justice);  each  island  territory  has  island 
council  headed  by  Lieutenant  Governor 

Government  leaders:  Domenico  Felip 

MARTINA,  Prime  Minister  (since  January 

1986);  Dr.  Rene  ROMER,  Governor  (since 

1983) 

Suffrage:  universal  age  18  and  over 

Elections:  federal  elections  mandatorily 
held  every  four  years,  last  held  22  Novem- 
ber 1985;  island  council  elections  every 
four  years,  last  held  22  November  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  are  indigenous  to  each  island: 
Curacao — Movement  for  a  New  Antilles 
(MAN),  Domenico  Felip  Martina;  Demo- 
cratic Party  (DP),  Augustin  Diaz;  National 
People's  Party  (NVP),  Maria  Liberia- 
Peters;  Workers  Front  for  Liberation 
(FOL),  Wilson  (Papa)  Godett;  Social  Dem- 
ocratic Party  (PSD),  Efraim  Cintje;  Social 
Independent  Party  (SI),  George  Hueck  and 
Nelson  Monte;  Bonaire — Popular  Union 
Party  of  Bonaire  (UPB),  Charles  E.  R. 
Ellis;  Democratic  Party  of  Bonaire  (PDB), 


New  Caledonia 


John  Evert  (Jopie)  Abraham;  New  Demo- 
cratic Action  (ADEN);  Windward  Is- 
lands—  Windward  Islands  Democratic 
Party  (DPWI),  Claude  Wathey;  United 
Federation  of  Antillean  Workers  (UFA); 
Windward  Islands  People's  Movement 
(WIPM) 

Voting  strength:  the  government  of  Prime 
Minister  Don  Martina  is  a  coalition  of  the 
MAN  and  DP  parties 

Communists:  small  leftist  groups 

Member  of:  EC  (associate),  INTERPOL; 
associated  with  UN  through  the  Nether- 
lands; UPU,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.36  billion,  $9,140  per  capita; 
1.0%  real  growth  rate  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  phosphates  (Curacao 
only),  salt  (Bonaire  only) 

Agriculture:  corn,  pulses 

Major  industries:  petroleum  refining  on 
Curacao  (refinery  currently  closed  but  may 
reopen);  petroleum  transshipment  facilities 
on  Curacao  and  Bonaire;  tourism  on  Cur- 
acao and  St.  Martin;  light  manufacturing 
on  Curasao 

Electric  power:  120,000  kW  capacity;  365 
million  kWh  produced,  1,550  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1984);  98% 
petroleum  products,  phosphate 

Imports:  $4.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1984);  64% 
crude  petroleum,  food,  manufactures 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 46%  US, 
2%  Canada,  1%  Netherlands;  imports— 
35%  Venezuela,  11%  US,  4%  Netherlands 

(1977) 

Aid:  bilateral  ODA  and  OOF  commit- 
ments (1970-79),  Western  (non-US)  coun- 
tries $353  million 

Budget:  central  government  revenues, 
$616  million;  central  government  expendi- 
tures, $656  million  (1984) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.8  Nether- 
lands Antillean  guilders  or  florins 
(NAF)=US$1  (August  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  950  km  total;  300  km  paved, 
650  km  gravel  and  earth 

Ports:  3  major  (Willemstad,  Philipsburg, 
Kralendijk);  6  minor  (of  which  4  are  signif- 
icant ports  for  petroleum  tankers) 

Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  7  total,  7  usable;  7  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  generally  adequate 
facilities;  extensive  interisland  radio-relay 
links;  65,000  telephones  (24.6  per  100 
popl.);  7  AM,  5  FM,  and  1  TV  stations;  2 
submarine  cables;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satel- 
lite antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  responsibility  of  the  Nether- 
lands 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  49,000; 
28,000  fit  for  military  service;  2,000  reach 
military  age  (20)  annually 


150km 


Coral  Sea 


Loyaute 


New 
Caledonia 


NOUMEA 


Coral  Sea 


See  refionil  map  X 


Islands  of  Huon  and 
Chesterfield  are  not  shown. 


Geography 

Total  area:  19,060  km2;  land  area:  18,760 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Massachusetts 

Coastline:  2,254  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  modified  by  southeast 
trade  winds;  hot,  humid 
Terrain:  coastal  plains  with  interior  moun- 
tains 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  14%  meadows  and 
pastures;  51%  forest  and  woodland;  35% 
other 

Environment:  typhoons  most  frequent 
from  November  to  March 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  149,795  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.66% 

Nationality:  noun — New  Caledonian(s); 
adjective — New  Caledonian 
Ethnic  divisions:  Melanesian  42.5%, 
European  37.1%,  Wallisian  8.4%,  Polynes- 
ian 3.8%,  Indonesian  3.6%,  Vietnamese 
1.6%,  other  3.0% 


177 


New  Caledonia  (continued) 


New  Zealand 


Religion:  over  60%  Roman  Catholic,  30% 
Protestant,  10%  other 

Language:  French;  Melanesian-Polynesian 
dialects 

Labor  force:  50,469  (1980  est);  Javanese 
and  Tonkinese  laborers  were  imported  for 
plantations  and  mines  in  pre- World  War 
II  period;  immigrant  labor  now  coming 
from  Wallis  and  Futuna,  Vanuatu,  and 
French  Polynesia;  est.  8%  unemployment 

Government 

Official  name:  Territory  of  New  Cal- 
edonia and  Dependencies 

Type:  French  overseas  territory;  repre- 
sented in  French  parliament  by  two  depu- 
ties and  one  senator 

Capital:  Noumea 

Administrative  divisions:  4  islands  or 
island  group  dependencies  (lie  des  Pins, 
lies  Loyaute,  lie  Huon,  Island  of  New 
Caledonia)  and  32  municipalities 

Legal  system:  French  law 

Branches:  administered  by  High  Commis- 
sioner, responsible  to  French  Ministry  for 
Overseas  France  and  Council  of  Govern- 
ment; 46-seat  Territorial  Assembly 

Government  leaders:  Fernand  WIBAUX, 
French  High  Commissioner  and  President 
of  the  Council  of  Government  (since  1985); 
Kanak  Provisional  Government — Jean- 
Marie  TJIBAOU,  President  (since  Decem- 
ber 1984) 

Suffrage:  universal 

Elections:  Assembly  elections  every  five 
years,  last  in  November  1984;  referendum 
on  New  Caledonian  independence  sched- 
uled for  1987 

Political  parties:  white-dominated  Ras- 
semblement  pour  la  Caledonie  dans  la 
Republique  (RPCR) — Conservative;  Melan- 
esian  proindependence  Kanak  Socialist 
National  Liberation  Front  (FLNKS);  Me- 
lanesian  moderate  Kanak  Socialist  Libera- 
tion (LKS) 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  Territorial 
Assembly— RPCR,  34  seats;  LKS,  6  seats; 
splinter  groups,  2  seats;  FLNKS  boycotted 
the  election 


Communists:  number  unknown;  Palita 
extreme  left  party;  some  politically  active 
Communists  deported  during  1950s;  small 
number  of  North  Vietnamese 

Member  of:  EIB  (associate),  WFTU, 
WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $1.21  billion,  $8,050  per  capita 
(1983) 

Natural  resources:  nickel,  chrome,  iron, 
cobalt,  manganese,  silver,  gold,  lead, 
copper 

Agriculture:  large  areas  devoted  to  cattle 
grazing;  coffee,  maize,  wheat,  vegetables; 
60%  self-sufficient  in  beef 
Industry:  nickel  mining 
Electric  power:  400,000  kW  capacity; 
2,200  million  kWh  produced,  14,800  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $217.8  million  (1983);  95%  nickel 
metal  (95%),  nickel  ore 
Imports:  $350  million  (1983);  fuels  and 
minerals,  machines  and  electrical  equip- 
ment 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 54.9% 
France;  imports— 32.5%  France  (1980) 
Budget:  revenues,  $187.1  million;  expendi- 
tures, $168.3  million  (1981) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  127.05  francs 
CFP=US$1  (December  1982) 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  5,448  km  total;  558  km  paved, 
2,251  km  improved  earth,  2,639  km  unim- 
proved earth 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  1  major  (Noumea),  21  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  29  total,  28  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  32,000  telephones 
(21  per  100  popl.);  5  AM,  3  FM,  7  TV 
stations;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 


Kermedec 
Itlindi    '• 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


Chflhmm 


Ttsmtn 

5"  ^i,  North  Island 

Auckland 
N«w  Plymouth/  fGJ.bom. 

^ELLINGTON 

^BE?'.74B  X 

Grey  mouth 

'Chrittchurch 

South  Island 

Dun*din 
Se«  rctlonal  map  \ 


Geography 

Total  area:  268,680  km2;  land  area: 
268,670  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Colorado 

Coastline:  15,134  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  territorial  claim 
in  Antarctica  (Ross  Dependency) 

Climate:  temperate  with  sharp  regional 

contrasts 

Terrain:  predominately  mountainous  with 

some  large  coastal  plains. 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  53%  meadows  and  pastures;  38% 
forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  earthquakes  are  common, 
though  usually  not  severe 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  3,307,239  (July  1987),  average 

annual  growth  rate  0.88% 

Nationality:  noun— New  Zealander(s); 

adjective — New  Zealand 

Ethnic  divisions:  88%  European,  8.9% 

Maori,  2.9%  Pacific  Islander,  0.2%  other 


178 


Religion:  81%  Christian,  18%  none  or 
unspecified,  1%  Hindu,  Confucian,  and 
other 

Language:  English  (official),  Maori 
Infant  mortality  rate:  12.5/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  70.5,  women  77.0 
Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  1,416,900  (August  1986); 
66.6%  services,  21.0%  manufacturing, 
11.8%  primary  production;  5.0%  unem- 
ployment rate  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  660,000  members;  41% 
of  labor  force  (December  1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  New  Zealand 

Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth, recognizing  Elizabeth  II  as  head  of 
state 

Capital:  Wellington 

Administrative  divisions:  241  territorial 
units  (128  boroughs,  90  counties,  10  town 
and  district  councils);  579  special-purpose 
bodies 

Dependent  areas:  Cook  Islands,  Niue, 
Tokelau 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  law,  with 
special  land  legislation  and  land  courts  for 
Maoris;  constitution  consists  of  various 
documents,  including  certain  acts  of  the 
UK  and  New  Zealand  Parliaments;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions 

National  holiday:  Waitangi  Day,  6  Febru- 
ary 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (97- 
member  House  of  Representatives,  com- 
monly called  Parliament);  Cabinet  respon- 
sible to  Parliament;  three-level  court 
system  (magistrates  and  courts,  Supreme 
Court,  and  Court  of  Appeal) 

Government  leader:  David  LANGE, 
Prime  Minister  (since  July  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  age  18  and  over 

Elections:  held  at  three-year  intervals  or 
sooner  if  Parliament  is  dissolved  by  Prime 
Minister;  last  election  July  1984 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  New 
Zealand  Labor  Party  (NZLP;  government), 
David  Lange;  National  Party  (NP;  opposi- 
tion), Jim  Bolger;  Democratic  Party,  Neil 
Morrison;  New  Zealand  Party,  Steven 
Greenfield;  Socialist  Unity  Party  (SUP; 
pro-Soviet),  Ken  Douglas 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election  and  one 
byelection  in  1985)  Parliament — National 
Party,  38  seats;  Labor  Party,  55  seats; 
Democratic  Party,  2  seats 

Communists:  SUP  about  140,  other  sects, 
about  200 

Member  of:  ADB,  ANZUS,  ASPAC,  Co- 
lombo Plan,  Commonwealth  of  Nations, 
DAC,  ESCAP,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  ISO,  ITU,  OECD,  SPF,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $24.1  billion  (FY  ending  March 
1985),  $7,420  per  capita;  real  growth  rate 
1.1%  (1975-85);  17.5%  average  inflation 
rate  (FY  ending  March  1987  est.) 

Natural  resources:  natural  gas,  iron,  sand, 
coal,  timber 

Agriculture:  fodder  and  silage  crops,  wool, 
meat,  dairy  products;  food  surplus  country 

Fishing:  catch  138,000  metric  tons  (1983); 
exports — 130,000  metric  tons  valued  at 
$300  million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  wood 
and  paper  products,  textile  production, 
machinery,  transport  equipment,  banking 
and  insurance,  tourism 

Electric  power:  7,593,000  kW  capacity; 
27,000  million  kWh  produced,  8,180  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $5.75  billion  (f.o.b.,  FY  ending 
June  1986);  beef,  wool,  dairy  products 

Imports:  $6.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  FY  ending 
June  1986);  petroleum,  cars,  trucks,  ma- 
chinery and  electrical  equipment,  iron  and 
steel,  petroleum  products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 16% 
Australia,  15%  Japan,  15%  US,  9%  UK 
(trade  year  1982/83);  imports— 20.5% 
Japan,  17.2%  Australia,  16.5%  US,  9.2% 
UK  (1985) 


Aid:  ODA  and  OOF  commitments 
(1970-84),  $380  million 

Budget:  expenditures,  $7.3  billion;  re- 
ceipts, $6.0  billion;  deficit,  $1.3  billion 

(1984/85) 

Monetary  conversion  rate: 

NZ$1.88=US$1  (14  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,716  km  total  (1980);  all  1.067- 
meter  gauge;  274  km  double  track;  113 
km  electrified;  over  99%  government 
owned 

Highways:  92,648  km  total  maintained 
(March  1984);  49,547  km  paved,  43,101 
km  gravel  or  crushed  stone 

Inland  waterways:  1,609  km;  of  little 
importance  to  transportation 

Pipelines:  1,000  km  natural  gas;  160  km 
refined  products;  150  km  condensate 

Ports:  3  major 

Civil  air:  about  40  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  205  total,  197  usable;  27  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  51  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  interna- 
tional and  domestic  systems;  2.01  million 
telephones  (60.8  per  100  popl.);  64  AM,  2 
FM,  14  TV  stations,  and  about  400  repeat- 
ers; submarine  cables  extend  to  Australia 
and  Fiji;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  New  Zealand  Navy,  New 
Zealand  Army,  Royal  New  Zealand  Air 
Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  881,000; 
753,000  fit  for  military  service;  31,000 
reach  military  age  (20)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1986,  $500  million;  about  5.1%  of 
central  government  budget 


179 


Nicaragua 


Sec  rffionil  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  130,000  km2;  land  area: 
118,750  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Iowa 
Land  boundaries:  1,220  km  total 
Coastline:  910  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  depth 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Nicaraguan 
interruption  of  transit  in  the  Rio  San  Juan 
(the  international  boundary)  is  an  occa- 
sional source  of  friction  with  Costa  Rica; 
territorial  dispute  with  Columbia  over  San 
Andres  and  Providencia  Archipelago 

Climate:  tropical  in  lowlands,  cooler  in 
highlands 

Terrain:  extensive  coastal  plains  rising  to 
interior  mountains 

Land  use:  9%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  43%  meadows  and  pastures;  35% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other;  including 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  destructive  earth- 
quakes, volcanoes,  and  landslides;  defores- 
tation; soil  erosion;  water  pollution 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  3,319,059  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.50% 

Nationality:  noun — Nicaraguan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Nicaraguan 


Ethnic  divisions:  69%  mestizo,  17%  white, 
9%  black,  5%  Indian 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Spanish  (official);  English-  and 
Indian-speaking  minorities  on  Atlantic 
coast 

Infant  mortality  rate:  84/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  56,  women  60 
Literacy:  66% 

Labor  force:  1,086,000  (1986);  45%  ser- 
vice, 42%  agriculture,  13%  industry;  25% 
unemployment 

Organized  labor:  35%  of  Nicaragua's  labor 
force  is  organized;  of  the  seven  confedera- 
tions, five  are  Sandinista  or  Marxist  ori- 
ented— the  government-sponsored  Sandin- 
ista Workers'  Central  (CST),  115,000 
members,  including  state  and  municipal 
employees;  the  Association  of  Campesino 
Workers  (ATC),  130,000  members;  the 
General  Confederation  of  Independent 
Workers  (CGI-I),  about  15,000  members; 
the  Workers  Front,  about  100  members; 
and  the  Central  for  Labor  Action  and 
Unity  (CAUS),  about  3,000  members;  the 
other  two  unions  are  the  Nicaraguan 
Workers'  Central  (CTN),  25,000  members, 
and  the  Confederation  of  Labor  Unifica- 
tion (CUS),  50,000  members 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Nicaragua 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Managua 

Administrative  divisions:  16  departments; 
in  1982  the  Sandinistas  established  six 
regions  and  three  special  zones,  which 
both  the  government  and  the  Sandinista 
National  Liberation  Front  (FSLN)  increas- 
ingly use  for  administrative  purposes 

Legal  system:  the  Sandinista-appointed 
Government  of  National  Reconstruction 
revoked  the  constitution  of  1974  and 
issued  a  Fundamental  Statute  and  a  Pro- 
gram of  the  Government  of  National 
Reconstruction,  which  guided  its  actions 
until  the  new  constitution  was  promul- 
gated in  January  1987 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  15 
September;  Anniversary  of  the  Revolution, 
19  July 


Branches:  executive  and  administrative 
responsibility  formally  reside  in  the  Presi- 
dent, Vice  President,  and  Cabinet;  in 
reality,  the  nine-member  National  Direc- 
torate of  the  Sandinista  National  Libera- 
tion Front  (FSLN)  shares  power  with  and 
dominates  the  executive;  National  Assem- 
bly was  elected  in  November  1984  and 
inaugurated  in  January  1985;  the  country's 
highest  judicial  authority  is  the  Sandinista- 
appointed  Supreme  Court,  composed  of 
seven  members 

Government  leaders:  Cdte.  (Jose)  Daniel 
ORTEGA  Saavedra,  President  (since  10 
January  1985);  Sergio  RAMIREZ  Mercado, 
Vice  President  (since  10  January  1985) 

Elections:  national  elections  were  held  on 
4  November  1984  for  president  and  vice 
president  (elected  for  a  six-year  term),  and 
a  96-member  National  Assembly 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Sandinista 
National  Liberation  Front  (FSLN)  is  the 
ruling  party  and  dominates  political  life; 
the  FSLN  has  61  seats  in  the  National 
Assembly;  government  prohibited  most 
political  activities  by  opposition  parties 
under  the  state  of  emergency  in  March 
1982,  expanded  the  emergency  decree  in 
October  1985,  and  reimposed  the  state  of 
emergency  in  January  1987;  main  opposi- 
tion parties  boycotted  the  November  1984 
elections  on  the  grounds  that  the  regime 
had  not  provided  them  with  sufficient 
political  guarantees;  democratic  opposition 
parties  are  highly  fragmented  and  include 
Social  Democratic  Party  (PSD),  leadership 
undecided;  Social  Christian  Party  (PSC), 
Erick  Ramirez;  Democratic  Conservative 
Party  of  Nicaragua  (PGDN),  split  into 
factions — the  most  influential  leaders  are 
Mario  Rappaccioli  and  Myriam  Arguello; 
Constitutionalist  Liberal  Party  (PLC), 
Alfredo  Reyes  Duque  Estrada;  Indepen- 
dent Liberal  Party  (PLI),  Virgilio  Godoy; 
Popular  Social  Christian  Party  (PPSC), 
Mauricio  Diaz;  and  Democratic  Conserva- 
tive Party  (PCD),  split  into  factions — most 
influential  leader  Rafael  Cordova  Rivas; 
the  PSD,  PSC,  PGDN  and  PLC,  as  well  as 
opposition  business  and  union  organiza- 
tions, form  the  Democratic  Coordinating 
Board — Eduardo  Rivas  Gasteazoro,  presi- 
dent; the  PPSC  and  PLI  were  allied  with 
the  FSLN  in  the  Patriotic  Front  of  the 


180 


Revolution  (FPR)  until  early  1984  but 
fielded  their  own  candidates  in  the  elec- 
tions; a  pro-FSLN  faction  dominates  the 
PCD;  the  PCD  has  14  seats  in  the  National 
Assembly,  the  PLI  9,  and  the  PPSC  6;  two 
additional  relatively  obscure  parties,  the 
Central  American  Unionist  Party  (PUCA) 
and  the  Revolutionary  Party  of  the  Work- 
ers (PRT),  were  founded  in  late  1984;  a 
third  obscure  party,  the  Liberal  Party 
(PALI),  was  founded  in  1986 
Communists:  the  Nicaraguan  Socialist 
Party  (PSN),  Gustavo  Tablada,  founded  in 
1944,  has  served  as  Nicaragua's  Moscow- 
line  Communist  party;  the  Communist 
Party  of  Nicaragua  (PCdeN),  Eli  Altamir- 
ano  Perez,  is  an  ultraleft  breakaway  fac- 
tion from  the  PSN;  and  the  Popular  Action 
Movement — Marxist-Leninist  (MAP-ML), 
Isidro  Tellez;  only  the  PSN  was  a  member 
of  the  FPR  alliance  with  the  FSLN,  but  all 
three  have  supported  the  revolution;  the 
PCdeN  and  MAP-ML  have  criticized  the 
Sandinistas  for  moving  too  slowly  toward 
consolidation  of  a  Marxist-Leninist  regime; 
each  of  the  three  Communist  parties  has 
two  seats  in  the  National  Assembly 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  the 
Superior  Council  of  Private  Enterprise 
(COSEP)  is  an  umbrella  group  comprising 
1 1  different  chambers  of  associations, 
including  such  groups  as  the  Chamber  of 
Commerce,  the  Chamber  of  Industry,  and 
the  Nicaraguan  Development  Institute 
(INDE) 

Member  of:  CACM,  CEMA  (observer), 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAS,  ODECA, 
PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPEB, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.6  billion  (1985),  $510  per  capita; 
real  GDP  growth  rate  1986,  -  5%  (conver- 
sion from  national  currency  made  at  70 
cordobas=US$l,  the  highly  overvalued 
official  exchange  rate) 

Natural  resources:  gold,  silver,  copper, 
tungsten,  arable  land,  timber,  livestock, 
fish 


Agriculture:  cotton,  coffee,  sugarcane,  rice, 
corn,  beans,  cattle 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  chemi- 
cals, metal  products,  textiles  and  clothing, 
petroleum,  beverages 

Electric  power:  398,000  kW  capacity; 
1,200  million  kWh  produced,  360  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $218  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  coffee, 
cotton,  sugar,  seafood,  bananas 
Imports:  $840  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  food 
and  nonfood  agricultural  products,  chemi- 
cals and  Pharmaceuticals,  transportation 
equipment,  machinery,  construction  mate- 
rials, clothing,  petroleum 
Major  trade  partners:  exports — 40%  EC, 
20%  Japan,  8%  CACM,  7%  US,  5%  CEMA, 
20%  other;  imports— 43%  CEMA,  12%  EC, 
10%  Mexico,  8%  US,  6%  CACM,  21% 
other  (1985) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-82),  $290 
million;  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $634  million;  Com- 
munist countries  (1970-85),  $1455  million 

Military  transfers:  US  commitments 
(FY70-79),  $20  million 
Budget:  expenditures,  $900  million;  reve- 
nues, $0.5  billion;  converted  at  70 
cordobas=US$l,  official  exchange  rate 
(1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  multiple 
exchange  policy;  official  rate  70 
cordobas=US$l  (January  1986);  free  mar- 
ket 3,000  cordobas=US$l  (January  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  344  km  1.067-meter  gauge, 
government  owned;  majority  of  system  not 
operating;  3  km  1.435-meter  gauge  line  at 
Puerto  Cabezas  (does  not  connect  with 
mainline) 

Highways:  23,585  km  total;  1,655  km 

paved,  2,170  km  gravel  or  crushed  stone, 

5,425  km  earth  or  graded  earth,  14,335 

km  unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  2,220  km,  including  2 

large  lakes 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  56  km 


181 


Ports:  1  major  (Corinto),  8  secondary,  13 

minor 

Civil  air:  12  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  289  total,  241  usable;  10  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  12  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  low-capacity  radio- 
relay  and  wire  system  being  expanded; 
connection  into  Central  American  micro- 
wave net;  60,000  telephones  (2.2  per  100 
popl.);  41  AM,  4  HF,  7  TV  stations;  Inter- 
sputnik  communications  satellite  facility; 
Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Sandinista  People's  Army, 
Sandinista  Navy,  Sandinista  Air  Force/ Air 
Defense,  Sandinista  People's  Militia 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  716,000; 
443,000  fit  for  military  service;  38,000 
reach  military  age  (18)  annually 

Military  budget:  estimated  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  $1.2-1.6  billion; 
50-65%  of  central  government  budget 
(includes  both  defense  and  security  expen- 
ditures) 


Niger 


Lake 
Chad 


Set  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,267,000  km2;  land  area: 
1,266,700  km2 

Comparative  area:  almost  three  times  the 
size  of  California 

Land  boundaries:  5,745  km  total 

Climate:  desert;  mostly  hot,  dry,  dusty; 
tropical  in  south 

Terrain:  predominately  desert  plains  and 
sand  dunes;  flat  to  rolling  plains  in  south 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  2%  forest 
and  woodland;  88%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recent  drought  and  deserti- 
fication severely  affecting  marginal  agri- 
cultural activities;  overgrazing;  soil  erosion 
Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  6,988,540  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.16% 

Nationality:  noun — Nigerien(s)  adjective — 
Nigerien 

Ethnic  divisions:  56%  Hausa;  22% 
Djerma;  8.5%  Fula;  8%  Tuareg;  4.3%  Beri 
Beri  (Kanouri);  1.2%  Arab,  Toubou,  and 
Gourmantche;  about  4,000  French  expatri- 
ates 

Religion:  80%  Muslim,  remainder  indige- 
nous beliefs  and  Christians 

Language:  French  (official);  Hausa, 
Djerma 


Infant  mortality  rate:  136/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  45 
Literacy:  10% 

Labor  force:  2.5  million  (1982)  wage 
earners;  90%  agriculture,  6%  industry  and 
commerce,  4%  government 

Organized  labor:  negligible 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Niger 

Type:  republic;  military  regime  in  power 
since  April  1974 

Capital:  Niamey 

Administrative  divisions:  7  departments, 
38  arrondissements 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  1960,  suspended  1974;  committee 
appointed  January  1984  to  reflect  on  a 
new  national  charter;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holidays:  Independence  Day,  3 
August;  Republic  Day,  18  December 

Branches:  executive  authority  exercised  by 
President  Seyni  Kountche  in  the  name  of 
the  Supreme  Military  Council  (SMC), 
which  is  composed  of  army  officers;  office 
of  prime  minister  created  January  1983; 
since  November  1983,  civilians  have  held 
all  cabinet  portfolios  except  Defense  and 
Interior,  which  are  held  by  President 
Kountche 

Government  leaders:  Brig.  Gen.  Seyni 
KOUNTCHE,  President  of  Supreme 
Military  Council,  Chief  of  State  (since 
1974);  Hamid  ALGABID,  Prime  Minister 
(since  November  1983) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  popular  elections  currently 
allowed  only  for  choosing  representatives 
for  village  Development  Councils,  which 
advise  on  local  economic  development 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  political 
parties  banned 

Communists:  no  Communist  party;  some 
sympathizers  in  outlawed  Sawaba  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  CEAO,  EAMA, 
EGA,  ECOWAS,  Entente,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 


ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
ITU,  Lake  Chad  Basin  Commission,  Niger 
River  Commission,  NAM,  OAU,  OGAM, 
QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.2  billion,  $180  per  capita;  annual 
real  growth  rate  -  3.1%  (1985  est.) 

Natural  resources:  uranium,  coal,  iron, 
tin,  phosphates 

Agriculture:  commercial — cowpeas, 
groundnuts,  cotton;  main  food  crops — 
millet,  sorghum,  rice 

Major  industries:  cement  plant,  brick 
factory,  rice  mill,  small  cotton  gins,  oil 
presses,  slaughterhouse,  and  a  few  other 
small  light  industries;  uranium  production 
began  in  1971 

Electric  power:  101,000  kW  capacity;  265 
million  kWh  produced,  39  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $250.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
uranium,  livestock,  cowpeas,  onions,  hides, 
skins;  exports  understated  because  much 
regional  trade  not  recorded 

Imports:  $309.4  million  (f.o.b.,  19825); 
petroleum  products,  primary  materials, 
machinery,  vehicles  and  parts,  electronic 
equipment,  Pharmaceuticals,  chemical 
products,  cereals,  foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  France  (about  half), 
other  EC  countries,  Nigeria,  UDEAC 
countries;  US  (3.8%,  1981);  preferential 
tariff  to  EC  and  franc  zone  countries 

Budget:  (1986  est.)  revenue  $173  million, 
(1986  est.)  $364.6  million  expenditures 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331  Commun- 
aute  Financiere  Af  ricaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  October-30  September 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  39,970  km  total;  3,170  km 
bituminous,  10,330  km  gravel  and  laterite, 
3,470  km  earthen,  23,000  km  tracks 
Inland  waterways:  Niger  River  navigable 
300  km  from  Niamey  to  Gaya  on  the 
Benin  frontier  from  mid-December 
through  March 


182 


Nigeria 


Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  33  total,  32  usable;  7  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  13  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  small  system  of 
wire  and  radio-relay  links  concentrated  in 
southwestern  area;  9,800  telephones  (0.2 
per  100  popl.);  9  AM,  2  FM,  12  TV  sta- 
tions; 2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  stations,  4 
domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  paramilitary 
Gendarmerie,  paramilitary  Republican 
Guard,  paramilitary  Presidential  Guard, 
paramilitary  National  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,468,000;  787,000  fit  for  military  service; 
81,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


300km 


Gull  of  Guinea 
Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  923,770  km2;  land  area: 
910,770  km2 

Comparative  area:  more  than  twice  the 
size  of  California 

Land  boundaries:  4,034  km  total 
Coastline:  853  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  30  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  sporadic  border 
dispute  with  Cameroon 

Climate:  varies — equatorial  in  south, 
tropical  in  center,  arid  in  north 

Terrain:  southern  lowlands  merge  into 
central  hills  and  plateaus;  mountains  in 
southeast,  plains  in  north 

Land  use:  31%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  23%  meadows  and  pastures;  15% 
forest  and  woodland;  28%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recent  droughts  in  north 
severely  affecting  marginal  agricultural 
activities;  desertification;  soil  degradation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  108,579,764  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.93% 

Nationality:  noun- — Nigerian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Nigerian 


Ethnic  divisions:  more  than  250  tribal 
groups;  Hausa  and  Fulani  of  the  north, 
Yoruba  of  the  southwest,  and  Ibos  of  the 
southeast  comprise  65%  of  the  population; 
about  27,000  non-Africans 

Religion:  50%  Muslim,  40%  Christian,  10% 
indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  English  (official);  Hausa, 
Yoruba,  Ibo,  Fulani,  and  several  other 
languages  also  widely  used 

Infant  mortality  rate:  113/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  men  47,  women  50 

(1983) 

Literacy:  25-30% 

Labor  force:  est.  45-50  million  (1984);  54% 
agriculture;  19%  industry,  commerce,  and 
services;  15%  government 

Organized  labor:  3.52  million  wage  earn- 
ers belong  to  one  of  42  recognized  trade 
unions,  which  are  under  a  single  national 
labor  federation,  the  Nigerian  Labor 
Congress  (NLC) 

Government 

Official  name:  Federal  Republic  of 
Nigeria 

Type:  military  government  since  31  De- 
cember 1983 

Capital:  Lagos 

Administrative  divisions:  19  states  with 
appointed  military  governors 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  Islamic  and  tribal  law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  1 
October 

Branches:  Armed  Forces  Ruling  Council; 
National  Council  of  Ministers  and  National 
Council  of  States;  judiciary  headed  by 
Supreme  Court 

Government  leader:  Ibrahim  BABAN- 
GIDA,  President  and  Commander  in  Chief 
of  Armed  Forces  (since  August  1985) 

Suffrage:  none 

Elections:  last  national  elections  under 
civilian  rule  held  August-September  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  all  political 
parties  banned  after  31  December  1983 


183 


Nigeria  (continued) 


Niue 


Communists:  the  pro-Communist  under- 
ground comprises  a  fraction  of  the  small 
Nigerian  left;  leftist  leaders  are  prominent 
in  the  country's  central  labor  organization 
but  have  little  influence  on  government 

Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  Commonwealth, 
ECA,  ECOWAS,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMO,  IMF,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IRC,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  Lake  Chad 
Basin  Commission,  Niger  River  Commis- 
sion, NAM,  OAU,  OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $53.4  billion  (1985),  $520  per  capita; 
1.0%  growth  rate  (1985  est);  5%  inflation 
rate  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  tin,  colum- 
bite,  iron  ore,  coal,  limestone,  lead,  zinc 

Agriculture:  peanuts,  cotton,  cocoa,  rub- 
ber, yams,  cassava,  sorghum,  palm  kernels, 
millet,  corn,  rice;  livestock;  an  illegal 
producer  of  cannabis  for  the  international 
drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  515,000  metric  tons  (1983); 
imports  nonprocessed  and  processed  fish 

Major  industries:  mining — crude  oil, 
natural  gas,  coal,  tin,  columbite;  processing 
industries — oil  palm,  peanut,  cotton,  rub- 
ber, petroleum,  wood,  hides,  skins;  manu- 
facturing industries — textiles,  cement, 
building  materials,  food  products,  foot- 
wear, chemical,  printing,  ceramics 

Electric  power:  4,900,000  kW  capacity; 
10,730  million  kWh  produced,  100  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $12.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  oil 
(97%),  cocoa,  palm  products,  rubber, 
timber,  tin 

Imports:  $8.3  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  machin- 
ery and  transport  equipment,  manufac- 
tured goods,  chemicals,  wheat 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  EC,  US 

Budget:  (1985)  revenues,  $15.0  billion; 
current  expenditures,  $12.0  billion;  capital 
expenditures  $5.0  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.3 
naira=US$l  (December  1986  market  rate) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 

Railroads:  3,505  km  1.067-meter  gauge 

Highways:  107,990  km  total  30,019  km 
paved  (mostly  bituminous  surface  treat- 
ment); 25,411  km  laterite,  gravel,  crushed 
stone,  improved  earth;  52,560  km  unim- 
proved 

Inland  waterways:  8,575  km  consisting  of 
Niger  and  Benue  rivers  and  smaller  rivers 
and  creeks 

Pipelines:  2,042  km  crude  oil;  264  km 
natural  gas;  3,000  km  refined  products 

Ports:  6  major  (Lagos,  Port  Harcourt, 
Calabar,  Warri,  Onne,  Sapele),  9  minor 

Civil  air:  77  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  88  total,  84  usable;  31  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  13  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  23  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  above-average 
system  limited  by  poor  maintenance; 
major  expansion  in  progress;  radio-relay 
and  cable  routes;  155,000  telephones  (0.2 
per  100  popl.);  37  AM,  9  FM,  34  TV 
stations;  satellite  station  with  Atlantic  and 
Indian  Ocean  antennas,  domestic  satellite 
system  with  19  stations;  1  coaxial  subma- 
rine cable 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
25,027,000;  14,295,000  fit  for  military 
service;  1,164,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Set  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  260  km2;  land  area:  260  km2 

Comparative  area:  one  and  one-half  times 
the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  64  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  modified  by  southeast 
trade  winds 

Terrain:  steep  limestone  cliffs  along  coast, 
central  plateau 

Land  use:  61%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  19% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  typhoons 

Special  notes:  one  of  world's  largest  coral 
islands 


Population:  2,602  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  -3.21% 

Nationality:  noun — Niuean(s);  adjective — 
Niuean 

Ethnic  divisions:  Polynesian,  with  some 
200  Europeans,  Samoans,  and  Tongans 

Religion:  75%  Ekalesia  Nieue  (Niuean 
Church) — a  Christian  Protestant  church 
closely  related  to  the  London  Missionary 
Society,  10%  Morman,  5%  Roman  Catho- 
lic, Jehovah's  Witnesses,  Seventh-Day 
Adventist 


184 


Norfolk  Island 


Language:  Polynesian  tongue  closely 
related  to  Tongan  and  Samoan;  English 

Literacy:  education  compulsory  between  5 
and  14  years  of  age 

Labor  force:  about  1,000  (1981);  most 
Niueans  work  on  family  plantations;  paid 
work  exists  only  in  government  service, 
small  industry,  and  the  Niue  Development 
Board 

Government 
Official  name:  Niue 

Type:  (since  1974)  self-governing  territory 
in  free  association  with  New  Zealand; 
Niueans  retain  New  Zealand  citizenship 

Capital:  Alofi 

Administrative  divisions:  14  village  coun- 
cils 
Legal  system:  English  common  law 

Branches:  Executive  consists  of  a  Cabinet 
of  four  members — the  Premier  (elected  by 
the  Assembly)  and  three  ministers  (chosen 
by  the  Premier  from  among  Assembly 
members);  Legislative  Assembly  consists  of 
20  members  (14  village  representatives  and 
6  elected  on  a  common  roll);  if  requested 
by  the  Assembly,  New  Zealand  will  also 
legislate  for  the  island 

Government  leaders:  Sir  Robert  R.  REX, 
Premier  (since  early  1950s);  John  SPRING- 
FORD,  New  Zealand  Representative  (since 
1974) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  every  three  years;  last  election 
held  March  1984 

Member  of:  ESCAP  (associate  member), 
SPF 

Economy 

GNP:  $3  million  (1984),  per  capita  GDP 
$1,080  (1984) 

Agriculture:  coconuts,  passion  fruit,  honey, 
limes;  subsistence  crops — taro,  yams, 
cassava  (tapioca),  sweet  potatoes;  pigs, 
poultry,  beef  cattle 

Fishing:  930,000  metric  tons  (1982) 
Major  industries:  small  tourist  industry 

Electric  power:  1,500  kW  capacity;  3 
million  kWh  produced,  1,120  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 


Exports:  $301,224  (f.o.b.  1983);  canned 
coconut  cream,  copra,  honey,  passion  fruit 
products,  pawpaw,  root  crops,  limes, 
footballs,  handicrafts 

Imports:  $1,504,180  (c.i.f.  1983);  food  and 
live  animals,  manufactured  goods,  machin- 
ery, fuels,  lubricants,  chemicals,  drugs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — New 
Zealand,  Fiji,  Cook  Islands,  Australia; 
imports — New  Zealand,  Fiji,  Japan,  West- 
ern Samoa,  Australia,  US 

Budget:  revenues  (including  New  Zealand 
subsidy  of  $2.3  million)  $3.2  million; 
expenditures,  $3.8  million  (FY83/84  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  uses  New 
Zealand  currency;  NZ$1.93=US$1  (No- 
vember 1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  123  km  all-weather  roads,  106 
km  access  and  plantation  roads 

Ports:  no  natural  harbor;  open  roadstead 
offers  anchorage  offshore  from  Alofi,  from 
where  servicing  is  by  small  boat 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runway  of  1,650  m 
(capable  of  taking  intermediate-size  jet 
aircraft) 

Telecommunications:  single-line  tele- 
phone system  connects  all  villages  on 
island;  383  telephones;  1,000  radio  receiv- 
ers (1983  est.);  1  radio  station;  no  TV 
service 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  New 
Zealand 


GWeMM 

.Burnt  Pin* 

Norfolk  Island 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


See  ref ionit  map  X 


QNepean 


'tip  Island 


Geography 

Total  area:  40  km2;  land  area:  40  km2 
Comparative  area:  less  than  one-fourth 
the  size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  32  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  subtropical,  mild,  little  seasonal 
temperature  variation 

Terrain:  volcanic  formation  with  mostly 
rolling  plains 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  25%  meadows  and  pastures;  0% 
forest  and  woodland;  75%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  typhoons  (espe- 
cially May  to  July) 
Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  2,537  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.56% 

Nationality:  noun — Norfolk  Islanders); 
adjective — Norfolk  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  descendants  of  the 
Bounty  mutiny;  more  recently,  Australian 
and  New  Zealand  settlers 

Religion:  Church  of  England,  Roman 
Catholic  Church,  Uniting  Church  in  Aus- 
tralia, and  Seventh-Day  Adventists 


185 


Norfolk  Island  (continued) 


Norway 


Language:  English  (official);  Norfolk — a 
mixture  of  18th  Century  English  and 
ancient  Tahitian 

Literacy:  probably  high 

Government 

Official  name:  Territory  of  Norfolk  Island 

Type:  Australian  territory 

Capital:  Kingston  (administrative  center), 
Burnt  Pine  (commercial  center) 

Legal  system:  wide  legislative  and  execu- 
tive responsibility  under  the  Norfolk  Island 
Act  of  1979;  Supreme  Court 

National  holiday:  Pitcairners  Arrival  Day 
Anniversary,  8  June 

Branches:  9-member  elected  Legislative 
Assembly;  chief  executive  is  Australian 
administrator  named  by  governor  general 

Government  leader:  David  E.  BUFFETT, 
Chief  Minister  (since  1983) 

Suffrage:  proportional  representation;  all 
persons  born  on  the  island  are  Australian 
citizens 

Elections:  last  held  18  May  1983;  every 
three  years 

Economy 

Agriculture:  Kentia  palm  seed,  cereals, 
vegetables,  fruit 

Major  industries:  tourism  ($10  million) 

Electric  power:  7,000  kW  capacity;  8 
million  kWh  produced,  3,240  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.9  billion  (1982-83);  seed  of  the 
Norfolk  Island  pine;  Kentia  palm  seeds, 
small  quantities  of  avocados 

Imports:  $15.1  million  (1982-83) 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — Australia 
and  Pacific  Islands,  New  Zealand,  Asia, 
Europe;  exports — Australia  and  Pacific 
Islands,  New  Zealand,  Asia,  and  Europe 

Budget:  revenue,  $2.7  million;  expendi- 
ture, $3.3  million  (1983);  main  source  of 
income  is  sale  of  postage  stamps  and 
customs  duties;  expenses — administrative 
$1.2  million,  education  $0.5  million,  health 
$0.5  million,  welfare  $0.2  million,  mainte- 
nance $0.4  million 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.55  Australian 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  80  km  of  roads,  including  53 
km  of  sealed  roads;  remainder  are  earth 
formed  or  coral  surfaced 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  none;  loading  jetties  at  Kingston  and 
Cascade 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with 
permanent-surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m 
(Australian-owned  airport) 

Telecommunications:  1,500  radio  receiv- 
ers (1982);  radio  link  service  with  Sydney; 
987  telephones  (1982) 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  Australia 


Jan  Mayen  and  Svalbard 
are  not  shown. 


Sec  regioiul  m»|»  V.nd  XI 


Geography 

Total  area:  324,220  km2;  land  area: 
307,860  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  2,579  km  total 

Coastline:  21,925  km  (3,419  km  mainland; 
2,413  km  large  islands;  16,093  km  long 
fjords,  numerous  small  islands,  and  minor 
indentations) 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  10  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  4  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  USSR;  territorial  claim  in  Ant- 
arctica (Queen  Maud  Land) 

Climate:  temperate  along  coast,  modified 
by  Gulf  Stream;  colder  interior 

Terrain:  glaciated;  mostly  high  plateaus 
and  rugged  mountains  broken  by  fertile 
valleys;  small,  scattered  plains;  coastline 
deeply  indented  by  fjords;  arctic  tundra  in 
north 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and  pastures; 
27%  forest  and  woodland;  70%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  air  and  water  pollution; 
acid  rain 


186 


Special  notes:  strategic  location  adjacent 
to  sea  lanes  and  air  routes  in  North  Atlan- 
tic; one  of  most  rugged  and  longest  coast- 
lines in  world;  Norway  and  Turkey  only 
NATO  members  having  a  boundary  with 
the  USSR 


Population:  4,178,545  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.30% 
Nationality:  noun — Norwegian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Norwegian 

Ethnic  divisions:  Germanic  (Nordic, 
Alpine,  Baltic)  and  racial-cultural  minority 
of  20,000  Lapps 

Religion:  94%  Evangelical  Lutheran  (state 
church),  4%  other  Protestant  and  Roman 
Catholic,  2%  other 

Language:  Norwegian  (official);  small 
Lapp-  and  Finnish-speaking  minorities 
Infant  mortality  rate:  7.9/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  72.7,  women  79.5 
Literacy:  100% 

Labor  force:  2.064  million  (1985);  30.9% 
services;  19.6%  mining  and  manufacturing; 
16.7%  commerce;  8.8%  transportation; 
7.6%  construction;  7.2%  agriculture,  for- 
estry, fishing;  5.7%  banking  and  financial 
services  (1983);  2.3%  unemployed  (1985) 
Organized  labor:  66%  of  labor  force 
(1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Norway 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Oslo 

Administrative  divisions:  20  counties,  407 
communes,  47  towns 
Dependent  areas:  Bouvet  Island,  Jan 
Mayen,  Peter  I  Island,  Svalbard 
Legal  system:  mixture  of  customary  law, 
civil  law  system,  and  common  law  tradi- 
tions; constitution  adopted  in  1814  and 
modified  in  1884;  Supreme  Court  renders 
advisory  opinions  to  legislature  when 
asked;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction, 
with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Constitution  Day,  17 
May 

Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  jointly 
with  Crown  and  parliament  (Storting — 
Lagting,  upper  house;  Odelsting,  lower 
house);  executive  power  vested  in  Crown 


but  exercised  by  Cabinet  responsible  to 
parliament;  Supreme  Court,  5  superior 
courts,  104  lower  courts 
Government  leaders:  OLAV  V,  King 
(since  1957);  Gro  Harlem  BRUNDTLAND, 
Prime  Minister  (since  May  1986) 
Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18  but  not 
compulsory 

Elections:  held  every  four  years  (next  in 
1989) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Labor,  Gro 
Harlem  Brundtland;  Conservative,  Rolf 
Presthus;  Center,  Johan  J.  Jakobsen;  Chris- 
tian People's,  Kjell  Magne  Bondevik; 
Liberal,  Arne  Fjortoft;  Socialist  Left,  Theo 
Koritzinsky;  Norwegian  Communist,  Hans 
I.  Kleven;  Progressive,  Carl  I.  Hagen 
Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  Labor, 
40.8%;  Conservative,  30.4%;  Christian 
People's,  8.3%;  Center,  6.6%;  Socialist  Left 
(Socialist  Electoral  Alliance),  5.5%;  Progres- 
sive, 3.7%;  Liberal,  3.1%;  Red  Electoral 
Alliance,  0.6%;  Liberal  People's  Party 
(antitax),  0.5%;  Norwegian  Communist, 
0.2%;  other  0.4% 

Communists:  15,500  est;  5,500  Norwegian 
Communist  Party  (NKP);  10,000  Workers 
Communist  Party  Marxist-Leninist 
(AKP-ML,  pro-Chinese) 
Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EC  (Free  Trade  Agreement),  EFTA, 
ESRO  (observer),  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  IDA, 
IEA  (associate  member),  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IPU,  ITU,  IWC— International  Whaling 
Commission,  IWC — International  Wheat 
Council,  NATO,  Nordic  Council,  OECD, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $56.7  billion  in  1984,  $13,700  per 
capita;  49.6%  private  consumption;  18.9% 
government  consumption;  25.4%  gross 
fixed  investment;  3.3%  change  in  stock- 
building;  net  exports  of  goods  and  services 
8.0%;  real  growth  rate  3.5%  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  oil,  copper,  gas,  pyrites, 
nickel,  iron,  zinc,  lead,  fish,  timber,  hydro- 
electric power 

Agriculture:  animal  husbandry  predomi- 
nates; main  crops — feed  grains,  potatoes, 


fruits,  vegetables;  40%  self-sufficient;  food 
shortages — food  grains,  sugar 
Fishing:  catch  2.48  million  metric  tons 
(1984);  exports  $765  million  (1985) 
Major  industries:  oil  and  gas,  food  pro- 
cessing, shipbuilding,  wood  pulp,  paper 
products,  metals,  chemicals 
Shortages:  most  raw  materials  except 
timber,  petroleum,  iron,  copper,  and 
ilmenite  ore;  dairy  products  and  fish 
Crude  petroleum:  785,000  b/d,  exports 
$6.5  billion  (1985) 

Crude  steel:  924,000  metric  tons  produced 
(1985),  228  kg  per  capita 
Electric  power:  23,435,000  kW  capacity; 
122,650  million  kWh  produced,  29,450 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 
Exports:  $18.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  oil, 
natural  gas,  metals,  chemicals,  machinery, 
fish  and  fish  products,  pulp  and  paper, 
ships 

Imports:  $14.5  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, fuels  and  lubricants,  transport 
equipment,  chemicals,  foodstuffs,  clothing, 
ships 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 68.8%  EC 
(35.6%  UK,  15.6%  FRG),  8.8%  Sweden, 
8.1%  LDC,  5.17  US;  imports— 47.4%  EC 
(16.1%  FRG,  10.0%  UK),  17.8%  Sweden, 
7.2%  US,  6.7%  LDC  (1985) 
Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  commitments 
(1970-84),  $2.4  billion 
Budget:  revenues  $25.9  billion,  expendi- 
tures, $23.1  billion,  (converted  at  1985 
exchange  rate  of  Nkr  8.597=US$1) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.5  Norwegian 
kroners=US$l  (October  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  4,242  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge;  Norwegian  State  Railways  (NSB) 
operates  4,242  km  (2,442  km  electrified 
and  96  km  double  track) 

Highways:  79,540  km  total;  18,600  km 
concrete,  bituminous,  stone  block;  19,980 
km  bituminous  treated;  40,960  km  gravel, 
crushed  stone,  and  earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,577  km;  1.5-2.4  m 
draft  vessels  maximum 


187 


Norway  (continued) 


Oman 


Pipelines:  refined  products,  53  km 

Ports:  9  major,  69  minor 

Civil  air:  62  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  101  total,  100  usable;  59  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  12  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  16  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  high-quality  domes- 
tic and  international  telephone,  telegraph, 
and  telex  services;  2.7  million  telephones 
(62.2  per  100  popl.);  8  AM,  1,013  FM, 
1,800  TV  stations;  4  coaxial  submarine 
cables;  10  domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Norwegian  Army,  Royal 

Norwegian  Navy,  Royal  Norwegian  Air 

Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 

1,074,000;  908,000  fit  for  military  service; 

34,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $2.1  billion;  8.7%  of 
central  government  budget 


300km 


MtfTrth 


See  regional  mip  VI 


Mini'  R»y»ut 


Geography 

Total  area:  212,460  km2;  land  area: 

212,460  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 

Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  1,384  km  total 

Coastline:  2,092  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Administrative  Line 

with  PDRY;  no  defined  boundary  with 

most  of  UAE,  Administrative  Line  in  far 

north;  no  defined  boundary  with  Saudi 

Arabia 

Climate:  dry  desert;  hot,  humid  along 

coast;  hot,  dry  interior;  strong  southwest 

summer  monsoon  (May  to  September)  in 

far  south 

Terrain:  vast  central  desert  plain,  rugged 

mountains  in  north  and  south 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  5%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures; 0%  forest  and  woodland;  95%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  summer  winds  often  raise 
large  sandstorms  and  duststorms  in  inte- 
rior; sparse  natural  fresh  water  resources 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  with  small 
foothold  on  Musandam  Peninsula  control- 
ling Strait  of  Hormuz  (17%  of  world's 
daily  oil  production  transits  this  point 
going  from  Persian  Gulf  to  Arabian  Sea) 


Population:  1,226,923  (July  1987),  average 

annual  growth  rate  3.10% 

Nationality:  noun — Omani(s);  adjective — 

Omani 

Ethnic  divisions:  almost  entirely  Arab, 

with  small  Baluchi,  Zanzibar!,  and  Indian 

groups 

Religion:  75%  Ibadhi  Muslim;  remainder 

Sunni  Muslim,  Shi'a  Muslim,  some  Hindu 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English, 
Baluchi,  Urdu,  Indian  dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  121/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  51,  women  54 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  430,000;  58%  are 
non-Omani;  est.  60%  agriculture 

Government 

Official  name:  Sultanate  of  Oman 

Type:  absolute  monarchy;  independent, 
with  residual  UK  influence 

Capital:  Muscat 

Administrative  divisions:  1  province 
(Dhofar),  2  governorates  (Musandam  and 
Muscat),  and  numerous  districts  (wilayats) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  Islamic  law;  no  constitution; 
ultimate  appeal  to  the  Sultan;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

Branches:  executive — Sultan,  who  ap- 
points 45-member  State  Consultative 
Assembly  to  advise  him;  judicial — tradi- 
tional Islamic  judges  and  a  nascent  civil 
court  system 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  18-19 
November 

Government  leader:  QABOOS  bin  Said, 
Sultan  (since  July  1970) 
Political  parties:  none 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  out- 
lawed Popular  Front  for  the  Liberation  of 
Oman  (PFLO),  based  in  South  Yemen 
Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GCC,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO 


188 


Pakistan 


Economy 

GDP:  $9.0  billion,  $7,800  per  capita  (1985 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  copper,  asbestos, 
some  marble,  limestone,  chromium,  gyp- 
sum 

Agriculture:  based  on  subsistence  farming 
(fruits,  dates,  cereals,  cattle,  camels), 
fishing 

Major  industries:  crude  petroleum  pro- 
duction 550,000  b/d  (1986) 

Electric  power:  1,111,000  kW  capacity; 
2,920  million  kWh  produced,  2,300  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $5.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985),  mostly 
petroleum;  nonoil  consist  mostly  of  re- 
exports, processed  copper,  and  some  agri- 
cultural goods 

Imports:  $3.4  billion  (  c.i.f.,  1985),  ma- 
chinery, transportation  equipment,  manu- 
factured goods,  food,  livestock,  lubricants 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 59% 
Japan,  15%  Korea,  7%  Thailand;  imports — 
23%  UK,  20%  Japan,  16%  UAE,  7%  FRG 

(1985) 

Budget:  (1985)  revenues,  $4.5  billion; 
expenditures,  $5.7  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .385 
rial=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  16,900  km  total;  2,200  km 
bituminous  surface,  14,700  km  motorable 
track 

Pipelines:  crude  oil  1,300  km;  natural  gas 
1,030  km 

Ports:  2  major,  5  minor 

Civil  air:  27  major  transport  aircraft, 
including  multinationally  owned  Gulf  Air 
Fleet 

Airfields:  124  total,  119  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  57  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  fair  system  of 
open-wire,  radio-relay,  and  radio  commu- 
nications stations;  23,000  telephones  (2.2 
per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  3  FM,  11  TV  sta- 
tions; 1  Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  station, 
8  domestic  satellite  stations,  1  ARABSAT 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Royal 
Oman  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  290,000; 
165,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $1.6  billion;  32%  of 
central  government  budget 


400km 


Pe.h. 


r  Kashmir 
'ISLAMABAD 


Arabi, 
SttHfioiulnupVIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  803,940  km2;  land  area: 
778,720  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Texas 
Land  boundaries:  5,900  km  total 
Coastline:  1,046  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Cease-Fire  Line  with 
India;  Pushtunistan  and  Baluchistan  ques- 
tions with  Afghanistan 

Climate:  mostly  hot,  dry  desert;  temperate 
in  northwest;  arctic  in  north 

Terrain:  flat  Indus  plain  in  east;  mountains 
in  north  and  northwest;  Baluchistan  Pla- 
teau in  west 

Land  use:  26%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  6%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures; 4%  forest  and  woodland;  64%  other; 
includes  19%  irrigated 

Environment:  frequent  earthquakes, 
occasionally  severe  especially  in  north  and 
west;  flooding  along  the  Indus  after  heavy 
rains  (July  and  August);  deforestation;  soil 
erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  controls  Khyber  Pass,  tradi- 
tional invasion  route  between  Afghanistan 
and  Pakistan 


189 


Pakistan  (continued) 


Population:  104,600,799  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.74% 

Nationality:  noun — Pakistani(s);  adjec- 
tive— Pakistani 

Ethnic  divisions:  Punjabi,  Sindhi,  Pushtun 
(Pathan),  Baluch 

Religion:  97%  Muslim,  3%  Christian, 
Hindu,  and  other 

Language:  Urdu  and  English  (official); 
total  spoken  languages— 64%  Punjabi,  12% 
Sindhi,  8%  Pushtu,  7%  Urdu,  9%  Baluchi 
and  other;  English  is  lingua  franca 
Infant  mortality  rate:  119/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  51,  women  49 
Literacy:  24% 

Labor  force:  28.6  million  (1985  est); 
extensive  export  of  labor;  53%  agriculture, 
19%  industry,  28%  services 
Organized  labor:  about  10%  of  industrial 
work  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Islamic  Republic  of 

Pakistan 

Type:  parliamentary  with  strong  executive, 

federal  republic 

Capital:  Islamabad 

Administrative  divisions:  four  provinces 
(Baluchistan,  North- West  Frontier,  Punjab, 
Sind)  and  1  territory  (Federally  Adminis- 
tered Tribal  Areas) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  but  gradually  being  transformed  to 
correspond  to  Koranic  injunction;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions; President  Zia's  government  has 
established  Islamic  Sharia  courts  parallel- 
ing the  secular  courts  and  has  introduced 
Koranic  punishments  for  criminal  offenses; 
martial  law  courts  abolished  30  December 
1985,  and  all  cases,  including  those  con- 
cerning national  security,  now  require  due 
process 
National  holiday:  Pakistan  Day,  23  March 

Government  leaders:  Gen.  Mohammed 
ZIA-UL-HAQ,  President  and  Army  Chief 
of  Staff  (since  July  1977);  confirmed  as 
President  through  March  1990  in  special 


referendum  in  December  1984;  Moham- 
med Khan  JUNEJO,  Prime  Minister  (since 
March  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  from  age  18 
Elections:  opposition  agitation  against 
rigging  elections  in  March  1977  led  to 
military  coup;  military  promised  to  hold 
new  national  and  provincial  assembly 
elections  in  October  1977  but  postponed 
them  indefinitely;  elections  for  municipal 
bodies  were  held  in  1979  and  1983; 
nonparty  national  elections  were  held  in 
February  1985;  many  outlawed  political 
parties  boycotted  polling 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  relegalized 
in  December  1985  under  legislation  re- 
quiring parties  to  register  and  open  books 
for  inspection;  government  still  has  wide 
authority  under  civil  code  to  restrict 
political  activity;  law  requires  disqualifica- 
tion of  any  parliamentary  delegate  who 
changes  party  affiliation;  majority  party  in 
parliament  is  Pakistan  Muslim  League 
(PML),  Mohammed  Khan  Junejo;  principal 
opposition  party  is  the  secular  socialist 
Pakistan  People's  Party  (PPP),  Benazir 
Bhutto  (major  leader);  others  include 
National  Democratic  Party  (NDP),  Sherbaz 
Mazari  and  the  Awami  National  Party 
(ANP),  Abdul  Wali  Khan;  all  the  afore- 
mentioned are  in  the  Movement  for  Resto- 
ration of  Democracy  (MRD),  formed  in 
February  1981;  Pakistan  National  Party 
(PNP),  Ghaus  Bakhsh  Bizenjo  (Baluch 
elements  of  the  former  NAP);  Tehrik-i- 
Istiqlal,  Asghar  Khan;  Jamiat-ul-Ulema-i- 
Islam  (JUI),  Fazlur  Rahman;  National 
People's  Party  (NPP),  Ghulam  Mustapha 
Jatoi 

Communists:  party  is  outlawed,  member- 
ship very  small;  sympathizers  estimated  at 
several  thousand 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  mili- 
tary remains  dominant  political  force; 
Ulema  (clergy),  industrialists,  and  small 
merchants  also  influential 
Member  of:  ADB,  Colombo  Plan,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC, 
ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  QIC,  Economic  Cooperation  Orga- 


nization, SAARC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WFTU,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $32  billion  (FY86  est.);  $310  per 
capita  (FY86);  real  growth  7.3%  (FY86) 
Natural  resources:  land,  extensive  natural 
gas,  limited  petroleum,  poor  quality  coal, 
iron  ore 

Agriculture:  wheat,  rice,  sugarcane,  cotton; 
an  illegal  producer  of  opium  poppy  and 
cannabis  for  the  international  drug  trade 
Fishing:  catch  343,400  metric  tons  (1983) 
Major  industries:  cotton  textiles,  steel, 
food  processing,  engineering,  chemicals, 
natural  gas 

Electric  power:  5,731,000  kW  capacity; 
22,590  million  kWh  produced,  220  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $3.1  billion  (c.i.f.,  FY86);  pri- 
marily rice,  cotton,  and  textiles 
Imports:  $5.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  FY86);  petro- 
leum (crude  and  products),  cooking  oil, 
machinery 

Major  trade  partners:  exports— US  10%, 
Japan  10%,  UK  8%;  imports— Japan  15%, 
US  12%,  Germany  9%  (FY86) 
Budget:  current  expenditures,  $5.4  billion; 
development  expenditures,  $2.6  billion 
(FY86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  17.2 
rupees=US$l  (FY86  average) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  (1985)  10,097  km  total;  7,718 
km  broad  gauge,  445  km  meter  gauge,  and 
610  km  narrow  gauge;  1,037  km  broad 
gauge  double  track;  286  km  electrified; 
government  owned 

Highways:  101,315  km  total  (1985);  40,155 
km  paved,  23,000  km  gravel,  29,000  km 
improved  earth,  and  9,160  km  unim- 
proved earth  or  sand  tracks 
Inland  waterways:  negligible 
Pipelines:  250  km  crude  oil;  2,269  km 
natural  gas;  885  km  refined  products 

Ports:  2  major,  4  minor 


190 


Panama 


Civil  air:  30  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  117  total,  99  usable;  70  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  29  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  43  with  runways 
1,200-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  international 
radiocommunication  service  over  micro- 
wave and  INTELSAT  satellite;  domestic 
radio  communications  poor;  broadcast 
service  good;  474,000  telephones  (0.3  per 
100  popl.);  21  AM,  23  FM,  16  TV  stations; 
2  satellite  ground  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  Navy,  Civil 
Armed  Forces,  National  Guards 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
24,249,000;  14,865,000  fit  for  military 
service;  1,196,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1986,  $2.17  billion;  about  33.6%  of 
central  government  budget 


1SOkm 


Caribbean  Sea 

ColoV^ 
•  d«l  Toro         _^ftA   Canal 

^ — jtn'        _ 
_  'PANAyA 

.O.vid 

*'"»"""(          Gulf  of'      t^P»tn>» 

^cw^    Psn""<1 


North  Pacific  Ocean 


See  rctional  m»p  HI 


Geography 

Total  area:  77,080  km2;  land  area:  75,990 

km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 

West  Virginia 

Land  boundaries:  630  km  total 

Coastline:  2,490  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid,  cloudy; 
prolonged  rainy  season  (May  to  January), 
short  dry  season  (January  to  May) 
Terrain:  interior  mostly  steep,  rugged 
mountains  and  dissected,  upland  plains; 
coastal  areas  largely  plains  and  rolling  hills 
Land  use:  6%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  15%  meadows  and  pastures;  54% 
forest  and  woodland;  23%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  dense  tropical  forest  in  east 
and  northwest 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  eastern 
end  of  isthmus  forming  land  bridge  con- 
necting North  and  South  America;  controls 
Panama  Canal  that  links  Atlantic  Ocean 
via  Caribbean  Sea  with  Pacific  Ocean 


Population:  2,274,833  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.14% 
Nationality:  noun — Panamanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Panamanian 


Ethnic  divisions:  70%  mestizo,  14%  West 
Indian,  10%  white,  6%  Indian 
Religion:  over  93%  Roman  Catholic,  6% 
Protestant 

Language:  Spanish  (official);  14%  speak 
English  as  native  tongue;  many  Pana- 
manians bilingual 

Infant  mortality  rate:  20.1/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  71 
Literacy:  90% 

Labor  force:  680,471  (1984  est);  45% 
commerce,  finance,  and  services;  29% 
agriculture,  hunting,  and  fishing;  10% 
manufacturing  and  mining;  5%  construc- 
tion; 5%  transportation  and  communica- 
tions; 4%  Canal  Zone;  1.2%  utilities;  20% 
unemployed  (January  1985  est.);  shortage 
of  skilled  labor,  but  an  oversupply  of 
unskilled  labor 

Organized  labor:  17%  of  labor  force 
(1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Panama 

Type:  centralized  republic 

Capital:  Panama 

Administrative  divisions:  9  provinces,  1 

comarca 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 

constitution  adopted  in  1972,  but  major 

reforms  adopted  in  April  1983;  judicial 

review  of  legislative  acts  in  the  Supreme 

Court;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction, 

with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  3 

November 

Branches:  under  April  1983  reforms,  a 

President,  two  Vice  Presidents,  and  a 

67-member  Legislative  Assembly  are 

elected  by  popular  vote  for  five-year 

terms;  nine  Supreme  Court  Justices  and 

nine  alternates  serve  10-year  terms;  two 

justices  and  their  alternates  are  replaced 

every  other  December  by  presidential 

nomination  and  legislative  confirmation 

Government  leaders:  Eric  Arturo 
DELVALLE  Henriquez,  President  (since 
September  1985);  Roderick  ESQUIVEL, 
First  Vice  President  (since  October  1985); 
Second  Vice  President,  unfilled 


191 


Panama  (continued) 


Suffrage  18:  universal  and  compulsory 
over  age  18 

Elections:  seven  electoral  slates  made  up 
of  14  registered  political  parties  were  on 
the  May  1984  ballot  with  the  president 
and  other  winners  decided  by  simple 
pluralities;  mayoral  and  municipal  elec- 
tions were  held  in  June  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  (registered 
for  1984  presidential  and  legislative  elec- 
tions) National  Democratic  Union 
(UNADE;  government  coalition) — Demo- 
cratic Revolutionary  Party  (PRD,  official 
government  party),  Romulo  Escobar  Be- 
thancourt,  Carlos  Ozores  Typaldos;  Repub- 
lican Party  (PR),  Eric  Arturo  Devalle 
Henriquez;  Liberal  Party  (PL),  Roderick 
Lorenzo  Esquivel;  Labor  Party  (PALA), 
Ramon  Sieiro  Murgas  and  Carlos  Eleta 
Almaran;  Panamenista  Party  (PP),  Luis 
Suarez;  Popular  Broad  Front  Party  (FR- 
AMPO),  Alvaro  Arosemena;  Democratic 
Opposition  Alliance  (ADO,  opposition) — 
Christian  Democratic  Party  (PDC),  Ri- 
cardo  Arias  Calderon;  Authentic  Paname- 
nista Party  (PPA),  Arnulfo  Arias  Madrid; 
Nationalist  Republican  Liberal  Movement 
(MOLIRENA),  Alfredo  Ramirez,  Sr.;  other 
opposition  parties — Popular  Nationalist 
Party  (PNP),  Olimpo  A.  Saez  Maruci; 
Popular  Action  Party  (PAPO),  Carlos  Ivan 
Zuniga;  People's  Party  (PdP,  Soviet- 
oriented  Communist),  Ruben  Dario  Sousa 
Batista;  Socialist  Workers  Party  (PST),  Jose 
Cambra;  Revolutionary  Workers  Party 
(PRT),  Graciela  Dixon 

Voting  strength:  in  the  May  1984  elections 
the  government  coalition  received  300,748 
votes,  narrowly  defeating  the  opposition 
alliance,  which  received  299,035  votes; 
UNADE  won  45  seats  in  the  67-member 
Legislative  Assembly,  and  ADO  won  the 
remaining  22  seats 

Communists:  People's  Party  (PdP),  pro- 
government  mainline  Communist  party, 
did  not  obtain  the  necessary  three  percent 
of  the  total  vote  in  1984  elections  to  retain 
its  legal  status;  about  3,000  members 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Na- 
tional Council  of  Organized  Workers 
(CONATO);  National  Council  of  Private 
Enterprise  (CONEP);  Panamanian  Associa- 
tion of  Business  Executives  (APEDE) 


Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  IADB,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IDE— 
Inter-American  Development  Bank,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IRC,  ITU,  IWC— International  Whaling 
Commission,  IWC — International  Wheat 
Council,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPEB,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $4.4  billion  (1984),  $2,060  per  cap- 
ita; real  growth  -  3.3%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  copper,  mahogany 
forests,  shrimp 

Agriculture:  bananas,  rice,  sugarcane, 
coffee,  corn;  self-sufficient  in  basic  foods; 
an  illegal  producer  of  cannabis  for  the 
international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  143,000  metric  tons  (1983); 
exports  $53.2  million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  bever- 
ages, petroleum  products,  construction 
materials,  clothing,  paper  products 

Electric  power:  1,109,000  kW  capacity; 
3,120  million  kWh  produced,  1,400  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $410  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum products,  bananas,  shrimp,  sugar 

Imports:  $1.34  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum products,  manufactured  goods, 
machinery  and  transportation  equipment, 
chemicals,  foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 59.1%  US, 
17%  Central  America  and  Caribbean,  16% 
EC,  8%  other;  imports— 30%  US,  19% 
Central  America  and  Caribbean,  10% 
Mexico,  8%  Japan,  8%  Venezuela,  6%  EC, 
15%  other  (1984) 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im  commitments 
(FY70-85),  $468  million;  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  ODA  and  OOF  (1970-84),  $494 
million;  Communist  countries  (1970-85),  $4 
million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $47 
million 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues,  $886  million; 
expenditures,  $1.175  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate: 

1  balboa=US$l  (January  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Communications 

Railroads:  238  km  total;  78  km  1. 524- 
meter  gauge,  160  km  0.914-meter  gauge 

Highways:  8,530  km  total;  2,745  km 
paved,  3,270  km  gravel  or  crushed  stone, 
2,515  km  improved  and  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  800  km  navigable  by 
shallow  draft  vessels;  82  km  Panama  Canal 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  130  km 

Ports:  2  major  (Cristobal  and  Balboa),  8 
minor 

Civil  air:  16  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  138  total,  133  usable;  44  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  16  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  domestic  and  inter- 
national facilities  well  developed;  connec- 
tion into  Central  American  microwave  net; 
2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  antennas; 
220,000  telephones  (10.5  per  100  pop!.);  80 
AM,  14  TV  stations;  1  coaxial  submarine 
cable 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Defense  Forces  of  the  Republic 
of  Panama  (formerly  known  as  the  Na- 
tional Guard)  includes  military  ground 
forces  (still  designated  National  Guard), 
Panamanian  Air  Force,  National  Navy, 
Panama  Canal  Defense  Force,  police 
force,  traffic  police/highway  patrol,  Na- 
tional Department  of  Investigation,  De- 
partment of  Immigration 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  579,000; 
400,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  beginning 
1  January  1987,  $104.6  million;  about  4% 
of  central  government  budget 


Papua  New  Guinea 


500  fcm 


South  Pacific  Ocean 

'  New  Ireland 


Cora/  Sea 


See  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  461,690  km2;  land  area: 
451,710  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
California 

Land  boundary:  966  km  with  Indonesia 
Coastline:  5,152  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 
archipelagic  baselines) 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  northwest  monsoon 
(December  to  March),  southeast  monsoon 
(May  to  October);  slight  seasonal  tempera- 
ture variation 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  coastal 
lowlands  and  rolling  foothills 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  1%  per- 
manent crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and 
pastures;  71%  forest  and  woodland;  28% 
other 

Environment:  one  of  world's  largest 
swamps  along  southwest  coast;  some  active 
volcanos;  frequent  earthquakes 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  3,563,743  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.41% 

Nationality:  noun — Papua  New  Guin- 
ean(s);  adjective — Papua  New  Guinean 


Ethnic  divisions:  predominantly  Mela- 
nesian  and  Papuan;  some  Negrito,  Micro- 
nesian,  and  Polynesian 

Religion:  over  half  of  population  nomi- 
nally Christian  (490,000  Catholic,  320,000 
Lutheran,  other  Protestant  sects);  remain- 
der indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  715  indigenous  languages; 
English  spoken  by  1-2%,  pidgin  English 
widespread,  Motu  spoken  in  Papua  region 

Infant  mortality  rate:  102/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  50 
Literacy:  32% 

Labor  force:  1.66  million  (1980);  732,806 
(1980)  in  salaried  employment;  54%  agri- 
culture, 25%  government,  9%  industry  and 
commerce,  8%  services 

Government 

Official  name:  Independent  State  of 
Papua  New  Guinea 

Type:  independent  parliamentary  state 
within  Commonwealth  recognizing  Eliza- 
beth II  as  head  of  state 

Capital:  Port  Moresby 
Administrative  divisions:  20  provinces 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  16 
September 

Branches:  executive — National  Executive 
Council;  legislature — House  of  Assembly 
(109  members);  judiciary — court  system 
consists  of  Supreme  Court  of  Papua  New 
Guinea  and  various  inferior  courts  (district 
courts,  local  courts,  children's  courts, 
wardens'  courts) 

Government  leaders:  Sir  Kingsford 
DIBELA,  Governor  General  (since  March 
1983);  Paias  WINGTI,  Prime  Minister 
(since  November  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  preferential-type  elections  for 
109-member  House  of  Assembly  every  five 
years,  last  held  in  June  1982 

Political  parties:  Pangu  Party,  People's 
Progress  Party,  United  Party,  Papua  Be- 
sena,  National  Party,  Melanesian  Alliance 

Communists:  no  significant  strength 


Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  CIPEC  (asso- 
ciate), Commonwealth,  ESCAP,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  South 
Pacific  Commission,  SPF,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GNP:  $2.2  billion,  $680  per  capita;  real 
growth  2.2%  (1984);  3.7%  inflation  rate 

(1985) 

Natural  resources:  gold,  copper,  silver,  gas 

Agriculture:  coffee,  cocoa,  coconuts,  tim- 
ber, tea 

Major  industries:  sawmilling  and  timber 
processing,  copper  mining  (Bougainville), 
fish  canning 

Electric  power:  750,000  kW  capacity; 
1,700  million  kWh  produced,  500  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $920  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  gold, 
copper,  coffee,  palm  oil,  logs,  cocoa,  copra, 
coconut  oil,  tea 

Imports:  $969  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  ma- 
chinery and  equipment,  fuels  and  lubri- 
cants, food  and  live  animals,  chemicals, 
other  manufactured  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  Australia,  UK, 
Japan 

Aid:  Australia,  commitments  (1970-84) 
$4.4  billion;  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70- 
85),  $220  million;  other  Western  countries, 
ODA  and  OOF  bilateral  commitments 
(1980-85),  $5  million 

Budget:  (1986)  total  revenues  $804  million; 
total  expenditures  (1985)  $820  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .961 
kina=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  19,200  km  total;  640  km 
paved,  10,960  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
stabilized  soil  surface,  7,600  km  unim- 
proved earth 

Inland  waterways:  10,940  km 

Ports:  5  principal,  9  minor 

Civil  air:  about  15  major  transport  aircraft 


193 


Papua  New  Guinea  (continued)        Paraguay 


Airfields:  551  total,  445  usable;  15  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  35  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  services  are  ade- 
quate and  being  improved;  facilities  pro- 
vide radiobroadcast,  radiotelephone  and 
telegraph,  coastal  radio,  aeronautical  radio 
and  international  radiocommunication 
services;  submarine  cables  extend  to  Aus- 
tralia and  Guam;  51,483  telephones  (1.5 
per  100  popl.);  31  AM,  2  FM,  no  TV 
stations,  1  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Papua  New  Guinea  Defense 
Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  880,000; 
489,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $34.5  million;  about  3.5% 
of  central  government  budget 


200km 


Boundary  rcpmspn  ration  IS 
not  necessarily  authoritative 


S«  rttlonil  itup  IV 


Encarnacion 


Geography 

Total  area:  406,750  km2;  land  area: 
397,300  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
California 

Land  boundaries:  3,444  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  Brazil  (Rio  Parana 
area) 

Climate:  varies  from  temperate  in  east  to 
semiarid  in  far  west 

Terrain:  grassy  plains  and  wooded  hills 
east  of  Paraguay  River;  Gran  Chaco  region 
west  of  Paraguay  River  mostly  low, 
marshy  plain 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  39%  meadows  and  pastures;  51% 
forest  and  woodland;  5%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  local  flooding  in  southeast 
(early  September  to  June);  poorly  drained 
plains  may  become  boggish  (early  October 
to  June) 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  buffer  between 
Argentina  and  Brazil 


Population:  4,251,924  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.15% 

Nationality:  noun — Paraguayan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Paraguayan 

Ethnic  divisions:  95%  mestizo  (Spanish 
and  Indian),  5%  white  and  Indian 


Religion:  97%  Roman  Catholic;  Mennonite 
and  other  Protestant  denominations 

Language:  Spanish  (official)  and  Guarani 
Infant  mortality  rate:  64/1,000  (1981) 
Life  expectancy:  68 
Literacy:  81% 

Labor  force:  1.1  million  (1983  est);  44% 
agriculture;  34%  industry  and  commerce, 
18%  services,  4%  government;  unemploy- 
ment rate  25%  (1986  est.) 

Organized  labor:  about  5%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Paraguay 
Type:  republic;  under  authoritarian  rule 
Capital:  Asuncion 

Administrative  divisions:  19  departments 
and  the  national  capital 

Legal  system:  based  on  Argentine  codes, 
Roman  law,  and  French  codes;  constitu- 
tion promulgated  1967;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  in  Supreme  Court;  does  not 
accept  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  14 
May 

Branches:  President  heads  executive; 
bicameral  legislature  (Senate,  Chamber  of 
Deputies);  judiciary  headed  by  Supreme 
Court 

Government  leader:  Gen.  (Ret.)  Alfredo 
STROESSNER,  President  (since  May  1954) 

Suffrage:  universal;  compulsory  between 
ages  of  18  and  60 

Elections:  President  and  Congress  elected 
at  same  time  every  five  years  (next  elec- 
tion March  1988) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Colorado 
Party,  Juan  Ramon  Chaves;  Authentic 
Radical  Liberal  Party  (PLRA),  Juan 
Zaldivar;  Christian  Democratic  Party 
(PDC),  Geronimo  Irala  Burgos;  Febrerista 
Revolutionary  Party  (PRF),  Fernando 
Vera;  Liberal  Party  (PL),  Joaquin  Burgos; 
Popular  Colorado  Movement  (MOPOCO), 
Waldino  Lovera;  Radical  Liberal  Party 
(PLR),  Emilio  Forestieri 


194 


Peru 


Voting  strength:  (February  1983  general 
election)  90%  Colorado  Party,  5.6%  Radi- 
cal Liberal  Party,  3.2%  Liberal  Party; 
Febrerista  Party  boycotted  elections 

Communists:  Oscar  Creydt  faction  and 
Miguel  Angel  Soler  faction  (both  illegal); 
est.  3,000  to  4,000  party  members  and 
sympathizers  in  Paraguay,  very  few  are 
hard  core;  party  in  exile  is  small  and 
deeply  divided 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Na- 
tional Accord  includes  MoPoCo  and 
Febrerista,  Radical  Liberal,  and  Christian 
Democratic  Parties;  Caspar  Rodriguez  de 
Francia,  Paraguayan  Liberation  Movement 

Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  IADB,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IDB— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITU,  LAIA,  OAS,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $3.8  billion  1986,  $950  per  capita 
(1986),  66%  private  consumption,  7% 
public  consumption  (1983);  28%  gross 
domestic  investment;  real  growth  rate 
1985,  4.5%;  40%  inflation  rate  (mid-1986) 

Natural  resources:  iron,  manganese, 
limestone,  hydroelectric  power,  forests 

Agriculture:  oilseeds,  soybeans,  cotton, 
wheat,  manioc,  sweet  potatoes,  tobacco, 
corn,  rice,  sugarcane;  self-sufficient  in  most 
foods;  illegal  producer  of  cannabis  for  the 
international  drug  trade 

Major  industries:  meat  packing,  oilseed 
crushing,  milling,  brewing,  textiles,  light 
consumer  goods,  cement,  construction 

Electric  power:  1,675,000  kW  capacity; 
1,130  million  kWh  produced,  280  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $350  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  cotton, 
oilseeds,  meat  products,  tobacco,  timber, 
coffee,  essential  oils,  lung  oil 

Imports:  $730  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  fuels 
and  lubricants,  machinery  and  motors, 
motor  vehicles,  beverages  and  tobacco, 
foodstuffs 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — 26% 
Brazil,  13%  Netherlands,  11%  Argentina, 
11%  Switzerland,  7%  US,  6%  FRG;  im- 
ports—33%  Brazil,  16%  Argentina,  13% 
US,  7%  Algeria,  6%  Japan,  5%  FRG,  5% 
UK  (1986) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  US  (FY70-85) 
$157  million;  other  Western  countries, 
ODA  and  OOF  (1970-84),  $648  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $18 
million 

Budget:  (1986  est.)  revenues,  $620  million; 
expenditures,  $762  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  240 
guaranies=US$l  at  fixed  rate,  650 
guaranies=US$l  at  floating  rate  (Novem- 
ber 1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  970  km  total;  440  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  60  km  1.000-meter 
gauge,  470  km  various  narrow  gauge 
(privately  owned) 

Highways:  21,960  km  total;  1,788  km 
paved,  474  km  gravel,  and  19,698  km 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  3,100  km 

Ports:  1  major  (Asuncion),  9  minor  (all 
river) 

Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  896  total,  791  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  39  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  principal  center  in 
Asuncion,  fair  intercity  microwave  net; 
78,300  telephones  (2.3  per  100  popl.);  41 
AM,  3  TV,  8  shortwave  stations;  1  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Paraguayan  Army,  Paraguayan 
Navy,  Paraguayan  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  997,000; 
728,000  fit  for  military  service;  46,000 
reach  military  age  (17)  annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1985,  $66.1  million;  18.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


500km 


Sec  region*!  mip  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,285,220  km2;  land  area: 
1,280,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  five-sixths  the 
size  of  Alaska 

Land  boundaries:  6,131  km  total 
Coastline:  2,414  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Ecuador  (two  areas) 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  in  east  to 
dry  desert  in  west 

Terrain:  western  coastal  plain  (costa),  high 
and  rugged  Andes  in  center  (sierra),  east- 
ern lowland  jungle  of  Amazon  Basin  (selva) 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  21%  meadows  and  pastures; 
55%  forest  and  woodland;  21%  other; 
includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  earthquakes, 
tsunamis,  landslides,  mild  volcanic  activity; 
deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil  erosion; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  shares  control  of  Lago 
Titicaca,  world's  highest  navigable  lake, 
with  Bolivia 

People 

Population:  20,739,218  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.54% 

Nationality:  noun — Peruvian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Peruvian 


195 


Peru  (continued) 


Ethnic  divisions:  45%  Indian;  37%  mestizo 
(white-Indian);  15%  white;  3%  black, 
Japanese,  Chinese,  and  other 

Religion:  predominantly  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Spanish  and  Quechua  (official), 
Aymara 

Infant  mortality  rate:  80/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  60.2 
Literacy:  est.  80% 

Labor  force:  5.6  million;  44%  government 
and  other  services,  38%  agriculture,  18% 
industry;  unemployment  10.9%;  underem- 
ployment 57.4%  (1984) 

Organized  labor:  about  40%  of  salaried 
workers  (1983  est.) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Peru 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Lima 

Administrative  divisions:  24  departments 
with  limited  autonomy  plus  constitutional 
Province  of  Callao 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 
1979  constitution  reestablished  civilian 
government  with  a  popularly  elected 
president  and  bicameral  legislature;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  28 
July 

Branches:  executive,  judicial,  bicameral 
legislature  (Senate,  Chamber  of  Deputies) 

Government  leaders:  Alan  GARCIA 
Perez,  President  (since  July  1985);  Luis 
ALVA  Castro,  Prime  Minister  (since  July 
1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  elections  for  president  and 
congress  held  every  five  years;  last  election 
for  president  and  congress  held  14  April 
1985;  current  government  inaugurated  28 
July  1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  American 
Popular  Revolutionary  Alliance 

(APRA),  Alan  Garcia;  United  Left  (IU), 
Alfonso  Barrantes;  Popular  Christian  Party 
(PPC),  Luis  Bedoya  Reyes;  Popular  Action 
Party  (AP),  Fernando  Belaunde  Terry 


Voting  strength:  (1985  presidential  elec- 
tion) 48%  APRA,  23%  IU,  14%  PPC,  5% 
AP 

Communists:  Peruvian  Communist  Party- 
Unity  (PCP-U),  pro-Soviet,  2,000;  other 
minor  Communist  parties 

Member  of:  Andean  Pact,  AIOEC, 
ASSIMER,  CIPEC,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IADB,  IAEA,  IATP,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDB — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  INTERPOL,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  LAIA,  NAM, 
OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $19  billion,  $970  per  capita  (1985); 
68%  private  consumption,  11%  public 
consumption,  12.5%  gross  investment;  8.5% 
net  foreign  balance  (1983);  real  growth 
rate,  1.6%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  minerals,  metals,  petro- 
leum, forests,  fish 

Agriculture:  main  crops — wheat,  potatoes, 
beans,  rice,  barley,  coffee,  cotton,  sugar- 
cane; imports — wheat,  meat,  lard  and  oils, 
rice,  corn;  an  illegal  producer  of  coca  for 
the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  4.1  million  metric  tons 
(1985);  exports — oil,  $7  million;  edible 
products,  $98  million;  fishmeal,  $118 
million  (1985) 

Major  industries:  mining  of  metals,  petro- 
leum, fishing,  textiles  and  clothing,  food 
processing,  cement,  auto  assembly,  steel, 
shipbuilding,  metal  fabrication 

Electric  power:  3,964,000  kW  capacity; 
13,700  million  kWh  produced,  680  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
fishmeal,  cotton,  sugar,  coffee,  copper,  iron 
ore,  refined  silver,  lead,  zinc,  crude  petro- 
leum and  byproducts 

Imports:  $2.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
foodstuffs,  machinery,  transport  equip- 
ment, iron  and  steel  semimanufactures, 
chemicals,  Pharmaceuticals 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — 36%  US, 
23%  EC,  11%  Latin  America,  10%  Japan, 
4%  UK;  imports— 25%  US,  20%  Latin 
America,  19%  EC,  7%  Japan,  6%  FRG 

(1985) 

Budget:  revenues,  $3.3  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $3.9  billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  13.95 
intis=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,876  km  total;  1,576  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  300  km  0.914-meter 
gauge 

Highways:  56,645  km  total;  6,030  km 
paved,  11,865  km  gravel,  14,610  km 
improved  earth,  24,140  km  unimproved 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  8,600  km  of  navigable 
tributaries  of  Amazon  River  system  and 
208  km  Lago  Titicaca 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  800  km;  natural  gas 
and  natural  gas  liquids,  64  km 

Ports:  7  major,  25  minor 

Civil  air:  27  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  241  total,  225  usable;  33  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  23  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  42  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fairly  adequate  for 
most  requirements;  nationwide  radio-relay 
system;  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  stations, 
12  domestic  antennas;  544,000  telephones 
(2.9  per  100  popl.);  241  AM,  175  short- 
wave, 136  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Peruvian  Army  (Ejercito 
Peruano),  Peruvian  Navy  (Marina  de 
Guerra  del  Peru),  Peruvian  Air  Force 
(Fuerza  Aerea  del  Peru) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,082,000;  3,441,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 223,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 


196 


Philippines 


500km 


Apard^ 


'Luzon 


South       MAN 
China 
Sea 


Philippine 
Sea 


Mindanao 


Set  refioiulmaplX 


Celebes  Sea 


Geography 

Total  area:  300,000  km2;  land  area: 
298,170  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Nevada 

Coastline:  36,289  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 

archipelagic  baselines) 

Continental  shelf:  to  depth  of  exploita- 
tion 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  irregular  polygon  up  to 
285  nm  in  breadth 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  involved  in 
complex  dispute  over  Spratley  Islands  with 
China,  Malaysia,  Taiwan,  Vietnam,  and 
possibly  Brunei 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  northeast  mon- 
soon (December  to  May);  southwest  mon- 
soon (July  to  October) 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  narrow  to 
extensive  coastal  lowlands 

Land  use:  26%  arable  land;  11%  perma- 
nent crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures; 
40%  forest  and  woodland;  19%  other; 
includes  5%  irrigated 

Environment:  astride  typhoon  belt,  af- 
fected by  15  and  struck  by  five  to  six 
cyclonic  storms  per  year;  subject  to  land- 
slides, active  volcanoes,  destructive  earth- 
quakes; deforestation;  soil  erosion;  water 
pollution 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  61,524,761  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.70% 

Nationality:  noun — Filipino(s);  adjective — 
Philippine 

Ethnic  divisions:  91.5%  Christian  Malay, 
4%  Muslim  Malay,  1.5%  Chinese,  3%  other 

Religion:  83%  Roman  Catholic,  9%  Protes- 
tant, 5%  Muslim,  3%  Buddhist  and  other 

Language:  Filipino  (based  on  Tagalog)  and 
English  (both  official) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  59/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  64 
Literacy:  about  88% 

Labor  force:  21,643  million  (1985);  47.0% 
agriculture,  20%  industry  and  commerce, 
13.5%  services,  10.0%  government,  9.5% 
other;  6.1%  official  unemployment  rate 
(1985);  much  underemployment 

Organized  labor:  2,064  registered  unions; 
total  membership  4.8  million  (includes  2.7 
million  members  of  the  National  Congress 
of  Farmers  Organizations) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  the  Philippines 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Manila  (de  facto),  Quezon  City 
(designated) 

Administrative  divisions:  73  provinces 
and  61  chartered  cities 

Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish,  Islamic, 
and  Anglo-American  law;  new  constitution 
passed  1987;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day 

Branches:  constitution  provides  for  a 
bicameral  legislature  and  a  presidential 
form  of  government  with  a  directly 
elected  President  and  Vice  President; 
judicial  branch  headed  by  Supreme  Court 
with  descending  authority  in  a  three-tiered 
system  of  local,  regional  trial,  and  interme- 
diate appellate  courts 

Government  leaders:  Corazon  AQUINO, 
President  (since  February  1986);  Salvador 
LAUREL,  Vice  President  and  Foreign 
Minister  (since  February  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory 


Elections:  presidential  election  held  on  7 
February  1986;  Ferdinand  Marcos  initially 
declared  winner;  following  civil  unrest  and 
military  rebellion,  he  left  office  and 
Aquino  assumed  presidency;  legislative 
elections  scheduled  for  May  1987,  with 
local  elections  to  follow  in  August 

Political  parties:  national  parties  are 
PDP-Laban;  United  Nationalist  Demo- 
cratic Organization  (UNIDO),  Liberals, 
Nacionalistas;  Partido  Ng  Bayan  (PNB) 

Communists:  the  Communist  Party  of  the 
Philippines  (CPP)  controls  about  23,200 
full-time  insurgents;  not  recognized  as 
legal  party;  a  second  Communist  party, 
the  pro-Soviet  Philippine  Communist 
Party  (PKP),  has  quasi-legal  status 

Member  of:  ADB,  ASEAN,  ASPAC,  Co- 
lombo Plan,  ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $34.5  billion,  $580  per  capita;  1% 
real  growth,  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  timber,  petroleum, 
nickel,  iron,  cobalt,  silver,  gold 

Agriculture:  rice,  corn,  coconut,  sugarcane, 

bananas,  abaca,  tobacco;  illegal  producer 

of  cannabis  for  the  international  drug 

trade 

Fishing:  catch  1.8  million  metric  tons 

(1983) 

Major  industries:  textiles,  pharmaceuti- 
cals,  chemicals,  wood  products,  food  pro- 
cessing, electronics  assembly 

Electric  power:  6,350,000  kW  capacity; 
22,000  million  kWh  produced,  370  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $4.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
coconut  products,  sugar,  logs  and  lumber, 
copper  concentrates,  bananas,  garments, 
nickel,  electrical  components,  gold 
Imports:  $5.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
petroleum,  industrial  equipment,  wheat 

Major  trade  partners:  (1983)  exports — 
36%  US,  20%  Japan;  imports— 23%  US, 
17%  Japan 


197 


Philippines  (continued) 


Pitcairn  Islands 


Budget:  revenues,  $4.3  billion,  expendi- 
tures, $5.7  billion,  deficit,  $1.4  billion 
(1986) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  (floating)  20.43 
pesos=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  378  km  operable  on  Luzon 
(1982),  34%  government  owned;  116  km 
on  Panay,  privately  owned 

Highways:  156,000  km  total  (1984);  29,000 
km  paved;  77,000  km  gravel,  crushed 
stone,  or  stabilized  soil  surface;  50,000  km 
unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  3,219  km;  limited  to 
shallow-draft  (less  than  1.5  m)  vessels 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  357  km 
Ports:  10  major,  numerous  minor 
Civil  air:  53  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  319  total,  270  usable;  69  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  9  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  51  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  good  international 
radio  and  submarine  cable  services;  do- 
mestic and  interisland  service  adequate; 
872,900  telephones  (1.5  per  100  popl.);  267 
AM  stations,  including  6  US;  55  FM  sta- 
tions; 33  TV  stations,  including  4  US; 
submarine  cables  extended  to  Hong  Kong, 
Guam,  Singapore,  Taiwan,  and  Japan;  1 
international  satellite  ground  station;  1 1 
domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Con- 
stabulary— Integrated  National  Police 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
14,926,000;  10,557,000  fit  for  military 
service;  649,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually  (1986) 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1987,  $585  million;  about  9.3% 
of  central  government  budget 


100  km 


tS»ndy 
Oeno 


Henderson 


Dude 


Pitcairn 


.ADAMSTOWN 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


See  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  47  km2;  land  area:  47  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-fourth  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  51  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical,  hot,  humid,  modified  by 
southeast  trade  winds;  rainy  season  (No- 
vember to  March) 

Terrain:  rugged  volcanic  formation;  rocky 
coastline  with  cliffs 

Land  use:  NA%  arable  land;  NA%  perma- 
nent crops;  NA%  meadows  and  pastures; 
NA%  forest  and  woodland;  NA%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  typhoons  (espe- 
cially November  to  March) 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  62  (July  1987),  average  annual 
growth  rate  3.28% 

Nationality:  noun — Pitcairn  Islanders); 
adjective — Pitcairn  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  descendants  of  Bounty 
mutineers 

Religion:  100%  Seventh  Day-Adventists 

Language:  English  (official);  also  a 
Tahitian/English  dialect 

Literacy:  probably  high 


Labor  force:  no  business  community  in 
the  usual  sense;  some  public  works;  subsis- 
tence farming  and  fishing 

Government 

Official  name:  Pitcairn,  Henderson,  Ducie, 
and  Oeno  Islands 

Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  Adamstown 

Legal  system:  Island  Court;  provisions  for 
a  Supreme  Court 

Branches:  administered  locally  by  Island 
Council  consisting  of  four  elected  island 
officers,  a  secretary,  and  five  nominated 
members 

Government  leaders:  Terence  D. 
O'LEARY,  Governor  and  UK  High  Com- 
missioner to  New  Zealand  (since  1982);  B. 
YOUNG,  Island  Magistrate  and  Chairman 
of  the  Island  Council  (since  1985) 

Suffrage:  18  years  old  and  3  years  resi- 
dency 

Elections:  annual;  Island  Magistrate 
elected  for  a  3-year  term 

Communists:  none 

Economy 

GNP:  expenditure  $NZ91 1,000  (1981/82); 
bartering  important  part  of  life 

Natural  resources:  miro  trees  (used  for 
handicrafts) 

Agriculture:  local  use — citrus,  sugarcane, 
watermelons,  bananas,  yams,  taro,  beans, 
pumpkin,  coconuts,  wild  goats,  poultry 

Fishing:  plentiful 

Major  industries:  postage  stamp  sales 

Electric  power:  25  kW  capacity;  .05 
million  kWh  produced,  810  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  fruits,  vegetables,  curios 

Imports:  fuel  oil,  machinery,  building 
materials,  flour,  sugar,  other  foodstuffs 

Budget:  revenue  $NZ812,639,  expenditure 

$NZ1, 119,882  (1983/84  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate: 

NZ$1.93=US$1  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 


198 


Poland 


Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  6.4  km  dirt  roads 

Ports:  boat  harbor  and  jetty  at  Bounty  Bay 

Airfields:  none 

Telecommunications:  24  telephones;  party 
line  telephone  service  on  the  island;  radio 
station  at  Taro  Ground;  diesel  generator 
provides  electricity 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 


Baltic  Sea 


Set  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  312,680  km2;  land  area: 
304,510  km2 

Comparative  area:  smaller  than  New 
Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  3,090  km  total 
Coastline:  491  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  temperate  with  cold,  cloudy, 
moderately  severe  winters  with  frequent 
precipitation;  mild  summers  with  frequent 
showers  and  thundershowers 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  plain,  mountains  along 
southern  border 

Land  use:  48%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  13%  meadows  and  pastures;  29% 
forest  and  woodland;  9%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  plain  crossed  by  a  few 
north-flowing,  meandering  streams 

Special  notes:  historic  area  on  North 
European  Plain  for  conflict  because  of  flat 
terrain  and  lack  of  natural  barriers 


Population:  37,726,699  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.67% 

Nationality:  noun — Pole(s);  adjective — 
Polish 


Ethnic  divisions:  98.7%  Polish,  0.6% 
Ukrainian,  0.5%  Byelorussian,  less  than 
0.05%  Jewish 

Religion:  95%  Roman  Catholic  (about  75% 
practicing),  5%  Uniate,  Greek  Orthodox, 
Protestant,  and  other 

Language:  Polish,  no  significant  dialects 
Infant  mortality  rate:  19.3/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  71.6 
Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  17.54  million;  44%  industry 
and  commerce,  30%  agriculture,  11% 
services,  8%  government  (1985) 

Organized  labor:  new  government  trade 
unions  formed  following  dissolution  of 
Solidarity  and  all  government  unions  in 
October  1982 

Government 

Official  name:  Polish  People's  Republic 

Type:  Communist  state 

Capital:  Warsaw 

Administrative  divisions:  49  provinces 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  Continental 
(Napoleonic)  civil  law  and  Communist 
legal  theory;  constitution  adopted  1952; 
court  system  parallels  administrative 
divisions  with  Supreme  Court,  composed 
of  104  justices,  at  apex;  no  judicial  review 
of  legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  com- 
pulsory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  National  Liberation 
Day,  22  July 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (Sejm), 
executive,  judicial  system  dominated  by 
parallel  Communist  party  apparatus 

Government  leaders:  Zbigniew  MESS- 
NER,  Chairman  of  Council  of  Ministers 
(Premier;  since  November  1985);  Army 
Gen.  Wojciech  JARUZELSKI,  Chairman 
of  Council  of  State  (President;  since  No- 
vember 1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  parliamentary  and  local  govern- 
ment every  four  years;  last  election  held 
October  1985 

Political  party  and  leader:  Polish  United 
(Communist)  Workers'  Party  (PZPR), 


199 


Poland  (continued) 


Portugal 


Wojciech  Jaruzelski,  First  Secretary  (since 
October  1981) 

Voting  strength:  (October  1985  election) 
78.86%  voted  for  Communist-approved 
candidates 

Communists:  2.1  million  (1986) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  United 
Peasant  Party  (ZSL),  Democratic  Party 
(SD);  powerful  Roman  Catholic  Church, 
Patriotic  Movement  of  National  Rebirth 
(PRON) 

Member  of:  CEMA,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA, 
ICAO,  ICES,  IHO,  ILO,  Indochina  Truce 
Commission,  IMO,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU, 
Korea  Truce  Commission,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  Warsaw  Pact, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $240.6  billion  (1985),  $6,420  per 
capita;  growth  rate  1.6%;  inflation  rate 
15%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  sulfur,  copper, 
natural  gas,  silver 

Agriculture:  self-sufficient  for  minimum 
requirements;  main  crops — grain,  sugar 
beets,  oilseed,  potatoes,  exporter  of  live- 
stock products  and  sugar;  importer  of 
grains 

Fishing:  catch  650,000  million  metric  tons 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  machinebuilding,  iron 
and  steel,  extractive  industries,  chemicals, 
shipbuilding,  food  processing 
Crude  steel:  16.1  million  metric  tons 
produced,  about  430  kg  per  capita  (1985) 
Electric  power:  30,737,000  kW  capacity; 
141,500  million  kWh  produced,  3,740 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 
Exports:  $17.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  39.7% 
machinery  and  equipment;  23.8%  fuels, 
minerals,  and  metals;  9.5%  chemicals,  7.4% 
manufactured  consumer  goods;  4.7% 
agricultural  and  forestry  products;  14.9% 
other  (1985) 

Imports:  $17.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  33.7% 
machinery  and  equipment;  30.4%  fuels, 
minerals,  and  metals;  14.2%  chemicals, 
7.3%  manufactured  consumer  goods,  4.7% 
agricultural  and  forestry  products;  9.7% 
other  (1985) 


Major  trade  partners:  $34.6  billion  (1985); 
61%  Communist  countries,  32%  developed 
countries,  7%  less  developed  countries 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  148  zlotys= 
US$1  (December  1985) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  27,092  km  total;  23,961  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  397  km 
1.524-meter  broad  gauge,  2,734  km  nar- 
row gauge;  8,964  km  double  track;  8,902 
km  electrified;  government  owned  (1985) 
Highways:  299,887  km  total;  130,000  km 
improved  hard  service  (concrete,  asphalt, 
stone  block);  24,000  km  unimproved  hard 
service  (crushed  stone,  gravel);  100,000  km 
earth;  4,588  km  other  urban  roads  (1985) 
Inland  waterways:  3,989  km  navigable 
rivers  and  canals  (1985) 
Pipelines:  4,500  km  for  natural  gas;  1,986 
km  for  crude  oil  (1984);  360  km  for  re- 
fined products 

Freight  carried:  rail — 419.4  million  metric 
tons,  120.6  billion  metric  ton/km  (1985); 
highway — 1,394  million  metric  tons,  36.5 
billion  metric  ton/km  (1985);  inland  water- 
way— 14.54  million  metric  tons,  1.41 
billion  metric  ton/km  (1985);  ocean — 
177.75  billion  metric  ton/km  (1985) 
Ports:  4  major  (Gdansk,  Gdynia,  Szczecin, 
Swinoujscie),  12  minor  (1979);  principal 
inland  waterway  ports  are  Gliwice, 
Wroclaw,  and  Warsaw  (1979) 

Civil  air:  42  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  160  total;  36  with  runways  2,500 
m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  24  AM,  28  FM,  41 
TV  stations;  4  Soviet  TV  relays;  8,864,768 
TV  sets;  9,286,663  receiver  sets;  at  least  1 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Ground  Forces,  National  Air 
Defense  Forces,  Air  Force  Command, 
Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
9,398,000;  7,453,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 267,000  reach  military  age  (19) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  371.6  billion 
zlotys;  8.1%  of  total  budget 


Azores  and  Madeira 
Islands  are  not  shown 


Set  rtfionil  map  V«nd  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  92,080  km2;  land  area:  91,640 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Indiana 

Land  boundary:  1,207  km  with  Spain 
Coastline:  1,793  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  territory  of 
Macau  will  become  a  Special  Administra- 
tive Region  of  China  in  1999;  East  Timor 
question  with  Indonesia 

Climate:  maritime  temperate;  cool  and 
rainy  in  north,  warmer  and  drier  in  south 

Terrain:  mountainous  north  of  Tagus 
River,  rolling  plains  in  south 

Land  use:  32%  arable  land;  6%  permanent 
crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures;  40% 
forest  and  woodland;  16%  other;  includes 
7%  irrigated 

Environment:  Azores  subject  to  severe 
earthquakes 

Special  notes:  Azores  and  Madeira  Islands 
occupy  strategic  locations  along  western 
sea  approaches  to  Strait  of  Gibraltar 


Population:  10,314,727  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.74% 


Nationality:  noun — Portuguese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Portuguese 

Ethnic  divisions:  homogeneous  Mediterra- 
nean stock  in  mainland,  Azores,  Madeira 
Islands;  citizens  of  black  African  descent 
who  immigrated  to  mainland  during 
decolonization  number  less  than  100,000 

Religion:  97%  Roman  Catholic,  1%  Protes- 
tant sects,  2%  other 

Language:  Portuguese 

Infant  mortality  rate:  19/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  73 

Literacy:  83% 

Labor  force:  4.59  million;  45%  services, 
34%  industry,  21%  agriculture;  unemploy- 
ment, 11.1%  (1986  est.) 

Organized  labor:  about  55%  of  Portuguese 
labor  is  organized;  the  Communist- 
dominated  General  Confederation  of 
Portuguese  Workers — Intersindical 
(CGTP-IN)  represents  more  than  half  of 
theunionized  labor  force;  its  main  compe- 
tition, the  General  Workers  Union  (UGT), 
is  organized  by  the  Socialists  and  Social 
Democrats  and  represents  less  than  half  of 
unionized  labor 

Government 

Official  name:  Portuguese  Republic 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Lisbon 

Administrative  divisions:  18  districts  on 
the  mainland,  3  in  the  Azores,  1  in  the 
Madeira  Islands 
Dependent  area:  Macau 
Legal  system:  civil  law  system;  constitu- 
tion adopted  April  1976  and  revised  Octo- 
ber 1982;  next  round  of  discussions  on 
constitutional  revision  slated  for  October 
1987;  the  Constitutional  Tribunal  reviews 
the  constitutionality  of  legislation;  accepts 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reserva- 
tions 

National  holiday:  25  April 
Branches:  executive  with  President  and 
Prime  Minister;  unicameral  legislature 
(popularly  elected  250-seat  Assembly  of 
the  Republic);  independent  judiciary 
Government  leaders:  Mario  SOARES, 
President  since  (February  1986);  Anibal 
Cavaco  SILVA,  Prime  Minister  (since 
October  1985) 


Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  national  elections  for  Assembly 
of  the  Republic  normally  to  be  held  every 
four  years;  Assembly  elections  held  Octo- 
ber 1985;  national  election  for  President  to 
be  held  every  five  years  (last  held  January- 
February  1986);  local  elections  to  be  held 
every  three  years  (last  held  December 
1985) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Dem- 
ocratic Party  (PSD),  Anibal  Cavaco  Silva; 
Portuguese  Socialist  Party  (PS),  Vitor 
Constancio;  Party  of  Democratic  Renewal 
(PRD),  Antonio  Ramalho  Eanes;  Portu- 
guese Communist  Party  (PCP),  Alvaro 
Cunhal;  Social  Democratic  Center  (CDS), 
Adriano  Moreira 

Voting  strength:  (1985  parliamentary 
election)  Social  Democrats,  29.87%;  Social- 
ists, 20.77%;  Democratic  Renewal,  17.92%; 
Communists  (in  a  front  coalition  called  the 
United  Peoples  Alliance— APU),  15.49%; 
Center  Democrats,  9.6% 
Communists:  Portuguese  Communist 
Party  claims  membership  of  200,753 
(December  1983) 

Member  of:  Council  of  Europe,  EC, 
EFTA,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IATP,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IEA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IRC,  ISO,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
NATO,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $20.7  billion  (1985);  68%  private 
consumption;  23%  fixed  capital  formation, 
16%  government  consumption,  —0.5% 
change  in  stocks;  —5%  net  exports;  real 
growth  rate  3.3%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  fish,  forests  (cork), 
tungsten,  iron,  uranium  ores 

Agriculture:  generally  underdeveloped; 
main  crops — grains,  potatoes,  olives,  grapes 
for  wine;  deficit  foods — sugar,  grain,  meat, 
fish,  oilseed 

Fishing:  catch  254,577  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  footwear; 
wood  pulp,  paper,  and  cork;  metalwork- 
ing;  oil  refining;  chemicals;  fish  canning; 


Crude  steel:  420,000  tons  produced,  40  kg 
per  capita  (1985  est.) 

Electric  power:  5,615,000  kW  capacity; 
17,240  million  kWh  produced,  1,710  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $5.7  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  cotton 
textiles,  cork  and  cork  products,  canned 
fish,  wine,  timber  and  timber  products, 
resin,  machinery,  and  appliances 

Imports:  $7.1  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, cotton,  foodgrains,  industrial  ma- 
chinery, iron  and  steel,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  47%  EC,  10%  US, 
2%  Communist  countries,  19%  other  devel- 
oped countries,  22%  less  developed  coun- 
tries 

Aid:  US,  including  Ex-Im,  $1.6  billion 
(FY70-85);  other  Western  countries  (ODA 
and  OOF),  $848  million  (1970-84) 

Military  transfers:  US,  $605  million 

(FY70-85) 

Budget:  (1985)  expenditures,  $8.5  billion; 
revenues,  $6.0  billion;  deficit,  $2.5  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  149.40 
escudos=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,630  km  total:  state-owned 
Portuguese  Railroad  Co.  (CP)  operates 
2,858  km  1.665-meter  gauge  (434  km 
electrified  and  426  km  double  track),  760 
km  1.000-meter  gauge;  12  km  (1.435- 
meter  gauge)  electrified,  double  track, 
privately  owned 

Highways:  57,499  km  total;  61,599  km 
paved  (bituminous,  gravel,  and  crushed 
stone),  including  140  km  of  limited-access 
divided  highway;  7,962  km  improved 
earth;  plus  an  additional  4,100  km  of 
unimproved  earth  roads  (motorable  tracks) 

Inland  waterways:  820  km  navigable; 
relatively  unimportant  to  national  econ- 
omy, used  by  shallow-draft  craft  limited  to 
297-metric-ton  cargo  capacity 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  11  km;  refined  prod- 
ucts, 58  km 


Portugal  (continued) 


Qatar 


Ports:  7  major,  34  minor 

Civil  air:  34  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  69  total,  65  usable;  35  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  11  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  10  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  facilities  are  gener- 
ally adequate;  1.8  million  telephones  (16.6 
per  100  popl.);  56  AM,  64  FM,  66  TV 
stations;  6  submarine  cables;  3  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  antennas  (on  mainland  and 
Azores) 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,517,000;  2,048,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 87,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $899  million;  about  8.3% 
of  central  government  budget 


50  km 


Hawar  Islands  are 
disputed  between 
Bahrain  and  Qatar 


Persian 
Gulf 


See  regional  map  VI 


Boundary  representation  is 
iOt  necessarily  authoritative. 


Geography 

Total  area:  11,000  km2;  land  area:  11,000 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Connecticut 

Land  boundaries:  56  km  total 
Coastline:  563  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  not  specific 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  as  delimited 

with  neighboring  states,  or  to  limit  of 

shelf,  or  to  median  line 

Extended  economic  zone:  to  median 

line 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  UAE;  territorial 
dispute  with  Bahrain  over  Hawar  island 
and  its  ring  of  islets 

Climate:  desert;  hot,  dry;  humid  and 
sultry  in  summer 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  and  barren  desert 
covered  with  loose  sand  and  gravel 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  0%  per- 
manent crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures; 
0%  forest  and  woodland;  95%  other 

Environment:  haze,  duststorms,  sand- 
storms common;  limited  fresh  water  re- 
sources mean  increasing  dependence  on 
large-scale  desalination  facilities 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  in  central 
Persian  Gulf  and  close  proximity  to 
region's  important  crude  oil  sources 


People 

Population:  315,741  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.96% 

Nationality:  noun — Qatari(s);  adjective — 
Qatari 

Ethnic  divisions:  40%  Arab,  18%  Paki- 
stani, 18%  Indian,  10%  Iranian 

Religion:  95%  Muslim 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  English  is 
commonly  used  as  second  language 

Life  expectancy:  72 
Literacy:  40% 

Labor  force:  104,000  (1983);  85%  non- 
Qatari  in  private  sector 

Government 

Official  name:  State  of  Qatar 

Type:  traditional  monarchy;  independence 

declared  in  1971 

Capital:  Doha 

Legal  system:  discretionary  system  of  law 
controlled  by  the  ruler,  although  civil 
codes  are  being  implemented;  Islamic  law 
is  significant  in  personal  matters;  a  consti- 
tution was  promulgated  in  1970 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  3 
September 

Branches:  executive — Amir  and  Council 

of  Ministers;  legislature — State  Advisory 

Council 

Government  leader:  Khalifa  bin  Hamad 

Al  THANI,  Amir  and  Prime  Minister 

(since  February  1972) 

Suffrage:  no  specific  provisions  for  suffrage 
laid  down 

Elections:  constitution  calls  for  elections 
for  part  of  State  Advisory  Council,  a 
consultative  body,  but  no  elections  have 
been  held 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  none 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  a  few 

small  clandestine  organizations 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  GCC,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAPEC,  QIC,  OPEC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 


202 


Reunion 


Economy 

GNP:  $6.4  billion;  $22,940  per  capita 

(1984) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural  gas, 
fish 

Agriculture:  farming  and  grazing  on  small 
scale;  commercial  fishing  increasing  in 
importance;  most  food  imported;  rice  and 
dates  staple  diet 

Major  industries:  oil  production  and 
refining;  crude  oil  production  averaged 
360,000  b/d  (1986);  oil  revenues  accrued 
$2.6  billion,  representing  85%  of  govern- 
ment revenue  (FY86  est.) 

Electric  power:  1,305,000  kW  capacity; 
4,000  million  kWh  produced,  13,180  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986),  of 
which  petroleum  accounted  for  $2.1  bil- 
lion 

Imports:  $1.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986) 

Budget:  revenues,  $2.8  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $3.1  billion  (FY86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.64  Qatar 
riyals=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  840  km  total;  490  km  bitumi- 
nous; 350  km  gravel;  undetermined  mile- 
age of  earth  tracks 

Pipelines:  crude  oil,  235  km;  natural  gas, 
400km 

Ports:  2  major  (Doha,  Musay'ld),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  4  total,  4  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  modern  system 
centered  in  Doha;  96,000  telephones  (37 
per  100  popl.);  1  Atlantic  Ocean  and  1 
Indian  Ocean  satellite  station;  1  Arab 
satellite  station  under  construction;  tropo- 
spheric  scatter  to  Bahrain;  radio-relay  to 
Saudi  Arabia;  submarine  cable  to  Bahrain 
and  UAE;  2  AM,  1  FM,  3  TV  stations 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Sea  Arm,  Air  Force, 
Police  Department 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  122,000; 
66,000  fit  for  military  service 


SAINT  DENIS 


UPort  8.im-Aiwlr*.  N^ 

Ocean 


Indian  Ocean 
See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,510  km2;  land  area:  2,500 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  201  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical,  but  moderates  with 
elevation;  cool  and  dry  from  May  to 
November,  hot  and  rainy  from  November 
to  April 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  and  mountainous; 
fertile  lowlands  along  coast 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 

crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  35% 

forest  and  woodland;  39%  other;  includes 

2%  irrigated 

Environment:  periodic  devastating 

cyclones 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  549,697  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.34% 

Nationality:  noun — Reunionese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Reunionese 

Ethnic  divisions:  most  of  the  population  is 
of  thoroughly  intermixed  ancestry  of 
French,  African,  Malagasy,  Chinese,  Paki- 
stani, and  Indian  origin 


203 


Reunion  (continued) 


Religion:  94%  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  French  (official);  Creole  widely 
used 

Literacy:  over  80%  among  younger  gener- 
ation 

Labor  force:  primarily  agricultural  work- 
ers; high  seasonal  unemployment 

Government 

Official  name:  Department  of  Reunion 

Type:  overseas  department  of  France; 
represented  in  French  Parliament  by  three 
deputies  and  two  senators 

Capital:  Saint-Denis 
Legal  system:  French  law 

Branches:  Reunion  is  administered  by  a 
Prefect  appointed  by  the  French  Minister 
of  Interior,  assisted  by  a  Secretary  General 
and  an  elected  36-man  General  Council; 
in  1974  France  created  an  elected  45- 
member  Regional  Assembly  to  coordinate 
economic  and  social  development  policies; 
in  1981  both  the  General  Council  and  the 
Regional  Assembly  received  greater  au- 
thority for  fiscal  policy 

Government  leader:  Jean  Anciaux,  Com- 
missioner of  the  Republic 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  last  municipal  and  General 
Council  elections  in  1983;  parliamentary 
election  June  1981;  Regional  Assembly 
election  February  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Reunion 
Communist  Party  (RCP),  Paul  Verges; 
Popular  Movement  for  the  Liberation  of 
Reunion,  Georges  Sinamale;  other  political 
candidates  affiliated  with  metropolitan 
French  parties,  which  do  not  maintain 
permanent  organizations  on  Reunion 

Voting  strength:  (parliamentary  election 
1981)  Union  for  French  Democracy — 
Rally  for  the  Republic  coalition  elected 
two  deputies;  the  Socialists  elected  one;  in 
the  1983  Regional  Assembly  election, 
leftist  parties  received  45.7%  of  the  vote 

Communists:  Communist  Party  small  but 
has  support  among  sugarcane  cutters  and 
the  minuscule  Popular  Movement  for  the 
Liberation  of  Reunion  (MPLR)  and  in  Le 
Port  District 


Member  of:  WFTU 


Economy 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — almost  entirely 
sugarcane,  small  amounts  of  vanilla  and 
perfume  plants;  food  crops — tropical  fruit 
and  vegetables,  manioc,  bananas,  corn, 
market  garden  produce,  some  tea,  tobacco, 
and  coffee;  food  crop  inadequate,  most 
food  needs  imported 

Major  industries:  12  sugar  processing 
mills,  rum  distilling  plants,  cigarette  fac- 
tory, 2  tea  plants,  fruit  juice  plant,  canning 
factory,  a  slaughterhouse,  and  several 
small  shops  producing  handicraft  items 

Electric  power:  180,000  kW  capacity;  394 
million  kWh  produced,  730  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $128  million  (f.o.b.,  1980);  90% 
sugar,  5%  rum  and  molasses,  4%  perfume 
essences,  1%  vanilla  and  tea 

Imports:  $871  million  (c.i.f.,  1980);  manu- 
factured goods,  food,  beverages,  tobacco, 
machinery  and  transportation  equipment, 
raw  materials,  and  petroleum  products 

Major  trade  partners:  France  and 
Mauritius 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-81),  $4.0  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.974  French 
francs=US$l  (31  October  1983) 

Fiscal  year:  probably  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,800  km  total;  2,200  km 
paved,  600  km  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
stabilized  earth 

Ports:  1  major  (Port  de  la  Pointe  des 
Galets  at  Le  Port) 

Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  adequate  system  for 
needs;  modern  open-wire  line  and  radio- 
relay  network;  principal  center  Saint- 
Denis;  radiocommunication  to  Comoros 
Islands,  France,  Madagascar;  new  radio- 
relay  route  to  Mauritius;  85,900  telephones 
(15.9  per  100  popl.);  3  AM,  13  FM  stations; 
2  TV  stations  with  17  relay  transmitters;  1 
Indian  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  144,000; 
75,000  fit  for  military  service;  6,000  reach 
military  age  (18)  annually 


Romania 


20O  fcm 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  237,500  km2;  land  area: 
230,340  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Oregon 

Land  boundaries:  2,969  km  total 
Coastline:  225  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Transylvania 
question  with  Hungary;  Bessarabia  ques- 
tion with  USSR 

Climate:  temperate;  cold,  cloudy  winters 
with  frequent  snow  and  fog;  sunny  sum- 
mers with  frequent  showers  and  thunder- 
storms 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  undulating  plains; 
some  hills  and  mountains 

Land  use:  43%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  19%  meadows  and  pastures;  28% 
forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  includes 
11%  irrigated 

Environment:  frequent  earthquakes  most 
severe  in  south  and  southwest;  geologic 
structure  and  climate  promote  landslides 

Special  notes:  controls  most  easily  travers- 
able  land  route  between  Balkans  and 
western  USSR 


Population:  22,936,503  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.44% 

Nationality:  noun — Romanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Romanian 

Ethnic  divisions:  89.1%  Romanian;  7.8% 
Hungarian;  1.5%  German;  1.6%  Ukrainian, 
Serb,  Croat,  Russian,  Turk,  and  Gypsy 

Religion:  80%  Romanian  Orthodox;  6% 

Roman  Catholic;  4%  Calvinist,  Lutheran, 

Jewish,  Baptist 

Language:  Romanian,  Hungarian,  German 

Infant  mortality  rate:  25.6/1,000  (1985) 

Life  expectancy:  men  67.0,  women  72.6 

Literacy:  98% 

Labor  force:  10.6  million;  37.1%  industry, 

28.9%  agriculture,  34.0%  other  nonagri- 

cultural  (1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  Republic  of  Roma- 
nia 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Bucharest 

Administrative  divisions:  40  counties;  city 
of  Bucharest  has  administrative  status 
equal  to  a  county 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  civil  law  system 
and  Communist  legal  theory  that  increas- 
ingly reflects  Romanian  traditions;  consti- 
tution adopted  1965;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Liberation  Day,  23 
August 

Branches:  Presidency;  Council  of  Minis- 
ters; Grand  National  Assembly,  under 
which  is  Office  of  Prosecutor  General  and 
Supreme  Court;  Council  of  State 

Government  leaders:  Nicolae 
CEAUS.ESCU,  President  of  the  Socialist 
Republic  (head  of  state;  since  1967);  Const- 
antin  DASCALESCU,  Prime  Minister 
(since  May  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  elections  held  every  five  years 
for  Grand  National  Assembly  deputies  and 
local  people's  councils;  last  election  held 
March  1985 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Communist 
Party  of  Romania  only  functioning  party, 
Nicolae  Ceaujescu,  Secretary  General 
(since  March  1965) 

Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  overall 
participation  reached  99.99%;  of  those 
registered  to  vote  (15,733,060),  97.73% 
voted  for  party  candidates 

Communists:  3,400,000  (November  1984) 

Member  of:  CEMA,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITC,  ITU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  Warsaw  Pact,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $123.7  billion  (1985),  $5,450  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate,  1.8%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  timber,  natural  gas, 
coal 

Agriculture:  net  exporter;  main  crops — 

corn,  wheat,  oilseed;  livestock- — cattle, 

hogs,  sheep;  consumer  and  food  supplies 

weak 

Fishing:  catch  243,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  mining,  forestry,  con- 
struction materials,  metal  production  and 
processing,  chemicals,  machine-building, 
food  processing 

Shortages:  energy,  iron  ore,  coking  coal, 
metallurgical  coke,  cotton  fibers,  natural 
rubber 

Crude  steel:  13.8  million  metric  tons 
produced,  608  kg  per  capita  (1985) 
Electric  power:  20,899,000  kW  capacity; 
72,500  million  kWh  produced,  3,160  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $12.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  32.0% 
machinery  and  equipment;  28.0%  fuels, 
minerals,  and  metals;  16.0%  manufactured 
consumer  goods;  12.0%  agricultural  mate- 
rials and  forestry  products;  12.0%  other 
(1984) 

Imports:  $10.4  billion  (f.o.b.  1985);  24.7% 
machinery  and  equipment;  52.6%  fuels, 
minerals,  and  metals;  10.8%  agricultural 
and  forestry  products;  4.2%  manufactured 
consumer  goods;  7.7%  other  (1984) 

Major  trade  partners:  $22.6  billion  in 
1984;  40%  non-Communist  countries,  60% 
Communist  countries  (1984) 


205 


Romania  (continued) 


Rwanda 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  15.6  Iei=US$l 
(November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  11,106  km  total;  10,589  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge,  472  km 
narrow  gauge,  45  km  broad  gauge;  3,113 
km  electrified,  2,712  km  double  track; 
government  owned  (1984) 

Highways:  72,799  km  total;  15,526  km 
concrete,  asphalt,  stone  block;  20,199  km 
asphalt  treated;  27,874  km  gravel,  crushed 
stone,  and  other  paved  surfaces;  9,200  km 
unpaved  roads  (1984) 

Inland  waterways:  1,724  km  (1984) 

Pipelines:  2,800  km  crude  oil;  1,429  km 
refined  products;  6,400  km  natural  gas 

Freight  carried:  rail— 289.3  million  metric 
tons,  75.2  billion  metric  ton/km;  high- 
way— 417.7  million  metric  tons,  7.3  billion 
metric  ton/km;  waterway — 17.21  million 
metric  tons,  2.5  billion  metric  ton/km 
(1984) 

Ports:  4  major  (Constanta,  Galati,  Braila, 
Mangalia),  7  minor;  principal  inland  ports 
are  Giurgiu,  Drobeta-Turnu  Severin,  and 
Orsova 

Civil  air:  70  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  160  total;  15  with  runways 
2,500  m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  37  AM,  30  FM,  35 
TV  stations;  3,910,000  TV  sets;  3,225,000 
receiver  sets;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Romanian  People's  Army, 
Security  Troops;  Patriotic  Guard,  Air  and 
Air  Defense  Forces,  Romanian  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,648,000;  4,780,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 218,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1985,  12.2  billion  lei; 
about  3.6%  of  total  budget 


Kagitumba 


See  reflonal  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  26,340  km2;  land  area:  24,950 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Maryland 

Land  boundaries:  877  km  total 

Climate:  temperate;  two  rainy  seasons 
(February  to  April,  November  to  January); 
mild  in  mountains  with  frost  and  snow 
possible 

Terrain:  mostly  grassy  uplands  and  hills; 
mountains  in  west 

Land  use:  29%  arable  land;  11%  perma- 
nent crops;  18%  meadows  and  pastures; 
10%  forest  and  woodland;  32%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  overgrazing; 
soil  exhaustion;  soil  erosion;  periodic 
droughts 

Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  6,811,336  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.53% 

Nationality:  noun — Rwandan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Rwandan 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  Hutu,  14%  Tutsi, 
1%  Twa  (Pygmoid) 

Religion:  65%  Catholic,  9%  Protestant,  1% 
Muslim;  indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  Kinyarwanda,  French  (official); 
Kiswahili  used  in  commercial  centers 


Infant  mortality  rate:  102/1,000(1985) 
Life  expectancy:  48 
Literacy:  37% 

Labor  force:  3.6  million  (1985);  91% 
agriculture,  2%  industry  and  commerce, 
7%  government  and  services 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Rwanda 

Type:  republic;  presidential  system  in 
which  military  leaders  hold  key  offices 

Capital:  Kigali 

Administrative  divisions:  10  prefectures, 
subdivided  into  143  communes 

Legal  system:  based  on  German  and 
Belgian  civil  law  systems  and  customary 
law;  judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in 
the  Supreme  Court;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  1  July 

Branches:  executive  (President, 
16-member  Cabinet);  unicameral  legisla- 
tive (National  Development  Council); 
judiciary  (4  senior  courts,  magistrates) 

Government  leader:  Maj.  Gen.  Juvenal 
HABYARIMANA,  President  and  Head  of 
State  (since  1973) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  national  elections,  including 
constitutional  referendum  and  presidential 
plebiscite,  held  December  1978;  National 
Development  Council  elected  and  Presi- 
dent reelected  in  December  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Revolutionary  Movement  for  Development 
(MRND),  General  Habyarimana  (officially 
a  development  movement,  not  a  party) 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  EAMA,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  OCAM,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.6  billion,  $270  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate,  5.5%  (1984  est.) 


206 


St.  Christopher  and  Nevis 


Natural  resources:  gold,  cassiterite,  wol- 
framite 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — mainly  coffee, 
tea,  some  pyrethrum;  main  food  crops — 
bananas,  cassava;  stock  raising;  self- 
sufficiency  declining;  country  imports 
foodstuffs 

Major  industries:  mining  of  cassiterite  (tin 
ore)  and  wolframite  (tungsten  ore),  tin 
factory,  cement  factory,  agricultural  proc- 
essing, and  production  of  beer,  soft  drinks, 
soap,  furniture,  shoes,  plastic  goods,  tex- 
tiles, cigarettes 

Electric  power:  42,000  kW  capacity;  110 
million  kWh  produced,  16  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $130.6  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est); 
mainly  coffee,  tea,  cassiterite,  wolframite, 
pyrethrum 

Imports:  $298.7  million  (c.i.f.,  1985  est.); 
textiles,  foodstuffs,  machines,  equipment, 
capital  goods,  steel,  petroleum  products, 
cement  and  construction  material 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  Belgium,  FRG, 
Kenya 

External  debt:  $225  million  (1983),  exter- 
nal debt  ratio  4.5%  (1983) 

Budget:  (1983  est.)  revenues,  $161.5  mil- 
lion; current  expenditures,  $164.3  million; 
development  expenditures,  $30.6  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  85.9  Rwanda 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  5,000  km  total;  460  km  paved, 
1,725  km  gravel  and/or  improved  earth, 
2,700  km  unimproved 

Inland  waterways:  Lac  Kivu  navigable  by 
shallow  draft  barges  and  native  craft 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  8  total,  8  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  fair  system  with 
low-capacity  radio-relay  system  centered 
on  Kigali;  6,600  telephones  (0.1  per  100 
popl.);  2  AM,  5  FM,  and  no  TV  stations; 
SYMPHONIE  satellite  station,  1  Indian 
Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  paramilitary,  Gendar- 
merie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,415,000;  725,000  fit  for  military  service; 
no  conscription 


Caribbean 
Sea 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  360  km2;  land  area:  360  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  135  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  subtropical  tempered  by  constant 
sea  breezes;  little  seasonal  temperature 
variation;  one  rainy  season  (May  to  No- 
vember) 

Terrain:  volcanic  with  mountainous 
interiors 

Land  use:  22%  arable  land;  17%  perma- 
nent crops;  3%  meadows  and  pastures; 
17%  forest  and  woodland;  41%  other 

Environment:  lies  within  Caribbean  hurri- 
cane belt 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  54,775  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.96% 

Ethnic  divisions:  mainly  of  black  African 
descent 

Nationality:  noun — Kittsian(s),  Nevisian(s); 
adjective — Kittsian,  Nevisian 

Religion:  Anglican,  other  Protestant  sects, 
Roman  Catholic 

Language:  English 
Literacy: 


207 


St.  Christopher 

and  Nevis  (continued) 


St.  Helena 


Labor  force:  20,000  (1981) 
Organized  labor:  6,700 

Government 

Official  name:  Federation  of  St.  Chris- 
topher and  Nevis 

Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth, recognizing  Elizabeth  II  as  Chief 
of  State 

Capital:  Basseterre,  St.  Christopher; 
Charlestown,  Nevis 

Administrative  divisions:  14  parishs 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  of  1960;  highest  judicial 
organ  is  Court  of  Appeal  of  Leeward  and 
Windward  Islands 

Branches:  legislative,  11 -member  popu- 
larly elected  House  of  Assembly;  execu- 
tive, Cabinet  headed  by  Prime  Minister; 
separate  Nevis  Island  Legislature  and 
Nevis  Island  Assembly  headed  by  Premier 

Government  leaders:  Dr.  Kennedy 
Alphonse  SIMMONDS,  Prime  Minister 
(since  1980);  Sir  Clement  ARRINDELL, 
Governor  General  (since  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  suffrage 

Elections:  at  least  every  five  years;  last 
election  held  June  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  St.  Chris- 
topher and  Nevis  Labor  Party  (SKNLP), 
Lee  Moore;  People's  Action  Movement 
(PAM),  Kennedy  Simmonds;  Nevis  Refor- 
mation Party  (NRP),  Simeon  Daniel 

Voting  strength:  (June  1984  election) 
House  of  Assembly — PAM,  6  seats; 
SKNLP,  2  seats;  NRP,  3  seats 

Communists:  none  known 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  IBRD,  IMF,  ISO,  OAS,  UN 

Economy 

GDP:  $66.7  million,  $1,250  per  capita; 
1.0%  real  growth  (1986  est.) 

Agriculture:  main  crops — sugar  on  St. 
Christopher,  cotton  on  Nevis 

Major  industries:  sugar  processing,  tour- 
ism, cotton,  salt,  copra 


Electric  power:  11,380  kW  capacity;  32 
million  kWh  produced,  800  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $30.6  million  (1983);  sugar 

Imports:  $47.3  million  (1983);  foodstuffs, 
manufactures,  fuel 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 50%  US, 
35%  UK;  imports— 21%  UK,  17%  Japan, 
11%  US  (1973) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im,  from  Western  (non-US)  countries 
(1970-81),  $15  million 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues,  $19  million; 
expenditures,  $26  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (December  1985) 

Communications 

Railroads:  58  km  0.760-meter  narrow 
gauge  on  St.  Christopher  for  sugarcane 

Highways:  300  km  total;  125  km  paved, 
125  km  otherwise  improved,  50  km  unim- 
proved earth 

Ports:  1  major — Basseterre,  St.  Chris- 
topher, and  1  minor — Charlestown,  Nevis 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  good  interisland 
VHF/UHF/SHF  radio  connections  and 
international  link  via  Antigua  and  Barbuda 
and  St.  Martin;  about  2,400  telephones  (5.0 
per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  4  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  St.  Christopher  and  Nevis 
Police  Force 


Ascension  and  Tristan 
da  Cunha  islands  are 
not  shown 


set  rt|ioi»l  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  310  km2;  land  area:  310  km2 

Comparative  area:  almost  twice  the  size 
of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  60  km 

_ 
Maritime  claims: 

Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  marine;  mild,  tempered 
by  trade  winds 

Terrain:  rugged,  volcanic;  small  scattered 
plateaus  and  plains 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures;  3%  forest 
and  woodland;  83%  other 
Environment:  very  few  perennial  streams 

Special  notes:  Ascension  is  major  relay 
station  for  cables  running  between  Europe 
and  South  Africa 

People 

Population:  8,524  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.54% 

Nationality:  noun — St.  Helenian(s);  adjec- 
tive— St.  Helenian 

Religion:  Anglican  majority;  also  Baptist, 
Seventh-Day  Adventist,  and  Roman 
Catholic 

Language:  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  22.37/1,000  (1982) 
Literacy:  probably  high 
Labor  force:  large  proportion  employed 
overseas 


208 


St.  Lucia 


Organized  labor:  St.  Helena  General 
Workers'  Union,  472  members;  10%  pro- 
fessional and  technical,  9%  mangement 
and  clerical,  5%  sales,  9%  farming  and 
fishing,  6%  transport,  17%  crafts,  10% 
service,  1%  security,  and  33%  other 

Government 

Official  name:  St.  Helena 
Type:  British  dependent  territory 
Capital:  Jamestown 

Administrative  divisions:  Ascension  and 

Triston  da  Cunha  are  dependencies  of  St. 

Helena 

Legal  system:  Constitution  in  effect  since 

1967;  Supreme  Court 

Branches:  Executive  Council,  12- member 
elected  Legislative  Council 

Government  leader:  Francis  BAKER, 
Governor  and  Commander  in  Chief  (since 
1984) 

Elections:  general  elections  held  in  Octo- 
ber 1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  St.  Helena 
Labor  Party,  G.  A.  O.  Thornton;  St.  Hel- 
ena Progressive  Party,  leader  unknown 

Voting  strength:  both  political  parties 
inactive  since  1976 

Communists:  probably  none 

Economy 

Natural  resources:  Ascension — sea  turtle 
and  sooty  tern  breeding  ground;  no 
minerals 

Agriculture:  maize,  potatoes,  vegetables; 
timber  production  being  developed; 
crawfishing  on  Tristan  da  Cunha 

Fishing:  214  metric  ton  catch  (1983) 

Major  industries:  crafts  (furniture, 
lacework,  fancy  woodwork) 

Electric  power:  9,800  kW  capacity;  8 
million  kWh  produced,  1,140  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  fish  (frozen  skipjack,  tuna,  salt- 
dried  skipjack),  handicrafts 

Imports:  food,  drink,  tobacco,  fuel  oils, 
animal  feed,  building  materials,  motor 
vehicles  and  parts,  machinery  and  parts 
(1981/82) 


Major  trade  partners:  imports — 59%  UK, 
29%  South  Africa 

Aid:  development  aid  from  UK — 7.5 
million  pounds  sterling  (1984  est.) 

Budget:  revenue,  5,656,518  pounds  ster- 
ling; expenditure,  5,681,933  pounds  ster- 
ling (1981/82) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  UK  currency; 
.70  pound  sterling=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  87  km  bitumen  sealed  roads, 
20  km  earth  roads  on  St.  Helena;  80  km 
sealed  on  Ascension;  2.7  km  sealed  on 
Tristan  da  Cunha 

Ports:  Jamestown  on  St.  Helena,  George- 
town on  Ascension,  and  St.  James  Bay 

Airfields:  none  on  St.  Helena;  airstrip 
(Miracle  Miles)  near  Georgetown  on  Ascen- 
sion; 1  permanent-surface  runway 
2,440-3,659  on  Tristan  da  Cunha 

Telecommunications:  1,500  radio  receiv- 
ers; no  television  service;  wireless  service 
to  Cape  Town  and  Ascension;  telephones 
310  (1982);  coaxial  cable  relay  point  be- 
tween South  Africa,  Portugal,  and  UK  at 
Ascension 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 

Military  manpower:  St.  Helena  Constabu- 
lary 


Sec  rt|lonil  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  620  km2;  land  area:  610  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-fifth  the  size 
of  Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  158  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine,  moderated  by 

northeast  trade  winds;  dry  season  from 

January  to  April,  rainy  season  from  May  to 

August 

Terrain:  mostly  mountainous  with  some 

broad,  fertile  valleys 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  20%  permanent 
crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures;  13% 
forest  and  woodland;  54%  other;  includes 
2%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes  and 
mild  volcanic  activity;  deforestation;  soil 
erosion 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  152,305  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.65% 
Nationality:  noun — St.  Lucian(s);  adjec- 
tive— St.  Lucian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90.3%  African  descent, 
5.5%  mixed,  3.2%  East  Indian,  0.8%  Cau- 
casian 

Religion:  90%  Roman  Catholic,  7%  Protes- 
tant, 3%  Church  of  England 


209 


St.  Lucia  (continued) 


St.  Vincent  and 
the  Grenadines 


Language:  English  (official),  French  patois 
Infant  mortality  rate:  27.4/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  68.3,  women  72.4 
Literacy:  78% 

Labor  force:  43,800  (1983  est);  43.4% 
agriculture,  38.9%  services,  17.7%  industry 
and  commerce;  30%  unemployment  (1984) 

Organized  labor:  20%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  St.  Lucia 

Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth, recognizing  Elizabeth  II  as  Chief 
of  State 

Capital:  Castries 

Administrative  divisions:  11  quarters 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  of  1960;  highest  judicial 
body  is  Court  of  Appeal  of  Leeward  and 
Windward  Islands 

Branches:  bicameral  legislative  (Senate, 
House  of  Assembly);  executive,  Cabinet 
headed  by  Prime  Minister 

Government  leaders:  John  G.  M.  COMP- 
TON,  Prime  Minister  (since  February 
1975);  Sir  Allen  LEWIS,  Governor  General 
(since  December  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  age  18 

Elections:  every  five  years;  last  election 
held  May  1982 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
Workers'  Party  (UWP),  John  Compton;  St. 
Lucia  Labor  Party  (SLP),  Julian  Hunte; 
Progressive  Labor  Party  (PLP),  George 
Odium 

Voting  strength:  (1982  election)  House  of 
Assembly— UWP,  14  seats;  SLP,  2  seats; 
PLP,  1  seat 

Communists:  negligible 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  NAM,  OAS, 
PAHO,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $148.1  million  (1984),  $1,220  per 
capita;  5.8%  real  GDP  growth  (1986  est.); 
average  annual  inflation  rate  2.4%  (1985) 


Natural  resources:  forests,  beaches,  miner- 
als (pumice),  mineral  springs 

Agriculture:  bananas,  coconuts,  sugar, 
cocoa,  spices 

Major  industries:  garments,  electronic 
components,  beverages,  corrugated  boxes, 
tourism,  lime  processing,  tropical  agricul- 
ture 

Shortages:  food,  machinery,  capital  goods 

Electric  power:  19,025  kW  capacity;  80 
million  kWh  produced,  650  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $49.7  million  (f.o.b.,  1983); 
bananas,  cocoa 

Imports:  $106.8  million  (c.i.f.,  1983); 
foodstuffs,  machinery  and  equipment, 
fertilizers,  petroleum  products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 58%  UK, 
16%  US,  24%  CARICOM;  imports— 37% 
US,  13%  UK,  17%  CARICOM,  9%  Trin- 
idad and  Tobago  (1984  est.) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  ODA  and 
OOF,  Western  (non-US)  countries 
(1970-81),  $34  million 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues,  $61  million; 
expenditures,  $64  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (August  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  760  km  total;  500  km  paved; 
260  km  otherwise  improved 

Ports:  1  major  (Castries),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439 

Telecommunications:  fully  automatic 
telephone  system  with  9,500  telephones 
(8.0  per  100  popl.);  direct  radio-relay  link 
with  Martinique  and  St.  Vincent  and  the 
Grenadines;  interisland  troposcatter  link  to 
Barbados;  3  AM  stations,  1  cable  TV 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  St.  Lucia  Police  Force 


10km 


Chateaubelai 


KINGSTOW 


'Georgetown 

Saint 
Vincent 


Caribbean 
Sea 


Caribbean 

Sea 


T  Canouan 


, 

'Union  Island 
Sec  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  340  km2;  land  area:  340  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  84  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  little  seasonal  tempera- 
ture variation;  one  rainy  season  (May  to 
November) 

Terrain:  volcanic,  mountainous 

Land  use:  38%  arable  land;  12%  perma- 
nent crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures; 
41%  forest  and  woodland;  3%  other;  in- 
cludes 3%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  hurricanes; 
Soufriere  volcano  a  constant  threat 

Special  notes:  islands  of  the  Grenadines 
group  are  divided  politically  with  Grenada 

People 

Population:  131,215  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  4.04% 

Nationality:  noun — St.  Vincentian(s)  or 
Vincentian(s);  adjectives — St.  Vincentian  or 
Vincentian 

Ethnic  divisions:  mainly  of  black  African 
descent;  remainder  mixed,  with  some 
white,  East  Indian,  Carib  Indian 

Religion:  Anglican,  Methodist,  Roman 
Catholic,  Seventh-Day  Adventist 

Language:  English,  some  French  patois 


210 


San  Marino 


Literacy:  82% 

Labor  force:  67,000  (1984  est);  about  35% 
unemployed  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  10%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  St.  Vincent  and  the  Grena- 
dines 

Type:  independent  state  within  Common- 
wealth, recognizing  Elizabeth  II  as  Chief 
of  State 

Capital:  Kingstown 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  of  1960;  highest  judicial 
body  is  Court  of  Appeal  of  Leeward  and 
Windward  Islands 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature 
(13-member  elected  House  of  Representa- 
tives and  6-member  appointed  Senate), 
judiciary  (Supreme  Court) 

Government  leaders:  James  (Son)  MITCH- 
ELL, Prime  Minister  (since  1984);  Sir 
Joseph  EUSTACE,  Governor  General 
(since  February  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 

Elections:  every  five  years;  last  held  18 
July  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  New  Demo- 
cratic Party  (NDP),  James  (Son)  Mitchell; 
St.  Vincent  Labor  Party  (SVLP),  Vincent 
Beach  and  Hudson  Tannis;  United     . 
People's  Movement  (UPM),  Oscar  Allen; 
Movement  for  National  Unity  (MNU), 
Ralph  Gonsalves 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  House  of 
Assembly— NDP,  9  seats;  SVLP,  4  seats 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IMF,  IMO,  OAS,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  $103  million  (1985),  $850  per  capita; 
7%  real  growth  (1986  est.) 

Agriculture:  bananas,  arrowroot 
Major  industries:  food  processing 

Electric  power:  14,440  kW  capacity;  31 
million  kWh  produced,  300  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 


Exports:  $42.0  million  (f.o.b.,  1983); 
bananas,  arrowroot,  copra 

Imports:  $64.9  million  (c.i.f.,  1983);  food- 
stuffs, machinery  and  equipment,  chemi- 
cals and  fertilizers,  minerals  and  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 32%  UK, 
57%  CARICOM,  34%  Trinidad  and 
Tobago  (1983);  imports  11%  UK,  33%  US, 
32%  CARICOM,  24%  Trinidad  and 
Tobago,  6%  Canada  (1983  est.) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  ODA  and 
OOF,  from  Western  (non-US)  countries 
(1970-81),  $25  million 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues,  $32  million; 
expenditures,  $34  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.70  East 
Caribbean  dollars=US$l  (August  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  about  1,000  km  total;  300  km 
paved;  400  km  improved;  300  km  unim- 
proved 

Ports:  1  major  (Kingstown),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  6  total,  6  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  1  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  islandwide  fully 
automatic  telephone  system  with  6,500  sets 
(4.6  per  100  popl.);  VHF/UHF  interisland 
links  to  Barbados  and  the  Grenadines;  new 
SHF  links  to  Grenada  and  St.  Lucia;  4  AM 
and  1  FM  stations;  St.  Vincentian-owned 
cable  television  system 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  St.  Vincent  and  the 
Grenadines  Police  Force 


2km 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  60  km2;  land  area:  60  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Land  boundary:  34  km  with  Italy 

Climate:  Mediterranean;  mild  to  cool 
winters;  warm,  sunny  summers 

Terrain:  rugged  mountains 

Land  use:  17%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  83%  other 

Environment:  dominated  by  the  Appeni- 
nes 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  world's  smallest 
republic;  enclave  of  Italy 

People 

Population:  22,791  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.86% 

Nationality:  noun — Sanmarinese  (sing,  and 

pi.);  adjective — Sanmarinese 

Religion:  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Italian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  9.6/1,000  (1983) 

Literacy:  97% 

Labor  force:  about  4,300 

Organized  labor:  Democratic  Federation 
of  Sanmarinese  Workers  (affiliated  with 
ICFTU)  has  about  1,800  members; 
Communist-dominated  General  Federation 
of  Labor,  1,400  members 


211 


San  Marino  (continued) 


Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  San  Marino 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  San  Marino 

Administrative  divisions:  San  Marino  is 

divided  into  9  castles — Acquaviva,  Borgo 

Maggiore,  Chiesanuova,  Domagnano, 

Faetano,  Fiorentino,  Monte  Giardino,  San 

Marino,  Serravalle 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system 
with  Italian  law  influences;  electoral  law  of 
1926  serves  some  of  the  functions  of  a 
constitution;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Anniversary  of  the 
Liberation  of  the  Republic,  5  February 

Branches:  the  Grand  and  General  Council 
is  the  legislative  body  elected  by  popular 
vote;  its  60  members  serve  five-year  terms; 
Council  in  turn  elects  two  Captains-Regent 
who  exercise  executive  power  for  term  of 
six  months,  the  Congress  of  State  whose 
members  head  government  administrative 
departments,  and  the  Council  of  Twelve, 
the  supreme  judicial  body;  actual  execu- 
tive power  is  wielded  by  the  Secretary  of 
State  for  Foreign  Affairs  and  the  Secretary 
of  State  for  Internal  Affairs 

Government  leaders:  Gabriele  GATTI 
(Christian  Democrat),  Secretary  of  State 
for  Foreign  and  Political  Affairs  and  for 
Information  (since  July  1986);  Alvaro 
SELVA  (Communist),  Secretary  of  State 
for  Internal  Affairs  and  Justice  (since  July 
1978);  Gabriele  GATTI  (Christian  Demo- 
crat), Secretary  of  State  for  Budget,  Fi- 
nance, and  Planning  (since  July  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  (since  1960) 

Elections:  elections  to  the  Grand  and 
General  Council  required  at  least  every 
five  years;  last  election  was  held  29  May 
1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Christian 
Democratic  Party  (DCS),  Clara  Boscaglia; 
Social  Democratic  Party  (PSDS),  Alvaro 
Casali;  Socialist  Party  (PSS),  Remy  Gi- 
acomini;  Communist  Party  (PCS),  Gilberto 
Ghiotti;  Unitary  Socialist  Party  (PSU), 
Emilio  Delia  Balda;  Committee  for  the 
Defense  of  the  Republic  (CDR),  leader 
unknown 


Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  42.1% 
DCS,  24.4%  PCS,  14.8%  PSS,  13.9%  PSU, 
2.9%  PSDS 

Communists:  about  300  members;  the 

PCS,  in  conjunction  with  the  PSS,  PSU, 

and  PSDS,  has  led  the  government  since 

1978 

Other  political  parties  or  pressure 

groups:  political  parties  influenced  by 

policies  of  their  counterparts  in  Italy 

Member  of:  ICJ,  International  Institute  for 
Unification  of  Private  Law,  International 
Relief  Union,  ITU,  IRC,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WTO;  observer  status  in 

NAM 

Economy 

Principal  economic  activities  of  San  Mar- 
ino are  farming,  livestock  raising,  light 
manufacturing,  and  tourism;  the  largest 
share  of  government  revenue  is  derived 
from  the  sale  of  postage  stamps  throughout 
the  world  and  from  payments  by  the 
Italian  Government  in  exchange  for  Italy's 
monopoly  in  retailing  tobacco,  gasoline, 
and  a  few  other  goods;  main  problem  is 
finding  additional  funds  to  finance  badly 
needed  water  and  electric  power  systems 
expansions 
Natural  resources:  building  stones 

Agriculture:  wheat,  grapes,  other  grains, 
fruits,  vegetables,  animal  feedstuff's, 
cheese,  livestock  hides 

Electric  power:  supplied  by  Italy 

Manufacturing:  cotton  textiles,  brick  and 
tile  production,  cement,  pottery,  tanned 
hides,  paper,  candy,  baked  goods,  Moscato 
wine,  gold  and  silver  souvenirs 

Foreign  transactions:  dominated  by 
tourism  (in  summer  months  about  25,000 
foreigners  visit  every  day);  remittances 
from  Sanmarinese  abroad  also  represent  an 
important  net  foreign  inflow;  commodity 
trade  consists  primarily  of  exchanging 
building  stone,  lime,  wood,  chestnuts, 
wheat,  wine,  baked  goods,  hides,  and 
ceramics  for  a  wide  variety  of  consumer 
manufactures 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1337.0  Italian 
lire=US$l  (January  1987) 


Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  about  104  km 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  none 

Telecommunications:  automatic  telephone 
system  serving  11,700  telephones  (34.2  per 
100  popl.);  no  radiobroadcasting  or  televi- 
sion facilities;  radio-relay  and  cable  links 
into  Italian  networks 


212 


Sao  Tome  and  Principe 


50km 


//ha  do . 
Principe1 

Pedras  , 

Tinhosas  • 


•Ilh4u  Bombom 
;!jSanto  Antonio 

*tlh6u  Caro$o 


Gulf 

of 

Guinea 


llheu  das  Cabra: 
SAO  TOME 


llhade 
Sao  Tome 

VMa 

Gago  Coutinhi 
See  regional  map  VII 


Santa  Cruz 


Geography 

Total  area:  960  km2;  land  area:  960  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 
size  of  Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  209  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 
archipelagic  baselines) 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  one  rainy 
season  (October  to  May) 

Terrain:  volcanic,  mountainous 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  36%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  62%  other 

Environment:  deforestation;  soil  erosion 
Special  notes:  smallest  country  in  Africa 


Population:  114,025  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.89% 

Nationality:  noun — Sao  Tomean(s);  adjec- 
tive— Sao  Tomean 

Ethnic  divisions:  mestico,  angolares  (de- 
scendents  of  Angolan  slaves),  forros  (de- 
scendents  of  freed  slaves),  servicais  (con- 
tract laborers  from  Angola,  Mozambique, 
and  Cape  Verde),  tongas  (children  of 
servicais  born  on  the  islands),  and  Europe- 
ans (primarily  Portuguese) 

Religion:  Roman  Catholic,  Evangelical 
Protestant,  Seventh-Day  Adventist 

Language:  Portuguese  (official) 


Infant  mortality  rate:  63/1,000  (1983) 
Literacy:  est.  50% 

Labor  force:  (1981)  21,096;  most  of  popu- 
lation engaged  in  subsistence  agriculture 
and  fishing;  some  unemployment;  labor 
shortages  on  plantations  and  for  skilled 
workers 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  Republic  of 
Sao  Tome  and  Principe 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Sao  Tome 

Administrative  divisions:  seven  counties 

Legal  system:  based  on  Portuguese  law 
system  and  customary  law;  constitution 
adopted  December  1975  and  approved  by 
National  People's  Assembly  on  15  Decem- 
ber 1982;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holidays:  Martyr's  Day,  4  Febru- 
ary; Independence  Day,  12  July;  Armed 
Forces  Day,  first  week  in  September 
(varies);  Farmer's  Day,  30  September 

Branches:  President  heads  the  government 
assisted  by  a  cabinet  of  ministers;  unicam- 
eral  legislature  (elected  National  People's 
Assembly) 

Government  leader:  Dr.  Manuel  Pinto  DA 
COSTA,  President  (since  1975) 

Suffrage:  universal  for  age  18  and  over 

Elections:  da  Costa  reelected  by  Popular 
Assembly  May  1980  and  September  1985; 
Assembly  elections  in  August  and  Septem- 
ber 1985 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Movement 
for  the  Liberation  of  Sao  Tome  and  Prin- 
cipe (MLSTP),  Manuel  Pinto  da  Costa 

Communists:  no  Communist  party,  proba- 
bly a  few  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de 
facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $30  million  (1981  est.);  per  capita 
income  $260  (1983  est.);  average  annual 
growth  rate  —10%  (1981  est.);  average 
inflation  rate  10%  (1981) 


Natural  resources:  agricultural  products, 
fish 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — cocoa,  copra, 
coconuts,  coffee,  palm  oil,  bananas 

Fishing:  catch  4,050  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  light  construction,  shirts, 
soap,  beer,  fisheries,  shrimp  processing 

Electric  power:  4,300  kW  capacity;  3 
million  kWh  produced  (1986),  27  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $8.8  million  (f.o.b.,  1981  est.); 
mainly  cocoa  (90%),  copra  (7%),  coffee, 
palm  oil 

Imports:  $20.0  million  (f.o.b.,  1981  est.); 
food  products,  machinery  and  electrical 
equipment,  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  main  partner  Neth- 
erlands, followed  by  Portugal,  US,  and 
FRG 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-81),  $583  million;  US 
(FY77-85),  $3.7  million;  Communist  coun- 
tries (1970-85),  $23  million 

Budget:  (1981  est.)  central  government 
budget  $22.0  million;  (1979  est.)  revenues, 
$15.7  million;  current  expenditures,  $10.4 
million;  capital  expenditures,  $9.1  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  46.2051 
dobras=US$l  (December  1984) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  300  km,  of  which  two-thirds  is 
paved;  roads  on  Principe  are  mostly 
unpaved  and  in  need  of  repair 

Ports:  1  major  (Sao  Tome),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  2  total,  2  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways  1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  minimal  system; 
2,200  telephones  (2.0  per  100  popl.);  1  AM, 
2  FM,  no  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Navy 


213 


Saudi  Arabia 


Persian 
GuH 

d  Dammim 
•  > 
At  Hutuf 


See  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,149,690  km2;  land  area: 
2,149,690km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-third  the 
size  of  US 

Land  boundaries:  4,537  km  total 
Coastline:  2,510  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  18  nm 
Continental  shelf:  not  specific 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  no  defined 
boundaries  with  Oman,  PDRY,  UAE, 
YAR;  shares  Neutral  Zone  with  Iraq 

Climate:  harsh,  dry  desert  with  great 
extremes  of  temperature 

Terrain:  mostly  uninhabited,  sandy  desert 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  39%  meadows  and  pastures; 
1%  forest  and  woodland;  59%  other;  in- 
cludes NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  no  perennial  rivers  or 
permanent  water  bodies;  developing  exten- 
sive coastal  seawater  desalination  facilities; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  extensive  coastlines  on 
Persian  Gulf  and  Red  Sea  provide  great 
leverage  on  shipping  (especially  crude  oil) 
through  Persian  Gulf  and  Suez  Canal 


Population:  14,904,794  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  4.95% 


Nationality:  noun — Saudi(s);  adjective — 
Saudi  or  Saudi  Arabian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  Arab,  10%  Afro- 
Asian 

Religion:  100%  Muslim 

Language:  Arabic 

Infant  mortality  rate:  118/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  54 

Literacy:  52% 

Labor  force:  about  one-third  (one-half 
foreign)  of  population;  45%  commerce, 
services,  government,  and  other;  30% 
agriculture;  15%  construction;  5%  industry; 
5%  oil  and  mining 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Saudi  Arabia 

Type:  monarchy 

Capital:  Riyadh 

Administrative  divisions:  14  provinces 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law,  sev- 
eral secular  codes  have  been  introduced; 
commercial  disputes  handled  by  special 
committees;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  23  September 

Branches:  King  rules  in  consultation  with 
royal  family  and  Council  of  Ministers 

Government  leader:  FAHD  bin  'Abd 
al-'Aziz  Al  Sa'ud,  King  and  Prime  Minister 
(since  1982) 

Communists:  negligible 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GCC,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  International 
Maritime  Satellite  Organization, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council,  NAM,  OAPEC,  OIC, 
OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $133.6  billion  (FY85),  $9,920  per 
capita;  annual  growth  in  nonoil  GDP  in 
constant  1969/70  prices  about  7% 
(1981-84) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  natural  gas,  iron 
ore,  gold,  copper 


Agriculture:  dates,  grains,  livestock;  not 
self-sufficient  in  food  except  wheat 

Major  industries:  crude  oil  production  5.0 
million  b/d  (1986);  oil  revenue  payments 
to  Saudi  Arabian  Government,  $15  billion 
(FY86);  petroleum  refining,  basic  petro- 
chemicals, cement  production  and  small 
steel-rolling  mill;  several  other  light  indus- 
tries, including  factories  producing  deter- 
gents, plastic  products,  furniture 

Electric  power:  20,005,000  kW  capacity; 
43,810  million  kWh  produced,  3,800  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $37  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  95% 
petroleum  and  petroleum  products 

Imports:  $34  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  manufac- 
tured goods,  transportation  equipment, 
construction  materials,  and  processed  food 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports  and  reex- 
ports—Japan 32%,  US  6%,  Bahrain  5%, 
Italy  4%;  imports— US  21%,  Japan  18%, 
Italy  8%,  FRG  8%  (1985) 

Budget:  (FY87  proposed)  appropriations, 
$31  billion;  expenditures,  $45  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.74  Saudi 
riyals=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year  as  of  1  January 
1987  (previously  followed  Islamic  calendar 
months  Rajab  through  Jumada  II) 

Communications 

Railroads:  886  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge 

Highways:  67,000  km  total;  28,000  km 
bituminous,  39,000  km  gravel  and  im- 
proved earth 

Pipelines:  6,400  km  crude  oil;  150  km 
refined  products;  2,200  km  natural  gas, 
includes  1,600  km  of  natural  gas  liquids 

Ports:  7  major  (Jiddah  or  Jeddah,  Ad 
DammSm,  Ras  Tanura,  Jlzan,  Al  Jubayl, 
Yanbu'  al  Bahr,  Yanbu'  a?  SJnS'lyah),  17 
minor 

Civil  air:  191  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  202  total,  174  usable;  60  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  11  with 
runways  over  3,659  m,  26  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  98  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


214 


Senegal 


Telecommunications:  good  system  exists, 
major  expansion  program  completed  with 
extensive  microwave  and  coaxial  cable 
systems;  1,624,000  telephones  (14.1  per  100 
popl.);  21  AM,  2  FM,  63  TV  stations;  2 
Atlantic  and  2  Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT 
stations,  1  ARABSAT  satellite  control 
station;  radio-relay  to  Bahrain,  Jordan, 
Kuwait,  Qatar,  UAE,  and  Sudan;  coaxial 
cable  to  Kuwait;  submarine  cable  to 
Djibouti 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Saudi  Arabian  Land  Forces, 
Royal  Saudi  Naval  Forces,  Royal  Saudi  Air 
Force,  Royal  Saudi  Air  Defense  Force, 
Saudi  Arabian  National  Guard,  Coast 
Guard  and  Frontier  Forces,  Special  Secu- 
rity Force,  Public  Security  Force,  Special 
Emergency  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,688,000;  3,209,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 154,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


'  Src  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  196,190  km2;  land  area: 
192,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  South 
Dakota 

Land  boundaries:  2,680  km  total 
Coastline:  531  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with  The 
Gambia  is  indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  rainy  season 
(December  to  April)  has  strong  southeast 
winds;  dry  season  (May  to  November) 
dominated  by  hot,  dry  harmattan  wind 

Terrain:  generally  low,  rolling,  plains 
rising  to  foothills  in  southeast 

Land  use:  27%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  30%  meadows  and  pastures;  31% 
forest  and  woodland;  12%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  lowlands  seasonally  flooded; 
deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil  erosion; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  The  Gambia  is  almost  an 
enclave 


Population:  7,064,025  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.01% 

Nationality:  noun — Senegalese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Senegalese 

Ethnic  divisions:  36%  Wolof,  17%  Fulani, 
17%  Serer,  9%  Toucouleur,  9%  Diola,  9% 
Mandingo,  1%  European  and  Lebanese 

Religion:  92%  Muslim,  6%  indigenous 
beliefs,  2%  Christian  (mostly  Roman  Cath- 
olic) 

Language:  French  (official);  Wolof,  Pulaar, 
Diola,  Mandingo 

Infant  mortality:  112/1,000 
Life  expectancy:  43 
Literacy:  10% 

Labor  force:  2,509,000;  77%  subsistence 
agricultural  workers;  175,000  wage  earn- 
ers— 40%  private  sector,  60%  government 
and  parapublic 

Organized  labor:  majority  of  wage-labor 
force  represented  by  unions;  however, 
dues-paying  membership  very  limited; 
major  confederation  is  National  Confeder- 
ation of  Senegalese  Labor  (CNTS),  an 
affiliate  of  governing  party 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Senegal 

Type:  republic  under  multiparty  demo- 
cratic rule;  (early  in  1982,  Senegal  and 
The  Gambia  formed  a  loose  confederation 
named  Senegambia,  which  calls  for  the 
eventual  integration  of  their  armed  forces 
and  economic  cooperation) 

Capital:  Dakar 

Administrative  divisions:  10  regions, 
subdivided  into  28  departments,  99  arron- 
dissements 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system;  constitution  adopted  1960,  revised 
1963,  1970,  and  1981;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  in  Supreme  Court,  which 
also  audits  the  government's  accounting 
office;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day, 

4  April 


215 


Senegal  (continued) 


Seychelles 


Branches:  government  dominated  by  the 
President;  unicameral  legislature  (120- 
member  National  Assembly),  elected  for 
five  years;  President  elected  for  five-year 
term  by  universal  suffrage;  judiciary 
headed  by  Supreme  Court,  with  members 
appointed  by  President 

Government  leaders:  Abdou  DIOUF, 
President  (since  January  1981) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  presidential  and  legislative 
elections  held  February  1983;  Socialist 
Party  holds  111  of  120  seats 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Socialist 
Party  (PS),  Abdou  Diouf;  Senegalese  Dem- 
ocratic Party  (PDS),  Abdoulaye  Wade;  13 
other  small  uninfluential  parties 

Communists:  small  number  of  Commu- 
nists and  sympathizers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  stu- 
dents, teachers,  labor,  Muslim  Brother- 
hoods 

Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  CEAO,  KAMA, 
ECA,  ECOWAS,  EIB  (associate),  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  OCAM, 
QIC,  OMVS  (Organization  for  the  Devel- 
opment of  the  Senegal  River  Valley),  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.3  billion,  $350  per  capita;  real 
growth  rate  3.8%  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  fish,  phosphates 

Agriculture:  peanuts  (primary  cash  crop), 
millet,  sorghum,  manioc,  maize,  rice, 
livestock;  deficit  production  of  food 

Fishing:  catch  230,000  metric  tons  (1984); 
exports  $120  million  (1984) 

Major  industries:  fishing,  agricultural 
processing  plants,  light  manufacturing, 
mining 

Electric  power:  187,000  kW  capacity;  737 
million  kWh  produced,  105  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $525  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  pea- 
nuts and  peanut  products,  phosphate  rock, 
fish,  petroleum  products  (reexport) 


Imports:  $805  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  food, 
consumer  goods,  machinery,  transport 
equipment,  petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  other  EC, 
and  franc  zone 

Budget:  (1984/85)  public  revenues,  $467 
million;  current  expenditures,  $489  mil- 
lion; capital  expenditures,  $75  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  about  331.24 
Communaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,034  km  1.000-meter  gauge; 
70  km  double  track 

Highways:  13,898  km  total;  3,461  km 
paved,  6,741  km  gravel  or  graded  earth, 
3,696  km  of  unimproved  roads 

Inland  waterways:  1,505  km 
Ports:  1  major  (Dakar),  2  minor 
Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  25  total,  21  usable;  10  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  16  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  above-average 
urban  system,  using  radio-relay  and  cable; 
40,200  telephones  (0.6  per  100  popl.);  8 
AM  ,  no  FM  stations;  1  TV  station;  3 
submarine  cables;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satel- 
lite station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,498,000;  782,000  fit  for  military  service; 
80,000  reach  military  age  (18)  annually 


300km 


VICTORIA*-^ " 


Amirante 
Isles 


Mahe 
Island 


Indian  Ocean 


Aldabra 
islands 


Cosmoledo 
Group 


SttrefionilmipVII 


Farquhar 
...    Group 


Geography 

Total  area:  280  km2;  land  area:  270  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one  and  one-half 
times  the  size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  491  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  marine;  humid;  cooler 
season  during  southeast  monsoon  (late  May 
to  September);  warmer  season  during 
northwest  monsoon  (March  to  May) 

Terrain:  Marie  Group  is  granitic,  narrow 

coastal  strip,  rocky,  hilly;  others  are  coral, 

flat,  elevated  reefs,  no  fresh  water,  mostly 

uninhabited 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  18%  permanent 

crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  18% 

forest  and  woodland;  60%  other 

Environment:  lies  outside  the  cyclone  belt, 
so  severe  storms  are  rare;  short  droughts 
possible;  40  granitic  and  about  50  coralline 
islands 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  67,552  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.52% 

Nationality:  noun — Seychellois  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Seychelles 


216 


Ethnic  divisions:  Seychellois  (mixture  of 
Asians,  Africans,  Europeans) 
Religion:  90%  Roman  Catholic,  8%  Angli- 
can, 2%  other 

Language:  English  and  French  (official); 
Creole 

Infant  mortality  rate:  26/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  66 
Literacy:  60% 

Labor  force:  1984  (est.)  formal  employ- 
ment (all  sectors) — 38.4  government,  30.7% 
parastatal,  30.8%  private;  formal  employ- 
ment (by  sector) — 49.0%  industry  and 
commerce,  39.0%  services,  11.5%  agricul- 
ture, forestry,  and  fishing 

Organized  labor:  3  major  trade  unions 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Seychelles 
Type:  republic;  member  of  the  Common- 
wealth 

Capital:  Victoria,  Marie  Island 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law,  French  civil  law,  and  customary  law 

National  holidays:  5  and  29  June 

Branches:  President,  Council  of  Ministers, 
People's  Assembly 

Government  leader:  France  Albert  RENE, 
President  (since  June  1979) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  general  election  held  June  1979 
gave  98%  approval  to  Rene  as  only  presi- 
dential candidate  on  yes/no  ballot;  re- 
elected  in  June  1984  with  92%  of  vote 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Rene,  who 
heads  the  Seychelles  People's  Progressive 
Front,  came  to  power  by  a  military  coup 
in  June  1977;  until  then  he  had  been 
Prime  Minister  in  an  uneasy  coalition  with 
then  President  James  Mancham,  who 
headed  the  Seychelles  Democratic  Party; 
Rene  banned  the  Seychelles  Democratic 
Party  in  March  1978  and  announced  a 
new  constitution  in  March  1979  that 
turned  the  country  into  a  one-party  state 

Communists:  negligible,  although  some 
Cabinet  ministers  espouse  pro-Soviet  line 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  trade 
unions,  Roman  Catholic  Church 


Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de 
facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL,  NAM,  OAU,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $175  million,  $2,670  per  capita,  real 
growth  rate  6.0%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  fish,  copra,  spices 

Agriculture:  islands  depend  largely  on 
coconut  production  and  export  of  copra; 
cinnamon,  vanilla,  and  patchouli  (used  for 
perfumes)  are  other  cash  crops;  food 
crops — small  quantities  of  sweet  potatoes, 
cassava,  sugarcane,  and  bananas;  islands 
not  self-sufficient  in  foodstuffs  and  the 
bulk  of  the  supply  must  be  imported;  fish 
is  an  important  food  source 

Major  industries:  tourism  is  largest  indus- 
try; processing  of  coconut  and  vanilla, 
fishing,  small-scale  manufacture  of  con- 
sumer goods,  coir  rope  factory,  tea  factory 

Electric  power:  25,000  kW  capacity;  59 
million  kWh  produced,  880  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $4.5  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  fish, 
copra,  cinnamon  bark 

Imports:  $90  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  food,  tobacco,  beverages, 
machinery  and  transport  equipment,  and 
petroleum  products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Pakistan, 
France,  Reunion,  UK,  Mauritius;  im- 
ports— Bahrain,  UK,  South  Africa,  Si- 
ngapore, Japan,  France 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1978-84),  $232  million;  US 
(FY78-85),  $14  million;  Communist  coun- 
tries (1970-85),  $42  million 

Budget:  (1984)  revenues,  $61  million; 
grants,  $4  million;  current  expenditures, 
$64  million;  capital  expenditures,  $11 
million;  net  lending,  $3.5  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  5.99  Seychelles 
rupees=US$l  (January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 


Highways:  282  km  total;  145  km  bitumi- 
nous, 137  km  crushed  stone  or  earth 

Ports:  1  port  (Victoria);  development 
underway  will  double  capacity 

Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  14  total,  14  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  direct  radio  com- 
munications with  adjacent  islands  and 
African  coastal  countries;  9,100  telephones 
(13.6  per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  no  FM  stations; 
1  TV  station;  1  Indian  Ocean  satellite 
station;  USAF  tracking  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Militia 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  16,000; 
8,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $10  million,  10.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


217 


Sierra  Leone 


Island 

North  Atlantic  Ocean 
See  reflonil  mip  VII          Sulima' 


Geography 

Total  area:  71,740  km2;  land  area:  71,620 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
South  Carolina 

Land  boundaries:  933  km  total 
Coastline:  402  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  summer 
rainy  season  (May  to  December);  winter 
dry  season  (December  to  April) 

Terrain:  coastal  belt  of  mangrove  swamps, 
wooded  hill  country,  upland  plateau, 
mountains  in  east 

Land  use:  23%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  31%  meadows  and  pastures;  29% 
forest  and  woodland;  15%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  extensive  mangrove  swamps 
hinder  access  to  sea;  deforestation;  soil 
degradation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  3,754,088  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.16% 

Nationality:  noun — Sierra  Leonean(s); 
adjective — Sierra  Leonean 

Ethnic  divisions:  over  99%  native  African 
(30%  Temne,  30%  Mende,  2%  Creole),  rest 
European  and  Asian;  13  tribes 


Religion:  30%  Muslim,  30%  indigenous 
beliefs,  10%  Christian,  30%  other  or  none 

Language:  English  (official);  regular  use 
limited  to  literate  minority;  principal 
vernaculars  are  Mende  in  south  and 
Temne  in  north;  Krio  is  the  language  of 
the  resettled  exslave  population  of  the 
Freetown  area  and  is  lingua  franca 

Life  expectancy:  46 
Literacy:  about  15% 

Labor  force:  about  1.5  million;  most  of 
population  engages  in  subsistence  agricul- 
ture; only  small  minority,  some  65,000, 
earn  wages 

Organized  labor:  35%  of  wage  earners 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Sierra  Leone 

Type:  republic  under  presidential  regime 
since  April  1971 

Capital:  Freetown 

Administrative  divisions:  three  provinces 
(Eastern,  Northern,  Southern)  and  one  area 
(Western  Area) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  law  and 
customary  laws  indigenous  to  local  tribes; 
constitution  adopted  1978;  highest  court  of 
appeal  is  the  Sierra  Leone  Court  of  Ap- 
peals; has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  19  April 

Branches:  executive  authority  exercised  by 
President;  unicameral  parliament  consists 
of  104  authorized  seats,  85  of  which  are 
filled  by  elected  representatives  of  constit- 
uencies and  12  by  Paramount  Chiefs 
elected  by  fellow  Paramount  Chiefs  in 
each  district;  President  authorized  to 
appoint  up  to  seven  members;  indepen- 
dent judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Gen.  Joseph 
MOMOH,  President  (since  28  November 
1985);  Francis  MINAH,  First  Vice  Presi- 
dent (since  November  1985);  Abu  Bakar 
KAMARA,  Second  Vice  President  (since 
November  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 


Political  party  and  leader:  All  People's 
Congress  (APC),  Siaka  Stevens,  National 
Chairman  (constitution  provides  only  for 
one-party  rule) 

Communists:  no  party,  although  there  are 
a  few  Communists  and  a  slightly  larger 
number  of  sympathizers 

Member  of:  AfDB,  AIOEC,  Common- 
wealth, EGA,  ECOWAS,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT,  IAEA,  IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDB — Islamic  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  IRC,  ITU,  Mano  River  Union,  NAM, 
OAU,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  (current  factor  cost)  $1  billion 
(1983/84  est.);  real  growth  rate  0.5% 
(1983/84) 

Natural  resources:  diamonds,  rutile, 
bauxite,  iron  ore,  gold,  chromite 

Agriculture:  palm  kernels,  coffee,  cocoa, 
rice,  yams,  millet,  ginger,  cassava;  much  of 
cultivated  land  devoted  to  subsistence 
farming;  food  crops  insufficient  for  domes- 
tic consumption 

Fishing:  catch  53,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  mining  (diamonds,  iron 
ore,  bauxite,  rutile),  manufacturing,  bever- 
ages, textiles,  cigarettes,  construction  goods, 
one  oil  refinery 

Electric  power:  65,000  kW  capacity;  85 
million  kWh  produced,  21  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $137  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  dia- 
monds, iron  ore,  palm  kernels,  cocoa, 
coffee 

Imports:  $167  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  transportation  equipment, 
manufactured  goods,  foodstuffs,  petroleum 
products 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  EC,  US,  Japan, 
Communist  countries 

Budget:  (1983/84)  revenues,  $109  million; 
current  expenditures,  $146  million;  devel- 
opment expenditures,  $68  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  40 

leones=US$l  (March  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 


218 


Singapore 


Communications 

Railroads:  about  84  km  1. 067-meter 
narrow  gauge  privately  owned  mineral 
line  operated  by  the  Sierra  Leone  Devel- 
opment Company 

Highways:  7,400  km  total;  1,150  km 
bituminous,  490  km  laterite  (some  gravel), 
remainder  improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  800  km;  600  km 
navigable  year  round 

Ports:  1  major  (Freetown),  2  minor 
Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  13  total,  10  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  telephone  and 
telegraph  service;  16,000  telephones  (0.4 
per  100  popl.);  1  INTELSAT  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  ground  station;  3  AM,  1 
FM,  2  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  857,000; 
413,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription 


10km 


Singapore  Strait 


Sec  regional  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  580  km2;  land  area:  570  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  three  times  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  193  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  12  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid,  rainy;  no 
pronounced  rainy  or  dry  seasons;  thunder- 
storms occur  on  40%  of  all  days  (67%  of 
days  in  April) 

Terrain:  lowland;  gently  undulating  cen- 
tral plateau  contains  water  catchment  area 
and  nature  preserve 

Land  use:  4%  arable  land;  7%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  5%  forest 
and  woodland;  84%  other 

Environment:  mostly  urban  and  industri- 
alized 

Special  notes:  focal  point  for  Southeast 
Asian  sea  routes 


Population:  2,616,236  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.13% 
Nationality:  noun — Singaporean(s),  adjec- 
tive— Singapore 

Ethnic  divisions:  76.4%  Chinese,  14.9% 
Malay,  6.4%  Indian,  2.3%  other 
Religion:  majority  of  Chinese  are  Bud- 
dhists or  atheists;  Malays  nearly  all  Mus- 
lim; minorities  include  Christians,  Hindus, 
Sikhs,  Taoists,  Confucianists 


Language:  Chinese,  Malay,  Tamil,  and 
English  (official);  Malay  (national) 
Infant  mortality  rate:  8.3/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  69,  women  74 
Literacy:  84.2% 

Labor  force:  1,154,260  (June  1985);  30.2% 
services,  25.5%  manufacturing,  23.5% 
trade,  10.1%  transport  and  communica- 
tion, 8.9%  construction,  0.7%  agriculture 
and  fishing;  6.5%  unemployment  (June 
1986) 

Organized  labor:  202,302,  17.5%  of  labor 
force  (1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Singapore 
Type:  republic  within  Commonwealth 
Capital:  Singapore 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  based  on  preindepend- 
ence  State  of  Singapore  constitution;  has 
not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  9  August 

Branches:  ceremonial  President;  executive 
power  exercised  by  Prime  Minister  and 
Cabinet  responsible  to  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (Parliament) 

Gove.-nment  leaders:  WEE  Kim  Wee, 
President  (since  September  1985);  LEE 
Kuan  Yew,  Prime  Minister  (since  June 
1959) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  20 

Elections:  normally  held  every  five  years; 
last  held  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  govern- 
ment— People's  Action  Party  (PAP),  Lee 
Kuan  Yew;  opposition — Barisan  Sosialis 
(BS),  Dr.  Lee  Siew  Choh;  Workers'  Party 
(WP),  J.  B.  Jeyaretnam;  United  People's 
Front  (UPF),  Harbans  Singh;  Singapore 
Democratic  Party  (SDP),  Chiam  See  Tong; 
Communist  Party  illegal 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  PAP  won 
77  of  79  seats  in  Parliament  and  received 
63%  of  the  vote;  WP  and  SDP  won  one 
seat  each;  WP  member  of  Parliament 
expelled  November  1986 
Communists:  200-500;  Barisan  Sosialis 
infiltrated  by  Communists 


219 


Singapore  (continued) 


Solomon  Islands 


Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  ASEAN, 
Colombo  Plan,  Commonwealth,  ESCAP, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $17.25  billion  (1985  est.),  $6,740  per 
capita;  (1985  est.)  real  growth  rate  1.9% 
(1986  est.) 

Agriculture:  occupies  a  position  of  minor 
importance  in  the  economy,  self-sufficient 
in  pork  (but  pig  farming  outlawed  as  of 
1985),  poultry,  and  eggs;  must  import 
much  of  its  other  food  requirements; 
major  crops — rubber,  copra,  fruit  and 
vegetables 

Fishing:  catch  22,761  metric  tons,  im- 
ports—102,139  metric  tons,  exports  56,841 
metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  petroleum  refining, 
electronics,  oil  drilling  equipment,  rubber 
processing  and  rubber  products,  processed 
food  and  beverages,  ship  repair,  entrepot 
trade,  financial  services,  biotechnology 

Electric  power:  3,486,000  kW  capacity; 
10,080  million  kWh  produced,  3,900  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $22.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  petroleum,  rubber,  elec- 
tronics 

Imports:  $26.3  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  major 
retained  imports — capital  equipment, 
manufactured  goods,  petroleum 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US,  Ma- 
laysia, Japan,  Hong  Kong,  Thailand,  Aus- 
tralia, FRG;  imports — Japan,  US,  Malaysia, 
Saudi  Arabia 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries  (1970-84), 
$630  million;  US,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70- 
85),  $590  million 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $2.3 
million 

Budget:  (1985)  revenues,  $5.55  billion; 
expenditures,  $5.55  billion; 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.14  Singapore 
dollars=US$l  (14  January  1987) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 


Communications 

Railroads:  38  km  of  1.000-meter  gauge 

Highways:  2,597  km  total  (1984) 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  3  major,  2  minor 

Civil  air:  about  30  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  6  total,  6  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  2  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways  1,220-2,439 
m 

Telecommunications:  good  domestic 
facilities;  good  international  service;  good 
radio  and  television  broadcast  coverage; 
1.02  million  telephones  (39.0  per  100 
popl.);  13  AM,  4  FM,  2  TV  stations;  sub- 
marine cables  extend  to  Sabah  (Malaysia), 
Peninsular  Malaysia,  Indonesia,  and  the 
Philippines;  1  satellite  ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Army 
Reserve,  Singapore  Armed  Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  808,000; 
606,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  estimated  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  March  1987,  $950  million; 
about  11.2%  of  central  government  budget 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


^Choiseul 


Gizo 


Santa  Isabel 


Yandina  0*upKiiAo, 
Guadalcanal 


Santa 

^San  ff       Cru* 

Cristobal  •     Islands 


Coral  Sea 


See  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  28,450  km2;  land  area:  27,540 
km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Maryland 

Coastline:  5,313  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 

archipelagic  baselines) 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical  monsoon;  few  extremes 
of  temperature  and  weather 

Terrain:  mostly  ruggedly  mountainous 
with  some  low  coral  atolls 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  93% 
forest  and  woodland;  4%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  typhoons,  but 
rarely  destructive;  geologically  active 
region  with  frequent  earth  tremors 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  301,180  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.62% 
Nationality:  noun — Solomon  Islanders); 
adjective — Solomon  Islander 
Ethnic  divisions:  93.0%  Melanesian,  4.0% 
Polynesian,  1.5%  Micronesian,  0.8%  Euro- 
pean, 0.3%  Chinese,  0.4%  other 
Religion:  almost  all  at  least  nominally 
Christian;  Anglican,  Seventh-Day  Advent- 
ist,  and  Roman  Catholic  churches  domi- 
nant 


220 


Somalia 


Language:  120  indigenous  languages; 
Melanesian  pidgin  in  much  of  the  country 
is  lingua  franca;  English  spoken  by  1-2% 
of  population 

Infant  mortality  rate:  46/1,000  (1980) 
Life  expectancy:  54 
Literacy:  60% 

Labor  force:  23,448  economically  active 
(1984);  32.4%  agriculture,  forestry,  and 
fishing;  7.0%  construction,  manufacturing, 
and  mining;  4.7%  commerce,  transport, 
and  finance 

Organized  labor:  most  of  the  cash  econ- 
omy workers  have  trade  union  representa- 
tion 

Government 

Official  name:  Solomon  Islands 

Type:  independent  parliamentary  state 
within  Commonwealth 

Capital:  Honiara 

Administrative  divisions:  7  administrative 
districts 

Legal  system:  a  High  Court  plus  Magis- 
trates Courts;  also  a  system  of  native  courts 
throughout  the  islands 

National  day:  7  July — Independence  Day 

Branches:  executive  authority  in  Governor 
General;  unicameral  legislature 
(38-member  National  Parliament) 

Government  leaders:  Sir  Baddeley 
DEVESI,  Governor  General  (since  July 
1978);  Ezekiel  Alabna,  Prime  Minister 
(since  December  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  21 

Elections:  at  least  every  four  years;  last 
held  October  1984 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
Party,  Sir  Peter  Kenilorea;  People's  Alli- 
ance Party,  Solomon  Mamaloni,  National 
Democratic  Party,  Bartholemew  Ulufa'alu 

Member  of:  ADB,  Commonwealth, 
ESCAP,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  SPF,  UN, 
UPU,  WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  $137  million  (1985),  $640  per  capita 


Natural  resources:  fish,  forests,  agricul- 
tural land,  minerals  (gold  and  bauxite) 

Agriculture:  dominated  by  coconut  pro- 
duction with  subsistence  crops  of  yams, 
taro,  bananas,  rice 

Electric  power:  15,000  kW  capacity;  30 
million  kWh  produced,  110  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $70.1  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  copra, 
timber,  fish,  palm  oil,  seashells  and  shell 
products 

Imports:  $83.2  million  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Japan 
37%,  UK  11%,  Australia  3%;  imports- 
Australia  31%,  Singapore  16%,  Japan  15%, 
UK  9%  (1981) 

Aid:  economic  commitments  from  Austra- 
lia and  other  Western  donors,  $16.1  mil- 
lion (1985) 

Budget:  (1985)  million  revenues,  $37.4 
million;  expenditures,  $51.0  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.4808  So- 
lomon Island  dollars=US$l  (February 
1986) 

Communications 
Railroad:  none 

Highways:  about  2,100  km  total  (1982);  30 
km  sealed,  290  km  gravel,  980  km  earth, 
800  private  logging  and  plantation  roads  of 
varied  construction 

Ports:  5  minor 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  24  total,  22  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  3,000  telephones;  4 
AM,  no  FM,  no  TV  stations;  1  satellite 
ground  station 


GullalAdtn 


Indian  Ocean 
'MOGADISHU 


'Chisimayu 
See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  637,660  km2;  land  area: 
627,340  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 

Texas 

Land  boundaries:  2,263  km  total 

Coastline:  3,025  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  200  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  southern  half  of 
boundary  with  Ethiopia  is  a  Provisional 
Administrative  Line;  territorial  dispute 
with  Ethiopia  over  the  Ogaden;  possible 
claims  to  Djibouti,  Ethiopia,  and  Kenya 
based  on  unification  of  ethnic  Somalis 

Climate:  hot,  dry  desert;  northeast  mon- 
soon (December  to  February),  cooler 
southwest  monsoon  (May  to  October); 
irregular  rainfall;  hot,  humid  periods 
(Tangambili)  between  monsoons 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  to  undulating  plateau 
rising  to  hills  in  north 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  46%  meadows  and  pastures; 
14%  forest  and  woodland;  38%  other; 
includes  3%  irrigated 

Environment:  recurring  droughts;  fre- 
quent dust  storms  over  eastern  plains  in 
summer;  deforestation;  overgrazing;  soil 
erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  on  Horn 
of  Africa  along  southern  approaches  to 
Bab  el  Mandeb  and  route  through  Red  Sea 
and  Suez  Canal 


221 


Somalia  (continued) 


Population:  7,741,859  (July  1987),  average 

annual  growth  rate  3.01% 

Nationality:  noun — Somali(s);  adjective — 

Somali 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  Somali,  rest  mainly 

Bantu;  30,000  Arabs,  3,000  Europeans,  800 

Asians 

Religion:  almost  entirely  Sunni  Muslim 

Language:  Somali  (official);  Arabic,  Italian, 
English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  150/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  43.9 

Literacy:  60% 

Labor  force:  about  2.2  million;  very  few 

are  skilled  laborers;  70%  pastoral  nomad, 

30%  agriculturists,  government  employees, 

traders,  fishermen,  handicraftsmen,  other 

Organized  labor:  General  Federation  of 
Somali  Trade  Unions,  a  government- 
controlled  organization,  established  in  1977 

Government 

Official  name:  Somali  Democratic  Repub- 
lic 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Mogadishu 

Administrative  divisions:  18  regions,  60 
districts 
National  holiday:  21  October 

Branches:  President  dominates  political 
system;  Cabinet  carries  out  day-to-day 
government  functions;  unicameral  legisla- 
ture (National  People's  Assembly)  exists 
but  has  little  power 

Government  leader:  Maj.  Gen.  Mohamed 
SIAD  Barre,  President  and  Commander  in 
Chief  of  the  Army  (since  October  1969) 

Political  party  and  leader:  the  Somali 
Revolutionary  Socialist  Party  (SRSP), 
created  on  1  July  1976,  is  the  sole  legal 
party;  Maj.  Gen.  Mohamed  Siad  Barre  is 
general  secretary  of  the  SRSP 

Elections:  parliamentary  elections  held  31 
December  1984;  Presidential  election  held 
December  1986  and  President  Siad  won 
99.92%  of  the  votes  in  yes/no  style  elec- 
tion for  another  seven-year  term 


Communists:  probably  some  Communist 
sympathizers  in  the  government  hierarchy 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Arab  League,  EAMA, 
FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— 
Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.4  billion,  about  $200  per  capita 
(1982  est.) 

Natural  resources:  uranium,  iron,  tin, 
gypsum,  bauxite 

Agriculture:  mainly  a  pastoral  country, 
raising  livestock;  crops — bananas,  sugar- 
cane, cotton,  cereals 

Major  industries:  a  few  small  industries, 
including  sugar  refining,  tuna,  beef  can- 
ning, textiles,  iron  rod  plant,  and  petro- 
leum refining 

Electric  power:  63,000  kW  capacity;  137 
million  kWh  produced,  17  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $108  million  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
livestock,  hides,  skins,  bananas 

Imports:  $407  million  (c.i.f.,  1986  est.); 
textiles,  cereals,  transport  equipment, 
machinery,  construction  materials  and 
equipment,  petroleum  products;  also 
military  materiel  in  1977 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Saudi 
Arabia  34.6%,  Italy  19.6%;  imports— Italy 
26%,  Saudi  Arabia  12%,  US  17%  (1985) 

External  debt:  $1.6  billion  (1985  est.); 
external  debt  service  73%  of  exports  of 
goods  and  services 

Budget:  (1985  est.  in  percent  of  GDP) 
revenues  and  grants,  10.2%;  current  expen- 
ditures, 8.5%;  investment  expenditures, 
6.8% 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  official  rate — 
86.5  Somali  shillings=US$l;  legal  free 
market— 140  Somali  shillings=US$l  (No- 
vember 1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 


Highways:  21,300  km  total;  including 

2,335  km  bituminous  surface,  2,880  km 

gravel,  and  12,000  km  improved  earth  or 

stabilized  soil 

Pipelines:  15  km  crude  oil 

Ports:  3  major  (Mogadishu,  Berbera,  Chis- 

imayu) 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  65  total,  53  usable;  6  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m;  21  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  poor  telephone  and 
telegraph  service;  radio-relay  system 
centered  on  Mogadishu  connects  a  few 
towns;  6,000  telephones  (0.1  per  100  popl.); 
1  Indian  Ocean  satellite  station;  2  AM,  no 
FM  stations;  1  TV  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Somali  National  Army  (includ- 
ing Navy,  Air  Force,  and  Air  Defense 
Force),  National  Police  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,710,000;  958,000  fit  for  military  service; 
no  conscription 


222 


South  Africa 


Messina 


Iwalvis  Bay 


Cape  Town 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  1,221,040  km2;  land  area: 
1,221,040  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  four-fifths  the 
size  of  Alaska 

Land  boundaries:  2,044  km  total 
Coastline:  2,881  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  occupies 
Namibia 

Climate:  mostly  dry  desert,  subtropical 
along  coast;  sunny  days,  cool  nights 

Terrain:  vast  interior  plateau  rimmed  by 
rugged  hills  and  narrow  coastal  plain 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  65%  meadows  and  pastures;  3% 
forest  and  woodland;  21%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  lack  of  important  arterial 
rivers  or  lakes  requires  extensive  water 
conservation  and  control  measures 

Special  notes:  Walvis  Bay  is  almost  an 
enclave  of  Namibia;  Lesotho  is  an  enclave 


Population:  34,313,356  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.27%,  includes  the 
four  nominally  independent  homelands 
that  are  not  recognized  by  the  US  (Bophu- 


thatswana  1,750,165,  average  annual 
growth  rate  3.85%;  Ciskei  982,982,  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.62%;  Transkei 
2,832,345,  average  annual  growth  rate 
2.70%;  Venda  434,395,  average  annual 
growth  rate  2.72%) 

Nationality:  noun — South  African(s); 
adjective — South  African 

Ethnic  divisions:  69.9%  black,  17.8% 
white,  9.4%  colored,  2.9%  Indian 

Religion:  most  whites  and  coloreds  and 
roughly  60%  of  blacks  are  Christian; 
roughly  60%  of  Indians  are  Hindu,  20% 
Muslim 

Language:  Afrikaans,  English  (official); 
many  vernacular  languages,  including 
Zulu,  Xhosa,  North  and  South  Sotho, 
Tswana 

Infant  mortality  rate:  whites  14.9/1,000 
(1982),  coloreds  80.6/1,000  (1982),  blacks 
80.6/1,000  (1982),  Asians  25.3/1,000  (1982) 

Life  expectancy:  whites  70  years,  Asians 
66  years,  coloreds  59  years,  blacks  55  years 

Literacy:  almost  all  white  population 
literate;  government  estimates  50%  of 
blacks  literate 

Labor  force:  11  million  economically 
active  (1985);  34%  services,  30%  agricul- 
ture, 29%  industry  and  commerce,  7% 
mining 

Organized  labor:  about  17%  of  total  labor 
force  is  unionized  (mostly  white  workers); 
African  unions  represent  less  than  15%  of 
black  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  South  Africa 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  administrative,  Pretoria;  legisla- 
tive, Cape  Town;  judicial,  Bloemfontein 

Administrative  divisions:  4  provinces;  10 
homelands  (4  independent,  6  dependent) 
administered  in  areas  set  aside  for  blacks 

Legal  system:  based  on  Roman-Dutch  law 
and  English  common  law;  accepts  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  31  May 

Branches:  state  president  is  chief  of  state, 
head  of  government,  and  chairman  of 
cabinet;  tricameral  legislature — House  of 


Assembly  (whites),  House  of  Representa- 
tives (coloreds),  and  House  of  Delegates 
(Indians)  elected  directly  by  respective 
racial  electorates;  judiciary  maintains 
substantial  independence  of  government 
influence 

Government  leader:  Pieter  Willem 
BOTHA,  State  President  (since  September 
1984) 

Suffrage:  general  suffrage  limited  to  whites 
over  18  (17  in  Natal  Province)  and  to 
coloreds  and  Indians  over  18 

Elections:  must  be  held  at  least  every  five 
years;  last  white  elections  April  1981;  last 
colored  and  Indian  elections  August  1984; 
the  next  white  elections  will  be  held  in 
first  half  of  1987 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  White 
political  parties  and  leaders —  National 
Party,  P.  W.  Botha;  Progressive  Federal 
Party,  Colin  Eglin;  New  Republic  Party, 
Bill  Sutton;  Conservative  Party,  Dr.  Andr- 
ies  P.  Treurnicht;  Herstigte  National  Party, 
Jaap  Marais;  Colored  political  parties  and 
leaders —  Labor  Party,  Allan  Hendrickse 
(majority  party);  People's  Congress  Party, 
Peter  Marais;  Indian  political  parties  and 
leaders — National  People's  Party, 
Amichand  Rajbansi  (majority  party);  Soli- 
darity, J.  N.  Reddy 

Voting  strength:  white  parliamentary 
seats — National  Party,  127;  Progressive 
Federal  Party,  27;  Conservative  Party,  18; 
New  Republic,  5;  Herstigte  National 
Party,  1 

Communists:  small  Communist  Party 
illegal  since  1950;  party  in  exile  maintains 
headquarters  in  London,  Daniel  Tloome, 
(Chairman)  and  Joe  Slovo,  (General  Secre- 
tary) 

Other  political  groups:  (insurgent  groups 
in  exile)  African  National  Congress  (ANC), 
Oliver  Tambo;  Pan-Africanist  Congress 
(PAC),  Zephania  Mothopeng 

Member  of:  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFC,  IHO,  International  Lead  and 
Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF,  INTELSAT,  ISO, 
ITU,  IWC— International  Whaling  Com- 
mission, IWC — International  Wheat  Coun- 
cil, Southern  African  Customs  Union,  UN, 
UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 


223 


South  Africa  (continued) 


Soviet  Union 


(membership  rights  in  IAEA,  ICAO,  ITU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  and  WMO  suspended  or 
restricted) 

Economy 

GDP:  $51  billion  (1985),  about  $1,560  per 
capita;  2.0%  real  growth  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  gold,  chromium,  anti- 
mony, coal,  iron,  manganese,  nickel,  phos- 
phates, tin,  uranium,  gem  diamonds, 
platinum,  copper,  vanadium 

Agriculture:  corn,  wheat,  sugarcane, 
tobacco,  citrus,  fruits;  cattle  and  dairy 
products;  sheep  and  wool;  self-sufficient  in 
foodstuffs 

Fishing:  catch  599,897  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  mining,  automobile 
assembly,  metalworking,  machinery, 
textile,  iron  and  steel,  chemical,  fertilizer 

Electric  power:  29,954,000  kW  capacity; 
148,450  million  kWh  produced,  4,470 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $9.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985),  gold, 
coal,  diamonds,  corn,  uranium,  other 
mineral  and  agricultural  products;  net  gold 
output  $7.0  billion  (1985) 

Imports:  $10.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, motor  vehicle  parts,  petroleum 
products,  textiles,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  US,  FRG,  Japan, 
UK,  Southern  African  Customs  Union 

Budget:  (FY85/86)  revenues,  $10.6  billion; 
current  expenditures,  $12.3  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.5  South 
African  rands=US$l  (29  January  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  36,499  km  total  (includes  Nam- 
ibia); 35,793  km  1.067-meter  gauge,  of 
which  6,830  km  are  multiple  track,  16,271 
km  electrified;  706  km  single  track 

Highways:  229,690  km  total;  80,796  km 
paved,  148,894  km  crushed  stone,  gravel, 
or  improved  earth 

Pipelines:  931  km  crude  oil;  1,748  km 
refined  products;  322  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  7  major  (Durban,  Cape  Town,  Port 
Elizabeth,  Richards  Bay,  Saldanha,  East 


London,  and  Mosselbaai);  1  minor  (Walvis 
Bay) 

Civil  air:  82  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  956  total,  846  usable;  112  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  1 1  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  215  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  the  system  is  the 
best  developed,  most  modern,  and  highest 
capacity  in  Africa  and  consists  of  carrier- 
equipped  open-wire  lines,  coaxial  cables, 
radio-relay  links,  and  radiocommunication 
stations;  key  centers  are  Bloemfontein, 
Cape  Town,  Durban,  Johannesburg,  Port 
Elizabeth,  and  Pretoria;  3.47  million 
telephones  (13.4  per  100  popl.);  14  AM, 
286  FM,  67  main  TV  stations  with  450 
relay  transmitters;  1  submarine  cable;  1 
Indian  Ocean  and  2  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Medi- 
cal Services 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
8,490,000;  5,182,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 369,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually;  obligation  for  service  in  Citizen 
Force  or  Commandos  begins  at  18;  volun- 
teers for  service  in  permanent  force  must 
be  17;  national  service  obligation  is  two 
years;  figures  include  Bophuthatswana, 
Ciskei,  Kwazulu,  Lebowa,  Transkei,  and 
Venda 


2000km 


Arctic  Ocean 


Baltic  Sea 


Barents  Sea    >ji; 
Mu 


'oitok 


The  United  State*  Government  he*  nol  recognized 
the  incorporation  ot  Estonia  Latvia  and  Lint/ami 
into  Ine  Soviet  Union  Ottiei  boundary  representation 


Set  region.!  maps  VIII  and  XI 


Geography 

Total  area:  22,402,200  km2;  land  area: 
22,272,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  almost  two  and  one- 
half  times  the  size  of  US 
Land  boundaries:  20,217  km  total 
Coastline:  108,346  km  (60,085  km  main- 
land; 48,261  islands) 
Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 

depth  of  exploitation 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  China  (Pamir,  Argun, 
Amur,  and  Khabarovsk  areas);  US  Govern- 
ment has  not  recognized  incorporation  of 
Estonia,  Latvia,  and  Lithuania  into  Soviet 
Union;  Habomai  Islands,  Etorofu,  Kunash- 
iri,  and  Shikotan  islands  occupied  by 
Soviet  Union  since  1945,  claimed  by 
Japan;  Kuril  Islands  administered  by 
Soviet  Union;  maritime  disputes  with 
Sweden,  Norway;  has  made  no  territorial 
claim  in  Antarctica  (but  has  reserved  the 
right  to  do  so)  and  does  not  recognize  the 
claims  of  any  other  nation;  Bessarabia 
question  with  Romania 

Climate:  mostly  temperate  to  arctic  conti- 
nental; winters  vary  from  cool  along  Black 
Sea  to  frigid  in  Siberia;  summers  vary 
from  hot  in  southern  deserts  to  cool  along 
Arctic  coast 

Terrain:  broad  plain  with  low  hills  west  of 
Urals;  vast  coniferous  forest  and  tundra  in 
Siberia,  deserts  in  Central  Asia,  mountains 
in  south 


224 


Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  17%  meadows  and 
pastures;  41%  forest  and  woodland;  32% 
other;  includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  despite  size  and  diversity, 
small  percentage  of  land  is  arable  and 
much  is  too  far  north;  some  of  most  fertile 
land  is  water  deficient  or  has  insufficient 
growing  season;  many  better  climates  have 
poor  soils;  hot,  dry,  desiccating  sukhovey 
wind  affects  south;  desertification 

Special  notes:  largest  country  in  world, 
but  unfavorably  located  in  relation  to 
major  sea  lanes  of  world 


Population:  284,008,160  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  0.90% 

Nationality:  noun — Soviet(s);  adjective — 
Soviet 

Ethnic  divisions:  52%  Russian,  16%  Ukrai- 
nian, 32%  among  over  100  other  ethnic 
groups,  according  to  1979  census 

Religion:  18%  Russian  Orthodox;  9% 
Muslim;  3%  Jewish,  Protestant,  Georgian 
Orthodox,  or  Roman  Catholic;  population 
is  70%  atheist 

Language:  Russian  (official);  more  than 
200  languages  and  dialects  (at  least  18  with 
more  than  1  million  speakers);  75%  Slavic 
group,  8%  other  Indo-European,  12% 
Altaic,  3%  Uralian,  2%  Caucasian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  27.9/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64,  women  74 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  civilian  148  million  (midyear 
1984),  20%  agriculture,  80%  industry  and 
other  nonagricultural  fields;  unemployed 
not  reported;  shortage  of  skilled  labor 
reported 

Government 

Official  name:  Union  of  Soviet  Socialist 
Republics 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Moscow 

Administrative  divisions:  15  union  repub- 
lics, consisting  of  20  autonomous  republics, 
6  krays,  123  oblasts,  8  autonomous  oblasts, 
and  10  autonomous  okrugs 


Legal  system:  civil  law  system  as  modified 
by  Communist  legal  theory;  revised  consti- 
tution adopted  1977;  no  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  October  Revolution 
Day,  7  November 

Branches:  executive — USSR  Council  of 
Ministers,  legislative — USSR  Supreme 
Soviet,  judicial — Supreme  Court  of  USSR 

Government  leaders:  Mikhail  Sergeyevich 
GORBACHEV,  General  Secretary  of  the 
Central  Committee  of  the  Communist 
Party  (since  11  March  1985);  Nikolay 
Ivanovich  RYZHKOV,  Chairman  of  the 
USSR  Council  of  Ministers  (since  28  Sep- 
tember 1985);  Andrey  Andreyevich 
GROMYKO,  Chairman  of  the  Presidium 
of  the  USSR  Supreme  Soviet  (since  2  July 
1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  direct, 
equal 

Elections:  to  Supreme  Soviet  every  five 
years;  1,500  seats  in  1984;  71.5%  held  by 
party  members 

Political  party:  Communist  Party  of  the 
Soviet  Union  (CPSU)  only  party  permitted 

Voting  strength:  (1984  election)  99.95%  of 
the  197,292,000  persons  over  18  voted  for 
Communist-sponsored  single  slate 

Communists:  over  18  million  party  mem- 
bers 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 

Komsomol,  trade  unions,  and  other  organi- 
zations that  facilitate  Communist  control 

Member  of:  CEMA,  ESCAP,  Geneva 
Disarmament  Conference,  IAEA,  IBEC, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  ICCAT,  ICCO,  ICES,  ILO, 
IMO,  International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study 
Group,  INRO,  IPU,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Whaling  Commission, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  Warsaw  Pact,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $2,062.6  billion  (1985,  in  1985 
geometric  mean  prices),  $7,396  per  capita; 
in  1985  percentage  shares  were — 50% 
consumption,  30%  investment,  20%  gov- 
ernment and  other,  including  elements  of 
defense  (based  on  1982  rubles  at  adjusted 


factor  cost);  average  annual  growth  rate  of 
real  GNP  2.4%  (1971-85);  average  annual 
growth  rate  2.1%  (1976-85);  1.2%  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  fossil  fuels,  hydroelec- 
tric power,  timber,  manganese,  lead,  zinc, 
nickel,  mercury,  potash,  phosphates 
Agriculture:  principal  food  crops — grain 
(especially  wheat),  potatoes;  main  indus- 
trial crops — sugar  beets,  cotton,  sunflowers, 
and  flax;  degree  of  self-sufficiency  depends 
on  fluctuations  in  crop  yields,  particularly 
grain;  large  grain  importer  over  past 
decade 

Fishing:  catch  10.7  million  metric  tons; 
exports  501,598  metric  tons,  418,912 
metric  tons;  exports  exclude  canned  fish, 
canned  crab,  and  caviar  (1985) 
Major  industries:  diversified,  highly 
developed  capital  goods  industries;  con- 
sumer goods  industries  comparatively  less 
developed 

Shortages:  fertilizer,  pesticides,  feed, 
natural  rubber,  bauxite  and  alumina, 
tantalum,  tin,  tungsten,  fluorspar,  molyb- 
denum, and  finished  steel  products 
Crude  steel:  174  million  metric  ton  capac- 
ity; 155  million  metric  tons  produced,  558 
kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Electric  power:  327,000,000  kW  capacity; 
1,600,000  million  kWh  produced,  5,670 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 
Exports:  $86,956  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
petroleum  and  petroleum  products,  natural 
gas,  metals,  wood,  agricultural  products, 
and  a  wide  variety  of  manufactured  goods 
(primarily  capital  goods  and  arms) 
Imports:  $82,922  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
grain  and  other  agricultural  products, 
machinery  and  equipment,  steel  products 
(including  large  diameter  pipe),  consumer 
manufactures 

Major  trade  partners:  $169.9  billion  (1985 
total  turnover);  61%  Communist  countries, 
27%  industrialized  West,  12%  with  less 
developed  countries 

Aid:  total  extended  to  non-Communist  less 
developed  countries  (1954-85),  $33  billion 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  official,  0.838 
ruble=US$l  (1985  average);  the  exchange 
rate  is  administratively  set  and  should  not 
be  used  to  convert  domestic  rubles  to 
dollars 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 


Soviet  Union  (continued) 


Spain 


Communications 

Railroads:  144,800  km  total;  142,967  km 
1.524-meter  broad  gauge;  1,833  km  mostly 
0.750-meter  narrow  gauge;  113,315  km 
broad-gauge  single  track;  47,900  km  elec- 
trified; does  not  include  industrial  lines 
(1984) 

Highways:  1,516,700  km  total;  439,000 
km  asphalt,  concrete,  stone  block;  354,000 
km  asphalt  treated,  gravel,  crushed  stone; 
723,700  km  earth  (1984) 
Inland  waterways:  136,700  km  navigable, 
exclusive  of  Caspian  Sea  (1984) 
Freight  carried:  rail — 3,958  million  metric 
tons,  3.72  trillion  metric  tons/km  (1985); 
highways — 25.5  billion  metric  tons,  477 
billion  metric  tons/km  (1985);  waterway — 
632  million  metric  tons,  261.6  billion 
metric  tons/km,  excluding  Caspian  Sea 
(1984) 

Pipelines:  78,300  km  crude  oil  and  refined 
products;  165,000  km  natural  gas  (1984) 
Ports:  53  major  (most  important — Lenin- 
grad, Riga,  Tallinn,  Kaliningrad,  LiepSja, 
Ventspils,  Murmansk,  Arkhangel'sk, 
Odessa,  Novorossiysk,  Il'ichevsk,  Niko- 
layev,  Sevastopol',  Vladivostok,  Nakhodka), 
180  minor;  58  major  inland  ports  (most 
important — Astrakhan',  Baku,  Gor'kiy, 
Kazan',  Khabarovsk,  Krasnoyarsk, 
Kuybyshev,  Moscow,  Rostov,  Volgograd, 
Kiev) 

Civil  air:  4,500  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  4,400  total;  470  with  runways 
2,500  m  or  longer 

Telecommunications:  extensive  network 
of  AM-FM  stations  broadcasting  both 
Moscow  and  regional  programs;  main  TV 
centers  in  Moscow  and  Leningrad  plus  11 
more  in  the  Soviet  republics;  hundreds  of 
TV  stations;  85,000,000  TV  sets; 
162,000,000  receiver  sets;  many  satellite 
ground  stations  and  extensive  satellite 
networks 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Ground  Forces,  Navy,  Air 

Defense  Forces,  Air  Forces,  Strategic 

Rocket  Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 

69,563,000;  55,293,000  fit  for  military 

service;  2,197,000  reach  military  age  (17) 

annually 


300kcn 


Bay  of  Biscay 


North 

Atlantic 

Ocean       Strait  of 

Gibraltar 

Sec  regiontl  map  V  and  VII 


Mediterranean 
Sea 


Canary  Islands.  Ceuta. 
and  Melilla  are  not  show 


Geography 

Total  area:  504,750  km2;  land  area: 
499,400  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Arizona  and  Utah  combined 

Land  boundaries:  1,899  km  total 
Coastline:  4,964  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Gibraltar  ques- 
tion with  UK;  controls  two  presidios  or 
places  of  sovereignty  (Ceuta,  Melilla)  on 
the  coast  of  Morocco 

Climate:  temperate;  clear,  hot  summers  in 
interior,  more  moderate  and  cloudy  along 
coast;  cloudy,  cold  winters  in  interior, 
partly  cloudy  and  cool  along  coast 

Terrain:  large,  flat  to  dissected  plateau 
surrounded  by  rugged  hills 

Land  use:  31%  arable  land;  10%  perma- 
nent crops;  21%  meadows  and  pastures; 
31%  forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  in- 
cludes 6%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
approaches  to  Strait  of  Gibraltar 

People 

Population:  39,000,804  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.54% 

Nationality:  noun — Spaniard(s);  adjec- 
tive— Spanish 


Ethnic  divisions:  composite  of  Mediterra- 
nean and  Nordic  types 

Religion:  99%  Roman  Catholic,  1%  other 
sects 

Language:  Castilian  Spanish;  second 
languages  include  17%  Catalan,  7%  Galic- 
ian,  and  2%  Basque 
Infant  mortality  rate:  9.6/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  73,  women  78 
Literacy:  97% 

Labor  force:  13.7  million  (1986  est); 
52.0%  services,  24.4%  industry,  16.1% 
agriculture,  7.5%  construction;  unemploy- 
ment, 21.5%  (June  1986) 
Organized  labor:  no  more  than  25%  of 
labor  force  (1984) 

Government 

Official  name:  Spanish  State 

Type:  parliamentary  monarchy 

Capital:  Madrid 

Administrative  divisions:  50  provinces 

Dependent  areas:  Ceuta,  Islas  Chafarinas, 
Melilla,  Pefton  de  Alhucemas,  Pefton  de 
Velez  de  la  Gomera 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system,  with 
regional  applications;  constitution  provides 
for  rule  of  law,  established  jury  system  as 
well  as  independent  constitutional  court  to 
rule  on  constitutionality  of  laws  and  serve 
as  court  of  last  resort  in  protecting  liberties 
and  rights  granted  in  constitution;  does  not 
accept  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  24  June 
Branches:  executive,  with  acts  of  the  king 
subject  to  countersignature,  Prime  Minister 
and  his  ministers  responsible  to  lower 
house;  bicameral  legislature — Cortes  Gen- 
erales,  consisting  of  more  powerful  Con- 
gress of  Deputies  (350  members)  and 
Senate  (208  members),  with  possible  addi- 
tion of  one  to  six  members  from  each  new 
autonomous  region;  judiciary,  independent 

Government  leaders:  JUAN  CARLOS  I, 
King  (since  November  1975);  Felipe 
GONZALEZ  Marquez,  Prime  Minister 
(since  December  1982) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18 


226 


Elections:  parliamentary  election  held  22 
June  1986  for  four-year  term;  local  elec- 
tions for  municipal  and  provincial  councils 
held  April  1983;  regional  elections  stag- 
gered 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  principal 
national  parties,  from  right  to  left — Popu- 
lar Alliance  (AP),  Antonio  Hernandez 
Mancha;  Popular  Democratic  Party  (PDP), 
Oscar  Alzaga;  Liberal  Party  (PL),  Jose 
Antonio  Segurado;  Social  Democratic 
Center  (CDS),  Adolfo  Suarez;  Spanish 
Socialist  Workers  Party  (PSOE),  Felipe 
Gonzalez  Marquez;  Spanish  Communist 
Party  (PCE),  Gerardo  Iglesias;  chief  re- 
gional parties — Convergence  and  Unity 
(CiU),  Jordi  Pujol,  in  Catalonia;  Basque 
Nationalist  Party  (PNV),  Xabier  Arzallus; 
Basque  Solidarity  (EA),  Carlos  Garaicoe- 
txea;  Basque  Popular  Unity  (HB),  Jon 
Idigoras;  Basque  Left  (EE),  Kepa  Aulestia; 
Andalusian  Party  (PA),  Luis  Urufluela; 
Independent  Canary  Group  (AIC);  Aragon 
Regional  Party  (PAR);  Valencian  Union 
(UV) 

Voting  strength:  (1986  parliamentary 
election  in  lower  house — 350  seats)  PSOE 
44%,  184  seats;  AP,  PDP,  and  PL  in  coali- 
tion 26%,  105  seats  (dissolution  of  coalition 
and  party  defections  in  1986— AP  68  seats, 
PDP  21  seats,  PL  12  seats,  independent  4 
seats);  CDS  9%,  19  seats;  Communist-led 
coalition  5%,  18  seats;  CiU  5%,  18  seats; 
Basque  Nationalist  Party  1%,  1  seat;  Popu- 
lar Unity  1%,  1  seat;  Basque  Left  1%,  1 
seat;  Independent  Canary  Group,  0%,  1 
seat;  Aragon  Regional  Party,  0%,  1  seat; 
Valencian  Union  0%,  1  seat;  6%,  vote 
other,  no  seats 

Communists:  PCE  membership  has  de- 
clined from  a  possible  high  of  160,000  in 
1977  to  roughly  60,000  today;  the  party 
lost  64%  of  its  voters  and  20  deputies  in 
the  1982  election;  remaining  strength  is  in 
labor,  where  it  dominates  the  Workers 
Commissions  trade  union  (one  of  the 
country's  two  major  labor  centrals),  which 
claims  a  membership  of  about  1  million; 
experienced  a  modest  recovery  in  1986 
national  election,  nearly  doubling  the  share 
of  the  vote  it  received  in  1982 


Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  on  the 
extreme  left,  the  Basque  Fatherland  and 
Liberty  (ETA)  and  the  First  of  October 
Antifascist  Resistance  Group  (GRAPO)  use 
terrorism  to  oppose  the  government;  free 
labor  unions  (authorized  in  April  1977) 
include  the  Communist-dominated  Work- 
ers Commissions  (CCOO);  the  Socialist 
General  Union  of  Workers  (UGT),  and  the 
smaller  independent  Workers  Syndical 
Union  (USO);  the  Catholic  Church;  busi- 
ness and  landowning  interests;  Opus  Dei; 
university  students 

Member  of:  "Andean  Pact  (observer), 
ASSIMER,  Council  of  Europe,  EC,  ESRO, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ICES,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  Inter- 
national Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU,  ITC,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
NATO,  OAS  (observer),  OECD,  UN, 

UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 

WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $187.6  billion  (1986  est);  70%  pri- 
vate consumption,  13%  government  con- 
sumption, 17%  gross  fixed  capital  invest- 
ment; 0.2%  change  in  stocks;  2%  net  ex- 
ports; real  growth  rate  2.9%  (1986);  8.6% 
inflation  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  lignite,  iron  ore, 
uranium,  mercury,  pyrites,  fluorspar, 
gypsum,  zinc,  lead,  tungsten,  copper, 
kaolin,  hydroelectric  power 
Agriculture:  grains,  citrus,  fruits,  vegeta- 
bles; virtually  self-sufficient  in  good  crop 
years 

Fishing:  catch,  1,100,000  metric  tons 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  apparel 
(including  footwear),  food  and  beverages, 
metals  and  metal  manufactures,  chemicals, 
shipbuilding,  automobiles 
Crude  steel:  14.2  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985),  370  kg  per  capita 
Electric  power:  41,120,000  kW  capacity; 
134,380  million  kWh  produced,  3,440 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 
Exports:  $24.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  iron 
and  steel  products,  machinery,  automo- 


biles, citrus,  fruits,  vegetables,  wine,  soy- 
bean oil,  feed  barley,  textiles,  footwear 
Imports:  $28.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  fuels 
(38%),  machinery,  chemicals,  iron  and 
steel,  automobiles,  corn,  soybeans,  coffee, 
tobacco,  forest  products,  hides  and  skins, 
cotton,  live  cattle 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  42%  EC, 
31%  less  developed  countries,  11%  other 
developed  countries,  11%  US,  5%  Commu- 
nist countries 

Aid:  US  authorizations,  $1.9  billion,  in- 
cluding Ex-Im  (FY70-85);  other  Western 
bilateral  (ODA  and  OOF),  $545.0  million 
(1970-79) 

Military  transfers:  US  (FY70-85),  $2.4 
billion 

Budget:  revenues,  $56  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $67  billion;  deficit,  $10  billion  (1985) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  136.13 
pesetas=US  $1  (October  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  15,430  km  total;  Spanish  Na- 
tional Railways  (RENFE)  operates  12,691 
km  1.668-meter  gauge,  6,050  km  electri- 
fied, and  2,295  km  double  track;  FEVE 
(government-owned  narrow-gauge  rail- 
ways) operates  1,821  km  of  predominantly 
1. 000-meter  gauge  and  441  km  electrified; 
privately  owned  railways  operate  918  km 
of  predominantly  1.000-meter  gauge,  512 
km  electrified,  and  56  km  double  track 
Highways:  150,396  km  total;  82,070  km 
national  2,433  km  limited-access  divided 
highway,  63,042  km  bituminous  treated, 
17,038  km  intermediate  bituminous,  con- 
crete, or  stone  block;  the  remaining  68,326 
km  are  provincial  or  local  roads  (bitumi- 
nous treated,  intermediate  bituminous,  or 
stone  block) 

Inland  waterways:  1,045  km;  of  minor 
importance  as  transport  arteries  and  con- 
tribute little  to  economy 
Pipelines:  265  km  crude  oil;  1,862  km 
refined  products;  1,475  km  natural  gas 
Ports:  23  major,  175  minor 
Civil  air:  142  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  121  total,  117  usable;  61  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  21  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  32  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


227 


Spain  (continued) 


Sri  Lanka 


Telecommunications:  generally  adequate, 
modern  facilities;  14.4  million  telephones 
(34.5  per  100  popl.);  193  AM,  406  FM, 
1,500  TV  stations;  22  coaxial  submarine 
cables;  2  satellite  stations  with  total  of  6 
antennas 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
9,597,000;  7,810,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 337,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $5.9  billion;  12.3%  of  the 
central  government  budget 


100km 


Ste  rc(ion.l  m»p  VIII       */„</„„  Ocean 


Geography 

Total  area:  65,610  km2;  land  area:  64,740 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-half  the  size 
of  North  Carolina 

Coastline:  1,340  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  monsoonal;  northeast 
monsoon  (December  to  March);  southwest 
monsoon  (June  to  October) 

Terrain:  mostly  low,  flat  to  rolling  plain; 
mountains  in  south-central  interior 

Land  use:  16%  arable  land;  17%  perma- 
nent crops;  7%  meadows  and  pastures; 
37%  forest  and  woodland;  23%  other; 
includes  8%  irrigated 

Environment:  occasional  cyclones,  torna- 
dos; deforestation;  soil  erosion 

Special  notes:  only  29  km  from  India; 
near  major  Indian  Ocean  sea  lanes 


Population:  16,406,576  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.37% 

Nationality:  noun — Sri  Lankan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Sri  Lankan 


Ethnic  divisions:  74%  Sinhalese;  18% 
Tamil;  7%  Moor;  1%  Burgher,  Malay,  and 
Veddha 

Religion:  69%  Buddhist,  15%  Hindu,  8% 
Christian,  8%  Muslim 

Language:  Sinhala  (official);  Sinhala  and 
Tamil  listed  as  national  languages;  Sinhala 
spoken  by  about  74%  of  population,  Tamil 
spoken  by  about  18%;  English  commonly 
used  in  government  and  spoken  by  about 
10%  of  the  population 

Infant  mortality  rate:  37/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  68 
Literacy:  87% 

Labor  force:  6.6  million  (1985  est.);  45.9% 
agriculture,  13.3%  mining  and  manufac- 
turing, 12.4%  trade  and  transport,  26.3% 
services  and  other;  extensive  underemploy- 
ment; 19%  unemployment  (1985  est.) 

Organized  labor:  about  33%  of  labor 
force,  over  50%  of  which  employed  on  tea, 
rubber,  and  coconut  estates 

Government 

Official  name:  Democratic  Socialist  Re- 
public of  Sri  Lanka 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Colombo 

Administrative  divisions:  9  provinces,  24 
administrative  districts 

Legal  system:  a  highly  complex  mixture 
of  English  common  law,  Roman-Dutch, 
Muslim,  and  customary  law;  new  constitu- 
tion 7  September  1978  reinstituted  a 
strong,  independent  judiciary;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  22 
May 

Branches:  the  1978  constitution  estab- 
lished a  strong  presidential  form  of  gov- 
ernment under  J.  R.  Jayewardene,  who 
had  been  Prime  Minister  since  his  party's 
election  victory  in  July  1977;  Jayewardene 
was  elected  to  a  second  term  in  October 
1982  and  will  serve  until  1989  regardless 
of  whether  Parliament  is  dissolved;  the 
current  Parliament  was  extended  until 
August  1989  by  a  national  referendum 
held  in  December  1982 


228 


Government  leader:  Junius  Richard 
JAYEWARDENE,  President  (since  1978) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  national  elections  ordinarily 
held  every  six  years;  must  be  held  more 
frequently  if  government  loses  confidence 
vote;  the  constitution  was  amended  in 
August  1982  to  permit  the  President  to  call 
an  early  presidential  election 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Sri  Lanka 
Freedom  Party  (SLFP),  Sirimavo  Ratwatte 
Dias  Bandaranaike;  Sri  Lanka  Mahajana 
Party,  Vijaya  Kumaratunga;  Lanka  Sama 
Samaja  Party  (LSSP;  Trotskyite),  C.  R.  de 
Silva;  Nava  Sama  Samaja  Party  (NSSP),  V. 
Nanayakkara;  Tamil  United  Liberation 
Front,  A.  Amirthalingam;  United  National 
Party  (UNP),  J.  R.  Jayewardene;  Commu- 
nist Party/Moscow,  K.  P.  Silva;  Commu- 
nist Party/Beijing,  N.  Shanmugathasan; 
Mahajana  Eksath  Peramuna  (People's 
United  Front),  M.  B.  Ratnayaka;  Janatha 
Vimukthi  Peramuna  (JVP;  People's  Libera- 
tion Front),  Rohana  Wijeweera;  All-Ceylon 
Tamil  Congress,  Kumar  Ponnambalam 

Voting  strength:  (October  1982  presiden- 
tial election)  UNP  52.91%,  SLFP  39.07%, 
JVP  4.18%,  All  Ceylon  Tamil  Congress 
2.67%,  LSSP  .9%,  NSSP  .27% 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Tamil 
separatist  groups,  Buddhist  clergy,  Sinha- 
lese Buddhist  lay  groups;  far-left  violent 
revolutionary  groups;  labor  unions 

Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  Colombo 
Plan,  Commonwealth,  ESCAP,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU,  NAM, 
SAARC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  VVFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $6.3  billion,  $390  per  capita  (1985); 
real  growth  rate  5%  (1984);  50%  services, 
26%  agriculture,  forestry,  and  fishing,  15% 
manufacturing,  7%  construction,  2%  min- 
ing and  quarrying  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  limestone,  graphite, 
mineral  sands,  gems,  phosphates 

Agriculture:  agriculture  accounts  for  about 
26%  of  GDP;  main  crops — paddy,  coco- 
nuts, tea,  rubber 


Fishing:  catch  140,000  metric  tons  (1985 
est.) 

Major  industries:  processing  of  rubber, 
tea,  coconuts,  and  other  agricultural  com- 
modities; consumer  goods  manufacture; 
garment  industry 

Electric  power:  982,000  kW  capacity; 
3,200  million  kWh  produced,  190  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  tea, 
textiles  and  garments,  petroleum  products, 
coconut,  rubber,  agricultural  products, 
gems  and  jewelry,  marine  products 

Imports:  $2.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, machinery  and  equipment,  textiles 
and  textile  materials,  wheat,  transport 
equipment,  electrical  machinery,  sugar, 
rice 

Major  trade  partners:  (1985)  exports — US 
(22%),  UAR,  Iraq,  UK,  FRG,  Singapore, 
Japan;  imports — Japan,  Saudi  Arabia,  US, 
India,  Singapore,  FRG,  UK,  Iran 

Budget:  (1985)  revenues,  $1.4  billion; 
expenditures,  $2.0  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  28.5 
rupees=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,868  km  total  (1985);  all  1.868- 
meter  broad  gauge;  102  km  double  track; 
no  electrification;  government  owned 

Highways:  66,176  km  total  (1985);  24,300 
km  paved  (mostly  bituminous  treated), 
28,916  km  crushed  stone  or  gravel,  12,960 
km  improved  earth  or  unimproved  earth; 
in  addition,  several  thousand  km  of  tracks, 
mostly  unmotorable 

Inland  waterways:  430  km;  navigable  by 
shallow-draft  craft 

Pipelines:  crude,  14  km;  refined  products, 
55km 

Ports:  3  major,  9  minor 

Civil  air:  8  major  transport  (including  1 
leased) 

Airfields:  14  total,  12  usable;  11  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  7  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  good  international 
service;  106,500  (est.)  telephones  (0.6  per 
100  popl.);  12  AM,  3  FM,  and  1  TV  sta- 
tions; submarine  cables  extend  to  Indone- 
sia, Djibouti,  India;  1  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  Navy,  Police 
Force,  Special  Police  Task  Force,  National 
Auxiliary  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,262,000;  3,344,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 174,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $370  million,  13%  of 
central  government  estimated  budget 


Sudan 


S«rt|ionalmip  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,505,810  km2;  land  area: 
2,376,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-fourth  the 
size  of  US 

Land  boundaries:  7,805  km  total 
Coastline:  853  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  18  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  international 
boundary  and  Administrative  Boundary 
with  Kenya;  international  boundary  and 
Administrative  Boundary  with  Egypt 

Climate:  tropical  in  south;  arid  desert  in 
north;  rainy  season  (April  to  October) 

Terrain:  generally  flat,  featureless  plain; 
mountains  in  east  and  west 

Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  24%  meadows  and  pastures; 
20%  forest  and  woodland;  51%  other; 
includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  dominated  by  Nile  River 
and  tributaries;  dust  storms;  desertification 

Special  notes:  largest  country  in  Africa 


Population:  23,524,622  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.90% 

Nationality:  noun — Sudanese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Sudanese 


Ethnic  divisions:  52%  black,  39%  Arab, 
6%  Beja,  2%  foreigners,  1%  other 

Religion:  70%  Sunni  Muslim  in  north,  20% 
indigenous  beliefs,  5%  Christian  (mostly  in 
south) 

Language:  Arabic  (official),  Nubian,  Ta 
Bedawie,  diverse  dialects  of  Nilotic,  Nilo- 
Hamitic,  and  Sudanic  languages,  English; 
program  of  Arabization  in  process 

Infant  mortality  rate:  118.9/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  47 
Literacy:  20% 

Labor  force:  6.086  million  (1982);  roughly 
78.4%  agriculture,  9.8%  industry  and 
commerce,  6.0%  government;  labor  short- 
ages for  almost  all  categories  of  employ- 
ment coexist  with  urban  unemployment 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  the  Sudan 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Khartoum 

Administrative  divisions:  9  regions 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  Islamic  law;  in  September  1983 
President  Nimeiri  declared  the  penal  code 
would  conform  to  Islamic  law;  some  sepa- 
rate religious  courts;  interim  constitution 
promulgated  August  1985;  accepts  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  1  January,  Indepen- 
dence Day 

Branches:  Supreme  Council  and  Civilian 
Cabinet;  regional  military  governors 

Government  leaders:  Ahmad 
al-MIRGHANI,  Chairman,  Supreme  Coun- 
cil (since  May  1986);  Sadiq  al-MAHDI, 
Prime  Minister  (since  May  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  elections  held  in  April  1986; 
selected  representation  to  a  Constituent 
Assembly  that  was  to  draft  a  new  constitu- 
tion in  one  year  and  thereafter  turn  itself 
into  a  parliament  to  serve  for  three  years 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  following 
coup  in  April  1985,  more  than  30  different 
political  parties  declared;  most  significant 
include  the  Umma  Party  (Ansar  Muslim 
Sect),  the  Democratic  Unionist  Party 
(Khatmiyyah  Muslim  Sect),  the  rightist 


Islamic  fundamentalist  National  Islamic 
Front  (Muslim  Brotherhood),  the  Sudanese 
Communist  Party,  and  the  B'ath  Party; 
major  southern  parties  include  the  Sudan 
African  Congress  and  the  Southern  Sudan- 
ese Political  Association 

Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  Arab  League, 
FAO,  G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  OIC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $7.31  billion  at  current  prices 

(FY84),  $330  per  capita  (FY84) 

Natural  resources:  modest  reserves  of  oil, 
iron  ore,  copper,  chrome,  and  other  indus- 
trial minerals 

Agriculture:  main  crops — sorghum,  millet, 
wheat,  sesame,  peanuts,  beans,  barley;  not 
self-sufficient  in  food  production;  main 
cash  crops — cotton,  gum  arabic,  peanuts, 
sesame 

Major  industries:  cotton  ginning,  textiles, 
brewery,  cement,  edible  oils,  livestock, 
soap,  distilling,  shoes,  Pharmaceuticals 

Electric  power:  552,000  kW  capacity; 
1,210  million  kWh  produced,  52  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $557  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  cotton 
(26%),  gum  arabic,  livestock,  peanuts, 
sesame;  $40  million  to  Communist  coun- 
tries (FY82) 

Imports:  $1,235  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
textiles,  petroleum  products,  foodstuffs, 
machinery  and  equipment,  manufactured 
goods 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  FRG,  US, 
Saudi  Arabia,  France,  Egypt,  Japan 

Budget:  (FY86)  public  revenues  $630 
million,  total  expenditures  $1,023  million, 
including  development  expenditure  of 
$255  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.50  Sudanese 
pounds=US$l  (October  1986)  official;  5.00 
Sudanese  pounds=US$l  free  market  (De- 
cember 1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 


230 


Suriname 


Communications 

Railroads:  5,516  km  total;  4,800  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge,  716  km  1.6096-meter  gauge 
plantation  line 

Highways:  20,000  km  total;  2,000  km 
bituminous  treated,  4,000  km  gravel,  2,304 
km  improved  earth;  remainder  unim- 
proved earth  and  track 

Inland  waterways:  5,310  km  navigable 
Pipelines:  refined  products,  815  km 
Ports:  1  major  (Port  Sudan) 
Civil  air:  13  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  88  total,  79  usable;  8  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  31  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  large  system  by 
African  standards,  but  barely  adequate; 
consists  of  radio  relay,  cables,  radio  com- 
munications, and  troposcatter;  domestic 
satellite  system  with  14  stations;  68,500 
telephones  (0.3  per  100  popl.);  4  AM,  1 
FM,  2  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Air 
Defense  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,314,000;  3,247,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 249,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1986,  $134.4  million;  5.5%  of  central 
government  budget 


North  Atlantic 
Ocean 


See  ref  lonal  map  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  163,270  km2;  land  area: 

161,470  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Georgia 

Land  boundaries:  1,561  km  total 

Coastline:  386  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  claims  area  in  French 
Guiana  between  Litani  Rivier  and  Riviere 
Marouini  (both  headwaters  of  the  Lawa); 
claims  area  in  Guyana  between  New 
(Upper  Courantyne)  and  Courantyne/Ku- 
tari  rivers  (all  headwaters  of  the  Couran- 
tyne) 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  trade 
winds 

Terrain:  mostly  rolling  hills;  narrow 
coastal  plain  with  swamps 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and 
pastures;  97%  forest  and  woodland;  3% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  mostly  tropical  rain  forest 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  388,636  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.61% 

Nationality:  noun — Surinamer(s);  adjec- 
tive— Surinamese 


Ethnic  divisions:  37.0%  Hindustani  (East 
Indian),  31.0%  Creole  (black  and  mixed), 
15.3%  Javanese,  10.3%  Bush  black,  2.6% 
Amerindian,  1.7%  Chinese,  1.0%  Europe- 
ans, 1.1%  other 

Religion:  27.4%  Hindu,  19.6%  Muslim, 
22.8%  Roman  Catholic,  25.2%  Protestant 
(predominantly  Moravian),  about  5% 
indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  Dutch  (official);  English  widely 
spoken;  Sranan  Tongo  (Surinamese,  some- 
times called  Taki-Taki)  is  native  language 
of  Creoles  and  much  of  the  younger  popu- 
lation and  is  lingua  franca  among  others; 
also  Hindi  Suriname  Hindustani  (a  variant 
of  Bhoqpuri),  and  Javanese 

Infant  mortality  rate:  23/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64.8,  women  69.8 
Literacy:  65% 

Labor  force:  104,000  (1984);  unemploy- 
ment 25%  (1985);  about  10.6%  of  work 
force  engaged  in  agriculture,  animal  hus- 
bandry, and  fishing 

Organized  labor:  49,000  members  of  labor 
force  organized 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Suriname 
Type:  military-civilian  rule 
Capital:  Paramaribo 

Administrative  divisions:  9  districts,  each 
headed  by  District  Commissioner  responsi- 
ble to  Minister  of  Internal  Affairs  and 
Local  Administration;  100  People's  Com- 
mittees installed  at  local  level 

Legal  system:  suspended  constitution; 
judicial  system  functions  in  ordinary  civil 
and  criminal  cases 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 

November 

Branches:  civilian  government  controlled 

by  the  military 

Government  leaders:  Lt.  Col.  Desire 
BOUTERSE,  Head  of  Government,  Army 
Commander  and  strongman  (since  Febru- 
ary 1980);  Lachmipersad  Frederick 
RAMDAT-MISIER,  Acting  President 
(figurehead;  since  February  1982);  Jules 
Wijdenbosch,  Prime  Minister  (since  Febru- 
ary 1987) 


231 


Suriname  (continued) 


Swaziland 


Suffrage:  suspended 
Elections:  none  planned 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  25  February 
National  Unity  Movement  (November 
1983)  established  by  Bouterse;  regular 
party  activity  limited;  given  greater  free- 
dom of  assembly  in  1985;  leftists  (all  small 
groups) — Revolutionary  People's  Party 
(RVP),  Michael  Naarendorp;  Progressive 
Workers  and  Farmers  (PALU),  Iwan 
Krolis;  traditional  parties — Progressive 
Reform  Party  (VHP),  Jaggermath 
Lachmon;  National  Party  of  Suriname 
(NPS),  Henck  Awon;  Indonesian  Peasants 
Party  (KTPI),  Willy  Soemita 

Member  of:  ECLA,  FAO,  GATT,  G-77, 
IBA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM,  OAS, 
PAHO,  SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $1.1  billion  (1985);  $2,920  per  capita 
(1985);  real  growth  rate  2.0%  (1985);  an- 
nual inflation  rate  20-30%  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  forests,  hydroelectric 
power  potential,  fish,  shrimp,  bauxite,  iron 
ore,  and  other  minerals 

Agriculture:  rice,  bananas,  palm  oil,  tim- 
ber 

Major  industries:  bauxite  mining,  alumina 
and  aluminum  production,  lumbering, 
food  processing 

Electric  power:  420,000  kW  capacity; 
1,610  million  kWh  produced,  4,230  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $314  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  alu- 
mina, bauxite,  aluminum,  rice,  wood  and 
wood  products 

Imports:  $299  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  capital 
equipment,  petroleum,  iron  and  steel, 
cotton,  flour,  meat,  dairy  products 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 26% 
Netherlands,  17%  US,  13%  FRG;  im- 
ports—30%  US,  21%  Trinidad  and  Tobago, 
9%  Netherlands  (1983) 

Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  including 
Ex-Im— US  (FY70-83),  $2.5  million;  West- 
ern (non-US)  countries,  ODA  and  OOF 
(1970-84),  $1.4  billion 


Budget:  revenues,  $270.9  million;  expendi- 
tures, $469.0  million  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.78  Suriname 
guilders=US$l  (August  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  166  km  total;  86  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  government  owned,  and  80 
km  1.435-meter  standard  gauge;  all  single 
track 

Highways:  8,300  km  total;  500  km  paved; 
5,400  km  bauxite  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
improved  earth;  2,400  km  sand  or  clay 

Inland  waterways:  1,200  km;  most  impor- 
tant means  of  transport;  oceangoing  vessels 
with  drafts  ranging  from  4.2  m  to  7  m  can 
navigate  many  of  the  principal  waterways 
while  native  canoes  navigate  upper  reaches 

Ports:  1  major  (Paramaribo),  6  minor 
Civil  air:  2  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  45  total,  40  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  international  facili- 
ties good;  domestic  radio-relay  system; 
27,500  telephones  (6.3  per  100  pop!.);  4 
AM,  7  FM,  and  1  shortwave  stations;  6  TV 
stations;  2  Atlantic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  National  Army  (including 
Infantry  Battalion,  Military  Police  Brigade, 
Navy,  Air  Force) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  100,278; 
59,971  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  1983,  $41.8  million;  8.2% 
of  central  government  budget 


50km 


SM  nfkwl  Mp  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  17,360  km2;  land  area:  17,200 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Jersey 

Land  boundaries:  435  km  total 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  to  near 
temperate 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  and  hills;  some 
moderately  sloping  plains 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  67%  meadows  and  pastures; 
6%  forest  and  woodland;  19%  other;  in- 
cludes 2%  irrigated 

Environment:  overgrazing;  soil  degrada- 
tion; soil  erosion 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  almost  an 
enclave  of  South  Africa 


Population:  715,160  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.75% 

Nationality:  noun — Swazi(s);  adjective — 
Swazi 

Ethnic  divisions:  96%  African,  3%  Euro- 
pean, 1%  mulatto 

Religion:  57%  Christian,  43%  indigenous 
beliefs 

Language:  English  and  siSwati  (official); 
government  business  conducted  in  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  156/1,000(1982) 
Life  expectancy:  men  46.8,  women  50.0 


232 


Literacy:  65% 

Labor  force:  195,000;  over  60,000  engaged 
in  subsistence  agriculture;  55,000-60,000 
wage  earners,  many  only  intermittently, 
with  36%  agriculture  and  forestry,  20% 
community  and  social  services,  14%  manu- 
facturing, 9%  construction,  21%  other; 
12,000  employed  in  South  Africa  (1982) 

Organized  labor:  about  15%  of  wage 
earners  are  unionized 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Swaziland 

Type:  monarchy;  independent  member  of 
Commonwealth  since  September  1968 

Capital:  Mbabane  (administrative); 
Lobamba  (legislative  capital) 

Administrative  divisions:  4  administrative 
districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  South  African 
Roman-Dutch  law  in  statutory  courts, 
Swazi  traditional  law  and  custom  in  tradi- 
tional courts;  has  not  accepted  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Somhlolo  (Indepen- 
dence) Day,  6  September 

Branches:  constitution  was  repealed  and 
Parliament  dissolved  by  King  Sobhuza  II 
(deceased  August  1982)  in  April  1973;  new 
bicameral  Parliament  (Senate,  House  of 
Assembly)  formally  opened  in  January 
1979;  80-member  electoral  college  chose 
40  members  of  lower  house  and  10  mem- 
bers of  upper  house;  additional  10  mem- 
bers for  each  house  chosen  by  King;  execu- 
tive authority  vested  in  the  King  or  Queen 
(with  the  advice  of  the  Supreme  Council 
of  State),  whose  assent  is  required  before 
parliamentary  acts  become  law;  King's 
authority  exercised  through  Prime  Minister 
and  Cabinet  who  must  be  members  of 
Parliament;  judiciary  is  part  of  Ministry  of 
Justice  but  otherwise  independent  of 
executive  and  legislative  branches;  cases 
from  subordinate  courts  can  be  appealed 
to  the  High  Court  and  the  Court  of  Ap- 
peal 

Government  leaders:  MSWATI  III,  King 
(since  April  1986);  Ntombi  THWALA, 
Queen  (and  co-Monarch),  Sotsha  Ernest 
DLAMINI,  Prime  Minister  (since  October 
1986) 


Suffrage:  universal  for  adults 
Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de 
facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAU,  Southern  African  Customs  Union, 
SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO 

Economy 

GNP:  about  $478  million,  $730  per  capita; 
real  growth  11%  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  asbestos,  coal,  clay,  tin, 
diamonds,  hydroelelectric  power,  forests 

Agriculture:  maize,  cotton,  rice,  sugar,  and 
citrus  fruits 

Major  industry:  mining,  pulping 

Electric  power:  46,000  kW  capacity;  120 
million  kWh  produced,  170  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $174  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  sugar, 
asbestos,  wood  and  forest  products,  citrus, 
and  canned  fruit 

Imports:  $322  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  motor 
vehicles,  chemicals,  petroleum  products, 
and  foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  South  Africa,  UK, 
US;  member  of  South  African  Customs 
Union 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $369  million;  US 
(FY70-85),  $90  million 

Budget:  revenues,  $204  million;  current 
expenditures,  $149  million  (1984/85  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  the  Swazi 
lilangeni  exchanges  at  par  with  the  South 
African  rand;  2.2  emalangeni=US$l  (29 
January  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  515  km  1.067-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  2,853  km  total;  510  km  paved, 
1,230  km  crushed  stone,  gravel,  or  stabi- 
lized soil,  and  1,113  km  improved  earth 
Civil  air:  1  major  transport  aircraft 
Airfields:  25  total,  25  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surfaced  runways;  1  with 
runways  2,440-3,659,  1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  system  consists  of 
carrier-equipped  open-wire  lines  and  low 
capacity  radio-relay  links;  15,400  tele- 
phones (2.3  per  100  popl.);  6  AM,  6  FM, 
11  TV  stations;  Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Umbutfo  Swaziland  Defense 
Force,  Royal  Swaziland  Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  151,000; 
87,000  fit  for  military  service 


233 


Sweden 


Tarna 


Sundtvatl 


aristae! 


Gbtebor 
Kallegal 

Mai  mo 
See  regional  map  V 


javle 

^Uppsala 

J&TOCKHOLM 

lopinq 

^Gotland 
Hand        Baltic  Sea 
Karlskrona 


Geography 

Total  area:  449,960  km2;  land  area: 
411,620km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
California 

Land  boundaries:  2,196  km  total 
Coastline:  3,218  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
deptb  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  USSR 

Climate:  temperate  in  south  with  cold, 
cloudy  winters  and  cool  partly  cloudy 
summers;  subarctic  in  north 

Terrain:  mostly  flat  or  gently  rolling  low- 
lands; mountains  in  west 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures;  64% 
forest  and  woodland;  27%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  water  pollution;  acid  rain 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
Danish  Straits  linking  Baltic  and  North 
Seas 

People 

Population:  8,383,026  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.15% 

Nationality:  noun — Swede(s);  adjective — 
Swedish 


Ethnic  divisions:  homogeneous  white 
population;  small  Lappish  minority;  est. 
12%  foreign  born  or  first  generation  immi- 
grants (Finns,  Yugoslavs,  Danes,  Norwe- 
gians, Greeks) 

Religion:  93.5%  Evangelical  Lutheran, 
1.0%  Roman  Catholic,  5.5%  other 

Language:  Swedish,  small  Lapp-  and 
Finnish-speaking  minorities;  immigrants 
speak  native  languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  7/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  75,  women  81 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  4.41  million  (1984);  32.8% 
private  services;  30.0%  government  ser- 
vices; 22.0%  mining  and  manufacturing; 
5.9%  construction;  5.0%  agriculture,  for- 
estry, and  fishing;  0.9%  electricity,  gas,  and 
waterworks;  2.8%  unemployed  (1985 
average) 

Organized  labor:  90%  of  labor  force  (1985 
est.) 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Sweden 
Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  Stockholm 

Administrative  divisions:  24  counties,  284 
municipalities  (townships) 
Legal  system:  civil  law  system  influenced 
by  customary  law;  a  new  constitution  was 
adopted  in  1975;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 
National  holiday:  no  national  holiday; 
King's  birthday,  30  April,  celebrated  as 
such  by  Swedish  embassies 
Branches:  legislative  authority  rests  with 
unicameral  parliament  (Riksdag);  executive 
power  vested  in  Cabinet,  responsible  to 
parliament;  Supreme  Court,  6  superior 
courts,  108  lower  courts 
Government  leaders:  CARL  XVI  Gustaf, 
King  (since  September  1973);  Ingvar 
CARLSSON,  Prime  Minister  (since  March 
1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  but  not  compulsory 
over  age  18;  after  three  years  of  legal 
residence  immigrants  may  vote  in  county 
and  municipal  but  not  national  elections 
Elections:  every  three  years;  next  sched- 
uled for  September  1988 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Moderate 
(conservative),  Carl  Bildt;  Center,  Olaf 
Johansson;  Liberal  People's  Party,  Bengt 
Westerberg;  Social  Democratic,  Ingvar 
Carlsson;  Left  Party-Communist  (VPK), 
Lars  Werner;  Swedish  Communist  Party 
(SKP),  Roland  Pettersson;  Communist 
Workers'  Party,  Rolf  Hagel 
Voting  strength:  (1985  election)  45.0% 
Social  Democratic,  21.3%  Moderate  Coali- 
tion, 12.5%  Center  (includes  votes  for 
Christian  Democratic  Alliance),  14.3% 
Liberal,  5.4%  Communist,  1.5%  other 
Communists:  VPK  and  SKP;  VPK,  the 
major  Communist  party,  is  reported  to 
have  roughly  17,800  members;  in  the  1985 
election,  the  VPK  attracted  293,543  votes; 
in  addition,  there  are  4  other  active  Com- 
munist parties,  including  the  SKP,  for 
which  membership  figures  are  not  avail- 
able; in  the  1985  elections,  these  parties 
obtained  an  additional  16,000  votes 
Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EC  (Free  Trade  Agreement),  EFTA, 
ESRO,  FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC, 
ICAO,  ICES,  ICO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter- 
American  Development  Bank,  IEA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTERPOL, 
INTELSAT,  International  Lead  and  Zinc 
Study  Group,  IPU,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— 
Internationa!  Whaling  Commission, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
Nordic  Council,  OECD,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $99  billion,  $11,850  per  capita; 
50.8%  private  consumption,  27.8%  govern- 
ment consumption,  13.1%  private  invest- 
ment; 5.9%  public  investment;  —0.2% 
change  in  stock  building;  0.2%  net  exports 
of  goods  and  services;  growth  rate,  2.2%; 
average  exchange  rate  8.61  kronors=US$l 
(1985) 

Natural  resources:  zinc,  iron,  lead,  copper, 
silver,  gold,  forests,  hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  animal  husbandry  predomi- 
nates, with  milk  and  dairy  products  ac- 
counting for  37%  of  farm  income;  main 
crops — grains,  sugar  beets,  potatoes;  100% 
self-sufficient  in  grains  and  potatoes,  85% 
self-sufficient  in  sugar  beets 


234 


Switzerland 


Fishing:  catch  285,000  metric  tons  (1984); 

exports  $74  million,  imports  $195.0  million 

(1985) 

Major  industries:  iron  and  steel,  precision 

equipment  (bearings,  radio  and  telephone 

parts,  armaments),  wood  pulp  and  paper 

products,  processed  foods,  motor  vehicles 

Shortages:  coal,  petroleum,  textile  fibers, 
potash,  salt,  oils  and  fats,  tropical  products 

Crude  steel:  4.8  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  575  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  39,016,000  kW  capacity; 
150,500  million  kWh  produced,  18,010 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $30.5  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, motor  vehicles,  paper  products, 
pulp  and  wood,  iron  and  steel  products, 
chemicals,  petroleum  and  petroleum 
products 

Imports:  $28.5  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, petroleum  and  petroleum  prod- 
ucts, chemicals,  motor  vehicles,  foodstuffs, 
iron  and  steel,  clothing 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — EC  47.0% 
(FRG  11.4%,  UK  9.9%,  Denmark  8.3%), 
US  11.7%,  Norway  10.5%;  imports— EC 
53.9%  (FRG  17.9%,  UK  14.1%,  Denmark 
6.8%),  US  8.4%,  less  developed  countries 
7.6% 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
commitments  (1970-84),  $6  billion 

Budget:  (1985/86)  revenues  $35.87  billion, 
expenditures  $42.3  billion,  deficit  $7.7 
billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.0 

kronors=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  12,520  km  total;  Swedish  State 
Railways  (SJ)— 11,180  km  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge,  6,960  km  electrified  and 
1,152  km  double  track;  182  km  0.891- 
meter  gauge;  117  km  rail  ferry  service; 
privately  owned  railways — 511  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  332  km  electrified; 
371  km  0.891-meter  gauge  electrified 

Highways:  97,400  km  (51,899  km  paved, 
20,659  km  gravel,  24,842  km  unimproved 
earth) 


Inland  waterways:  2,052  km  navigable  for 
small  steamers  and  barges 

Pipelines:  84  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  17  major  and  30  minor 

t 

Civil  air:  65  major  transports 

Airfields:  265  total,  261  usable;  137  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  10  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  89  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  domestic 
and  international  facilities;  7.8  million 
telephones  (89.0  per  100  popl.);  5  AM,  361 
FM,  877  TV  stations;  5  submarine  coaxial 
cables,  2  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  antennas, 
1  Eutelsat  antenna 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Swedish  Army,  Royal 
Swedish  Air  Force,  Royal  Swedish  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,095,000;  1,840,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 57,000  reach  military  age  (19)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
June  1987,  $3.45  billion;  7.9%  of  central 
government  budget 


100  km 


Schaffhausen 


Bas 


Bodensee 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  41,290  km2;  land  area:  39,770 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
New  Jersey 

Land  boundaries:  1,884  km  total 

Climate:  temperate,  but  varies  with  alti- 
tude; cold,  cloudy,  rainy /snowy  winters; 
cool  to  warm,  cloudy,  humid  summers 
with  occasional  showers 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  (Alps  in  south, 
Jura  in  northwest)  with  central  plateau  of 
rolling  hills  and  plains 

Land  use:  10%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  40%  meadows  and  pastures;  26% 
forest  and  woodland;  23%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  dominated  by  Alps 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  crossroads  of 
northern  and  southern  Europe 


Population:  6,572,739  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.32% 

Nationality:  noun — Swiss  (sing.  &  pi.); 
adjective — Swiss 

Ethnic  divisions:  total  population — 65% 
German,  18%  French,  10%  Italian,  1% 
Romansch,  5%  other;  Swiss  nationals — 74% 
German,  20%  French,  4%  Italian,  1% 
Romansch,  1%  other 

Religion:  49%  Catholic,  48%  Protestant, 
0.3%  Jewish 


Switzerland  (continued) 


Language:  total  population — 65%  German, 
18%  French,  12%  Italian,  1%  Romansch, 
4%  other;  Swiss  nationals — 74%  German, 
20%  French,  4%  Italian,  1%  Romansch,  1% 
other 

Infant  mortality  rate:  9/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  70.3,  women  76.2 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  3.05  million,  about  706,000 
foreign  workers,  mostly  Italian;  42%  ser- 
vices, 39%  industry  and  crafts,  11%  gov- 
ernment, 7%  agriculture  and  forestry,  1% 
other;  0.9%  unemployed  (1985) 

Organized  labor:  20%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Swiss  Confederation 

Type:  federal  republic 

Capital:  Bern 

Administrative  divisions:  23  cantons  (3 
divided  into  half  cantons) 

Legal  system:  civil  law  system  influenced 
by  customary  law;  constitution  adopted 
1874,  amended  since;  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts,  except  with  respect  to 
federal  decrees  of  general  obligatory 
character;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion, with  reservations 

National  holiday:  National  Day,  1  August 

Branches:  bicameral  parliament  (National 
Council,  Council  of  States)  has  legislative 
authority;  federal  council  (Bundesrat)  has 
executive  authority;  justice  left  chiefly  to 
cantons 

Government  leaders:  Pierre  AUBERT, 
President  (1987 — presidency  rotates  annu- 
ally); Otto  STICK,  Vice  President  (term 
runs  concurrently  with  that  of  President) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20 

Elections:  held  every  four  years;  next 
elections  scheduled  for  1987 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Dem- 
ocratic Party  (SPS),  Helmuth  Hubacher, 
chairman;  Radical  Democratic  Party 
(FDP),  Bruno  Hunziker,  president;  Chris- 
tian Democratic  People's  Party  (CVP), 
Flavio  Cotti,  president;  Swiss  People's 
Party  (SVP),  Adolf  Ogi,  president; 


Workers'  Party  (PdA),  Armand  Magnin, 
secretary  general;  National  Action  Party 
(NA),  Hans  Zwicky,  chairman; 
Independents'  Party  (LdU),  Dr.  Franz 
Jaeger,  president;  Republican  Movement 
(Rep),  Dr.  James  Schworzenboch,  Franz 
Baumgartner,  leaders;  Liberal  Party  (LPS), 
Gilbert  Coutau,  president;  Evangelical 
People's  Party  (EVP),  Max  Diik,  president; 
Progressive  Organizations  of  Switzerland 
(POCH),  Georg  Degen,  secretary;  Federa- 
tion of  Ecology  Parties  (GP),  Laurent 
Rebeaud,  president;  Autonomous  Socialist 
Party  (PSA),  Werner  Carobbio,  secretary 

Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  23.4% 
FDP,  22.8%  SPS,  20.5%  CVP,  11.1%  SVP, 
3.5%  NA,  2.9%  GP 
Communists:  about  5,000  members 

Member  of:  ADB,  Council  of  Europe, 
DAC,  EFTA,  ELDO  (observer),  ESRO, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDB — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IEA,  IFAD,  ILO,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Wheat  Council,  OECD,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  World  Confederation  of  Labor, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG, 
WTO;  permanent  observer  status  at  the 
UN 

Economy 

GNP:  $97.1  billion,  $14,030  per  capita; 
58%  consumption,  22%  investment,  13% 
government,  0%  net  foreign  balance;  real 
growth  rate  3.2%  (1985);  annual  average 
exchange  rate  2.46  Swiss  francs  (SF)=US$1 
(1985) 

Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  power 
(potential),  timber,  salt 

Agriculture:  dairy  farming  predominates; 
less  than  50%  self-sufficient;  food  short- 
ages— fish,  refined  sugar,  fats  and  oils 
(other  than  butter),  grains,  eggs,  fruits, 
vegetables,  meat 

Major  industries:  machinery,  chemicals, 
watches,  textiles,  precision  instruments 

Shortages:  practically  all  important  raw 
materials  except  hydroelectric  energy 
Electric  power:  17,690,000  kW  capacity; 
57,330  million  kWh  produced,  8,870  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 


Exports:  $27.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  equipment,  chemicals,  preci- 
sion instruments,  metal  products,  textiles, 
foodstuffs 

Imports:  $30.7  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery and  transportation  equipment, 
metals  and  metal  products,  foodstuffs, 
chemicals,  textile  fibers  and  yarns 
Major  trade  partners:  59%  EC,  21%  other 
developed,  17%  less  developed  countries, 
3%  Communist 

Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  economic  aid 
committed  (1970-84),  $1.6  billion 

Budget:  receipts,  $8.50  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $8.7  billion;  deficit,  $0.20  billion 
(1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.69  Swiss 
francs  (SF)=US$1  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  5,174  km  total,  of  which  2,971 
km  are  government  owned  (SBB),  and 
2,203  km  are  nongovernment  owned;  the 
SBB  network  consists  of  2,897  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge  and  74  km  1.000- 
meter  narrow  gauge  track;  1,432  km 
double  track,  99%  electrified;  the  nongov- 
ernment network  consists  of  710  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge,  1,418  km  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  and  75  km  0.790-meter 
gauge  track,  100%  electrified 
Highways:  62,145  km  total  (all  paved),  of 
which  18,620  km  are  canton  and  1,057  km 
are  national  highways  (740  km  autobahn); 
42,468  km  are  communal  roads 
Pipelines:  314  km  crude  oil;  1,438  km 
natural  gas 

Inland  waterways:  65  km;  Rhine  River 
(Basel  to  Rheinfelden,  Schaffhausen  to 
Bodensee);  12  navigable  lakes 
Ports:  1  major  (Basel),  2  minor  (all  inland) 
Civil  air:  89  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  73  total,  71  usable;  42  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  16  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


236 


Syria 


Telecommunications:  excellent  domestic, 
international,  and  broadcast  services;  5.44 
million  telephones  (78.9  per  100  popl.);  7 
AM,  265  FM,  1,340  TV  stations;  1  satellite 
station  with  2  Atlantic  Ocean  and  1  Indian 
Ocean  antennas 

Defense  Forces 
Branches:  Army,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,736,000;  1,502,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 47,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  proposed  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1985,  $2.0  billion; 
21.3%  of  proposed  central  government 
budget 


oundary  fepfpsontahon  is 

•ssanly  authoritative 


See  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  185,180  km2;  land  area: 
184,050  km2  (including  1,295  km2  of 
Israeli-occupied  territory) 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  North 
Dakota 

Land  boundaries:  2,196  km  total  (excludes 
2,156  km  occupied  area) 

Coastline:  193  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  35  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  separated  from  Israel 
by  1949  Armistice  Line;  Golan  Heights  is 
Israeli  occupied;  Hatay  question  with 
Turkey;  periodic  disputes  with  Iraq  over 
Euphrates  water  rights;  potential  dispute 
over  water  development  plans  by  Turkey 
for  the  Tigris  and  Euphrates  rivers 

Climate:  mostly  dry  desert  with  hot,  dry, 
sunny  summers  (June  to  August)  and  mild, 
rainy  winters  (December  to  February) 
along  coast 

Terrain:  primarily  semiarid  and  desert 
plain;  narrow  coastal  plain;  mountains  in 
west 

Land  use:  28%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  46  meadows  and  pastures;  3%  forest 
and  woodland;  20%  other;  includes  3% 
irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  overgrazing; 
soil  erosion;  desertification 


Special  notes:  none 


Population:  11,147,763  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.69% 

Nationality:  noun — Syrian(s);  adjective — 
Syrian 

Ethnic  divisions:  90.3%  Arab;  9.7%  Kurds, 
Armenians,  and  other 

Religion:  74%  Sunni  Muslim;  16%  Alawite, 
Druze,  and  other  Muslim  sects;  10%  Chris- 
tian (various  sects) 

Language:  Arabic  (official),  Kurdish, 
Armenian,  Aramaic,  Circassian;  French 
and  English  widely  understood 

Infant  mortality  rate:  57/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64.9,  women  67.6 
Literacy:  47% 

Labor  force:  2.4  million;  36%  miscella- 
neous services,  32%  agriculture,  32% 
industry  (including  construction);  majority 
unskilled;  shortage  of  skilled  labor 

Organized  labor:  5%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Syrian  Arab  Republic 

Type:  republic;  under  leftwing  military 
regime  since  March  1963 

Capital:  Damascus 

Administrative  divisions:  13  provinces 
and  city  of  Damascus 

Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  and 
civil  law  system;  special  religious  courts; 
constitution  promulgated  in  1973;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  17 
April 

Branches:  executive  powers  vested  in 
President  and  Council  of  Ministers;  power 
rests  in  unicameral  legislative  (People's 
Council);  seat  of  power  is  the  Ba'th  Party 
Regional  (Syrian)  Command 

Government  leader:  Lt.  Gen.  Hafiz  al- 
ASSAD,  President  (since  February  1971) 

Suffrage:  universal  at  age  18 

Elections:  People's  Council  election  held 
November  1983;  presidential  election  held 
February  1985 


237 


Syria  (continued) 


Tanzania 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  ruling  party 
is  the  Arab  Socialist  Resurrectionist  (Ba'th) 
Party;  the  Progressive  National  Front  is 
dominated  by  Ba'thists  but  includes  inde- 
pendents and  members  of  the  Syrian  Arab 
Socialist  Party  (ASP),  Arab  Socialist  Union 
(ASU),  Socialist  Unionist  Movement,  and 
Syrian  Communist  Party  (SCP) 

Communists:  mostly  sympathizers,  num- 
bering about  5,000 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  non- 
Ba'th  parties  have  little  effective  political 
influence;  Communist  Party  ineffective; 
greatest  threat  to  Assad  regime  lies  in 
factionalism  in  the  military;  conservative 
religious  leaders;  Muslim  Brotherhood 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IOOC,  IPU,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Wheat  Council,  NAM,  OAPEC,  QIC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $21.46  billion  (1985),  $2,040  per 
capita;  real  GDP  growth  rate  -3%  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  crude  oil,  phosphates, 
chrome  and  manganese  ores,  asphalt,  iron 
ore,  rock  salt,  marble,  gypsum 

Agriculture:  cotton,  wheat,  barley,  to- 
bacco; sheep  and  goat  raising;  self- 
sufficient  in  most  foods  in  years  of  good 
weather 

Major  industries:  textiles,  food  processing, 
beverages,  tobacco;  petroleum — 210,000 
b/d  production  (1986),  229,000  b/d  re- 
fining capacity 

Electric  power:  2,296,000  kW  capacity; 
8,050  million  kWh  produced,  740  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, textiles  and  textile  products,  tobacco, 
fruits  and  vegetables,  cotton 

Imports:  $3.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum, machinery  and  metal  products, 
textiles,  fuels,  foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — Romania, 
Italy,  France,  USSR;  imports— Iran,  FRG, 
Italy,  Libya 


Budget:  1985 — revenues  $6.3  billion 
(excluding  aid  payments);  expenditures 
$10.9  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.925  Syrian 
pounds = US$1  (official  rate,  February 
1986);  several  other  rates  are  sanctioned  by 
the  government,  including  a  promotional 
rate  for  specific  transactions  and  others 
guided  by  supply  and  demand 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,543  km  total;  1,281  km  stan- 
dard gauge,  262  km  1.050-meter  narrow 
gauge 

Highways:  16,939  km  total;  12,051  km 
paved,  2,625  km  gravel  or  crushed  stone, 
2,263  km  improved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  672  km;  of  little  im- 
portance 

Pipelines:  1,304  km  crude  oil;  515  km 
refined  products 

Ports:  2  major  (Tartus,  Latakia),  1  petro- 
leum terminal  (Baniyas),  2  minor 

Civil  air:  26  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  99  total,  94  usable;  27  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  21  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  5  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  cur- 
rently undergoing  significant  improve- 
ment; 512,600  telephones  (4.7  per  100 
popl.);  9  AM,  no  FM,  40  TV  stations;  1 
Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  station;  1  Inter- 
sputnik  satellite  station  under  construction; 
1  submarine  cable;  coaxial  cable  and 
radio-relay  to  Iraq,  Jordan,  Turkey,  and 
Lebanon  (inactive) 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Syrian  Arab  Army,  Syrian  Arab 
Air  Force,  Syrian  Arab  Navy 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
2,398,000;  1,341,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 132,000  reach  military  age  (19) 
annually 


Like 


300km 


Sec  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  945,090  km2;  land  area: 

886,040  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 

California 

Land  boundaries:  3,883  km  total 

Coastline:  1,424  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  50  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Malawi 

Climate:  varies  from  tropical  along  coast 
to  temperate  in  highlands 
Terrain:  plains  along  coast;  central  pla- 
teau; highlands  in  north,  south 
Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  40%  meadows  and  pastures;  47% 
forest  and  woodland;  7%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  lack  of  water  and  tsetse  fly 
limit  agriculture;  recent  droughts  affecting 
marginal  agriculture;  Kilimanjaro  is  high- 
est point  in  Africa 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  23,502,472  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.28% 
Nationality:  noun — Tanzanian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Tanzanian 

Ethnic  divisions:  mainland — 99%  native 
African  consisting  of  well  over  100  tribes; 
1%  Asian,  European,  and  Arab;  Zanzibar — 
almost  all  Arab 


238 


Religion:  mainland— 33%  Christian,  33% 
Muslim,  33%  indigenous  beliefs;  Zanzi- 
bar— almost  all  Muslim 
Language:  Swahili  and  English  (official); 
English  primary  language  of  commerce, 
administration,  and  higher  education; 
Swahili  widely  understood  and  generally 
used  for  communication  between  ethnic 
groups;  first  language  of  most  people  is  one 
of  the  local  languages;  primary  education 
is  generally  in  Swahili 
Infant  mortality  rate:  103/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  52 
Literacy:  79% 

Labor  force:  208,680  in  paid  employment 
(1983);  90%  agriculture,  10%  industry  and 
commerce 
Organized  labor:  15%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  United  Republic  of  Tanza- 
nia 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Dar  es  Salaam 

Administrative  divisions:  25  regions — 20 
on  mainland,  5  on  Zanzibar 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  permanent  constitution  adopted  1977 
(Zanzibar  has  its  own  constitution  but 
remains  subject  to  provisions  of  the  union 
constitution);  judicial  review  of  legislative 
acts  limited  to  matters  of  interpretation; 
has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdic- 
tion 

National  holiday:  Union  Day,  26  April; 
Independence  Day,  9  December 

Branches:  President  Ali  Hassan  Mwinyi 
has  full  executive  authority  on  the  main- 
land; National  Assembly  dominated  by  the 
Chama  Cha  Mapinduzi  (Revolutionary 
Party);  National  Assembly  consists  of  233 
members,  72  from  Zanzibar,  of  whom  10 
are  directly  elected,  65  appointed  from  the 
mainland,  and  96  directly  elected  from  the 
mainland  (these  numbers  are  slated  to  be 
changed  when  amendments  to  the  Consti- 
tution are  approved) 

Government  leaders:  Ali  Hassan 
MWINYI,  President  (since  November 
1985);  Joseph  Sinde  WARIOBA,  Prime 
Minister  (since  November  1985) 


Suffrage:  universal  adult  over  age  18 

Political  party  and  leader:  Chama  Cha 
Mapinduzi  (Revolutionary  Party),  only 
political  party,  dominated  by  Nyerere;  has 
considerable  power  over  domestic  policies 
and  the  enforcement  of  them 

Voting  strength:  (October  1985  national 
elections)  close  to  7  million  registered 
voters;  Mwinyi  received  92.2%  of  over  5 
million  votes  cast 

Communists:  a  few  Communist  sympa- 
thizers, especially  on  Zanzibar 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAU,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $4.2  billion  (1984),  $210  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate,  0.8%  (1984  est.) 

Natural  resources:  hydroelectric  power 
potential,  large  unexploited  iron  and  coal, 
gemstone  and  gold  mines,  natural  gas, 
nickel 

Agriculture:  cotton,  coffee,  sisal  on  main- 
land; cloves  and  coconuts  on  Zanzibar 

Major  industries:  primarily  agricultural 
processing  (sugar,  beer,  cigarettes,  sisal 
twine),  diamond  mine,  oil  refinery,  shoes, 
cement,  textiles,  wood  products 

Electric  power:  379,000  kW  capacity;  830 
million  kWh  produced,  37  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $255  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  coffee, 
cotton,  sisal,  cashew  nuts,  meat,  cloves, 
tobacco,  tea,  coconut  products 

Imports:  $1.0  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  machinery  and  transport 
equipment,  cotton  piece  goods,  crude  oil, 
foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — FRG,  UK, 
US;  imports— FRG,  UK,  US,  Iran 

External  debt:  $2.8  billion  (1983);  debt 
service  ratio  68.1%  (1984 — not  including 
IMF) 

Budget:  (1984/85)  revenues,  $891.8  mil- 
lion; current  expenditures,  $1.017  billion; 
development  expenditures,  $359.5  million 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  45  Tanzanian 
shillings=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,555  km  total;  960  km  1.067- 
meter  gauge;  2,595  km  1.000-meter  gauge, 
6.4  km  double  track,  962  km  Tazara 
(Tan-Zam)  Railroad  1.067-meter  gauge  in 
Tanzania;  115  km  1.000-meter  gauge 
planned  by  end  of  decade 

Highways:  total  81,900  km,  3,600  km 
paved;  5,600  km  gravel  or  crushed  stone; 
remainder  improved  and  unimproved 
earth 

Pipelines:  982  km  crude  oil 

Inland  waterways:  several  thousand  km 
navigable  on  Lakes  Tanganyika,  Victoria, 
and  Nyasa;  principal  inland  ports  are 
Mwanza  on  Lake  Victoria  and  Kigoma  on 
Lake  Tanganyika 

Ports:  3  major  (Dar  es  Salaam,  Mtwara, 
Tanga) 

Civil  air:  7  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  100  total,  92  usable;  12  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  45  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  of  open 
wire,  radio  relay,  and  troposcatter;  103,800 
telephones  (0.5  per  100  popl.);  6  AM,  no 
FM,  2  TV  stations;  1  Indian  Ocean  satel- 
lite station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Tanzanian  People's  Defense 
Force  includes  Army,  Navy,  and  Air 
Force;  paramilitary  Police. Field  Force 
Unit;  Militia 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,813,000;  2,772,000  fit  for  military  service 


Thailand 


400  km 


Stf  rc|ioiul  map  IX 


Geography 

Total  area:  514,000  km2;  land  area: 
511,770km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Texas 
Land  boundaries:  4,868  km  total 
Coastline:  3,219  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy,  warm,  cloudy 
southwest  monsoon  (mid-May  to  October); 
dry,  cool  northeast  monsoon  (November  to 
mid-March);  southern  isthmus  always  hot 
and  humid 

Terrain:  central  plain;  eastern  plateau 
(Khorat);  mountains  elsewhere 

Land  use:  34%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  30% 
forest  and  woodland;  31%  other;  includes 
7%  irrigated 

Environment:  air  and  water  pollution; 
land  subsidence  in  Bangkok  area 

Special  notes:  controls  only  land  route 
from  Asia  to  Malaysia  and  Singapore 


Population:  53,645,823  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  1.78% 

Nationality:  noun — Thai  (sing,  and  pi.); 
adjective — Thai 


Ethnic  divisions:  75%  Thai,  14%  Chinese, 
11%  other 

Religion:  95.5%  Buddhist,  4%  Muslim, 
0.5%  other 

Language:  Thai;  English  is  the  secondary 
language  of  the  elite;  ethnic  and  regional 
dialects 

Infant  mortality  rate:  51.4/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  59.5,  women  65.1 
Literacy:  82% 

Labor  force:  26  million  (1984);  73%  agri- 
culture, 11%  industry  and  commerce,  10% 
services,  6%  government;  8%  unemploy- 
ment rate 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Thailand 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy 

Capital:  Bangkok 

Administrative  divisions:  72  centrally 

controlled  provinces 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system, 

with  influences  of  common  law;  has  not 

accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  King's  Birthday,  5 
December 

Branches:  King  is  head  of  state  with 
nominal  powers;  bicameral  legislature 
(National  Assembly — Senate  appointed  by 
King,  elected  House  of  Representatives); 
judiciary  relatively  independent  except  in 
important  political  subversion  cases 
Government  leaders:  BHUMIBOL 
ADULYADEJ,  King  (since  June  1946); 
Gen.  (Ret.)  PREM  TINSULANONDA, 
Prime  Minister  (since  March  1980) 
Suffrage:  universal  at  age  20 
Elections:  last  held  July  1986 
Political  parties:  Social  Action  Party,  Thai 
Nation  Party,  Thai  People's  Party,  Thai 
Citizens  Party,  Democrat  Party,  United 
Democratic  Party,  United  Democracy 
Party,  Community  Action  Party,  People's 
Party,  Progressive  Party;  other  small 
parties  represented  in  parliament 
Voting  strength:  (July  1986  parliamentary 
election)  total  number  of  seats — 347; 
Democrat  Party  100  seats,  Thai  Nation  63 
seats,  Social  Action  51  seats,  United  Demo- 
cratic 38  seats,  Thai  Citizens  24  seats, 
National  Democracy  3  seats,  minor  parties 
68  seats 


Communists:  strength  of  illegal  Commu- 
nist Party  is  probably  less  than  1,000; 
Communist  insurgents  throughout  Thai- 
land total  an  estimated  1,000 
Member  of:  ADB,  ANRPC,  ASEAN, 
ASPAC,  Association  of  Tin  Producing 
Countries,  Colombo  Plan,  GATT,  ESCAP, 
FAO,  G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITC, 
ITU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $37.2  billion  (1985),  $720  per  capita; 
4.0%  real  growth  in  1985 
Natural  resources:  tin,  rubber,  natural  gas, 
tungsten,  tantalum,  timber,  fisheries  prod- 
ucts 

Agriculture:  main  crops — rice,  sugar,  corn, 
rubber,  manioc;  an  illegal  producer  of 
opium  poppy  and  cannabis  for  the  inter- 
national drug  trade 
Fishing:  catch  2.2  million  metric  tons 
(1984);  major  fishery  export,  shrimp, 
24,041  metric  tons,  about  $126  million 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  textiles  and  garments, 
agricultural  processing,  beverages,  tobacco, 
cement,  other  light  manufacturing;  tin  and 
tungsten  ore  mining;  world's  second  largest 
tungsten  producer  and  third  largest  tin 
producer 

Shortages:  fuel  sources,  including  coal  and 
petroleum;  scrap  iron;  and  fertilizer 
Electric  power:  6,400,000  kW  capacity; 
24,060  million  kWh  produced,  460  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $7.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  textiles 
and  garments,  rice,  tapioca,  rubber,  inte- 
grated circuits,  corn,  gems,  sugar,  tin, 
canned  and  frozen  seafood,  fruit 
Imports:  $9.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  machin- 
ery and  transport  equipment,  fuels  and 
lubricants,  base  metals,  chemicals,  and 
fertilizer 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — US,  Japan, 
the  Netherlands,  Singapore,  Malaysia, 
Hong  Kong;  imports — Japan,  US,  Saudi 
Arabia,  Singapore,  Malaysia,  FRG;  about 
1%  or  less  trade  with  Communist  countries 
Budget:  (FY85)  estimate  of  expenditures, 
$7.8  billion;  revenues  $6.0  billion;  deficit 
$1.8  billion 


240 


Togo 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  26.27 
baht=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  October-30  September 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,940  km  1.000-meter  gauge, 
99  km  double  track 

Highways:  44,534  km  total;  28,016  km 
paved,  5,132  km  earth  surface,  11,386  km 
under  development 

Inland  waterways:  3,999  km  principal 
waterways;  3,701  km  with  navigable 
depths  of  0.9  m  or  more  throughout  the 
year;  numerous  minor  waterways  naviga- 
ble by  shallow-draft  native  craft 

Pipelines:  natural  gas,  350  km;  refined 
products,  67  km 

Ports:  2  major,  16  minor 

Civil  air:  30  (plus  2  leased)  major  transport 
aircraft 

Airfields:  131  total,  104  usable;  57  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  13  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  26  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  service  to  general 
public  adequate;  bulk  of  service  to  govern- 
ment activities  provided  by  multichannel 
cable  and  radio-relay  network;  satellite 
ground  station;  domestic  satellite  system 
being  developed;  623,368  telephones;  over 
200  AM,  about  100  FM,  11  TV  transmit- 
ters in  government-controlled  networks 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Thai  Army,  Royal  Thai 
Navy  (includes  Royal  Thai  Marine  Corps), 
Royal  Thai  Air  Force;  paramilitary  forces 
include  Border  Patrol  Police,  Thahan 
Phran  (irregular  soldiers),  Village  Defense 
Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
14,557,000;  8,912,000  fit  for  military 
service;  630,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  30 
September  1987,  $1.6  billion  (est);  18.1% 
of  central  government  budget 


125  km 


Stcrc|ioni1mipVII 


Kpalima 


Bight  of  Benin 


Geography 

Total  area:  56,790  km2;  land  area:  54,390 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  West 

Virginia 

Land  boundaries:  1,646  km  total 

Coastline:  56  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  30  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid  in  south; 
semiarid  in  north 

Terrain:  gently  rolling  savanna  in  north; 
central  hills;  southern  plateau;  low  coastal 
plain  with  extensive  lagoons  and  marshes 

Land  use:  25%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures;  28% 
forest  and  woodland;  42%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  hot,  dry  harmattan  wind 
can  reduce  visibility  in  north  during  win- 
ter; recent  droughts  affecting  agriculture; 
deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  3,228,635  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.25% 

Nationality:  noun — Togolese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Togolese 

Ethnic  divisions:  37  tribes;  largest  and 
most  important  are  Ewe,  Mina,  and  Ka- 
bye;  under  1%  European  and  Syrian- 
Lebanese 


Religion:  about  70%  indigenous  beliefs, 
20%  Christian,  10%  Muslim 

Language:  French,  both  official  and  lan- 
guage of  commerce;  major  African  lan- 
guages are  Ewe  and  Mina  in  the  south  and 
Dagomba  and  Kabye  in  the  north 

Infant  mortality  rate:  114/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  47 
Literacy:  18% 

Labor  force:  78%  agriculture,  22%  indus- 
try; about  88,600  wage  earners,  evenly 
divided  between  public  and  private  sectors 

Organized  labor:  one  national  union,  the 
National  Federation  of  Togolese  Workers 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Togo 

Type:  republic;  one-party  presidential 

regime 

Capital:  Lome 

Administrative  divisions:  21  prefectures 

Legal  system:  French-based  court  system 
with  a  court  of  appeals 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  27 
April 

Branches:  strong  executive  President; 
unicameral  legislature  (National  Assembly); 
separate  judiciary,  including  State  Security 
Court,  established  in  1970;  a  new  constitu- 
tion was  endorsed  by  referendum  in  1979 
that  provided  for  an  elective  presidential 
system  and  a  67-member  National  Assem- 
bly 

Covernment  leader:  Gen.  Cnassingbe 
EYADEMA,  President  (since  1967) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  to  be  held  every  seven  years; 
last  held  in  December  1986;  General 
Eyadema,  the  sole  candidate,  was  elected 
by  almost  100%  of  votes  cast 

Political  party:  single  party  formed  by 
President  Eyadema  in  September  1969, 
Rally  of  the  Togolese  People  (RPT);  struc- 
ture and  staffing  of  party  closely  controlled 
by  government 

Communists:  no  Communist  Party;  possi- 
bly some  sympathizers 


241 


TogO  (continued) 


Tokelau 


Member  of:  Af DB,  CEAO  (observer), 
EAMA,  ECA,  ECOWAS,  ENTENTE, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTERPOL,  ITU,  Lome  Convention, 
NAM,  OAU,  OCAM,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $790  million  (1983  est),  about  $280 
(1983  est.)  per  capita;  3.2%  real  growth  in 
1982 

Natural  resources:  phosphates,  limestone, 

marble 

Agriculture:  main  cash  crops — coffee, 

cocoa,  cotton;  major  food  crops — yarns, 

cassava,  corn,  beans,  rice,  millet,  sorghum, 

fish 

Fishing:  catch  14,556  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  phosphate  mining, 
agricultural  processing,  cement,  handi- 
crafts, textiles,  beverages 

Electric  power:  116,000  kW  capacity;  203 
million  kWh  produced,  65  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $191  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  phos- 
phates, cocoa,  coffee,  palm  kernels 

Imports:  $233  million  (f.o.b.,  1984);  con- 
sumer goods,  fuels,  machinery,  tobacco, 
foodstuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  'mostly  France  and 
other  EC  countries 

Budget:  (1984  proj.),  revenues,  $184.4 
million;  current  expenditures,  $219  mil- 
lion; development  expenditures,  $89  mil- 
lion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  331.24  Com- 
munaute  Financiere  Africaine  (CFA) 
francs=US$l  (average  to  midyear  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  570  km  1.000-meter  gauge, 
single  track 

Highways:  7,000  km  total;  1,600  km 
paved,  2,700  km  improved  earth,  remain- 
der unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  section  of  Mono  River 
and  about  50  km  of  coastal  lagoons  and 
tidal  creeks 


Ports:  1  major  (Lome),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  11  total,  11  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways  2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  system  based  on 
network  of  open-wire  lines  supplemented 
by  radio-relay  routes;  12,000  telephones 
(0.4  per  100  popl.);  2  AM,  no  FM,  4  TV 
stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station 
and  1  SYMPHONIE  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  para- 
military Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  714,000; 
376,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription 


50km 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


Fakaoto''- 


See  regional  mip  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  10  km2;  land  area:  10  km2 
Comparative  area:  about  one-eighteenth 
the  size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  101  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  trade 
winds  (April  to  November) 
Terrain:  coral  atolls  enclosing  large  lagoons 
Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 
Environment:  lies  in  Pacific  typhoon  belt 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  1,713  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.95% 

Nationality:  noun — Tokelauan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Tokelauan 

Ethnic  divisions:  all  Polynesian,  with 
cultural  ties  to  Western  Samoa 
Religion:  70%  Congregational  Christian 
Church,  30%  Roman  Catholic — on  Atafu, 
all  Congregational  Christian  Church  of 
Samoa;  on  Nukunonu,  all  Roman  Catholic; 
on  Fakaofo,  both  denominations 

Language:  Tokelauan  (a  Polynesian  lan- 
guage) and  English 
Literacy:  probably  high 


242 


Tonga 


Government 
Official  name:  Tokelau 

Type:  New  Zealand  Associated  Territory; 
Tokelauans  are  British  subjects  and  New 
Zealand  citizens;  administered  under  the 
Tokelau  Islands  Act  of  1948  as  amended  in 
1970 

Capital:  no  capital — each  atoll  has  its  own 
administrative  center 

Branches:  the  Minister  of  Foreign  Affairs 
of  New  Zealand  is  empowered  to  appoint 
an  Administrator  to  the  region;  the  powers 
of  the  Administrator  are  delegated  to  the 
Official  Secretary  at  the  Office  of  Tokelau 
Affairs,  Apia,  Western  Samoa 

Administrative  divisions:  each  village  has 
a  Council  of  Elders  (Taupulega)  made  up 
of  heads  of  family  groups  together  with 
the  commissioner  (faipule)  and  the  mayor 
(pulenuku);  the  commissioner  administers 
the  law  and  presides  over  the  court 

Legal  system:  British  and  local  statutes 

National  holiday:  6  February  (Waitangi 
Day) 

Government  leaders:  H.  H.  FRANCIS, 
Administrator  (since  February  1985);  A.  H. 
MACEY,  Official  Secretary,  Office  of 
Tokelau  Affairs  (since  February  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult 

Elections:  elections  for  a  commissioner 
and  a  mayor  from  each  atoll  held  at 
three-year  intervals 

Communists:  probably  none 

Economy 

GDP:  $1  million,  $670  per  capita  (1983) 

Natural  resources:  negligible 

Agriculture:  coconuts,  copra;  basic  subsis- 
tence crops — pulaka,  breadfruit,  pawpaw, 
bananas;  pigs,  poultry 

Fishing:  ocean  and  lagoon  fish  and  shell- 
fish for  local  consumption 

Major  industries:  copra  production,  wood 
work,  plaited  craft  goods,  stamps,  coins 

Electric  power:  200  kW  capacity;  .30 
million  kWh  produced,  200  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $98,000  (1983);  stamps,  handi- 
crafts 


Imports:  $323,400  (1983);  foodstuffs, 
machinery,  fuel 

Major  trade  partner:  New  Zealand 

Budget:  (1983/4)  expenditures,  $1,358,105; 
revenue,  $208,419;  New  Zealand  subsidy, 
$1,149,686 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  New  Zealand 
currency  and  the  Tokelau  souvenir  coin 
are  legal  tender— NZ$1.93=US$1  (Novem- 
ber 1986);  Western  Samoan  currency  is 
also  used 

Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 
Highways:  none 

Ports:  no  natural  harbor;  offshore  anchor- 
ages 

Airfields:  none;  lagoon  landings  by  am- 
phibious aircraft  from  Western  Samoa 

Telecommunications:  telephone  service 
links  islands  to  each  other  and  to  Western 
Samoa  (1985) 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  New 
Zealand 


200km 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


_  Talahi 

'  Niuatoputapu 


Veva'u . 
Group 


^Neia.u 


Ht'lpti 
Group   •    •  •  I 

•       •'.'* 


NUKU  ALOFA* 

<W 

Tongotapu 
Group 

Sec  regional  map  X 


Minerva  Reef  not  shown 


Geography 

Total  area:  700  km2;  land  area:  670  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  four  times  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  419  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  modified  by  trade 
winds;  warm  season  (December  to  May), 
cool  season  (May  to  December) 

Terrain:  most  have  limestone  base  formed 
from  uplifted  coral  formation;  others  have 
limestone  overlaying  volcanic  base 

Land  use:  25%  arable  land;  55%  perma- 
nent crops;  6%  meadows  and  pastures; 
12%  forest  and  woodland;  2%  other 

Environment:  archipelago  of  170  islands 
(36  inhabited);  subject  to  cyclones  (October 
to  April);  deforestation 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  98,689  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.76% 

Nationality:  noun — Tongan(s);  adjective — 
Tongan 

Ethnic  divisions:  Polynesian;  about  300 

Europeans 

Religion:  Christian;  Free  Wesleyan 

Church  claims  over  30,000  adherents 


243 


Tonga  (continued) 


Trinidad  and  Tobago 


Language:  Tongan,  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  6.4/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  58 

Literacy:  90-95%;  compulsory  education 
for  children  ages  6-14 

Labor  force:  70%  engaged  in  agriculture; 
600  engaged  in  mining 

Government 

Official  name:  Kingdom  of  Tonga 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy  within  the 
Commonwealth 

Capital:  Nuku'alofa 

Administrative  divisions:  three  island 
groups  (Tongatapu,  Ha'apai,  Vava'u) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  law 

Branches:  executive — King,  Cabinet,  and 
Privy  Council;  unicameral  legislature — 
Legislative  Assembly  composed  of  seven 
nobles  elected  by  their  peers,  seven  elected 
representatives  of  the  people,  eight  Minis- 
ters of  the  Crown;  the  King  appoints  one 
of  the  seven  nobles  to  be  the  speaker; 
judiciary — Supreme  Court,  Magistrate's 
Court,  Land  Court 

Government  leaders:  Taufa'ahau  TUPOU 
IV,  King  (since  December  1965);  Prince 
Fatafehi  TU'IPELEHAKE),  Premier  (since 
December  1965) 

Suffrage:  all  literate,  tax-paying  males  and 
all  literate  females  over  21 

Elections:  supposed  to  be  held  every  three 
years;  last  held  in  April  1978 

Communists:  none  known 

Member  of:  ADB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
ESCAP,  GATT  (de  facto),  IFAD,  ITU, 
South  Pacific  Bureau  for  Economic  Coop- 
eration, SPF,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO 

Economy 

GDP:  $100  million,  $1,030  per  capita 
(1985) 

Natural  resources:  fish 

Agriculture:  largely  dominated  by  coconut 
and  banana  production;  vanilla  beans,  taro, 
yams,  sweet  potatoes,  breadfruit,  fruits  and 
vegetables 

Major  industry:  tourism 


Electric  power:  5,000  kW  capacity;  8 
million  kWh  produced,  80  kWh  per  capita 

(1986) 

Exports:  $7.33  million  (1985  est);  coconut 
oil,  vanilla,  copra,  bananas,  taro,  vanilla 
beans,  fruits  and  vegetables 

Imports:  $41.36  million  (1985  est.);  textiles, 
food,  consumers  products,  machinery, 
petroleum,  building  supplies 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 36% 
Australia,  34%  New  Zealand,  14%  US; 
imports  38%  New  Zealand,  31%  Australia, 
6%  Japan,  5%  Fiji  (1979) 

Aid:  $6.2  million;  Australia  and  other 
Western  donors  (1985  est.) 

Budget:  (1985  est.)  revenues,  22.0  million 
pa'anga;  expenditures,  19.1  million  pa'anga 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  .8463 
pa'anga=US$l  (December  1985) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  198  km  sealed  road  (Tonga- 
tapu); 74  km  (Vava'u);  94  km  unsealed 
roads  usable  only  in  dry  weather 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  2  minor  (Nuku'alofa,  Neiafu) 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  4  total,  4  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  3,529  telephones 
(3.3  per  100  popl.);  66,000  radio  sets;  no 
TV  sets;  1  AM  station;  1  satellite  ground 
station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Land  Force,  Maritime  Force 


Caribbean  Sea 


'^'Scarborough 


PORT  OF  SPAIN 
GuHofPtrii 


See  regional  map  111 


Geography 

Total  area:  5,130  km2;  land  area:  5,130 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Delaware 

Coastline:  362  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (June  to 
December) 

Terrain:  mostly  plains  with  some  hills  and 
low  mountains 

Land  use:  14%  arable  land;  17%  perma- 
nent crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures; 
44%  forest  and  woodland;  23%  other; 
includes  4%  irrigated 

Environment:  outside  usual  path  of  hurri- 
canes and  other  tropical  storms 

Special  notes:  southernmost  of  Southern 
Antilles;  only  11  km  from  Venezuela 


Population:  1,250,839  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.36% 

Nationality:  noun — Trinidadian(s), 
Tobagan(s);  adjective — Trinidadian, 
Tobagan 


244 


Ethnic  divisions:  43%  black,  40%  East 
Indian,  14%  mixed,  1%  white,  1%  Chinese, 
1%  other 

Religion:  36.2%  Roman  Catholic,  23.0% 
Hindu,  13.1%  Protestant,  6.0%  Muslim, 
21.7%  unknown 

Language:  English  (official),  Hindi, 
French,  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  20/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  67,  women  72 
Literacy:  89% 

Labor  force:  about  463,900  (est.  1985); 
18.1%  construction  and  utilities;  14.8% 
manufacturing,  mining,  and  quarrying; 
10.9%  agriculture;  47.9%  other  services 
(1985);  15.4%  unemployment  (June  1985) 

Organized  labor:  40%  of  labor  force 

(1984) 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Trinidad  and 
Tobago 

Type:  parliamentary  democracy 
Capital:  Port-of-Spain 

Administrative  divisions:  8  counties  (29 
wards,  Tobago  is  30th) 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  constitution  came  into  effect  1976; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  in  the 
Supreme  Court;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  31 
August 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature 
(36-member  elected  House  of  Representa- 
tives and  31 -member  appointed  Senate); 
executive  is  Cabinet  led  by  the  Prime 
Minister;  judiciary  is  headed  by  the  Chief 
Justice  and  includes  a  Court  of  Appeal, 
High  Court,  and  lower  courts 

Government  leaders:  Arthur  Napoleon 
Raymond  ROBINSON,  Prime  Minister 
(since  December  1986);  Noor  HASSAN- 
ALI,  President  (since  February  1987) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  elections  to  be  held  at  intervals 
of  not  more  than  five  years;  last  election 
held  15  December  1986 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Alliance  for  Reconstruction  (NAR),  A.N.R. 
Robinson;  People's  National  Movement 
(PNM),  Patrick  Manning  (interim  leader); 
Organization  for  National  Reconstruction 
(ONR),  Karl  Hudson-Phillips 

Voting  strength:  (1986  election)  62%  of 
registered  voters  cast  ballots;  House  of 
Representatives— NAR,  33  seats;  PNM,  3 

Communists:  People's  Popular  Movement 
(PPM),  Michael  Als;  February  18  Move- 
ment (F/18),  James  Millette 

Other  political  pressure  groups:  National 
Joint  Action  Committee  (NJAC),  radical 
antigovernment  black-identity  organiza- 
tion; Trinidad  and  Tobago  Peace  Council, 
leftist  organization  affiliated  with  the 
World  Peace  Council;  Trinidad  and  To- 
bago Chamber  of  Industry  and  Commerce; 
Trinidad  and  Tobago  Labor  Congress, 
moderate  labor  federation;  Council  of 
Progressive  Trade  Unions,  radical  labor 
federation 

Member  of:  CARICOM,  Commonwealth, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB,  IBRD,  Interna- 
tional Coffee  Agreement,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDE — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  IWC— Interna- 
tional Wheat  Council,  NAM,  OAS,  PAHO, 
SELA,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $7.8  billion  (1986  est.),  $6,390  per 
capita;  real  growth  rate  (1986  est.),  —3.5%; 
inflation  rate  7.0%  (1985) 
Natural  resources:  oil,  gas,  petroleum, 
asphalt 

Agriculture:  sugar,  cocoa,  coffee,  rice, 
citrus,  bananas;  largely  dependent  upon 
imports  of  food 

Fishing:  catch  4,461  metric  tons  (1983) 
Major  industries:  petroleum,  chemicals, 
tourism,  food  processing,  cement 
Electric  power:  1,171,000  kW  capacity; 
2,720  million  kWh  produced,  2,260  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  petro- 
leum and  petroleum  products,  ammonia, 
fertilizer,  chemicals,  sugar,  cocoa,  coffee, 
citrus;  includes  exports  of  oil  under  pro- 
cessing agreement 


Imports:  $1.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  crude 
petroleum  (33%),  machinery,  fabricated 
metals,  transportation  equipment,  manu- 
factured goods,  food,  chemicals;  includes 
imports  under  processing  agreement 
Major  trade  partners:  (1984  est.)  exports — 
US  56%,  CARICOM  10%,  UK  8%;  im- 
ports—US 37%,  UK  10%,  CARICOM  7% 
Aid:  bilateral  commitments,  US,  including 
Ex-Im  (FY70-85),  $370  million;  (1970-84) 
other  Western  countries,  ODA  and  OOF, 
$369  million 

Budget:  (1985  est.)  consolidated  central 
government  revenues,  $2.6  billion;  expen- 
ditures, $3.0  billion  (current,  $2.4  billion; 
capital,  $438  million) 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.60  Trinidad 
and  Tobago  dollars=US$l  (August  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  minimal  agricultural  system 
near  San  Fernando 

Highways:  8,000  km  total;  4,000  km 
paved,  1,000  km  improved  earth,  3,000 
km  unimproved  earth 

Pipelines:  1,032  km  crude  oil;  19  km 
refined  products;  904  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  1  major  (Port-of-Spain),  8  minor 
Civil  air:  14  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  6  total,  5  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  excellent  interna- 
tional service  via  tropospheric  scatter  links 
to  Barbados  and  Guyana;  good  local  ser- 
vice; 1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite  station; 
109,000  telephones  (9.6  per  100  popl.);  2 
AM,  4  FM,  5  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Trinidad  and  Tobago  Defense 
Force,  Trinidad  and  Tobago  Police  Service 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  322,434; 
234,451  fit  for  military  service 


245 


Tunisia 


200km 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  163,610  km2;  land  area: 
155,360  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Missouri 

Land  boundaries:  1,408  km  total 
Coastline:  1,148  km 

Maritime  claim: 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Libya 

Climate:  temperate  in  north  with  mild, 
rainy  winters  and  hot,  dry  summers;  hot, 
dry  desert  in  south  year  round 

Terrain:  mountains  in  north;  hot,  dry 
central  plain;  semiarid  south  merges  into 
Sahara  Desert 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  10%  perma- 
nent crops;  19%  meadows  and  pastures; 
4%  forest  and  woodland;  47%  other;  in- 
cludes 1%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  overgrazing; 
soil  erosion;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  in  central 
Mediterranean;  only  144  km  from  Italy 
across  the  Strait  of  Sicily;  borders  Libya  on 
east 


Population:  7,561,641  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.33% 

Nationality:  noun — Tunisian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Tunisian 


Ethnic  divisions:  98%  Arab,  1%  European, 
less  than  1%  Jewish 

Religion:  98%  Muslim,  1%  Christian,  less 
than  1%  Jewish 

Language:  Arabic  (official);  Arabic  and 
French  (commerce) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  83/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  60,  women  63 
Literacy:  about  62% 

Labor  force:  1.9  million,  32%  agriculture; 
15%-25%  unemployed;  shortage  of  skilled 
labor 

Organized  labor:  about  360,000  members 
claimed,  roughly  20%  of  labor  force; 
General  Union  of  Tunisian  Workers 
(UGTT),  quasi-independent  of  Destourian 
Socialist  Party 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Tunisia 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Tunis 

Administrative  divisions:  23  governorates 

Legal  system:  based  on  French  civil  law 
system  and  Islamic  law;  constitution  (pat- 
terned on  Turkish  and  US  constitutions) 
adopted  1959;  some  judicial  review  of 
legislative  acts  in  the  Supreme  Court  in 
joint  session 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day, 
1  June 

Branches:  executive  dominant;  unicameral 
legislative  (National  Assembly)  largely 
advisory;  judicial,  patterned  on  French 
and  Koranic  systems 

Government  leaders:  Habib 
BOURGUIBA,  President  (Prime  Minister 
since  1956,  President  since  1957,  President 
for  Life  since  November  1974);  Rachid 
SFAR,  Prime  Minister  (since  July  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 

Elections:  national  election  held  every  five 
years;  last  election  held  2  November  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Destourian 
Socialist  Party  is  official  ruling  party;  two 
small  parties — Movement  of  Social  Demo- 
crats and  Movement  of  Popular  Unity — 
legalized  in  1983;  Communist  Party  legal- 
ized in  1981 


Voting  strength:  1986  election 
non-competitive;  over  95%  Destourian 
Socialist  Party,  3.2%  Social  Democrats, 
under  1%  Movement  of  Popular  Unity, 
under  1%  Communist  Party 

Communists:  a  small  number  of  nominal 
Communists,  mostly  students 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Arab  League,  AIOEC, 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Devel- 
opment Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  Interna- 
tional Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC, 
ITU,  IWC— International  Wheat  Council, 
NAM,  OAPEC,  OAU,  QIC,  Regional 
Cooperation  for  Development,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $9.0  billion,  $1,250  per  capita  (1985 
est.);  63%  private  consumption,  16.5% 
government  consumption,  30.5%  gross 
fixed  capital  formation;  real  growth  rate, 
4.6%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  oil,  phosphates,  iron, 
ore,  lead,  zinc 

Agriculture:  not  food  self-sufficient;  main 
crops — cereals  (barley  and  wheat),  olives, 
grapes,  citrus  fruits,  and  vegetables 

Major  sectors:  agriculture,  manufacturing, 
mining  (phosphate),  energy  (petroleum, 
natural  gas),  services  (transport,  telecom- 
munications, tourism,  government) 

Electric  power:  1,502,000  kW  capacity; 
3,820  million  kWh  produced,  510  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  40% 
hydrocarbons,  18%  agricultural,  18% 
phosphates  and  chemicals 

Imports:  $2.9  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  57% 
industrial  goods,  13%  hydrocarbons,  12% 
food,  18%  other 

Major  trade  partners:  France,  Italy,  FRG, 

US 

Tourism  and  foreign  worker  remittances: 

$780  million  (1985) 

Budget:  (1985  est.)  total  revenues,  $3.04 
billion;  operating  budget,  $2.5  billion; 
capital  budget,  $1.2  billion 


246 


Turkey 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.14  Tunisian 
dinars  (TD)=US$1  (7  May  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,089  km  total;  503  1. 435-meter 
km  standard  gauge;  1,586  km  1.000-meter 
gauge,  18  km  1.000-meter  gauge  double 
track 

Highways:  17,700  km  total;  9,100  km 
bituminous;  8,600  km  improved  and 
unimproved  earth 

Pipelines:  797  km  crude  oil;  86  km  re- 
fined products;  742  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  5  major,  14  minor;  2  petroleum, 
oils,  and  lubricants  terminal 

Civil  air:  15  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  31  total,  29  usable;  13  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  6  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m;  8  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  the  system  is  above 
the  African  average;  facilities  consist  of 
open-wire  lines,  multiconductor  cable,  and 
radio  relay;  key  centers  are  §af5qis,  Susah, 
Bizerte,  and  Tunis;  233,000  telephones  (3.1 
per  100  popl.);  18  AM,  4  FM,  14  TV 
stations;  4  submarine  cables;  ARABSAT 
satellite  back-up  control  station;  coaxial 
cable  to  Algeria;  radio-relay  to  Algeria, 
Libya,  and  Italy 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,800,000;  1,036,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 83,000  reach  military  age  (20)  annu- 
ally 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $303.5  million;  10.6%  of 
central  government  budget 


400km 


Black  Sea 


Mediterranean 
Set? 


Sec  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  780,580  km2;  land  area: 

770,760  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 

California 

Land  boundaries:  2,574  km  total 

Coastline:  7,200  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm  in 

Black  Sea  only 

Territorial  sea:  6  nm  (12  nm  in  Black 

Sea  and  Mediterranean  Sea) 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  complex  mari- 
time and  air  (but  not  territorial)  disputes 
with  Greece  in  Aegean  Sea;  Cyprus  ques- 
tion with  Greece;  Hatay  question  with 
Syria;  potential  dispute  with  downstream 
riparians  (Syria  and  Iraq)  over  water 
development  plans  for  the  Tigris  and 
Euphrates  rivers 

Climate:  temperate;  hot,  dry  summers 
with  mild,  wet  winters;  harsher  in  interior 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains;  narrow  coastal 
plain;  central  plateau  (Anatolia) 

Land  use:  30%  arable  land;  4%  permanent 
crops;  12%  meadows  and  pastures;  26% 
forest  and  woodland;  28%  other;  includes 
3%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  severe  earth- 
quakes, especially  along  major  river  valleys 
in  west;  air  pollution;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  controlling 
Turkish  Straits  (Bosporus,  Sea  of  Marmara, 
Dardanelles)  that  link  Black  and  Aegean 


Seas;  Turkey  and  Norway  only  NATO 
members  having  a  boundary  with  USSR 


Population:  52,987,778  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.23% 

Nationality:  noun — Turk(s);  adjective — 
Turkish 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  Turkish,  12%  Kurd, 
3%  other 

Religion:  98%  Muslim  (mostly  Sunni),  2% 
other  (mostly  Christian  and  Jewish) 

Language:  Turkish  (official),  Kurdish, 
Arabic 

Infant  mortality  rate:  15.3/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  57 
Literacy:  70% 

Labor  force:  18.5  million  (1986);  58.3% 
agriculture,  28.7%  service,  13.0%  industry 
and  energy;  about  1  million  Turks  work 
abroad  (1986);  effective  unemployment 
rate  estimated  to  be  over  20%  (1986) 

Organized  labor:  10-15%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Turkey 

Type:  republican  parliamentary  democ- 
racy 

Capital:  Ankara 
Administrative  divisions:  67  provinces 

Legal  system:  derived  from  various  conti- 
nental legal  systems;  constitution  adopted 
in  November  1982;  accepts  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Republic  Day,  29 
October 

Branches:  executive — President  empow- 
ered to  call  new  elections,  promulgate  laws 
(elected  for  a  seven-year  term);  unicameral 
legislature  (400-member  Grand  National 
Assembly);  independent  judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Gen.  Kenan 
EVREN,  President  (since  1982);  Turgut 
OZAL,  Prime  Minister  (since  1983) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  21 


247 


Turkey  (continued) 


Elections:  according  to  the  1982  Constitu- 
tion, elections  to  the  Grand  National 
Assembly  to  be  held  every  five  years;  most 
recent  election  6  November  1983;  by- 
election  held  28  September  1986 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  military 
leaders  banned  all  traditional  parties  from 
taking  part  in  the  parliamentary  election 
of  November  1983  and  banned  many 
prominent  party  leaders  from  taking  part 
in  politics  for  five  to  10  years;  three  new 
parties  allowed  to  take  part  in  the  elec- 
tion—Motherland Party  (ANAP),  Turgut 
Ozal;  Populist  Party  (PP),  Necdet  Calp; 
Nationalist  Democracy  Party  (NDP),  Ulk 
Soylemezoglu;  additional  parties  permitted 
to  take  part  in  local  elections  in  March 
1984— Social  Democratcy  Party  (SODEP), 
Erdal  Inon;  Correct  Way  Party  (CWP), 
Husamettin  Cinderuk;  SODEP  and  PP 
merged  in  1985  to  form  the  Social  Demo- 
cratic Populist  Party  (SHP)  now  headed  by 
Erdal  In8n;  Democratic  Left  Party  (DLP) 
founded  in  1985  under  Rahsan  Ecevit 

Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  Grand 
National  Assembly — Motherland  Party, 
211  seats;  Populist  Party,  117  seats;  Na- 
tionalist Democracy  Party,  71  seats;  as  of 
March  1987,  Grand  National  Assembly — 
Motherland  Party,  251  seats;  Social  Demo- 
cratic Populist  Party,  65  seats;  Correct 
Way  Party,  35  seats;  Democratic  Left 
Party,  24  seats;  independents,  24  seats; 
vacant,  2  seats 

Communists:  strength  and  support  negligi- 
ble 

Member  of:  ASSIMER,  Council  of  Eu- 
rope, EC  (associate  member),  ECOSOC, 
FAO,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IDE — Islamic  Development  Bank, 
IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IOOC,  IPU, 
ITC,  ITU,  NATO,  OECD,  QIC,  Economic 
Cooperation  Organization,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $52.9  billion,  $1,020  per  capita; 
7.8%  real  growth,  6.3%  average  annual 
real  growth  (1984-86);  inflation  rate  33.7% 
(1986) 

Natural  resources:  antimony,  coal,  chro- 
mium, mercury,  copper,  borate,  oil 


Agriculture:  main  products — cotton, 
tobacco,  cereals,  sugar  beets,  fruits,  nuts, 
and  livestock  products;  self-sufficient  in 
food  in  average  years;  a  legal  producer  of 
opium  poppy  for  the  pharmaceutical  trade 

Major  industries:  textiles,  food  processing, 
mining  (coal,  chromite,  copper,  boron 
minerals),  steel,  petroleum,  construction 

Crude  steel:  3.5  million  tons  produced,  70 
kg  per  capita  (1984) 

Electric  power:  9,765,000  kW  capacity; 
38,490  million  kWh  produced  (1986),  740 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $7,958  million  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
cotton,  tobacco,  fruits,  nuts,  metals,  live- 
stock products,  textiles,  clothing,  cement, 
leather,  glass,  ceramics 

Imports:  $11,344  million  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
crude  oil,  machinery,  transport  equipment, 
metals,  Pharmaceuticals,  dyes,  plastics, 
rubber,  mineral  fuels,  fertilizers,  chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  (1986)  exports — 
18.2%  FRG,  11.7%  Iran,  10.7%  Iraq,  6.6% 
Italy,  5.4%  US;  imports— 15.9%  FRG, 
10.6%  US,  8.4%  Iraq,  7.7%  Italy,  5.6% 
Japan 

Budget:  (FY86)  revenues,  $9.08  billion; 
expenditures,  $10.7  billion;  deficit,  $1.6 
billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  747.07  Turkish 
liras=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  8,193  km  1.435-meter  standard 
gauge;  204  km  double  track;  109  km 
electrified  (1985) 

Highways:  49,615  km  total;  26,915  km 
bituminous;  16,500  km  gravel  or  crushed 
stone;  4,000  km  improved  earth;  2,200  km 
unimproved  earth  (1985) 

Inland  waterways:  about  1,200  km 

Pipelines:  1,738  km  crude  oil;  2,321  km 
refined  products 

Ports:  4  major,  10  secondary,  18  minor 

Civil  air:  30  major  transport  aircraft 

(1985) 


Airfields:  122  total,  106  usable;  62  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  27  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  26  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  domestic  and 
international  systems;  trunk  radio-relay 
network;  2.8  million  telephones  (5.5  per 
100  popl.);  17  AM,  49  FM,  356  TV  sta- 
tions; 2  satellite  ground  station  antennas,  1 
submarine  telephone  cable 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Land  Forces,  Navy,  Air  Force, 
Gendarmerie 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
13,296,000;  8,136,000  fit  for  military 
service;  582,000  reach  military  age  (20) 
annually 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1986,  $2.9  billion;  17.3%  of 
central  government  budget 


248 


Turks  and 
Caicos  Islands 


North  Atlantic 
Ocean 


50km 


Providenciales 


"West 
Caicos 


__North  Caicos 
^Middle  Caicos 

East  Caicos 


Cockburrvl  GRAND  TURK* 
(Cockburnri/ 

Townl     (J, 

Sail      .  •'. 
Cay?       • 

Turks 
Islands 


.--I 


North  Atlantic 
Ocean 


See  regional  map  III 


Geography 

Total  area:  430  km2;  land  area:  430  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  two  and  one- 
half  times  the  size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  about  300  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  marine;  moderated  by 
trade  winds;  sunny  and  relatively  dry 

Terrain:  low,  flat  limestone;  extensive 
marshes  and  mangrove  swamps 

Land  use:  2%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  98%  other 

Environment:  30  islands  (8  inhabited); 
subject  to  frequent  hurricanes 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  9,052  (1987),  average  annual 
growth  rate  2.66 

Ethnic  division:  majority  of  African 
descent 

Religion:  Anglican,  Roman  Catholic, 
Raptist,  Methodist,  Church  of  God, 
Seventh-Day  Adventist 

Language:  English  (official) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  24.4/1,000 
(1981/82) 

Literacy:  about  99% 


Labor  force:  some  subsistence  agriculture; 
majority  engaged  in  fishing  and  tourist 
industries 

Organized  labor:  St.  George's  Industrial 
Trade  Union  (Cockburn  Harbour),  250 
members 

Government 

Official  name:  Turks  and  Caicos  Islands 
Type:  Rritish  dependent  territory 
Capital:  Grand  Turk  (Cockburn  Town) 
Administrative  divisions:  3  districts 

Legal  system:  based  on  laws  of  England 
and  Wales  with  a  small  number  adopted 
from  Jamaica  and  The  Bahamas;  constitu- 
tion introduced  in  1976 

National  holiday:  Commonwealth  Day, 
31  May 

Branches:  executive,  bicameral  legislature 
(Executive  Council,  14-member  Legislative 
Council),  judicial  (Supreme  Court) 

Government  leader:  Michael  RRADLEY, 
Governor  (since  1987) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 

Elections:  last  held  in  May  1984  for  11 
Legislative  Council  seats 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  People's 
Democratic  Movement  (PDM),  Clement 
Howell;  Progressive  National  Party  (PNP), 
Nathaniel  Francis 

Voting  strength:  PDM,  3  seats,  PNP,  8 
seats 

Communists:  none 

Economy 

GDP:  $15  million,  per  capita  GDP  $2,020 
(1980) 

Natural  resources:  spiny  lobster,  conch 
Agriculture:  corn,  beans 
Fishing:  catch  1,050  metric  tons  (1983) 
Major  industries:  fishing,  tourism 

Electric  power:  1,500  kW  capacity;  6 
million  kWh  produced,  810  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $2.5  million  (1982);  crawfish, 
dried  and  fresh  conch,  conch  shells 

Imports:  $20.9  million  (1982);  foodstuffs, 
drink,  tobacco,  clothing 


Major  trade  partners:  US  (lobster,  conch, 
tourism)  and  UK 

Budget:  revenues,  $5.9  million;  expendi- 
tures, $7.2  million  (1981/82) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  uses  the  US 
dollar 

Fiscal  year:  calendar 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  121  km,  including  24  km 

tarmac 

Ports:  4  major  (Grand  Turk,  Salt  Cay, 
Providenciales,  Cockburn  Harbour) 

Civil  air:  Air  Turks  and  Caicos  (passenger 
service)  and  Turks  Air  Ltd.  (cargo  service) 

Airfields:  7  total,  7  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  4  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  fair  cable  and  radio 
services;  1,400  telephones  (16.9  per  100 
popl.);  1  AM  station;  2  submarine  cables;  1 
satellite  ground  station;  several  TV  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  the  United 
Kingdom 

Branches:  police 


249 


Tuvalu 


Nanurrtea 


fNiutao 
• 
Nanumanga 


South 
Pacific 
Ocean 


Sff  rcgninll  map  X 


.Vailupu 

NukufetauQ 

FUNAFUTI  *-»-(* 

Funafuti 


Nurakita 


Geography 

Total  area:  26  km2;  land  area:  26  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-seventh  the 
size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Coastline:  24  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  easterly 
trade  winds  (March  to  November);  west- 
erly gales  and  heavy  rain  (November  to 
March) 

Terrain:  very  low  lying  and  narrow  coral 
atolls 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  severe  tropical  storms  are 
rare 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  8,329  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.73% 

Nationality:  noun — Tuvaluans(s);  adjec- 
tive— Tuvaluan 

Ethnic  divisions:  96%  Polynesian 

Religion:  Christian,  predominantly  Protes- 
tant 

Language:  Tuvaluan,  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  42/1,000  (1979) 


Life  expectancy:  men  57,  women  60 
Literacy:  less  than  50% 

Government 
Official  name:  Tuvalu 

Type:  independent  state,  special  member 
of  the  Commonwealth 

Capital:  Funafuti 

Administrative  divisions:  8  island  councils 
on  the  permanently  inhabited  islands 

Branches:  executive — Prime  Minister  and 
Cabinet;  unicameral  legislature — 12- 
member  House  of  Parliament;  judicial — 
High  Court,  8  island  courts  with  limited 
jurisdication 

Government  leaders:  Dr.  Tomasi 
PUAPUA,  Prime  Minister  (since  Septem- 
ber 1981);  Tupua  LEUPENA,  Governor 
General  (since  1  March  1986) 

Elections:  last  general  election  September 
1985,  next  scheduled  for  September  1989 

Political  parties:  none 

Member  of:  ESCAP  (associate  member), 
GATT  (de  facto),  SPF,  SPC,  UPU 

Economy 

GNP:  $4  million  (1984),  $500  per  capita 
Agriculture:  limited;  coconut  palms,  copra 
Major  industry:  copra 

Electric  power:  2,600  kW  capacity;  3 
million  kWh  produced,  380  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.0  million  (1983  est.) 

Imports:  $2.8  million  (1983);  food  and 
mineral  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  UK,  Australia 

Aid:  $4.2  million  (1983);  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  ODA  (1970-79),  $22  million 

Budget:  (1983  est.)  revenues,  $2.59  million; 
expenditures,  $3.6  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.54  Australian 
dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 
Highways:  8  km  gravel 


Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  2  minor  (Funafuti,  Nukufetau) 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  1  total,  1  usable  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  1  AM  station;  about 
300  radiotelephones  (0.5  per  100  popl.); 
4,000  radio  receivers;  108  telephones  (1.3 
per  100  popl.) 


250 


Uganda 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  236,040  km2;  land  area: 
199,710  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
Oregon 

Land  boundaries:  2,680  km  total 

Climate:  tropical;  generally  rainy  with  two 
dry  seasons  (December  to  February,  June 
to  August);  semiarid  in  northeast 

Terrain:  mostly  plateau  with  rim  of  moun- 
tains 

Land  use:  23%  arable  land;  9%  permanent 
crops;  25%  meadows  and  pastures;  30% 
forest  and  woodland;  13%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  straddles  Equator;  defores- 
tation; overgrazing;  soil  erosion 

Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  15,908,896  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  3.70% 

Nationality:  noun — Ugandan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Ugandan 

Ethnic  divisions:  99%  African,  1%  Euro- 
pean, Asian,  Arab 

Religion:  33%  Roman  Catholic,  33% 
Protestant,  16%  Muslim,  rest  indigenous 
beliefs 

Language:  English  (official);  Luganda  and 
Swahili  widely  used;  other  Bantu  and 
Nilotic  languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  92/1,000  (1985) 


Life  expectancy:  men  48,  women  50 
Literacy:  52% 

Labor  force:  estimated  4.5  million;  about 
250,000  in  paid  labor;  remainder  in  subsis- 
tence activities 

Organized  labor:  125,000  union  members 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Uganda 
Type:  republic 
Capital:  Kampala 

Administrative  divisions:  10  provinces 
and  34  districts 

Legal  system:  government  plans  to  restore 
system  based  on  English  common  law  and 
customary  law  and  reinstitute  a  normal 
judicial  system;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction,  with  reservations 
National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  9 
October 

Branches:  present  government,  which 
assumed  power  in  January  1986,  consists 
of  a  National  Resistance  Council  headed 
by  the  President;  the  constitution  has  been 
suspended  and  the  unicameral  legislature 
(National  Assembly)  has  been  dissolved 
Government  leader:  Yoweri  Kaguta 
MUSEVENI,  Head  of  State  and  Chairman 
of  the  National  Resistance  Council  (since 
January  1986) 
Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Elections:  none  scheduled 
Political  parties:  Uganda  Patriotic  Move- 
ment (UPM),  Ugandan  People's  Congress 
(UPC),  Democratic  Party  (DP),  Conserva- 
tive Party  (CP);  all  are  proscribed  from 
conducting  public  political  activities 
Other  political  parties  or  pressure 
groups:  Uganda  National  Liberation  Army 
(UNLA),  Uganda  Freedom  Movement 
(UFM),  Federal  Democratic  Movement  of 
Uganda  (FEDEMU),  Uganda  National 
Rescue  Front  (UNRF),  Uganda  People's 
Democratic  Movement  (UPDM) 
Communists:  possibly  a  few  sympathizers 
Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO, 
ICO,  IDA,  IDB— Islamic  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  ISO,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU,  QIC, 
UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WTO 


Economy 

GDP:  $5.9  billion;  $220  per  capita  (1983 
est.) 

Natural  resources:  copper,  cobalt,  lime- 
stone 

Agriculture:  cash  crops — coffee  (150,000 
metric  tons  produced  (1984/85  est.),  cot- 
ton, tobacco,  tea,  sugar,  fish,  livestock 

Major  industries:  agricultural  processing 
(coffee,  plywood,  beer) 

Electric  power:  164,000  kW  capacity;  287 
million  kWh  produced,  18  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  $352  million  (f.o.b.,  1985/86  est.); 
coffee  (over  90%),  cotton,  tea 

Imports:  $325  million  (c.i.f.,  1985/86  est.); 
petroleum  products,  machinery,  cotton 
piece  goods,  metals,  transport  equipment, 
food 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 27%  US, 
14%  UK,  9%  Spain;  imports— 39%  Kenya, 
17%  UK,  7%  Japan  (1985) 

Budget:  in  percent  of  GDP — tax  revenues 
11.6%,  grants  1.6%,  expenditures,  15.5% 

(FY85/86) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  400  Uganda 
shillings=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,300  km,  1.000-meter  gauge 
single  track 

Highways:  30,500  km  total;  3,500  km 
paved;  7,000  km  crushed  stone,  gravel, 
and  laterite;  remainder  earth  roads  and 
tracks 

Inland  waterways:  Lake  Victoria,  Lake 
Albert,  Lake  Kyoga,  Lake  George,  Lake 
Edward;  Victoria  Nile,  Albert  Nile;  princi- 
pal inland  water  ports  are  at  Jinja  and  Port 
Bell,  both  on  Lake  Victoria 

Civil  air:  4  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  39  total,  34  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  11  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


251 


Uganda  (continued) 


United  Arab  Emirates 


Telecommunications:  fair  system  with 
radio-relay  and  radio  communications 
stations  in  use;  61,600  telephones  (0.5  per 
100  popl.);  9  AM,  no  FM,  9  TV  stations;  1 
Atlantic  Ocean  INTELSAT  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  National  Resistance  Army 

(NRA) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  about 
3,393,000;  about  1,831,000  fit  for  military 
service 


Persian  Gulf    R.-.  „  Kh^-hl 

Umm  al  QaywayiV'^  V. 

pAjminj 

*»1 


Fujayrah 


Boundary  representation  is 

See  refional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  83,600  km2;  land  area:  83,600 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Maine 

Land  boundaries:  1,094  km  total 
Coastline:  1,448  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  defined  by  bilateral 
boundaries  or  equidistant  line 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Qatar;  no  defined 
boundary  with  Saudi  Arabia;  no  defined 
boundary  with  most  of  Oman,  Administra- 
tive Line  in  far  north;  claims  three  islands 
occupied  by  Iran  in  Strait  of  Hormuz 

Climate:  hot,  dry  desert;  cooler  in  eastern 
mountains 

Terrain:  flat,  barren  coastal  plain  merging 
into  rolling  sand  dunes  of  vast  desert 
wasteland;  mountains  in  east 

Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  2%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures; NEGL%  forest  and  woodland;  98% 
other;  includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  frequent  dust  and  sand 
storms;  lack  of  natural  fresh  water  re- 
sources being  overcome  by  desalination 
plants;  desertification 

Special  notes:  strategic  location  along 
southern  approaches  to  Strait  of  Hormuz,  a 
vital  transit  point  for  world  crude  oil 


Population:  1,846,373  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  7.47% 
Nationality:  noun — Emirian(s),  adjective — 
Emirian 

Ethnic  divisions:  19%  Emirian,  23%  other 
Arab,  50%  South  Asian  (fluctuating),  8% 
other  expatriates  (includes  Westerners  and 
East  Asians);  fewer  than  20%  of  the  popu- 
lation are  UAE  citizens  (1982) 
Religion:  96%  Muslim  (16%  Shi'a);  4% 
Christian,  Hindu,  and  other 
Language:  Arabic  (official);  Farsi  and 
English  widely  spoken  in  major  cities; 
Hindi,  Urdu 

Infant  mortality  rate:  44/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  68,  women  73 
Literacy:  68% 

Labor  force:  580,000  (1985  est);  85% 
industry  and  commerce,  5%  agriculture, 
5%  services,  5%  government;  80%  of  labor 
force  is  foreign 

Government 

Official  name:  United  Arab  Emirates 

Member  states:  Abu  Dhabi,  'Ajman, 
Dubayy,  Al  Fujayrah,  Ra's  al  Khaymah, 
Ash  ShSriqah,  Umm  al  Qaywayn 

Type:  federation;  constitution  signed 
December  1971,  which  delegated  specified 
powers  to  the  UAE  central  government 
and  reserved  other  powers  to  member 
shaykhdoms 

Capital:  Abu  Dhabi 

Legal  system:  secular  codes  are  being 
introduced  by  the  UAE  Government  and 
in  several  member  shaykhdoms;  Islamic 
law  remains  influential 

National  holiday:  2  December 

Branches:  executive — Supreme  Council  of 
Rulers  (seven  members),  from  which  a 
President  and  Vice  President  are  elected; 
Prime  Minister  and  Council  of  Ministers; 
unicameral  legislature — Federal  National 
Council;  judicial — Union  Supreme  Court 

Government  leaders:  Shaykh  Zayid  bin 
Sultan  Al  NUHAYYAN  of  Abu  Dhabi, 
President  (since  December  1971);  Shaykh 
Rashid  ibn  Sa'id  Al  MAKTUM  of  Dubayy, 
Vice  President  (since  1971)  and  Prime 
Minister  (since  April  1979) 


252 


United  Kingdom 


Suffrage:  none 
Elections:  none 

Political  or  pressure  groups:  none;  a  few 
small  clandestine  groups  are  active 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  GCC,  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Development 
Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU,  NAM, 
OAPEC,  QIC,  OPEC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $24.0  billion,  $18,900  per  capita; 
real  growth  -  3.0%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  oil  and  natural  gas;  oil 
production  1.38  million  b/d  (1986) 

Agriculture:  food  imported;  some  dates, 
alfalfa,  vegetables,  fruit,  tobacco  raised 

Electric  power:  5,158,000  kW  capacity; 
16,440  million  kWh  produced,  12,400 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $9.8  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  $8.3 
billion  in  crude  oil,  $1.45  billion  consisting 
mostly  of  gas,  reexports,  dried  fish,  dates 

Imports:  $6.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1986);  food, 
consumer  and  capital  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  Japan,  EC,  US 

Budget:  current  expenditures,  $3.5  billion; 
development,  $0.14  billion;  revenue,  $3.1 
billion  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  3.67  UAE 
dirhams=US$l  (October  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,000  km  total;  1,800  km 
bituminous,  200  km  gravel  and  graded 
earth 

Pipelines:  830  km  crude  oil;  870  km 
natural  gas,  including  natural  gas  liquids 

Ports:  7  major,  25  minor 

Civil  air:  5  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  39  total,  31  usable;  17  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  5  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  6  with  runways  1,220- 
2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  adequate  system  of 
radio-relay  and  coaxial  cable;  key  centers 
are  Abu  Dhabi  and  Dubayy;  319,000 
telephones  (24.1  per  100  popl.);  8  AM,  3 
FM,  12  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  and  2 
Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT  stations;  1 
ARABSAT  satellite  station;  submarine 
cable  to  Qatar  and  Bahrain;  planned 
submarine  cables  to  India  and  Pakistan; 
tropospheric  scatter  to  Bahrain;  radio-relay 
to  Saudi  Arabia 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Central 
Military  Command,  Federal  Police  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  793,000; 
441,000  fit  for  military  service 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
December  1985,  $1.385  billion;  42%  of 
central  government  budget 


300km 


English  Channel 


See  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  244,820  km2;  land  area: 
241,590  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Oregon 

Land  boundary:  360  km  with  Ireland 
Coastline:  12,429  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Ireland;  Northern  Ireland  ques- 
tion with  Ireland;  Gibraltar  question  with 
Spain;  Argentina  claims  Falkland  Islands 
(Islas  Malvinas);  Mauritius  claims  island  of 
Diego  Garcia  in  British  Indian  Ocean 
Territory;  colony  of  Hong  Kong  will  be- 
come a  Special  Administrative  Region  of 
China  in  1997;  Rockall  continental  shelf 
dispute  involving  Denmark,  Iceland, 
Ireland;  territorial  claim  in  Antarctica 
(British  Antarctic  Territory) 

Climate:  temperate;  moderated  by  pre- 
vailing southwest  winds  over  Gulf  Stream; 
more  than  one-half  of  days  are  overcast 

Terrain:  mostly  rugged  hills  and  low 
mountains;  level  to  rolling  plains  in  east 
and  southeast 

Land  use:  29%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  48%  meadows  and 
pastures;  9%  forest  and  woodland;  14% 
other;  includes  1%  irrigated 


United  Kingdom  (continued) 


Environment:  pollution  control  measures 
improving  air,  water  quality;  because  of 
heavily  indented  coastline,  no  location  is 
more  than  125  km  from  tidal  waters 

Special  notes:  lies  near  vital  North  Atlan- 
tic sea  lanes;  only  35  km  from  France 


Population:  56,845,195  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0. 15% 

Nationality:  noun — Briton(s),  British 
(collective  pi.);  adjective — British 

Ethnic  divisions:  81.5%  English,  9.6% 
Scottish,  2.4%  Irish,  1.9%  Welsh,  1.8% 
Ulster,  2.8%  West  Indian,  Indian,  Paki- 
stani, and  other 

Religion:  27.0  million  Anglican,  5.3  mil- 
lion Roman  Catholic,  2.0  million  Presbyte- 
rian, 760,000  Methodist,  450,000  Jewish 
(registered) 

Language:  English,  Welsh  (about  26%  of 
population  of  Wales),  Scottish  form  of 
Gaelic  (about  60,000  in  Scotland) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  10.1/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  71 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  (1986)  27.94  million;  24.5% 
manufacturing  and  construction,  49.8% 
services,  9.8%  self-employed,  13.0%  gov- 
ernment, 1.1%  agriculture;  11.4%  unem- 
ployed (November  1986) 

Organized  labor:  42%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  United  Kingdom  of  Great 
Britain  and  Northern  Ireland 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy 
Capital:  London 

Administrative  divisions:  54  counties  in 
England  and  Wales,  12  regions  in  Scotland 
and  islands  area,  26  districts  in  Northern 
Ireland 

Dependent  areas:  Anguilla,  Bermuda, 
British  Indian  Ocean  Territory,  British 
Virgin  Islands,  Cayman  Islands,  Falkland 
Islands,  Gibraltar,  Guernsey,  Hong  Kong, 
Jersey,  Isle  of  Man,  Montserrat,  Pitcairn 
Islands,  St.  Helena,  Turks  and  Caicos 
Islands 


Legal  system:  common  law  tradition  with 
early  Roman  and  modern  continental 
influences;  no  judicial  review  of  Acts  of 
Parliament;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ  juris- 
diction, with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Birthday  of  the  Queen, 
16  June 

Branches:  legislative  authority  resides  in 
Parliament  (House  of  Lords,  House  of 
Commons);  executive  authority  lies  with 
collectively  responsible  Cabinet  led  by 
Prime  Minister;  House  of  Lords  is  supreme 
judicial  authority  and  highest  court  of 
appeal 

Government  leaders:  ELIZABETH  II, 
Queen  (since  1952);  Margaret 
THATCHER,  Prime  Minister  (since  1979) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  at  discretion  of  Prime  Minister 
but  must  be  held  before  expiration  of  a 
five-year  electoral  mandate;  last  election 
held  9  June  1983 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Conserva- 
tive, Margaret  Thatcher;  Labor,  Neil 
Kinnock;  Social  Democratic,  David  Owen; 
Communist,  Gordon  McLennan;  Scottish 
National,  Donald  Stewart;  Plaid  Cymru, 
Dafydd  Wigley;  Official  Unionist,  James 
Molyneaux;  Democratic  Unionist,  Ian 
Paisley;  Social  Democratic  and  Labor, 
John  Hume;  Provisional  Sinn  Fein,  Gerry 
Adams;  Alliance,  John  Cushnahan;  Liberal, 
David  Steel 

Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  House  of 
Commons — Conservative,  392  seats 
(42.4%);  Labor,  210  seats  (27.6%);  Social 
Democratic-Liberal  Alliance,  26  seats  (19 
Liberal,  7  SDP)  (25.4%);  Scottish  National 
Party,  2  seats;  Plaid  Cymru  (Welsh  Na- 
tionalist), 2  seats;  Ulster  (Official)  Unionist 
(Northern  Ireland),  10  seats;  Ulster  Demo- 
cratic Unionist  (Northern  Ireland),  3  seats; 
Ulster  Popular  Unionist  (Northern  Ireland), 
1  seat;  Social  Democratic  and  Labor 
(Northern  Ireland),  1  seat;  Sinn  Fein 
(Northern  Ireland),  1  seat 

Communists:  15,961 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Trades 
Union  Congress,  Confederation  of  British 
Industry,  National  Farmers'  Union,  Cam- 
paign for  Nuclear  Disarmament 


Member  of:  ADB,  CENTO,  Colombo 
Plan,  Council  of  Europe,  DAC,  EC, 
ELDO,  ESCAP,  ESRO,  FAO,  GATT, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICES,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDB — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  Inter- 
national Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IOOC,  IPU,  IRC,  ISO,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Whaling  Commission, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
NATO,  OECD,  UN,  UPU,  WEU,  WHO, 
WIPO,  WMO,  WSG 

Economy 

GNP:  $443.2  billion  (1985),  $7,860  per 
capita;  59.8%  consumption,  17.0%  invest- 
ment, 21.1%  government;  0.3%  stockbuild- 
ing,  1.8%  net  foreign  balance,  real  growth 
3.4%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  oil,  gas  (North 
Sea),  tin,  limestone,  iron,  salt,  clay,  chalk, 
gypsum,  lead,  silica 

Agriculture:  wheat,  barley,  potatoes,  sugar 
beets,  livestock,  dairy  products;  62.1% 
self-sufficient  (1983);  dependent  on  imports 
for  more  than  half  of  consumption  of 
refined  sugar,  butter,  oils  and  fats,  bacon 
and  ham 

Fishing:  catch  746,000  metric  tons  (1985); 
imports  $774  million,  exports  $377  million 
(1985) 

Major  industries:  machinery  and  trans- 
port equipment,  metals,  food  processing, 
paper  and  paper  products,  textiles,  chemi- 
cals, clothing 

Crude  steel:  15.8  million  metric  tons 
produced  (1985);  280  kg  per  capita  (1985); 
23.6  million  tons  capacity  (1984) 
Electric  power:  95,213,000  kW  capacity; 
312.700  million  kWh  produced,  5,540 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 
Exports:  $101.0  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  man- 
ufactured goods,  machinery,  fuels,  chemi- 
cals, semifinished  goods,  transport  equip- 
ment 

Imports:  $109.1  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  manu- 
factured goods,  machinery,  semifinished 
goods,  foodstuffs,  consumer  goods 


United  States 


Major  trade  partners:  exports — 46.2%  EC 
(11.4%  FRG,  9.9%  France,  9.4%  Nether- 
lands), 14.8%  US,  2.3%  Communist  coun- 
tries; imports— 46.2%  EC  (14.9%  FRG, 
7.8%  France,  7.7%  Netherlands),  11.9% 
US,  2.4%  Communist  countries  (1985) 
Aid:  donor — ODA  and  OOF  commitments 
(1970-84)  $15.4  billion 
Budget:  national  and  local  government 
revenues  (FY86  est),  $222.3  billion;  expen- 
ditures, $232.2  billion;  deficit  $9.9  billion 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.674  pound 
sterling=US$l  (December  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  1  April-31  March 

Communications 

Railroads:  Great  Britain— 16,800  km  total; 
British  Railways  (BR)  operates  16,800  km 
1.435-meter  standard  gauge  (3,802  km 
electrified  and  12,591  km  double  or  multi- 
ple track);  several  additional  small 
standard-gauge  and  narrow-gauge  lines  are 
privately  owned  and  operated;  Northern 
Ireland  Railways  (NIR)  operates  332  km 
1.600-meter  gauge,  190  km  double  track 

Highways:  United  Kingdom,  362,982  km 
total;  Great  Britain,  339,483  km  paved 
(including  2,573  km  limited-access  divided 
highway);  Northern  Ireland,  23,499  km 
(22,907  paved,  592  km  gravel) 

Inland  waterways:  3,219  km  publicly 
owned;  605  km  major  commercial  routes 

Pipelines:  933  km  crude  oil,  almost  all 
insignificant;  2,993  km  refined  products; 
12,800  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  9  major,  15  secondary,  190  minor 
Civil  air:  618  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  499  total,  332  usable;  243  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  36  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  133  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  modern,  efficient 
domestic  and  international  system;  29.5 
million  telephones  (52.5  per  100  popl.); 
excellent  countrywide  broadcast  systems 
with  216  AM,  478  FM,  3,065  TV  stations; 
36  coaxial  submarine  cables;  4  satellite 
ground  stations  with  a  total  of  14  antennas 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Royal  Army,  Royal  Navy, 
Royal  Air  Force,  Royal  Marines 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
14,315,000;  12,117,000  fit  for  military 
service;  no  conscription 

Military  budget:  for  fiscal  year  ending  31 
March  1986,  $28.4  billion;  about  20.1%  of 
central  government  budget 


North 
Atlantic 
Ocean 


See  regional  map  II 


Note:  this  section  was  compiled  from 
information  in  the  public  domain  and  does 
not  represent  Intelligence  Community 
estimates 

Geography 

Total  area:  9,372,610  km2;  land  area: 
9,166,600km2 

Comparative  area:  about  four-tenths  the 
size  of  USSR;  about  one-third  the  size  of 
Africa;  about  one-half  the  size  of  South 
America  (or  slightly  larger  than  Brazil); 
slightly  smaller  than  China;  about  two  and 
one-half  times  the  size  of  Western  Europe 

Land  boundaries:  12,000  km  total 
Coastline:  19,924  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  12  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  3  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  maritime  dis- 
pute with  Canada;  Guantanamo  (US  Naval 
Base)  leased  from  Cuba;  Haiti  claims 
Navassa  Island  (US  possession);  has  made 
no  territorial  claim  in  Antarctica  (but  has 
reserved  the  right  to  do  so)  and  does  not 
recognize  the  claims  of  any  other  nation 

Climate:  mostly  temperate,  but  varies 
from  tropical  (Hawaii)  to  arctic  (Alaska); 
arid  to  semiarid  with  occasional  warm,  dry 
chinook  wind  in  west 

Terrain:  vast  central  plain,  mountains  in 
west,  hills  and  low  mountains  in  east; 
rugged  mountains  and  broad  river  valleys 


255 


United  States  (continued) 


in  Alaska;  rugged,  volcanic  topography  in 
Hawaii 

Land  use:  20%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  26%  meadows  and 
pastures;  29%  forest  and  woodland;  25% 
other;  includes  2%  irrigated 

Environment:  pollution  control  measures 
improving  air  and  water  quality;  acid  rain; 
agricultural  fertilizer  and  pesticide  pollu- 
tion; management  of  sparse  natural  water 
resources  in  west;  desertification;  tsunamis, 
volcanoes,  and  earthquake  activity  around 
Pacific  Basin 

Special  notes:  world's  fourth  largest  coun- 
try (after  USSR,  Canada,  and  China) 


Population:  243,084,000  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  0.92% 

Ethnic  divisions:  83.1%  white;  11.6% 
black;  6.448%  Spanish  origin;  0.622% 
American  Indian,  Eskimo,  and  Aleut; 
0.357%  Chinese;  0.343%  Filipino;  0.31% 
Japanese,  0.1595%  other  Asian;  0.156% 
Korean;  0.115%  Vietnamese  (1980) 

Religion:  total  membership  in  religious 
bodies  140.170  million;  Protestant  76.8 
million,  Roman  Catholic  52.7  million, 
Jewish  5.7  million,  other  religions  5.0 
million;  60%  of  the  population  have  a 
religious  affiliation  (1982) 

Language:  predominantly  English;  sizable 
Spanish-speaking  minority 

Infant  mortality  rate:  10.6/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  71.6,  women  76.3 
Literacy:  99% 

Labor  force:  117.17  million  (includes  the 
armed  forces  and  the  unemployed) — 
annual  averages  of  monthly  data;  unem- 
ployment rate  7.2%  (1985);  7.1%  unem- 
ployed as  a  share  of  total  civilian  labor 
force  (1985) 

Organized  labor:  17.3  million  members; 
18%  of  civilian  labor  force  (1985) 

Government 

Official  name:  United  States  of  America 

Type:  federal  republic;  strong  democratic 
tradition 

Capital:  Washington,  D.  C. 


Administrative  divisions:  50  states  and 
the  District  of  Columbia 

Dependent  areas:  American  Samoa,  Baker 
Island,  Guam,  Howland  Island,  Jarvis 
Island,  Johnston  Atoll,  Kingman  Reef, 
Midway  Islands,  Navassa  Island,  Palmyra 
Atoll,  Puerto  Rico,  Virgin  Islands,  Wake 
Island.  Since  18  July  1947,  the  US  has 
administered  the  Trust  Territory  of  the 
Pacific  Islands,  but  recently  entered  into  a 
new  political  relationship  with  three  of  the 
four  political  units.  The  Northern  Mariana 
Islands  is  a  Commonwealth  associated  with 
the  US  (effective  3  November  1986).  Palau 
concluded  a  Compact  of  Free  Association 
with  the  US  that  was  approved  by  the  US 
Congress  but  to  date  the  Compact  process 
has  not  been  completed  in  Palau,  which 
continues  to  be  administered  by  the  US  as 
the  Trust  Territory  of  the  Pacific  Islands. 
The  Federated  States  of  Micronesia  signed 
a  Compact  of  Free  Association  with  the 
US  (effective  3  November  1986).  The 
Republic  of  the  Marshall  Islands  signed  a 
Compact  of  Free  Association  with  the  US 
(effective  21  October  1986).  Maps  and  data 
on  the  Federated  States  of  Micronesia  and 
the  Republic  of  the  Marshall  Islands  will 
be  included  in  the  next  edition. 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law;  dual  system  of  courts,  state  and  fed- 
eral; constitution  adopted  1789;  judicial 
review  of  legislative  acts;  accepts  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  4 
July 

Branches:  executive  (President),  bicameral 
legislature  (House  of  Representatives  and 
Senate),  and  judicial  (Supreme  Court); 
branches,  in  principle,  independent  and 
maintain  balance  of  power 

Government  leaders:  Ronald  REAGAN, 
President  (since  January  1981);  George 
BUSH,  Vice  President  (since  January  1981) 

Suffrage:  all  citizens  over  age  18;  not 
compulsory 

Elections:  presidential,  every  four  years 
(next  November  1988);  all  members  of  the 
House  of  Representatives,  every  two  years; 
one-third  of  members  of  the  Senate,  every 
two  years 


Political  parties  and  leaders:  Republican 
Party,  Frank  J.  Fahrenkopf,  Jr.,  national 
chairman,  Maureen  Reagan,  cochairman; 
Democratic  Party,  Paul  G.  Kirk,  Jr.,  na- 
tional committee  chairman;  several  other 
groups  or  parties  of  minor  political  signifi- 
cance 

Voting  strength:  53.3%  voter  participation 
(1984  presidential  election);  Republican 
Party  (Ronald  Reagan),  59%  of  the  popular 
vote  (525  electoral  votes);  Democratic 
Party  (Walter  Mondale),  41%  of  the  popu- 
lar vote  (13  electoral  votes) 

Communists:  Communist  Party  (claimed 
15,000-20,000  members),  Gus  Hall,  general 
secretary;  Socialist  Workers  Party  (claimed 
1,800  members),  Jack  Barnes,  national 
secretary  (1983) 

Member  of:  ADB,  ANZUS,  Bank  of  Inter- 
national Settlements,  CCC,  CENTO, 
Colombo  Plan,  DAC,  FAO,  ESCAP, 
GATT,  Group  of  Ten,  IADB,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAC,  ICAO,  ICEM,  ICES,  ICO, 
IDA,  IDB — Inter-American  Development 
Bank,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  Inter- 
national Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU, 
IRC,  ITC,  ITU,  IWC— International 
Whaling  Commission,  IWC — International 
Wheat  Council,  NATO,  OAS,  OECD, 
PAHO,  SPC,  UN,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO, 
WMO,  WSG,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $3,988.5  billion  (1985);  $2,186.5 
billion  (65%)  personal  consumption,  $501.0 
billion  (14.9%)  private  investment,  $701.8 
billion  (20.9%)  government,  -  $25.9  billion 
(—.1%)  net  exports;  $16,710  per  capita; 
2.3  %  real  growth  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  copper,  lead, 
molybdenum,  phosphates,  uranium,  baux- 
ite, gold,  iron,  mercury,  nickel,  potash, 
silver,  tungsten,  zinc 

Agriculture:  food  grains,  feed  crops,  oil- 
bearing  crops,  cattle,  dairy  products 

Fishing:  catch  4,143  thousand  metric  tons 
(1983);  5.5  kg  per  capita  consumption 
(1981);  imports  $4.173  billion  (1981); 
exports  $1.156  billion,  (1981);  est.  value, 
$2.388  billion  (1981) 


Uruguay 


Crude  steel:  80. 1  million  metric  tons 
produced,  335  kg  per  capita  (1985) 

Natural  gas:  16.5  trillion  cubic  feet  pro- 
duced (1985) 

Electric  power:  717,643,000  kW  capacity; 
2,733,630  billion  kWh  produced,  11,350 
kWh  per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $213,144  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
machinery,  chemicals,  transport  equip- 
ment, agricultural  products 

Imports:  $361,627  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985); 
crude  and  partly  refined  petroleum,  ma- 
chinery, transport  equipment  (mainly  new 
automobiles) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — $4,030 
million  Canada,  $1,925.7  million  Japan, 
$1,015.7  million  Mexico,  $842.8  million 
UK,  $651.4  million  FRG  (1985);  imports— 
$6,153.8  million  Canada,  $6,451.8  million 
Japan,  $1,479.4  million  Mexico,  $1,300.1 
million  UK,  $1,807.5  million  FRG  (1985) 

Aid:  including  Ex-Im  (FY80-85),  $54.2 
billion 

Military  transfers:  (FY80-85)  $27.4  billion 

Budget:  (1986)  receipts,  $769.1  billion; 
outlays,  $989.8  billion;  deficit,  $220.7 
billion 

Fiscal  year:  1  October-30  September 

Communications 
Railroads:  270,312  km 

Highways:  6,365,590  km,  including  88,641 
km  expressways 

Inland  waterways:  est.  41,009  km  of 
navigable  inland  channels,  exclusive  of  the 
Great  Lakes 

Freight  carried:  rail— 1,637.0  million 
metric  tons,  1,345.6  billion  metric  ton/km 
(1984);  highways— 987.53  billion  metric 
ton/km  (1984);  inland  water  freight  (ex- 
cluding Great  Lakes  traffic)— 582.81  mil- 
lion metric  tons,  358.29  billion  metric 
ton/km  (1984);  air— 11,495  million  metric 
ton/km  (1984) 

Pipelines:  petroleum,  883.3  billion  metric 
ton/km,  1,049.6  million  metric  tons  car- 
ried (1984) 

Ports:  44  handling  10.9  million  metric  tons 
or  more  per  year 


Civil  air:  2,960  commercial  multiengine 
transport  aircraft,  including  2,724  jet,  185 
turboprop,  51  piston  (1984) 

Airfields:  15,422  in  operation  (1981) 

Telecommunications:  182,558,000  tele- 
phones (791  telephones  per  1,000  popl.); 
4,892  AM,  3,915  FM,  1,285  noncommer- 
cial FM  stations  (10,092  total);  796  com- 
mercial, 300  noncommercial  (public  broad- 
casting), 6,200  commercial  cable  TV 
broadcast  stations  (7,296  total);  495  million 
radio  and  150  million  TV  receivers  (1982) 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Department  of  the  Army, 
Department  of  the  Navy  (including  Ma- 
rine Corps),  US  Coast  Guard,  Department 
of  the  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  2,135,900  total; 
780,800,  army;  594,500,  air  force;  761,400, 
navy  (includes  196,600  marines)  (1984) 

Military  budget:  $289.1  billion;  29.2%  of 
central  government  budget  (1986) 


125fcm 


R(o 
dela 

Plata 
See  rrti,mil  m.p  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  176,220  km2;  land  area: 
173,620  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  the 
State  of  Washington 

Land  boundaries:  1,352  km  total 
Coastline:  660  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  200  nm  (overflight  and 
navigation  permitted  beyond  12  nm) 

Boundary  disputes:  Argentina,  Brazil 

Climate:  warm  temperate;  freezing  tem- 
peratures almost  unknown 

Terrain:  mostly  rolling  plains  and  low 
hills;  fertile  coastal  lowland 

Land  use:  8%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  78%  meadows  and  pastures; 
4%  forest  and  woodland;  10%  other;  in- 
cludes 1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  seasonally  high 
winds,  droughts,  floods 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  2,964,052  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.39% 

Nationality:  noun — Uruguayan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Uruguayan 

Ethnic  divisions:  88%  white,  8%  mestizo, 
4%  black 


257 


Uruguay  (continued) 


Religion:  66%  Roman  Catholic  (less  than 
half  adult  population  attends  church 
regularly),  2%  Protestant,  2%  Jewish,  30% 
nonprofessing  or  other 

Language:  Spanish 

Infant  mortality  rate:  32/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  67.1,  women  73.7 
Literacy:  94.3% 

Labor  force:  about  1.28  million  (1981); 
25%  government;  19%  manufacturing;  11% 
agriculture;  12%  commerce;  12%  utilities, 
construction,  transport,  and  communica- 
tions; 21%  other  services;  unemployment 
11%  (1986  est.) 

Organized  labor:  Interunion  Workers' 
Assembly/National  Workers'  Confedera- 
tion (PIT/CNT)  Labor  Federation 

Government 

Official  name:  Oriental  Republic  of  Uru- 
guay 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Montevideo 

Administrative  divisions:  19  departments 
with  limited  autonomy 
Legal  system:  based  on  Spanish  civil  law 
system;  most  recent  constitution  imple- 
mented 1967;  accepts  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  25 
August 

Branches:  executive,  headed  by  President; 
bicameral  National  Congress  (Senate  and 
House  of  Deputies);  national  judiciary 
headed  by  Court  of  Justice 
Government  leaders:  Julio  M.  SANGUI- 
NETTI,  President  (since  March  1985); 
Enrique  E.  TARIGO,  Vice  President  (since 
March  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 
Elections:  last  November  1984;  elections 
held  every  five  years 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
(Blanco)  Party,  Wilson  Ferreira;  Colorado 
Party,  Julio  Sanguinetti,  Enrique  Tarigo, 
Jorge  Pacheco  Areco;  Broad  Front  Coali- 
tion, Liber  Seregni;  Communist  Party 
(legalized  in  March  1985),  Rodney  Arisme- 
ndi;  Civic  Union,  Humberto  Ciganda; 
Government  of  the  People  (List  99),  Hugo 
Batalla 


Voting  strength:  (1984  elections)  41% 
Colorado,  35%  Blanco,  22%  Broad  Front, 
2%  Civic  Union 
Communists:  30,000 
Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Na- 
tional Liberation  Movement  (MLN) — 
Tupamaros,  leftist  revolutionary  terrorist 
group,  granted  amnesty  in  1985 
Member  of:  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IADB, 
IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO, 
IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IRC, 
ITU,  LAIA,  OAS,  PAHO,  SELA,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO, 
WSG 

Economy 

GDP:  $5.2  billion,  $1,760  per  capita 
(1986);  89%  consumption,  13%  gross  invest- 
ment, —2.0%  foreign;  real  growth  rate 
1986,  3.0% 

Natural  resources:  soil,  hydroelectric 
power  (potential),  minor  minerals 

Agriculture:  large  areas  devoted  to  exten- 
sive livestock  grazing;  main  crops — wheat, 
rice,  corn,  sorghum;  self-sufficient  in  most 
basic  foodstuffs 

Major  industries:  meat  processing,  wool 
and  hides,  rice,  textiles,  footwear,  leather 
apparel,  tires,  cement,  fishing,  petroleum 
refining 

Electric  power:  1,379,000  kW  capacity; 
3,730  million  kWh  produced,  1,260  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $960  million  (f.o.b.,  1986);  meat, 
textiles,  wool,  hides,  leather  products,  fish, 
rice,  furs 

Imports:  $708  million  (f.o.b.,  1986  est.); 
fuels  and  lubricants  (37%),  metals,  machin- 
ery, transportation  equipment,  industrial 
chemicals 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 20% 
Brazil;  15%  US,  imports— 39%  LAIA  (13% 
Brazil,  11%  Argentina),  15%  EC,  7%  US 
(1986  est.) 

Aid:  US  authorized,  including  Ex-Im 
(FY70-84),  $78  million;  other  Western 
countries,  ODA  and  OOF  (1970-84)  $175 
million;  Communist  countries  (1970-85), 
$65  million 

Military  transfers:  US  authorized  (FY70- 
85)  $39  million 


Budget:  (1986  est.)  revenues,  $709  million; 
expenditures,  $901  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  173.36  new 
pesos=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,000  km,  all  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge  and  government  owned 

Highways:  49,900  km  total;  6,700  km 
paved,  3,000  km  gravel,  40,200  km  earth 

Inland  waterways:  1,600  km;  used  by 
coastal  and  shallow-draft  river  craft 

Ports:  1  major  (Montevideo),  9  minor 
Civil  air:  14  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  97  total,  94  usable;  16  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  14  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  most  modern  facili- 
ties concentrated  in  Montevideo;  new 
nationwide  radio-relay  network  337,000 
telephones  (11.3  per  100  popl.);  98  AM,  9 
shortwave,  21  TV  stations;  2  Atlantic 
Ocean  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  689,000; 
561,000  fit  for  military  service;  no  con- 
scription 


Vanuatu 


Espintu 

Santo 

LuganviH 


V 

o  . 

Aoba\Maewo 


^Msew 


A  Pentecost 


200km 


South 
Pacific  Ocean 


Coral  Sea 


PORT-VILA^ 


Sec  regional  mip  X 


kErromango 


oAnatom 


Geography 

Total  area:  14,760  km2;  land  area:  14,760 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Connecticut 

Coastline:  2,528  km 

Maritime  claims:  (measured  from  claimed 
archipelagic  baselines) 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 

Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 

margin  or  200  nm 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  southeast 
trade  winds 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  of  volcanic 
origin;  narrow  coastal  plains 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  5%  permanent 
crops;  2%  meadows  and  pastures;  1%  forest 
and  woodland;  91%  other 

Environment:  subject  to  cyclones  (January 
to  April);  volcanism  causes  minor  earth- 
quakes; over  80  islands 

Special  notes:  none 

People 

Population:  149,652  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.36% 

Nationality:  noun — Vanuatuan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Vanuatuan 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  indigenous  Melanes- 
ian;  8%  French;  remainder  Vietnamese, 
Chinese,  and  various  Pacific  Islanders 


Religion:  most  at  least  nominally  Christian 

Language:  English  and  French  (official); 
pidgin  (known  as  Bislama  or  Bichelama) 

Life  expectancy:  55 
Literacy:  probably  10-20% 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Vanuatu 

Type:  republic,  formerly  Anglo-French 
condominium  of  New  Hebrides,  indepen- 
dent 30  July  1980 

Capital:  Port- Vila 

Administrative  divisions:  four  administra- 
tive districts 

Legal  system:  unified  system  being  cre- 
ated from  former  dual  French  and  British 
systems 

Branch:  unicameral  legislature 
(39-member  Parliament),  elected  Novem- 
ber 1983 

Government  leader:  Father  Walter  Hadye 
LINI,  Prime  Minister  (since  1980) 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  National 
Party  (Vanuaaku  Pali),  Walter  Lini,  chair- 
man 

Member  of:  ADB,  Commonwealth, 
ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IFC,  IMF,  ITU,  NAM,  SPF,  UN,  WHO, 
WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $79  million,  $600  per  capita  (1984); 
GDP  decline  of  2.0%  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  manganese,  hardwood 
forests,  cattle 

Agriculture:  export  crops  of  copra,  cocoa, 
coffee,  some  livestock  and  fish  production; 
subsistence  crops  of  copra,  taro,  yams 

Fishing:  catch,  2,470  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  fish-freezing,  canneries, 
tourism 

Electric  power:  10,000  kW  capacity;  20 
million  kWh  produced,  150  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $18.1  million  (1985);  24%  copra, 
59%  frozen  fish,  meat 

Imports:  $52.3  million  (1985);  18%  food 
Aid:  Australia  (1970-84),  $43.0  million 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  118.57 
vatu=US$l;  1.55  Australian  dollars=US$l 
(6  February  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  1,027  km  total;  at  least  240  km 
sealed  or  all-weather  roads 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  3  minor  (Port- Vila,  Luganville, 
Palikoulo) 

Civil  air:  no  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  31  total,  27  usable;  2  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  2  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  2  AM  stations;  3,000 
telephones  (2.2  per  100  popl.);  1  satellite 
ground  station 

Defense  Forces 

Personnel:  no  military  forces  maintained; 
however,  a  paramilitary  force  is  responsi- 
ble for  internal  and  external  security 


259 


Vatican  City 


25Q  meters 


Sec  regional  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  0.438  km2;  land  area:  0.438 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-four  hun- 
dredth the  size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 

Land  boundary:  3  km  with  Italy 

Climate:  temperate;  mild,  rainy  winters 
(September  to  mid-May)  with  hot,  dry 
summers  (May  to  September) 

Terrain:  low  hill 

Land  use:  0%  arable  land;  0%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  100%  other 

Environment:  urban 

Special  notes:  landlocked;  enclave  of 
Rome,  Italy;  world's  smallest  state 


Population:  738  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  0.14% 

Ethnic  divisions:  primarily  Italians  but 
also  many  other  nationalities 

Religion:  Roman  Catholic 

Language:  Italian,  Latin,  and  various 
other  languages 

Literacy:  100% 

Labor  force:  about  1,500;  Vatican  City 
employees  divided  into  three  categories- 
executives,  office  workers,  and  salaried 
employees 


Government 

Official  name:  State  of  the  Vatican  City 
Type:  monarchical-sacerdotal  state 
Capital:  Vatican  City 

Administrative  divisions:  outside  the 
Vatican,  13  buildings  in  Rome  and  Castel 
Gandolfo  (the  Pope's  summer  residence) 
enjoy  extraterritorial  rights 

Legal  system:  Canon  laws  of  1929  serve 
some  functions  of  a  constitution 

National  holiday:  22  October  (installation 
day  of  Pope  John  Paul  II) 

Branches:  the  Pope  possesses  full  execu- 
tive, legislative,  and  judicial  powers;  he 
delegates  these  powers  to  the  President  of 
the  Pontifical  Commission,  who  is  subject 
to  pontifical  appointment  and  recall;  the 
administrative  structure  of  the  Roman 
Catholic  Church  is  known  as  the  Roman 
Curia;  its  most  important  temporal  compo- 
nents include  the  Secretariat  of  State  and 
Council  for  Public  Affairs  (which  handles 
Vatican  diplomacy)  and  the  Prefecture  of 
Economic  Affairs;  the  College  of  Cardinals 
act  as  chief  papal  advisers 

Government  leader:  JOHN  PAUL  II, 
Supreme  Pontiff  (Karol  WOJTYLLA, 
elected  Pope  16  October  1978) 

Suffrage:  limited  to  cardinals  less  than  80 
years  old 

Elections:  Supreme  Pontiff  elected  for  life 
by  College  of  Cardinals 

Communists:  none  known 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  none 
(exclusive  of  influence  exercised  by  other 
church  officers  in  universal  Roman  Catho- 
lic Church) 

Member:  IAEA,  INTELSAT,  ITU,  IWC— 
International  Wheat  Council,  UPU, 
WIPO,  WTO;  permanent  observer  status 
at  FAO,  OAS,  UN,  and  UNESCO 

Economy 

The  Vatican  City,  seat  of  the  Holy  See,  is 
supported  financially  by  contributions 
(known  as  Peter's  pence)  from  Roman 
Catholics  throughout  the  world;  some 
income  derived  from  sale  of  Vatican 
postage  stamps  and  tourist  mementos,  fees 
for  admission  to  museums,  and  sale  of 


publications;  industrial  activity  consists 
solely  of  printing  and  production  of  a 
small  amount  of  mosaics  and  staff  uni- 
forms; worldwide  banking  and  financial 
activities;  the  Institute  for  Religious  Works 
(IOR)  carries  out  fiscal  operations  and 
invests  and  transfers  funds  of  Roman 
Catholic  religious  communities  throughout 
the  world;  the  Administration  of  the 
Patrimony  of  the  Holy  See  manages  the 
Holy  See's  capital  assets 

Electric  power:  3,000  kW  capacity 
(1986) — power  supplied  by  Italy 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  the  Vatican 
issues  its  own  coinage,  which  is  inter- 
changeable with  the  Italian  lira;  1,337.0 
lira=US$l  (January  1987) 

Communications 

Highways:  none  (city  streets) 

Telecommunications:  2  AM  and  2  FM 
stations;  2,000-line  automatic  telephone 
exchange 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  Italy;  Swiss 
Papal  Guards  are  posted  at  entrances  to 
the  Vatican  City 


260 


Venezuela 


Caribbean  Sea 


Boundary  representation 
no!  necessarily  aulhonta 


See  regional  map  IV 


Geography 

Total  area:  912,050  km2;  land  area: 
882,050  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  twice  the  size  of 
California 

Land  boundaries:  4,181  km  total 
Coastline:  2,800  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  15  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  claims  Essequibo  area 
of  Guyana;  maritime  dispute  with  Colom- 
bia 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid;  more  mod- 
erate in  highlands 

Terrain:  Andes  mountains  and  Maracaibo 
lowlands  in  northwest;  central  plains 
(llanos);  Guyana  highlands  in  southeast 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  20%  meadows  and  pastures;  39% 
forest  and  woodland;  37%  other;  includes 
NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  Angel  Falls  is  world's  high- 
est waterfall 

Special  notes:  on  major  sea  and  air  routes 
linking  North  and  South  America 


Population:  18,291,134  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.66% 


Nationality:  noun — Venezuelan(s);  adjec- 
tive— Venezuelan 

Ethnic  divisions:  67%  mestizo,  21%  white, 
10%  black,  2%  Indian 

Religion:  96%  nominally  Roman  Catholic, 
2%  Protestant 

Language:  Spanish  (official);  Indian  dia- 
lects spoken  by  about  200,000  Amerind- 
ians in  the  remote  interior 

Infant  mortality  rate:  36.2/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  men  64.0,  women  69.0 
Literacy:  85.6% 

Labor  force:  5.8  million  (1985);  56% 

services,  28%  industry,  16%  agriculture 

(1980);  10.5%  unemployment  (December 

1986) 

Organized  labor:  32%  of  labor  force 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Venezuela 

Type:  republic 

Capital:  Caracas 

Administrative  divisions:  20  states,  1 
federal  district,  2  federal  territories 

Legal  system:  based  on  Napoleonic  code; 
constitution  promulgated  1961;  judicial 
review  of  legislative  acts  in  Cassation 
Court  only;  dual  court  system,  state  and 
federal;  has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  5 

July 

Branches:  executive  (President),  bicameral 

legislature  (National  Congress — Senate, 

Chamber  of  Deputies),  judiciary 

Government  leader:  Jaime  LUSINCHI, 
President  (since  February  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18,  though  rarely  enforced 

Elections:  every  five  years  by  secret  ballot; 
last  held  December  1983;  next  national 
election  for  President  and  bicameral 
legislature  scheduled  for  December  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Social  Chris- 
tian Party  (COPEI),  Eduardo  Fernandez 
(secretary  general);  Democratic  Action 
(AD),  Gonzalo  Barrios;  Movement  Toward 
Socialism  (MAS),  Pompeyo  Marquez  (presi- 
dent), Freddy  Mufioz  (secretary  general) 


Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  56.8% 
AD,  34.5%  COPEI,  4.17%  MAS,  4.53% 
others 

Communists:  10,000  members  (est.) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups: 
FEDECAMARAS,  a  conservative  business 
group 

Member  of:  Andean  Pact,  AIOEC,  FAO, 
G-77,  IADB,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO, 
IDE — Inter-American  Development  Bank, 
IFAD,  IFC,  IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO, 
INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  IRC,  ITU, 
IWC — International  Wheat  Council, 
LAIA,  OAS,  OPEC,  PAHO,  SELA, 
WFTU,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WHO, 
WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $57  billion  (1986  est.),  $3,200  per 
capita  (1986  est.);  58%  private  consump- 
tion, 13%  public  consumption,  16%  gross 
investment  (1986);  real  growth  rate  3% 
(1986);  11.5%  inflation  rate  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  natural  gas, 
iron  ore,  gold,  bauxite,  other  minerals, 
hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  cereals,  fruits,  sugar,  coffee, 
rice;  an  illegal  producer  of  cannabis  for 
the  international  drug  trade 

Fishing:  catch  301,372  metric  tons  (1985); 
exports  $31.9  million  (1985),  imports  $30.0 
million  (1982) 

Major  industries:  petroleum,  iron-ore 
mining,  construction,  food  processing, 
textiles,  steel,  aluminum,  motor  vehicles 

Crude  steel:  2.8  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  160  kg  per  capita 
Electric  power:  17,000,000  kW  capacity; 
50,240  million  kWh  produced,  2,820  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $12.3  billion  (f.o.b.1985)  petro- 
leum (84%) 
Imports:  $8.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985) 

Major  trade  partners:  imports — 50%  US, 
6%  Italy,  5%  Japan,  5%  FRG,  4.5% 
France,  4%  Brazil,  3%  UK;  exports— 41% 
US,  17%  Netherlands  Antilles,  7%  FRG, 
5%  Canada,  4%  Italy  (1985) 
Budget:  revenues,  $12.2  billion;  expendi- 
tures, $16.6  billion  (1987  est.) 


261 


Venezuela  (continued) 


Vietnam 


Monetary  conversion  rate:  (official)  7.5 
bolivares=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  439  km  total;  260  km  1.435- 
meter  standard  gauge  all  single  track, 
government  owned;  179  km  1.435-meter 
gauge,  privately  owned 

Highways:  77,785  km  total;  22,780  km 
paved,  24,720  km  gravel,  14,450  km  earth 
roads,  and  15,835  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  7,100  km;  Rio  Orinoco 
and  Lago  de  Maracaibo  accept  oceangoing 
vessels 

Pipelines:  6,370  km  crude  oil;  480  km 
refined  products;  3,690  km  natural  gas 

Ports:  6  major,  17  minor 

Civil  air:  58  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  278  total,  253  usable;  108  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  86  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  modern  expanding; 
1.44  million  telephones  (9.5  per  100  popl.); 
178  AM,  42  shortwave,  62  TV  stations;  3 
submarine  coaxial  cables;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
satellite  station  with  2  antennas,  3  domes- 
tic satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Ground  Forces,  Naval  Forces 
(Marines,  Coast  Guard),  Air  Forces,  Armed 
Forces  of  Cooperation  (National  Guard) 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
4,633,000;  3,371,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 199,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


Boundary  representation  rs 
not  necessarily  aulhnntalivi 


Gull  of 
Thailand 

See  regional  map  IX 


South 

China 

Sea 


m  Con  Dao 


Geography 

Total  area:  329,560  km2;  land  area: 
325,360 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  New 
Mexico 

Land  boundaries:  4,562  km  total 
Coastline:  3,444  km  (excluding  islands) 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  Cambodia  (three 
areas);  occupies  Cambodia;  sporadic  border 
clashes  with  China;  involved  in  complex 
dispute  over  Spratly  Islands  with  China, 
Malaysia,  Philippines,  Taiwan,  and  possi- 
bly Brunei;  maritime  dispute  with  China; 
dispute  with  China  over  Paracel  Islands 

Climate:  tropical  in  south;  monsoonal  in 
north  with  hot,  rainy  season  (mid-May  to 
mid-September)  and  warm,  dry  season 
(mid-October  to  mid-March) 

Terrain:  low,  flat  delta  in  south  and  north; 
central  highlands;  hilly,  mountainous  in  far 
north  and  northwest 

Land  use:  22%  arable  land;  2%  permanent 
crops;  1%  meadows  and  pastures;  40% 
forest  and  woodland;  35%  other;  includes 
5%  irrigated 

Environment:  occasional  typhoons  (May  to 
January)  with  extensive  flooding 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  63,585,121  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.49% 

Nationality:  noun — Vietnamese  (sing,  and 
pi.);  adjective — Vietnamese 

Ethnic  divisions:  85-90%  predominantly 
Vietnamese;  3%  Chinese;  ethnic  minorities 
include  Muong,  Thai,  Meo,  Khmer,  Man, 
Cham;  other  mountain  tribes 

Religion:  Buddhist,  Confucian,  Taoist, 
Roman  Catholic,  indigenous  beliefs,  Is- 
lamic, Protestant 

Language:  Vietnamese  (official),  French, 
Chinese,  English,  Khmer,  tribal  languages 
(Mon-Khmer  and  Malayo-Polynesian) 

Infant  mortality  rate:  53/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  62,  women  66 
Literacy:  78% 

Labor  force:  31.20  million,  not  including 
military 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  Republic  of  Viet- 
nam 

Type:  Communist  state 
Capital:  Hanoi 

Administrative  divisions:  40  provinces, 
under  central  government  control 

Legal  system:  based  on  Communist  legal 
theory  and  French  civil  law  system 

National  holiday:  2  September 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (National 
Assembly);  highest  authority  of  the  land  is 
technically  the  Council  of  State,  whose 
chairman  serves  as  the  country's  President; 
Council  of  Ministers  oversees  implementa- 
tion of  party  policies — chairman  is  equiva- 
lent of  premier 

Government  leader:  Nguyen  Van  LINH, 
Secretary  General  of  the  Communist  Party 
(since  December  1986) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  pro  forma  elections  held  .for 
national  and  local  assemblies;  last  election 
for  National  Assembly  held  on  25  April 
1976 

Political  party  and  leader:  Vietnam 
Communist  Party  (VCP),  Nguyen  Van 
Linh 


262 


Wallis  and  Futuna 


Communists:  probably  more  than  1  mil- 
lion 

Member  of:  ADB,  CEMA,  Colombo  Plan, 
ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77,  IAEA,  IBRD,  ICAO, 
IDA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTELSAT, 
IRC,  ITU,  Mekong  Committee,  NAM,  UN, 
UNDP,  UNESCO,  UNICEF,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $18.1  billion,  $300  per  capita  (1984) 
at  official  exchange  rates  of  12.1 
dong=US$l 

Natural  resources:  phosphates,  coal,  man- 
ganese, bauxite,  apatite,  chromate,  possible 
offshore  oil  deposits,  forests 

Agriculture:  main  crops — rice,  rubber, 
fruits  and  vegetables;  some  corn,  manioc, 
sugarcane;  major  food  imports — wheat, 
corn,  dairy  products 

Fishing:  catch  539,000  metric  tons  (1984) 

Major  industries:  food  processing,  textiles, 
machinebuilding,  mining,  cement,  chemi- 
cal fertilizer,  glass,  tires,  oil 

Shortages:  foodgrains,  petroleum,  capital 
goods  and  machinery,  fertilizer 

Electric  power:  1,914,000  kW  capacity; 
5,400  million  kWh  produced,  90  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $763  million  (1984);  agricultural 
and  handicraft  products,  coal,  minerals, 
ores 

Imports:  $1,823  million  (1984);  petroleum, 
steel  products,  railroad  equipment,  chemi- 
cals, medicines,  raw  cotton,  fertilizer,  grain 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — USSR, 
East  European  countries,  Japan,  other 
Asian  markets;  imports — USSR,  East 
Europe,  Japan 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  official  rate  80 
dong=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  2,943  km  total;  2,371  1.000- 
meter  gauge,  130  km  standard  gauge,  230 
km  dual  gauge,  212  km  unoperable 
Highways:  about  85,000  km  total;  9,400 
km  bituminous,  48,700  km  gravel  or 
improved  earth,  26,900  km  unimproved 
earth 


Pipelines:  150  km,  refined  products 
Inland  waterways:  about  17,702  km 
navigable;  more  than  5,149  km  navigable 
at  all  times  by  vessels  up  to  1.8-m  draft 
Ports:  9  major,  23  minor 
Civil  air:  controlled  by  military 
Airfields:  217  total,  128  usable;  46  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  12  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  28  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  16  AM,  1  FM,  2  TV 
stations;  2,300,000  TV  sets;  6,000,000 
receiver  sets;  at  least  2  satellite  ground 
stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
15,026,000;  9,582,000  fit  for  military 
service;  735,000  reach  military  age  (17) 
annually 

Military  budget:  no  expenditure  estimates 
are  available;  military  aid  from  the  USSR 
has  been  so  extensive  that  actual  allocation 
of  Vietnam's  domestic  resources  to  defense 
has  not  been  indicative  of  total  military 
effort 


MATA-UTUA. 
Vf 

He  Uviif. 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


'lie  A/of i 


See  regional  map  X 


Geography 

Total  area:  200  km2;  land  area:  200  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than 
Washington,  D.C. 

Coastline:  129  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  rainy  season  (No- 
vember to  April);  cool,  dry  season  (May  to 
October) 

Terrain:  volcanic  origin;  low  hills 

Land  use:  5%  arable  land;  20%  permanent 
crops;  0%  meadows  and  pastures;  0%  forest 
and  woodland;  75%  other 

Environment:  both  island  groups  have 
fringing  reefs 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  14,593  (July  1987)  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.35% 

Nationality:  noun — Wallisian(s),  Futun- 
an(s),  or  Wallis  and  Futuna  Islanders; 
adjective — Wallisian,  Futunan,  or  Wallis 
and  Futuna  Islander 

Ethnic  divisions:  almost  entirely  Polynes- 
ian 

Religion:  largely  Roman  Catholic 


Wallis  and  Futuna  (continued)          Western  Sahara 


Government 

Official  name:  Territory  of  the  Wallis  and 
Futuna  Islands 

Type:  overseas  territory  of  France 
Capital:  Mata-Utu 

Administrative  divisions:  three  districts 
Branches:  territorial  assembly  of  20  mem- 
bers; popular  election  of  one  deputy  to 
National  Assembly  in  Paris  and  one  sena- 
tor 

Government  leaders:  Jacques  LE 
HENAFF,  Administrator;  and  Jean 
MONTPEZAT,  High  Commissioner 
Suffrage:  universal  adult 
Elections:  every  five  years 

Economy 

GDP:  Colonial  Francs  Pacifique  (CFP) 
1,100  million  (est.  1985) 
Agriculture:  dominated  by  coconut  pro- 
duction, with  subsistence  crops  of  yams, 
taro,  bananas 

Electric  power:  1,000  kW  capacity;  1 
million  kWh  produced,  70  kWh  per  capita 
(1986) 

Exports:  negligible 

Imports:  $3.4  million  (1977);  largely  food- 
stuffs and  some  equipment  associated  with 
development  programs 
Aid:  (1978)  France,  European  Develop- 
ment Fund,  $2.6  million 
Monetary  conversion  rate:  138.23  Colo- 
nial Francs  Pacifique  (CFP)=US$1  (De- 
cember 1985) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  100  km  on  lie  Uvea  (Uvea 
Island),  16  km  sealed;  20  km  earth  surface 
on  lie  Futuna  (Futuna  Island) 
Inland  waterways:  none 
Ports:  2  minor 

Airfields:  2  total;  2  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  225  telephones  (1.6 
per  100  popl.);  1  AM  station 

Defense  Forces 

Defense  is  the  responsibility  of  France 


200k 


S«c  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  266,000  km2;  land  area: 
266,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Utah 
Land  boundaries:  2,086  km  total 
Coastline:  1,110  km 

Maritime  claims:  contingent  upon  resolu- 
tion of  sovereignty  issue 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  claimed  and 
administered  by  Morocco,  but  sovereignty 
is  unresolved 

Climate:  hot,  dry  desert;  rain  is  rare;  cold 
offshore  currents  produce  fog  and  heavy 
dew 

Terrain:  mostly  low,  flat  desert  with  large 
areas  of  rocky  or  sandy  surfaces  rising  to 
small  mountains  in  south  and  northeast 
Land  use:  NEGL%  arable  land;  0%  per- 
manent crops;  19%  meadows  and  pastures; 
0%  forest  and  woodland;  81%  other 
Environment:  hot,  dry,  dust/sand-laden 
sirocco  wind  can  occur  during  winter  and 
spring;  widespread  harmattan  haze  exists 
60%  of  time,  often  severely  restricting 
visibility;  sparse  water  and  arable  land 
Special  notes:  none 


Population:  93,859  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  1.78% 

Nationality:  noun— Saharan(s),  Moroc- 
can(s);  adjective — Saharan,  Moroccan 

Ethnic  divisions:  Arab  and  Berber 


Religion:  Muslim 

Language:  Hassaniya  Arabic,  Moroccan 
Arabic 

Literacy:  about  20%  among  Moroccans, 
5%  among  Saharans 

Labor  force:  12,000;  50%  animal  hus- 
bandry and  subsistence  farming 

Government 

Official  name:  Western  Sahara 

Type:  legal  status  of  territory  and  question 
of  sovereignty  unresolved;  territory  con- 
tested by  Morocco,  an  insurgent  group 
(Popular  Front  for  the  Liberation  of  the 
Saguia  el  Hamra),  and  Polisario  (Rio  de 
Oro);  territory  partitioned  between  Mo- 
rocco and  Mauritania  in  April  1976,  with 
Morocco  acquiring  northern  two-thirds; 
Mauritania,  under  pressure  from  Polisario 
guerrillas,  abandoned  all  claims  to  its 
portion  in  August  1979;  Morocco  moved  to 
occupy  that  sector  shortly  thereafter  and 
has  since  asserted  administrative  control; 
the  Polisario 's  government  in  exile  was 
seated  as  an  OAU  member  in  1984;  guer- 
rilla activities  continue  to  the  present 
Government  leader:  Mohamed 
ABDELAZIZ,  President,  Sahara  Demo- 
cratic Arab  Republic  (since  October  1982), 
and  secretary  general,  Polisario  (since 
August  1976) 

Economy 

Natural  resources:  phosphates,  iron  ore 
Agriculture:  practically  none;  some  barley 
is  grown  in  nondrought  years;  fruit  and 
vegetables  in  the  few  oases;  food  imports 
are  essential;  camels,  sheep,  and  goats  are 
kept  by  the  nomadic  natives;  cash  econ- 
omy exists  largely  for  the  garrison  forces 

Major  industries:  phosphate,  fishing,  and 
handicrafts 

Shortages:  water 

Electric  power:  60,000  kW  capacity;  78 
million  kWh  produced,  850  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  up  to  $5  million  in  phosphates, 
all  other  exports  valued  at  under  $3  mil- 
lion (1982) 

Imports:  up  to  $30  million  (1982);  fuel  for 
fishing  fleet,  foodstuffs 


264 


Western  Samoa 


Major  trade  partners:  Morocco  claims 
administrative  control  over  Western  Sa- 
hara and  controls  all  trade  with  the  coun- 
try; Western  Sahara  trade  figures  are 
included  in  overall  Moroccan  accounts 
Aid:  previously  received  small  amounts 
from  Spain;  Morocco  is  now  the  major 
source  of  support 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  uses  Moroccan 
dirham;  10.06  dirham=US$l  (1984) 

Communications 

Railroads:  none 

Highways:  6,100  km  total;  1,350  km 
surfaced,  4,750  km  improved  and  unim- 
proved earth  roads  and  tracks 
Ports:  2  secondary  (El  Aaiiin,  Ad  Dakhla) 

Airfields:  16  total,  15  usable;  3  with 
permanent-surface  runways,  3  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  1  AM,  0  FM,  and  1 
TV  stations 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


South  Pacific  Ocean 


See  regional  map  \ 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,860  km2;  land  area:  2,850 

km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 

Rhode  Island 

Coastline:  403  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 

Territorial  sea:  12  nm 
Climate:  tropical;  rainy  season  (October  to 
March),  dry  season  May  to  October) 
Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain  with  volca- 
nic, rocky,  rugged  mountains  in  interior 
Land  use:  19%  arable  land;  24%  perma- 
nent crops;  NEGL%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures; 47%  forest  and  woodland;  10%  other 
Environment:  subject  to  occasional  ty- 
phoons; active  volcanism 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  175,084  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.20% 
Nationality:  noun — Western  Samoan(s); 
adjective — Western  Samoa 
Ethnic  divisions:  Samoan;  about  12,000 
Euronesians  (persons  of  European  and 
Polynesian  blood),  700  Europeans 
Religion:  99.7%  Christian  (about  half  of 
population  associated  with  the  London 
Missionary  Society;  includes  Congrega- 
tional, Roman  Catholic,  Methodist,  Latter 
Day  Saints,  Seventh-Day  Adventist) 


Language:  Samoan  (Polynesian),  English 

Infant  mortality  rate:  36/1,000  (1983) 

Life  expectancy:  63 

Literacy:  90% 

Labor  force:  about  37,000  (1983);  about 

22,000  employed  in  agriculture 

Government 

Official  name:  Independent  State  of 
Western  Samoa 

Type:  constitutional  monarchy  under 
native  chief 
Capital:  Apia 

Administrative  divisions:  1 1  districts 
Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  local  customs;  constitution  came 
into  effect  upon  independence  in  1962; 
judicial  review  of  legislative  acts  with 
respect  to  fundamental  rights  of  the  citi- 
zen; has  not  accepted  compulsory  ICJ 
jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  1 
January 

Branches:  Head  of  State  and  Executive 
Council;  unicameral  legislature 
(47-member  Legislative  Assembly);  Su- 
preme Court,  Court  of  Appeal,  Land  and 
Titles  Court,  village  courts 
Government  leaders:  MALIETOA 
Tanumafili  II,  Head  of  State  (since  1962); 
Va'ai  KOLONE,  Prime  Minister  (since 
December  1985) 

Suffrage:  45  members  of  Legislative  As- 
sembly are  elected  by  holders  of  matai 
(heads  of  family)  titles  (about  12,000  per- 
sons); two  members  are  elected  by  univer- 
sal adult  suffrage  of  persons  lacking  tradi- 
tional family  ties 

Elections:  held  triennially;  last  held  in 
February  1982 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  no  clearly 
defined  structure 
Communists:  unknown 
Member  of:  ADB,  Commonwealth, 
ESCAP,  FAO,  G-77,  IBRD,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  IMF,  South  Pacific  Commission,  SPF, 
UN,  UNESCO,  WHO 


265 


Western  Samoa  (continued) 


Yemen  Arab  Republic 
(North  Yemen) 


Economy 

GDP:  $86.8  million,  $532  per  capita  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  hardwood  forests,  fish 

Agriculture:  cocoa,  bananas,  copra;  staple 
foods  include  coconuts,  bananas,  taro, 
yams 

Major  industries:  timber,  tourism,  light 
industry 

Electric  power:  62,000  kW  capacity;  79 
million  kWh  produced,  480  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $16  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  copra 
43.3%,  cocoa  32.3%,  timber  2.0%,  mineral 
fuel,  bananas 

Imports:  $63  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  food 
30%,  manufactured  goods  25%,  machinery 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 31%  FRG, 
26%  New  Zealand,  12%  US,  2%  Australia; 
imports— 30%  US,  28%  New  Zealand,  10% 
Australia,  6%  UK  (1981) 

Aid:  US  (FY70-85),  $13  million;  Western 
(non-US)  countries,  ODA  and  OOF 
(1970-84),  $195  million 

Budget:  (1982  est.)  revenues,  $36.9  million; 
expenditures,  $37.6  million;  development 
expenditure,  $34.9  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  2.256  WS 
tala=US$l  (November  1986) 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  2,042  km  total;  375  km  sealed; 
remainder  mostly  gravel,  crushed  stone,  or 
earth 

Inland  waterways:  none 

Ports:  1  principal  (Apia),  1  minor 

Civil  air:  3  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  4  total,  4  usable;  1  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with 
2,440-3,659  m 

Telecommunications:  7,500  telephones 
(4.5  per  100  popl.);  70,000  radio  receivers; 
1  AM  station;  1  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  45,000; 
23,000  fit  for  military  service 


Set  regioni!  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  195,000  km2;  land  area: 
195,000  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
South  Dakota 

Land  boundaries:  1,528  km  total 
Coastline:  523  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  18  nm 
Continental  shelf:  200  meters 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  international  boun- 
dary/indefinite boundary/no  defined 
boundary  with  PDRY;  international  boun- 
dary/no defined  boundary  with  Saudi 
Arabia 

Climate:  desert;  hot  and  humid  along 
coast;  temperate  in  central  mountains; 
harsh  desert  in  east 

Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain  (Tihama); 
western  mountains;  flat  dissected  plain  in 
center  sloping  into  desert  interior  of  Ara- 
bian Peninsula 

Land  use:  14%  arable  land;  NEGL% 
permanent  crops;  36%  meadows  and 
pastures;  8%  forest  and  woodland;  42% 
other;  includes  1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  sand  and  dust 
storms  in  summer;  overgrazing;  soil  ero- 
sion; desertification 

Special  notes:  controls  northern 
approaches  to  Bab  el  Mandeb  linking  Red 
Sea  and  Gulf  of  Aden,  one  of  world's  most 
active  shipping  lanes 


Population:  6,533,265  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  2.93% 
Nationality:  noun — Yemeni(s);  adjective — 
Yemeni 

Ethnic  divisions:  90%  Arab,  10%  Afro- 
Arab  (mixed) 

Religion:  100%  Muslim  (Sunni  and  Shi'a) 
Language:  Arabic 

Infant  mortality  rate:  152/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  37.3,  women  38.7 
Literacy:  15%  (est.) 

Labor  force:  about  30%  expatriate  labor- 
ers; remainder  almost  entirely  agriculture 
and  herding 

Government 

Official  name:  Yemen  Arab  Republic 
Type:  republic;  military  regime  assumed 
power  in  June  1974 
Capital:  Sanaa 

Administrative  divisions:  1 1  provinces 
Legal  system:  based  on  Turkish  law, 
Islamic  law,  and  local  customary  law;  first 
constitution  promulgated  December  1970, 
suspended  June  1974;  has  not  accepted 
compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 
National  holiday:  Proclamation  of  the 
Republic,  26  September 
Branches:  President,  Prime  Minister, 
Cabinet;  People's  Constituent  Assembly 
Government  leaders:  Col.  'Ali  'Abdallah 
SALIH,  President  (since  1978);  'Abd  al- 
'Aziz  'ABD  AL-GHANI,  Prime  Minister 
(since  1983) 

Communists:  small  number 
Political  parties  or  pressure  groups:  no 
legal  political  parties;  in  1983  President 
Salih  started  the  General  People's  Con- 
gress, which  is  designed  to  function  as  the 
country's  sole  political  party;  conservative 
tribal  groups,  Muslim  Brotherhood,  and 
leftist  factions — pro-Iraqi  Ba'thists,  Nasir- 
ists,  National  Democratic  Front  (NDF) 
supported  by  South  Yemen — exert  political 
influence 

Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Islamic  Devel- 
opment Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF, 
IMO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL,  ITU, 
NAM,  QIC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO 


266 


Yemen,  People's  Democratic 
Republic  of 
(South  Yemen) 


Economy 

GDP:  $3.1  billion,  $520  per  capita  (1984) 

Natural  resources:  petroleum,  rock  salt, 
marble;  small  deposits  of  coal,  nickel,  and 
copper 

Agriculture:  sorghum  and  millet,  qat  (a 
mild  narcotic),  cotton,  coffee,  fruits  and 
vegetables,  livestock 

Major  industries:  small  scale  production 
of  cotton  textiles  and  leather  goods;  food 
processing;  handicrafts;  fishing;  small 
aluminum  products  factory;  cement 

Electric  power:  254,000  kW  capacity;  556 
million  kWh  produced,  240  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $9.5  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  qat, 
cotton,  coffee,  hides,  vegetables 

Imports:  $1.2  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  textiles 
and  other  manufactured  consumer  goods, 
petroleum  products,  sugar,  grain,  flour, 
other  foodstuffs,  and  cement  (one  of  the 
worst  export/import  ratios  in  the  world) 

Major  trade  partners:  exports  (1985) — 
41%  US,  14%  PDRY,  12%  Japan;  imports 
(1985)— 10%  Italy,  9%  Saudi  Arabia,  9% 
Japan,  8%  UK 

Budget:  (1985  est.)  total  receipts,  $942 
million;  current  expenditures,  $946  mil- 
lion; development  expenditures,  $580 
million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  7.44 
rials=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  4,000  km  total;  1,  775  km 
bituminous;  500  km  crushed  stone  and 
gravel;  1,725  km  earth,  sand,  and  light 
gravel 

Ports:  1  major  (Al  rjudaydah),  3  minor 
Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  20  total,  14  usable;  4  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  7  with  run- 
ways 2,440-3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  system  poor  but 
improving;  new  radio-relay  and  cable 
networks;  50,000  telephones  (0.8  per  100 
popl.);  3  AM,  no  FM,  5  TV  stations;  1 
Indian  Ocean,  1  Atlantic  Ocean,  and  1 
ARABSAT  satellite  station;  tropospheric 
scatter  to  South  Yemen 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,183,000;  672,000  fit  for  military  service; 
about  83,000  reach  military  age  (18) 
annually 


representation  is 


Kamaron 


Perim 


-*ADEN 


Gulf  of  Aden 


See  regional  map  VI 


Geography 

Total  area:  332,970  km2;  land  area: 
332,970  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Nevada 

Land  boundaries:  1,802  km  total 
Coastline:  1,383  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Contiguous  zone:  24  nm 
Continental  shelf:  edge  of  continental 
margin  or  200  nm 
Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  international  boun- 
dary/indefinite boundary/no  defined 
boundary  with  YAR;  Administrative  Line 
with  Oman;  no  defined  boundary  with 
Saudi  Arabia 

Climate:  desert;  extraordinarily  hot  and 
dry 

Terrain:  mostly  upland  desert  plains; 
narrow,  flat,  sandy  coastal  plain  backed  by 
flat-topped  hills  and  rugged  mountains 

Land  use:  1%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  27%  meadows  and  pastures; 
7%  forest  and  woodland;  65%  other;  in- 
cludes NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  scarcity  of  natural  fresh 
water  resources;  overgrazing;  soil  erosion; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  controls  southern 
approaches  to  Bab  el  Mandeb  linking  Red 
Sea  to  Gulf  of  Aden,  one  of  world's  most 
active  shipping  lanes 


267 


Yemen,  People's  Democratic 
Republic  of 

(South  Yemen)  (continued) 

People 

Population:  2,351,131  (July  1987);  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.07% 

Nationality:  noun — Yemeni(s);  adjective — 
Yemeni 

Ethnic  divisions:  almost  all  Arabs;  a  few 
Indians,  Somalis,  and  Europeans 

Religion:  Sunni  Muslim,  some  Christian 
and  Hindu 

Language:  Arabic 

Infant  mortality  rate:  114/1,000  (1980) 
Life  expectancy:  men  40.6,  women  42.4 
Literacy:  25% 

Government 

Official  name:  People's  Democratic  Re- 
public of  Yemen 

Type:  republic 
Capital:  Aden 

Administrative  divisions:  six  governorates 
Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law  (for 
personal  matters)  and  English  common  law 
(for  commercial  matters);  highest  judicial 
organ,  Federal  High  Court,  interprets 
constitution  and  determines  disputes 
between  states 

National  holiday:  14  October 

Branches:  unicameral  legislature  (People's 
Assembly);  Supreme  Cabinet 

Government  leaders:  Haydar  Abu  Bakr 
al-'ATTAS,  Chairman,  Presidium,  Su- 
preme People's  Council  (since  February 
1986);  'Ali  Salim  al-BID,  Secretary  Gen- 
eral, Yemeni  Socialist  Party  (since  Febru- 
ary 1986);  Yasin  Sa'id  NU'MAN,  Chair- 
man, Council  of  Ministers  (since  February 
1986) 

Suffrage:  all  citizens  age  18  and  over 
Elections:  elections  for  legislative  body 
and  Supreme  People's  Council  are  called 
for  in  the  constitution,  but  none  have  been 
held 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Yemeni 
Socialist  Party  (YSP),  the  only  legal  party, 
is  a  coalition  of  National  Front,  Ba'th,  and 
Communist  Parties 

Communists:  no  information 


Member  of:  Arab  League,  FAO,  G-77, 
GATT  (de  facto),  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA, 
IDE— Islamic  Development  Bank,  IFAD, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  ITU,  NAM,  QIC,  UN, 
UNESCO,  UPU,  WFTU,  WHO,  WMO, 
WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $1.1  billion  (1985  est),  $500  per 
capita 

Natural  resources:  fish,  oil,  minerals  (gold, 
copper,  lead) 

Agriculture:  cotton  is  main  cash  crop; 
cereals,  dates,  qat  (a  mild  narcotic),  coffee, 
and  livestock  are  raised,  and  there  is  a 
growing  fishing  industry;  large  amount  of 
food  must  be  imported  (particularly  for 
Aden);  cotton,  hides,  skins,  dried  and 
salted  fish  are  exported 

Major  industries:  petroleum  refinery  at 
Little  Aden  operates  on  imported  crude 

Electric  power:  254,000  kW  capacity;  556 
million  kWh  produced,  240  kWh  per 
capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $316  million  (f.o.b.  1985  est.) 
Imports:  $762  million  (f.o.b.,  1985  est.) 

Major  trade  partners:  1985  imports 
mainly  from  USSR  14%,  Australia  9%,  UK 
7%;  exports  mainly  to  Japan  36%,  North 
Yemen  23%,  Singapore  10% 

Budget:  (1985  est.)  total  receipts  $433 
million,  current  expenditures  $495  million, 
development  expenditures  $327  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  0.3454 
dinar=US$l  (November  1986) 
Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 
Railroads:  none 

Highways:  5,600  km  total;  1,700  km 
bituminous  treated,  630  km  crushed  stone 
and  gravel,  3,270  km  motorable  track 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  32  km 
Ports:  1  major  (Aden),  5  minor 
Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  41  total,  30  usable;  5  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1 1  with 
runways  2,440-3,659  m,  1 1  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Telecommunications:  small  system  of 
open-wire,  radio-relay,  multiconductor 
cable,  and  radio  communications  stations; 
only  center  Aden;  estimated  15,000  tele- 
phones (0.7  per  100  popl.);  1  AM,  no  FM, 
5  TV  stations;  1  Indian  Ocean  INTELSAT, 
1  Intersputnik,  and  1  ARABSAT  satellite 
station;  tropospheric  scatter  to  North 
Yemen 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force, 
People's  Militia,  People's  Police 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49,  491,000; 
277,000  fit  for  military  service 


Yugoslavia 


Adriatic 
Sea 


Dubrovn 


See  refionil  map  V 


Geography 

Total  area:  255,800  km2;  land  area: 
255,400  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Wyoming 

Land  boundaries:  3,001  km  total 

Coastline:  3,935  km  (including  2,414  km 
offshore  islands) 

Maritime  claims: 

Continental  shelf:  200  meters  or  to 
depth  of  exploitation 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  Kosovo  question 
with  Albania;  Macedonia  question  with 
Bulgaria  and  Greece;  Trieste  question  with 
Italy 

Climate:  temperate;  hot,  relatively  dry 
summers  with  mild,  rainy  winters  along 
coast;  warm  summer  with  cold  winters 
inland 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains  with  large  areas 
of  karst  topography;  plain  in  north 

Land  use:  28%  arable  land;  3%  permanent 
crops;  25%  meadows  and  pastures;  36% 
forest  and  woodland;  8%  other;  includes 
1%  irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  frequent  and 
very  destructive  earthquakes 

Special  notes:  controls  the  most  important 
land  routes  from  central  and  western 
Europe  to  Aegean  Sea  and  Turkish  Straits 


Population:  23,430,830  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  0.66% 

Nationality:  noun — Yugoslav(s);  adjec- 
tive— Yugoslav 

Ethnic  divisions:  36.3%  Serb,  19.7% 
Croat,  8.9%  Muslim,  7.8%  Slovene,  7.7% 
Albanian,  5.9%  Macedonian,  5.4% 
Yugoslav,  2.5%  Montenegrin,  1.9%  Hun- 
garian, 3.9%  other  (1981  census) 

Religion:  50%  Eastern  Orthodox,  30% 
Roman  Catholic,  10%  Muslim,  1%  Protes- 
tant, 9%  other 

Language:  Serbo-Croatian,  Slovene,  Mace- 
donian (all  official);  Albanian,  Hungarian 

Infant  mortality  rate:  30/1,000  (1982) 
Life  expectancy:  men  68,  women  73 
Literacy:  90.5% 

Labor  force:  10.1  million  (1983);  25% 
agriculture,  29%  mining  and  manufactur- 
ing; about  5%  of  labor  force  are  guest 
workers  in  Western  Europe;  unemploy- 
ment about  10.0%  of  domestic  labor  force, 
including  private  agriculture  (August  1986) 

Government 

Official  name:  Socialist  Federal  Republic 
of  Yugoslavia 

Type:  Communist  state,  federal  republic  in 
form 

Capital:  Belgrade 

Administrative  divisions:  six  republics 

Legal  system:  mixture  of  civil  law  system 
and  Communist  legal  theory;  constitution 
adopted  1974;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  29  November  (Day  of 
the  Republic) 

Branches:  bicameral  legislature  (Federal 
Assembly — Federal  Chamber,  Chamber  of 
Republics  and  Provinces);  executive  in- 
cludes cabinet  (Federal  Executive  Council) 
and  the  federal  administration;  judiciary; 
the  State  Presidency  is  a  collective,  rotat- 
ing policymaking  body  composed  of  a 
representative  from  each  republic  and 
province,  Sinan  Hasni  presides  as  President 
of  the  Republic  until  May  1987,  when  he 
will  be  replaced  by  the  representative 
from  Macedonia,  Lazar  Mojsov 


Government  leader:  Branko  MIKULIC, 
President  of  the  Federal  Executive  Coun- 
cil (since  1986);  nonrenewable  four-year 
term  expires  May  1990 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18 

Elections:  Federal  Assembly  elected  every 
four  years  by  a  complicated,  indirect 
system  of  voting 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  League  of 
Communists  of  Yugoslavia  (LCY)  only; 
leaders  are  23  members  of  party  Presid- 
ium selected  proportionally  from  repub- 
lics, provinces,  and  Yugoslav  People's 
Army,  with  the  president  rotating  on  an 
annual  basis  and  the  secretary  rotating 
every  two  years;  president  until  June  1987 
is  Milanko  Renovica  from  Bosnia- 
Hercegovina 

Communists:  2,167,860  party  members 
(December  1985) 

Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  Social- 
ist Alliance  of  Working  People  of  Yugosla- 
via (SAWPY),  the  major  mass  front  organi- 
zation; Confederation  of  Trade  Unions  of 
Yugoslavia  (CTUY),  League  of  Socialist 
Youth  of  Yugoslavia,  Federation  of 
Veterans'  Associations  of  Yugoslavia 
(SUBNOR) 

Member  of:  ASSIMER,  CEMA  (observer 
but  participates  in  certain  commissions), 
FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA,  IBA,  IBRD, 
ICAC,  ICAO,  IDA,  IDE— Inter-American 
Development  Bank,  IFAD,  IFC,  IHO, 
ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT,  International 
Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group,  INTERPOL, 
IPU,  ITC,  ITU,  NAM,  OECD  (participant 
in  some  activities),  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GNP:  $129.4  billion,  $5,600  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  0.2%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  copper,  bauxite, 
timber,  iron,  antimony,  chromium,  lead, 
zinc,  asbestos,  mercury,  crude  oil,  nickel, 
uranium 

Agriculture:  diversified  agriculture  with 
many  small  private  holdings  and  large 
agricultural  combines;  main  crops — corn, 
wheat,  tobacco,  sugar  beets,  and  sun- 
flowers; occasionally  a  net  exporter  of 
corn,  tobacco,  foodstuffs,  live  animals 


Yugoslavia  (continued) 


Zaire 


Fishing:  catch  75,057  metric  tons  (1985) 

Major  industries:  metallurgy,  machinery 
and  equipment,  oil  refining,  chemicals, 
textiles,  wood  processing,  food  processing, 
electric  power 

Crude  steel:  4.5  million  metric  tons  pro- 
duced (1985),  195  kg  per  capita 

Electric  power:  20,113,000  kW  capacity; 
79,000  million  kWh  produced,  3,380  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $10.6  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985);  49% 
raw  materials  and  semimanufactures,  31% 
consumer  goods,  20%  equipment 

Imports:  $12.2  billion  (c.i.f.,  1985);  81% 
raw  materials  and  semimanufactures,  14% 
equipment,  4%  consumer  goods 

Major  trade  partners:  59%  non-Com- 
munist countries;  41%  Communist  coun- 
tries, of  which  24%  USSR  (1985) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  408.0 
dinars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  9,279  km  total;  (all  1.435-meter 
standard  gauge)  including  893  km  double 
track,  3,462  km  electrified  (1984) 
Highways:  116,602  km  total;  65,222  km 
asphalt,  concrete,  stone  block;  33,048  km 
macadam,  asphalt  treated,  gravel,  crushed 
stone;  18,332  km  earth  (1983) 
Inland  waterways:  2,600  km  (1982) 
Freight  carried:  rail — 91.7  million  metric 
tons,  28.7  billion  metric  tons/km;  high- 
way— 229.3  million  metric  tons,  121.8 
billion  metric  tons/km;  waterway — 21.0 
million  metric  tons,  4.3  billion  metric 
tons/km  (excluding  international  transit 
traffic)  (1984) 

Pipelines:  1,373  km  crude  oil;  2,900  km 
natural  gas;  150  km  refined  products 
Ports:  9  major  (most  important:  Rijeka, 
Split,  Koper,  Bar,  and  Ploce),  24  minor; 
principal  inland  water  port  is  Belgrade 
Airfields:  185  total,  183  usable;  51  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  22  with 
runways  2,440  to  3,659  m,  22  with  run- 
ways 1,220-2,439  m 
Telecommunications:  199  AM,  87  FM 
stations;  11  main  TV  centers  and  about  50 
TV  stations;  3,915,113  TV  sets;  4,456,213 
receiver  sets;  2  satellite  ground  stations 


Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Yugoslav  People's  Army — 
Ground  Forces,  Naval  Forces,  Air  and  Air 
Defense  Forces,  Frontier  Guard,  Territo- 
rial Defense  Force 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
6,029,000;  4,890,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; 184,000  reach  military  age  (19) 
annually 

Military  budget:  announced  for  fiscal  year 
ending  31  December  1986,  889.0  billion 
dinars;  about  5.2%  of  national  income 


See  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  2,345,410  km2;  land  area: 
2,267,600  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  one-fourth  the 
size  of  US 

Land  boundaries:  9,902  km  total 
Coastline:  37  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Exclusive  fishing  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  sections  with  Congo 
and  Zambia  are  indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  hot,  humid  in  river 
basin;  cooler,  drier  in  southern  highlands 

Terrain:  vast  central  basin  is  a  low-lying 
plateau;  mountains  in  east 

Land  use:  3%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  4%  meadows  and  pastures; 
78%  forest  and  woodland;  15%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  straddles  Equator;  periodic 
droughts  in  south 

Special  notes:  very  narrow  strip  of  land  is 
only  outlet  to  Atlantic  Ocean 

People 

Population:  32,342,947  (July  1987),  aver- 
age annual  growth  rate  2.88% 

Nationality:  noun — Zairian(s);  adjective — 
Zairian 


270 


Ethnic  divisions:  over  200  African  ethnic 
groups,  the  majority  are  Bantu;  four  larg- 
est tribes — Mongo,  Luba,  Kongo  (all 
Bantu),  and  the  Mangbetu-Azande 
(Hamitic)  make  up  about  45%  of  the 
population 

Religion:  50%  Roman  Catholic,  20% 
Protestant,  10%  Kimbanguist,  10%  Muslim, 
10%  other  syncretic  sects  and  traditional 
beliefs 

Language:  French  (official),  English, 
Lingala,  Swahili,  Kingwana,  Kikongo, 
Tshiluba 

Infant  mortality  rate:  108/1,000  (1984) 

Life  expectancy:  men  49,  women  52 

(1983) 

Literacy:  55%  males,  37%  females 

Labor  force:  about  15  million,  but  only 
about  13%  in  wage  structure 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Zaire 

Type:  republic;  constitution  establishes 
strong  presidential  system 

Capital:  Kinshasa 

Administrative  divisions:  eight  regions 
and  federal  district  of  Kinshasa 

Legal  system:  based  on  Belgian  civil  law 
system  and  tribal  law;  new  constitution 
promulgated  February  1978;  has  not 
accepted  compulsory  ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holidays:  Independence  Day,  30 
June;  Anniversary  of  the  Regime,  24 
November 

Branches:  President  elected  originally  in 
1970  for  seven-year  term;  Marshal  Mobutu 
reelected  July  1984;  limits  on  reelection 
removed  by  new  constitution;  unicameral 
legislature  (310-member  National  Legisla- 
tive Council  elected  for  five-year  term); 
the  official  party  is  the  supreme  political 
institution 

Government  leader:  Marshal  MOBUTU 
Sese  Seko,  President  (since  1965) 

Suffrage:  universal  and  compulsory  over 
age  18 

Elections:  elections  for  rural  collectivities' 
urban  zone  councils,  and  the  Legislative 
Council  of  the  Popular  Movement  of  the 
Revolution  were  held  June-September 


1982;  presidential  referendum/election 
held  July  1984;  presidential  election/refer- 
endum scheduled  for  1991 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Popular 
Movement  of  the  Revolution  (MPR),  only 
legal  party 

Voting  strength:  Mobutu  polled  99.6%  of 
vote  in  the  1984  election 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  APC,  CIPEC,  EAMA, 
EIB  (associate),  FAO,  G-77,  GATT,  IAEA, 
IBRD,  ICAO,  ICO,  IDA,  IFAD,  IFC, 
IHO,  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITC,  ITU,  NAM,  OAU, 
OCAM,  UDEAC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 

Economy 

GDP:  $4.7  billion  (1985),  $150  per  capita; 
1.8%  real  growth  (1986  est.) 

Natural  resources:  cobalt,  copper,  cad- 
mium, petroleum,  industrial  and  gem 
diamonds,  gold,  silver,  zinc,  manganese, 
tin,  germanium,  uranium,  radium,  bauxite, 
iron,  coal,  hydroelectric  power  (potential) 

Agriculture:  main  cash  crops — coffee, 
palm  oil,  rubber,  quinine;  main  food 
crops — manioc,  bananas,  root  crops,  corn; 
some  provinces  self-sufficient 

Fishing:  catch  102,000  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  mining,  mineral  process- 
ing, consumer  products  (including  textiles, 
footwear,  and  cigarettes),  processed  foods 
and  beverages,  cement 

Electric  power:  2,412,000  kW  capacity; 
5,280  million  kWh  produced,  170  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.913  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985); 
$1.824  billion  (1986  est.)  copper  (37%), 
cobalt,  diamonds,  petroleum,  coffee 

Imports:  $1.383  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985  est); 
$1.411  billion  (1986  est.)  consumer  goods, 
foodstuffs,  mining  and  other  machinery, 
transport  equipment,  fuels 

Major  trade  partners:  Belgium,  US, 
France,  and  West  Germany 

Budget:  (1985)  revenues,  $827  million; 
total  expenditures,  $1,096  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  65.94 
zaires=US$l  (November  1986) 


Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  5,254  km  total;  3,968  km  1. 067- 
meter  gauge  (851  km  electrified);  125  km 
1.000-meter  gauge;  136  km  0.615-meter 
gauge;  1,025  km  0.600-meter  gauge 

Highways:  145,050  km  total;  2,350  km 
bituminous,  46,230  km  gravel  and  im- 
proved earth;  remainder  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  comprising  the  Congo, 
its  tributaries,  and  unconnected  lakes,  the 
waterway  system  affords  over  15,000  km 
of  navigable  routes 

Pipelines:  refined  products,  390  km 
Ports:  2  major  (Matadi,  Boma),  1  minor 
Civil  air:  49  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  335  total,  296  usable;  25  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  6  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  70  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  barely  adequate 
wire  and  radio-relay  service,  31,200  tele- 
phones (0.1  per  100  popl.);  10  AM,  3  FM, 
17  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean  satellite 
station  and  13  domestic  satellite  stations 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  Na- 
tional Gendarmerie,  Logistics  Corps, 
Special  Presidential  Brigade 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
7,141,000;  3,608,000  fit  for  military  service 


271 


Zambia 


Livingston* 
Set  regional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  752,610  km2;  land  area: 
740,720  km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of  Texas 
Land  boundaries:  6,003  km  total 

Boundary  disputes:  short  section  with 
Zaire  is  indefinite 

Climate:  tropical;  modified  by  altitude; 
rainy  season  (October  to  April) 

Terrain:  mostly  high  plateau  with  some 
hills  and  mountains 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  47%  meadows  and  pastures; 
27%  forest  and  woodland;  19%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  deforestation;  soil  erosion; 
desertification 

Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  7,281,738  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.73% 

Nationality:  noun — Zambian(s);  adjec- 
tive— Zambian 

Ethnic  divisions:  98.7%  African,  1.1% 
European,  0.2%  other 

Religion:  50-75%  Christian,  1%  Muslim 
and  Hindu,  remainder  indigenous  beliefs 

Language:  English  (official);  about  70 
indigenous  languages 

Infant  mortality  rate:  140/1,000  (1984) 
Life  expectancy:  47 


Literacy:  54% 

Labor  force:  2,455,000;  85%  agriculture; 
6%  mining,  manufacturing,  and  construc- 
tion; 9%  transport  and  services 

Organized  labor:  about  238,000  wage 
earners  are  unionized 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Zambia 

Type:  one-party  state 

Capital:  Lusaka 

Administrative  divisions:  nine  provinces 

Legal  system:  based  on  English  common 
law  and  customary  law;  new  constitution 
adopted  September  1973;  judicial  review 
of  legislative  acts  in  an  ad  hoc  constitu- 
tional council;  has  not  accepted  compul- 
sory ICJ  jurisdiction 

National  holiday:  Independence  Day,  24 
October 

Branches:  modified  presidential  system; 
unicameral  legislature  (National  Assembly); 
judiciary 

Government  leaders:  Dr.  Kenneth  David 
KAUNDA,  President  (since  October  1964); 
Kebby  MUSOKOTWANE,  Prime  Minister 

(April  1985) 

Suffrage:  universal  adult  at  age  18 

Elections:  general  election  held  27  Octo- 
ber 1983;  next  general  election  scheduled 
for  1988 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  United 
National  Independence  Party  (UNIP), 
Kenneth  Kaunda;  former  opposition  party 
banned  in  December  1972  when  one-party 
state  proclaimed 

Voting  strength:  (1983  election)  63.5%  of 
eligible  voters  participated;  Kaunda,  the 
only  candidate  for  president,  received  a 
93%  yes  vote;  National  Assembly  seats 
were  contested  by  members  of  UNIP 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT  (de  facto),  IAEA,  IBRD, 
ICAO,  IDA,  IEA,  IFAD,  IFC,  ILO,  IMF, 
INTELSAT,  International  Lead  and  Zinc 
Study  Group,  INTERPOL,  IPU,  ITU, 
NAM,  OAU,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO, 
UPU,  WHO,  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 


Economy 

GDP:  $2.3  billion  (1985),  $340  per  capita; 
real  growth  rate  3.4%  (1985  est.) 

Natural  resources:  copper,  cobalt,  zinc, 
lead,  coal,  emeralds,  gold,  silver,  uranium, 
hydroelectric  power 

Agriculture:  corn,  tobacco,  cotton;  net 
importer  of  most  major  agricultural  prod- 
ucts 

Major  industries:  copper  mining  and 
refinery,  transport,  construction,  foodstuffs, 
beverages,  chemicals,  textiles,  and  fertilizer 

Electric  power:  1,900,000  kW  capacity; 
11,100  million  kWh  produced,  1,570  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $788  million  (f.o.b.,  1985);  cop- 
per, zinc,  cobalt,  lead,  tobacco 

Imports:  $513  million  (c.i.f.,  1985);  ma- 
chinery, transport  equipment,  foodstuffs, 
fuels,  manufactures 

Major  trade  partners:  EC,  Japan,  South 
Africa,  US 

Budget:  revenues  $610  million;  expendi- 
tures $733  million  (1984  est.) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  13.5  Zambian 
kwachas=US$l  (December  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 

Communications 

Railroads:  1,204  km,  all  1.067-meter 
gauge;  13  km  double  track 

Highways:  36,370  km  total;  6,500  km 
paved,  7,000  km  crushed  stone,  gravel,  or 
stabilized  soil;  22,870  km  improved  and 
unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  2,250  km,  including 
Zambezi  River,  Luapula  River,  Lake 
Tanganyika;  Mpulungu  is  small  port  on 
Lake  Tanganyika 

Pipelines:  1,724  km  crude  oil 
Civil  air:  9  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  128  total,  114  usable;  12  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  1  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  4  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  19  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 


Zimbabwe 


Telecommunications:  facilities  are  among 
the  best  in  Sub-Saharan  Africa;  high- 
capacity  radio  relay  connects  most  larger 
towns  and  cities;  71,700  telephones  (1.0 
per  100  popl.);  9  AM,  2  FM,  10  TV  sta- 
tions; 1  Indian  Ocean  satellite  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Air  Force,  paramilitary 
Police  Mobile  Force,  Police  Paramilitary 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,500,000;  786,000  fit  for  military  service 


QWMU.  Mutw« 

Mnvingo 


Set  rcfional  map  VII 


Geography 

Total  area:  390,580  km2;  land  area: 
386,670  km2 

Comparative  area:  slightly  smaller  than 
California 

Land  boundaries:  3,017  km  total 

Climate:  tropical;  moderated  by  altitude; 
rainy  season  (November  to  March) 

Terrain:  mostly  high  plateau  with  higher 
central  plateau  (high  veld);  mountains  in 
east 

Land  use:  7%  arable  land;  NEGL%  per- 
manent crops;  12%  meadows  and  pastures; 
62%  forest  and  woodland;  19%  other; 
includes  NEGL%  irrigated 

Environment:  recurring  droughts;  floods 
and  severe  storms  are  rare;  deforestation; 
soil  erosion;  air  and  water  pollution;  deser- 
tification 

Special  notes:  landlocked 


Population:  9,371,972  (July  1987),  average 
annual  growth  rate  3.60% 
Nationality:  noun — Zimbabwean(s);  adjec- 
tive— Zimbabwean 

Ethnic  divisions:  about  96%  African  (over 
73%  members  of  Shona-speaking  subtribes, 
19%  speak  Ndebele);  about  3%  white,  1% 
mixed  and  Asian 

Religion:  50%  syncretic  (part  Christian, 
part  indigenous  beliefs),  25%  Christian, 
24%  indigenous  beliefs,  a  few  Muslim 


Language:  English  (official);  ChiShona  and 
Si  Ndebele 

Infant  mortality  rate:  66/1,000  (1985) 
Life  expectancy:  men  53.3,  women  56.8 
Literacy:  45-55% 

Labor  force:  1,985,000  (1985);  78%  agri- 
culture; 18%  mining,  manufacturing, 
construction;  4%  transport  and  services 
Organized  labor:  about  one-third  of 
European  wage  earners  are  unionized,  but 
only  a  small  minority  of  Africans 

Government 

Official  name:  Republic  of  Zimbabwe 
Type:  independent,  Hritish-style  parlia- 
mentary democracy 
Capital:  Harare 

Administrative  divisions:  8  provinces 
Legal  system:  Roman-Dutch 
Branches:  legislative  authority  resides  in  a 
Parliament  consisting  of  a  100-member 
House  of  Assembly  (with  20  seats  reserved 
for  whites)  and  a  40-member  Senate  (10 
elected  by  white  members  of  the  House, 
14  elected  by  the  other  members  of  the 
House;  10  chiefs,  5  from  Mashonaland  and 
5  from  Matabeleland,  elected  by  members 
of  the  Council  of  Chiefs;  6  appointed  by 
the  President,  on  the  advice  of  the  Prime 
Minister);  executive  authority  lies  with  a 
Cabinet  led  by  the  Prime  Minister;  the 
High  Court  is  the  superior  judicial 
authority 

Government  leaders:  Rev.  Canaan 
Sodindo  BANANA,  President  (since  April 
1980);  Robert  Gabriel  MUGABE,  Prime 
Minister  (since  April  1980) 
Suffrage:  universal  over  age  18;  for  at  least 
seven  years  after  independence  (1980), 
white,  mixed,  and  Asians  vote  on  a  sepa- 
rate roll  for  20  seats  in  the  House  of  As- 
sembly 

Elections:  last  held  July  1985 
Political  parties  and  leaders:  Zimbabwe 
African  National  Union  (ZANU),  Robert 
Mugabe;  Zimbabwe  African  People's 
Union  (ZAPU),  Joshua  Nkomo;  Conserva- 
tive Alliance  of  Zimbabwe  (CAZ),  Ian 
Smith;  Independent  Zimbabwe  Group 
(IZG),  Bill  Irving;  Zimbabwe  African 
National  Union  -  Sithole  (ZANU-S), 
Ndabaningi  Sithole;  others  failed  to  win 
any  seats  in  Parliament 


273 


Zimbabwe  (continued) 


Taiwan 
(China  listed  in 
alphabetic  order) 


Voting  strength:  (July  1985  elections) 
ZANU  (also  known  as  ZANU-PF),  64  seats; 
ZAPU,  15  seats;  CAZ,  15  seats;  IZG,  4 
seats;  ZANU-S,  1  seat;  independents,  1 

Communists:  no  Communist  party 

Member  of:  AfDB,  Commonwealth,  FAO, 
G-77,  GATT,  IBRD,  ICAO,  IDA,  IFAD, 
IFC,  ILO,  IMF,  INTERPOL,  ITO,  NAM, 
OAU,  SADCC,  UN,  UNESCO,  UPU, 
WFTU,  WHO,  WMO 

Economy 

GDP:  $2.3  billion,  $260  per  capita;  real 
growth  6.0%  (1985) 

Natural  resources:  coal,  chrome,  asbestos, 
gold,  nickel,  copper,  iron  ore,  vanadium, 
lithium 

Agriculture:  tobacco,  corn,  tea,  sugar, 
cotton;  livestock 

Major  industries:  mining,  steel,  textiles, 
chemicals,  vehicles 

Electric  power:  1,600,000  kW  capacity; 
4,670  million  kWh  produced,  520  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $1.1  billion  (f.o.b.,  1985),  includ- 
ing net  gold  sales  and  reexports;  tobacco, 
asbestos,  cotton,  copper,  tin,  chrome,  gold, 
nickel,  meat,  clothing,  sugar,  iron  ore, 
silver 

Imports:  $930  million  (f.o.b.  1985);  ma- 
chinery, petroleum  products,  wheat,  trans- 
port equipment 

Major  trade  partners:  South  Africa,  UK 

Aid:  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA 
and  OOF  (1970-84),  $1.3  billion;  US, 
including  Ex-Im  (1980-85),  $327  million; 
Communist  countries  (1970-85),  $118 
million 

Budget:  (CY85)  revenues,  $1.42  billion; 
expenditures,  $1.81  billion 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  1.70  Zimbab- 
wean dollars=US$l  (November  1986) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  3,394  km  1.067-meter  gauge; 
42  km  double  track;  335  km  electrified 
Highways:  85,237  km  total;  12,243  km 
paved,  28,090  km  crushed  stone,  gravel, 


stabilized  soil:  23,097  km  improved  earth; 
21,807  km  unimproved  earth 

Inland  waterways:  Lake  Kariba  is  a 
potential  line  of  communication 

Pipelines:  8  km  refined  products 
Civil  air:  13  major  transport  aircraft 

Airfields:  530  total,  472  usable;  22  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  2  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  3  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  39  with  runways 
1,220-2,439  m 

Telecommunications:  system  was  one  of 
the  best  in  Africa  but  now  suffers  from 
poor  maintenance;  consists  of  radio-relay 
links,  open-wire  lines,  and  radio  communi- 
cations stations;  principal  center  Harare, 
secondary  center  Bulawayo;  247,000  tele- 
phones (2.7  per  100  popl.);  8  AM,  15  FM, 
8  TV  stations;  1  Atlantic  Ocean 
INTELSAT  station 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Zimbabwe  National  Army,  Air 
Force  of  Zimbabwe,  Police  Support  Unit, 
People's  Militia 

Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
1,876,000;  1,157,000  fit  for  military  service 


100km 


Chi  lung 


Quemoy  and  Matsu 
stands  are  not  shown 


See  regional  mip  VIII 


Geography 

Total  area:  35,980  km2;  land  area:  35,980 
km2 

Comparative  area:  about  the  size  of 
Connecticut  and  New  Hampshire  com- 
bined 

Coastline:  1,448  km 

Maritime  claims: 

Extended  economic  zone:  200  nm 
Territorial  sea:  12  nm 

Boundary  disputes:  none;  involved  in 
complex  dispute  over  Spratly  Islands  with 
China,  Malaysia,  Philippines,  Vietnam, 
and  possibly  Brunei 

Climate:  tropical;  marine;  rainy  season 
during  southwest  monsoon  (June  to  Sep- 
tember); cloudiness  is  persistent  and  exten- 
sive all  year 

Terrain:  mostly  mountains;  flat  to  gently 
rolling  plains  in  west 

Land  use:  24%  arable  land;  1%  permanent 
crops;  5%  meadows  and  pastures;  55% 
forest  and  woodland;  15%  other;  14% 
irrigated 

Environment:  subject  to  earthquakes  and 
typhoons 

Special  notes:  none 


Population:  19,768,035,  excluding  the 
population  of  Chin-men  Tao  (Quemoy), 
Ma-tsu  Tao  (Matsu),  and  foreigners  (July 
1987),  average  annual  growth  rate  1.24% 


Nationality:  noun — Chinese  (sing.,  pi.); 
adjective — Chinese 

Ethnic  divisions:  85%  Taiwanese,  14% 
mainland  Chinese,  2%  aborigine 

Religion:  93%  mixture  of  Buddhist,  Con- 
fucian, and  Taoist;  4.5%  Christian;  2.5% 
other 

Language:  Mandarin  Chinese  (official); 
Taiwanese  and  Hakka  dialects  also  used 

Infant  mortality  rate:  11.01/1,000  (1983) 
Life  expectancy:  men  69.9,  women  74.9 
Literacy:  94% 

Labor  force:  7,491,000  (1984);  41%  indus- 
try and  commerce,  32%  services,  20% 
agriculture,  7%  civil  administration;  2.4% 
unemployment  (1984) 

Organized  labor:  (1983)  1.3  million  or 
about  18.4%  (government  controlled) 

Administration 

Type:  one-party  presidential  regime;  the 
new  political  organizations  bill  (due  to  be 
passed  in  early  1987)  will  permit  legal 
formation  of  new  political  parties 

Capital:  Taipei 

Administrative  divisions:  16  counties,  5 
cities,  2  special  municipalities  (Taipei  and 
Kao-hsiung) 

Legal  system:  based  on  civil  law  system; 
constitution  adopted  1946,  though  1948 
amendments  set  most  of  the  constitution 
aside;  martial  law  (declared  in  1949)  was 
lifted  in  early  1987;  accepts  compulsory 
ICJ  jurisdiction,  with  reservations 

National  holiday:  10  October 

Branches:  five  independent  branches 
(executive,  legislative,  judicial,  plus  tradi- 
tional Chinese  functions  of  examination 
and  control),  dominated  by  executive 
branch;  President  and  Vice  President 
elected  by  National  Assembly 

Government  leaders:  CHIANG  Ching- 
kuo,  President  (since  March  1978);  Yt) 
Kuo-hua,  Premier  (since  June  1984) 

Suffrage:  universal  over  age  20 

Elections:  national  level — Legislative  Yuan 
every  three  years;  National  Assembly  and 
Control  Yuan  every  six  years;  no  general 
election  held  since  1948  election  on  main- 
land (partial  elections  for  Taiwan  province 


representatives  in  December  1969,  1972, 
1975,  1980,  1983,  1984,  1985,  and  1986); 
local  level — provincial  assembly,  county 
and  municipal  executives  every  four  years; 
county  and  municipal  assemblies  every 
four  years 

Political  parties  and  leaders:  Kuomint- 
ang,  or  National  Party,  led  by  Chairman 
Chiang  Ching-kuo;  Democratic  Socialist 
Party  and  Young  China  Party  controlled 
by  Kuomintang;  The  Democratic  Progres- 
sive Party  (new  opposition  party)  not 
formally  recognized  by  Kuomintang 

Voting  strength:  (1983  Legislative  Yuan 
elections)  62  seats  Kuomintang,  19  seats 
independents;  1981  local  elections,  with 
63%  turnout  of  eligible  voters,  Kuomintang 
received  71%  of  the  popular  vote,  non- 
Kuomintang  29% 

Member  of:  expelled  from  UN  General 
Assembly  and  Security  Council  on  25 
October  1971  and  withdrew  on  same  date 
from  other  charter-designated  subsidiary 
organs;  expelled  from  IMF/World  Bank 
group  April/May  1980;  member  of  ADB 
and  PECC,  seeking  to  join  GATT  and/or 
MFA;  attempting  to  retain  membership  in 
ICAC,  ISO,  INTELSAT,  INTERPOL, 
IWC— International  Wheat  Council,  PCA; 
suspended  from  IAEA  in  1972,  but  still 
allows  IAEA  controls  over  extensive  atomic 
development 

Economy 

GNP:  $60.0  billion  (1985),  $3,110  per 
capita;  8.0%  real  growth  (1986) 

Natural  resources:  small  deposits  of  coal, 
natural  gas,  limestone,  marble,  and  asbes- 
tos 

Agriculture:  rice,  sweet  potatoes,  sugar- 
cane, bananas,  pineapples,  citrus  fruits; 
food  shortages — wheat,  corn,  soybeans 

Fishing:  catch  930,582  metric  tons  (1983) 

Major  industries:  textiles,  clothing,  chemi- 
cals, electronics,  food  processing,  plywood, 
sugar  milling,  cement,  shipbuilding 

Electric  power:  16,200,000  kW  capacity; 
54,000  million  kWh  produced,  2,760  kWh 
per  capita  (1986) 

Exports:  $30.4  billion  (f.o.b.,  1984  est); 
20.5%  textiles,  18.8%  electrical  machinery, 
9%  general  machinery  and  equipment,  9% 


telecommunications  equipment,  7.4%  basic 
metals  and  metal  products,  5.4%  food- 
stuffs, 2.5%  plywood  and  wood  products 

Imports:  $21.6  billion  (c.i.f.,  1984  est.); 
25%  machinery  and  equipment,  17.7% 
crude  oil,  11.9%  chemical  and  chemical 
products,  6.7%  basic  metals,  6.3%  food- 
stuffs 

Major  trade  partners:  exports — 49%  US, 
10%  Japan;  imports— 29%  Japan,  23%  US, 
8.6%  Saudi  Arabia  (1983) 

Aid:  US  authorizations,  including  Ex-Im 
(FY46-82),  $4.6  billion;  Western  (non-US) 
countries,  ODA  and  OOF  (1970-84),  $414 
million 

Budget:  central  government  expenditure, 
$42.5  billion  (FY83) 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  NT  (New 
Taiwan)  40.39  do!lars=US$l  (September 
1985) 

Fiscal  year:  1  July-30  June 

Communications 

Railroads:  about  1,075  km  common  car- 
rier lines  and  over  3,800  km  industrial 
lines;  common  carrier  lines  consist  of  the 
1.067-meter  gauge  708  km  West  Line  and 
the  367  km  East  Line;  a  98.25  km  South 
Link  Line  connection  is  under  construc- 
tion; common  carrier  lines  owned  by  the 
government  and  operated  by  the  Railway 
Administration  under  Ministry  of  Commu- 
nications; industrial  lines  owned  and 
operated  by  government  enterprises 

Highways:  network  totals  18,800  km 
(15,800  km  are  bituminous  or  concrete 
surface);  2,500  km  are  crushed  stone  or 
gravel  surface;  and  500  km  are  graded 
earth 

Pipelines:  615  km  refined  products,  97  km 
natural  gas 

Ports:  5  major  (Kao-hsiung,  Chi-lung, 
Hua-lien,  Su-ao,  and  T'ai-tung),  4  minor 
(Tan-shui,  T'ai-nan,  Ta-p'eng,  and  Ma- 
kung) 

Airfields:  41  total;  39  usable;  34  with 
permanent-surface  runways;  3  with  run- 
ways over  3,659  m,  17  with  runways 
2,440-3,659  m,  8  with  runways  1,220- 
2,439  m 


275 


Taiwan 

(China  listed  in 
alphabetic  order)  (continued) 

Telecommunications:  very  good  interna- 
tional and  domestic  service;  5.1  million 
telephones  (1  per  3.5  popl.);  about  100 
radio  broadcast  stations  with  270  AM  and 
12  FM  transmitters;  12  TV  stations  and  6 
repeaters;  8  million  radio  receivers  and  3.6 
million  TV  receivers;  2  INTELSAT  ground 
stations;  tropospheric  scatter  links  to  Hong 
Kong  and  the  Philippines  available  but 
inactive;  submarine  cables  to  Okinawa 
(Japan),  the  Philippines,  Guam,  Singapore, 
and  Hong  Kong 

Defense  Forces 

Branches:  Army,  Navy  (including  Ma- 
rines), Air  Force,  Combined  Services  Force 
Military  manpower:  males  15-49, 
5,528,000;  4,337,000  fit  for  military  ser- 
vice; about  186,000  currently  reach  mili- 
tary age  (19)  annually 

Military  budget:  announced  expenditures 
for  national  defense  for  fiscal  year  ending 
30  June  1987,  $4.2  billion;  about  37.1%  of 
central  government  budget;  however,  total 
military  expenditures  may  be  closer  to 
$4.7  billion  or  about  50%  of  the  central 
government  budget 


West  Bank  and  Gaza  Strip 


See  regional  map  V| 


Note:  The  war  between  Israel  and  the 
Arab  states  in  June  1967  ended  with  Israel 
in  control  of  the  West  Bank  and  the  Gaza 
Strip,  the  Sinai,  and  the  Golan  Heights.  As 
stated  in  the  1978  Camp  David  Accords 
and  reaffirmed  by  the  President's  1  Sep- 
tember 1982  peace  initiative,  the  final 
status  of  the  West  Bank  and  the  Gaza 
Strip,  their  relationship  with  their  neigh- 
bors, and  a  peace  treaty  between  Israel 
and  Jordan  are  to  be  negotiated  among  the 
concerned  parties.  Camp  David  further 
specifies  that  these  negotiations  will  resolve 
the  respective  boundaries.  Pending  the 
completion  of  this  process,  it  is  US  policy 
that  the  final  status  of  the  West  Bank  and 
the  Gaza  Strip  has  yet  to  be  determined. 
In  the  view  of  the  United  States,  the  term 
West  Bank  describes  all  of  the  area  west  of 
the  Jordan  River  under  Jordanian  adminis- 
tration before  the  1967  Arab-Israeli  war. 
However,  with  respect  to  negotiations 
envisaged  in  the  framework  agreement,  it 
is  US  policy  that  a  distinction  must  be 
made  between  Jerusalem  and  the  rest  of 
the  West  Bank  because  of  the  city's  special 
status  and  circumstances.  Therefore,  a 
negotiated  solution  for  the  final  status  of 
Jerusalem  could  be  different  in  character 
from  that  of  the  rest  of  the  West  Bank. 


Geography 

Total  area:  West  Bank— 5,860  km2  (in- 
cludes West  Bank,  East  Jerusalem,  Latrun 
Salient,  Jerusalem  No  Man's  Land,  and 
northwest  quarter  of  the  Dead  Sea,  but 
excludes  Mt.  Scopus)  and  Gaza  Strip — 
380km2;  land  area:  West  Bank— 5,640  km2 
and  Gaza  Strip— 380  km2 
Comparative  area:  West  Bank — slightly 
larger  than  Delaware;  Gaza  Strip —  about 
twice  the  size  of  Washington,  D.  C. 
Land  boundaries:  West  Bank — 480  km 
total;  Gaza  Strip — 72  km  total 
Coastline:  West  Bank — none  (landlocked); 
Gaza  Strip — 40  km 
Maritime  claims:  West  Bank — none 
(landlocked);  Gaza  Strip — to  be  deter- 
mined 

Boundary  disputes:  West  Bank — Israeli 
occupied  with  status  to  be  determined; 
Gaza  Strip — Israeli  occupied  with  status  to 
be  determined 

Climate:  West  Bank — temperate,  tempera- 
ture and  precipitation  vary  with  altitude, 
warm  to  hot  summers,  cool  to  mild  win- 
ters; Gaza  Strip —  temperate,  mild  winters, 
dry  and  warm  to  hot  summers 
Terrain:  West  Bank — mostly  rugged 
dissected  upland,  some  vegetation  in  west, 
but  barren  in  east;  Gaza  Strip — flat  to 
rolling,  sand  and  dune  covered  coastal 
plain 

Land  use:  West  Bank — 27%  arable  land, 
0%  permanent  crops,  32%  meadows  and 
pastures,  1%  forest  and  woodland,  40% 
other;  Gaza  Strip— 13%  arable  land,  32% 
permanent  crops,  0%  meadows  and  pas- 
tures, 0%  forest  and  woodland,  55%  other 
Environment:  West  Bank — highlands  are 
main  recharge  area  for  Israel's  coastal 
aquifers;  Gaza  Strip — desertification 
Special  notes:  West  Bank — landlocked, 
Israeli  settlements;  Gaza  Strip —  Israeli 
settlements 


Population:  total,  1,529,235  (July  1987); 
average  annual  growth  rate  2.57%;  West 
Bank  (including  East  Jerusalem)— 969,386 
(July  1987),  average  annual  growth  rate 
2.27%;  Gaza  Strip— 559,849  (July  1987), 
average  annual  growth  rate  3.09% 


276 


Nationality:  West  Bank — to  be  deter- 
mined; Gaza  Strip — to  be  determined 

Ethnic  divisions:  West  Bank— 88%  Pales- 
tinian Arab  and  other,  12%  Jewish  (includ- 
ing expanded  East  Jerusalem),  4%  Be- 
douin; Gaza  Strip — 99.8%  Palestinian  Arab 
and  other,  0.2%  Jewish 

Religion:  West  Bank — 80%  Muslim  (pre- 
dominantly Sunni),  12%  Jewish,  8%  Chris- 
tian and  other;  Gaza  Strip — 99%  Muslim 
(predominantly  Sunni),  0.8%  Christian, 
0.2%  Jewish 

Language:  West  Bank — Arabic,  Israeli 
settlers  speak  Hebrew,  English  widely 
understood;  Gaza  Strip — Arabic,  Israeli 
settlers  speak  Hebrew,  English  widely 
understood 

Labor  force:  West  Bank — (excluding 
Israeli  Jewish  settlers)  29.8%  small  indus- 
try, commerce,  and  business,  24.2%  con- 
struction, 22.4%  agriculture,  and  23.6% 
service  and  other  (1984);  Gaza  Strip — 
(excluding  Israeli  Jewish  settlers)  32.0% 
small  industry,  commerce  and  business, 
24.4%  construction,  25.5%  service  and 
other,  and  18.1%  agriculture  (1984) 

Government 

The  West  Bank  and  the  Gaza  Strip  are 
currently  governed  by  Israeli  military 
authorities  and  their  civil  administrations. 
It  is  US  policy  that  the  final  status  of  these 
areas  will  be  determined  by  negotiations 
among  the  concerned  parties.  These  nego- 
tiations will  determine  how  this  area  is  to 
be  governed. 

Economy 

GNP:  West  Bank— $1.1  billion  (1983); 
Gaza  Strip— $550  million  (1983) 

Agriculture:  olives,  citrus,  and  other  fruits, 
vegetables,  beef,  and  dairy  products 

Major  industries:  the  Israelis  have  estab- 
lished some  small-scale  modern  industries 
in  the  settlements  and  industrial  centers  (3 
in  West  Bank  and  1  in  Gaza  Strip);  gener- 
ally small  family  businesses  that  produce 
cement,  textiles,  soap,  olive  wood  carvings, 
and  mother-of-pearl  souvenirs 

Electric  power:  the  Israel  Electric  Corpo- 
ration, Ltd.,  exported  285  million  kWh 
during  1985  (exported  is  understood  to 


mean  power  provided  to  occupied  territo- 
ries); West  Bank — bulk  of  installed  capac- 
ity contained  in  two  diesel  power  plants: 
Jerusalem-Shoufat  plant  (22,000  kW), 
which  is  owned  and  operated  by  the  East 
Jerusalem  Electric  Co.,  and  Nablus  plant 
(19,600  kW),  which  is  owned  and  operated 
by  the  Nablus  municipality;  total  esti- 
mated capacity  for  all  West  Bank  power 
plants  is  45,000  kW  (1985);  59  million 
kWh  produced  (1985),  63  kWh  per  capita 
(1986);  Gaza  Strip — no  known  installed 
capacity;  power  probably  obtained  from 
Israel 

Exports:  West  Bank — $184.5  million 
(1984);  Gaza  Strip— $114.9  million  (1984) 

Imports:  West  Bank — $406.8  million 
(1984);  Gaza  Strip— $279.4  million  (1984) 

Major  trade  partners:  West  Bank — Jordan 
and  Israel;  Gaza  Strip — Egypt  and  Israel 

Budget:  within  the  occupied  territories, 
each  municipality  has  its  own  budget;  the 
following  data  represent  the  sum  of  the 
revenues  and  expenditures  of  the  munici- 
palities in  each  area  for  fiscal  year  begin- 
ning 1  April  1984;  West  Bank — revenues, 
$26.7  million  and  expenditures,  $27.1 
million;  Gaza  Strip —  revenues,  $14.2 
million  and  expenditures,  $18.2  million 

Monetary  conversion  rate:  West  Bank — 
units  of  currency  used  are  Israeli  new 
sheqalim  (1.1788=US$1,  1985  average), 
Jordanian  dinar  (0.384=US$1,  1984  aver- 
age) and  US  dollar;  Gaza  Strip — units  of 
currency  used  are  Israeli  new  sheqalim 
(1.1788=US$1,  1985  average),  Egyptian 
pound  (1.43=US$1,  February  1984  aver- 
age), and  US  dollar 

Communications 

Railroads:  West  Bank — none;  Gaza 
Strip — one  line,  abandoned 

Highways:  West  Bank — small,  poorly 
developed  indigenous  road  network,  Israe- 
lis have  improved  major  axial  highways; 
Gaza  Strip — small,  poorly  developed 
indigenous  road  network,  Israelis  have 
improved  major  axial  highways 

Ports:  West  Bank— none  (landlocked); 
Gaza  Strip — facilities  for  small  boats  to 
service  Gaza 


Airfields:  West  Bank— 2  total,  2  usable 
with  permanent-surface  runways,  1  with 
runways  1,220-2,439  m;  Gaza  Strip — 1 
total,  1  usable  with  permanent-surface 
runways 

Telecommunications:  West  Bank — 
planned  telephone  system  currently  being 
upgraded,  no  local  radio  or  TV  stations; 
Gaza  Strip — no  local  radio  or  TV  stations 


277 


Appendix  A 

The  United  Nations  System 


Main  committee* 

Standing  and  procedural 
committee! 

Other  subsidiary  organs  of  the 
General  Assembly 


Trusteeship  Council 


Security  Council 


UNRWA:  United  Nations  Relief 
and  Works  Agency  for  Palestine 
Refugees  in  the  Near  East 

UNCTAD:  United  Nations 
Conference  on  Trade  and 
Development 

UNICEF:  United  Nations 
Children's  Fund 

UNHCR:  United  Nations  Office 
of  High  Commissioner  for 
Refugees 

WFP:  World  Food  Program 

UNITA&  United  Nations 
Institute  for  Training  and 
Research 

UNDP:  United  Nations 
Development  Program 

UNIDO:  United  Nations 
Industrial  Development 
Organization 

UNEP:  United  Nations 
Environment  Program 

UNU:  United  Nations 
University 

HABITAT:  United  Nations 
Center  for  Human  Settlements 

UNFPA:  United  Nations  Fund 
for  Population  Activities 

United  Nations  Special  Fund 
World  Food  Council 


General  Assembly 


International  Court 
of  Justice 


Secretariat 


Economic  and 

Social  Council 

•••••••••••I 

1  Regional  Commissions 
'  Functional  Commissions 

>  Sessional,  standing,  and  ad 
hoc  committees 


Principal  organs  of  the  United 
Nations 

•  Other  United  Nations  organs 

D  Specialized  agencies  and  other 
autonomous  organizations 
within  the  system 


•  UNDOF:  United  Nations 
Disengagement  Observer  Force 

•  UNFICYP:  United  Nations 
Force  in  Cyprus 

•  UNIFIL:  United  Nations  Interim 
Forces  in  Lebanon 

— •  UNMOCIP:  United  Nations 
Military  Observer  Croup  in 
India  and  Pakistan 


L 


•  UNTSO:  United  Nations  Truce 
Supervision  Organization 


Military  Staff  Committee 


— D  IAEA:  International  Atomic 
Energy  Agency 

I D  CATT:  General  Agreement  on 

Tariffs  and  Trade 

O  ILO:  International  Labor 
Organization 


D  FAO-.  Food  and  Agriculture 
Organization  of  the  United 
Nations 

O  UNESCO:  United  Nations 
Educational,  Scientific,  and 
Cultural  Organization 

O  WHO:  World  Health 
Organization 

O  IMF:  International  Monetary 
Fund 

D  IDA:  International 

Development  Association 

Q  IBRD:  International  Bank  for 
Reconstruction  and 
Development 

O  IFC:  International  Finance 

Corporation 


ICAO:  International  Civil 
Aviation  Organization 

UPU:  Universal  Postal  Union 

ITU:  International 
Telecommunication  Union 

WMO:  World  Meteorological 
Organization 

IMO:  International  Maritime 
Organization 

WIPO:  World  Intellectual 
Property  Organization 


-  D  IFAD:  International  Fund  for 
Agricultural  Development 


Based  on  a  chart  from  the  UN  Chronicle 


278 


Appendix  B 

International  Organizations 


A                                              AAPSO 

Afro-Asian  People's  Solidarity  Organization 

ADB 

Asian  Development  Bank 

AfDB 

African  Development  Bank 

AIOEC 

Association  of  Iron  Ore  Exporting  Countries 

ANRPC 

Association  of  Natural  Rubber  Producing  Countries 

ANZUS 

ANZUS  Council;  treaty  signed  by  Australia,  New  Zealand,  and 
the  United  States 

A  PC 

African  Peanut  (Groundnut)  Council 

.  .  .                                       Arab  League  (League  of  Arab  States) 

ASEAN 

Association  of  Southeast  Asian  Nations 

ASPAC 

Asian  and  Pacific  Council 

ASSIMER 

International  Mercury  Producers  Association 

B                                           BENELUX 

Belgium,  Netherlands,  Luxembourg  Economic  Union 

BLEU 

Belgium-Luxembourg  Economic  Union 

C                                           CACM 

Central  American  Common  Market 

CARICOM 

Caribbean  Common  Market 

CARIFTA 

Caribbean  Free  Trade  Association 

CCC 

Customs  Cooperation  Council 

CDB 

Caribbean  Development  Bank 

CEAO 

West  African  Economic  Community 

CEMA 

Council  for  Mutual  Economic  Assistance 

CENTO 

Central  Treaty  Organization 

CIPEC 

Intergovernmental  Council  of  Copper  Exporting  Countries 

.  .  .                                       Colombo  Plan 

.  .  .                                    Council  of  Europe 

D                                             DAC 

Development  Assistance  Committee  (OECD) 

E                                             EAMA 

African  States  associated  with  the  EEC 

EC 

European  Communities 

ECA 

Economic  Commission  for  Africa  (UN) 

ECE 

Economic  Commission  for  Europe  (UN) 

ECLA 

Economic  Commission  for  Latin  America  (UN) 

ECOSOC 

Economic  and  Social  Council  (UN) 

ECOWAS 

Economic  Community  of  West  African  States 

ECWA 

Economic  Commission  for  Western  Asia  (UN) 

EFTA 

European  Free  Trade  Association 

EIB 

European  Investment  Bank 

ELDO 

European  Space  Vehicle  Launcher  Development  Organization 

EMS 

European  Monetary  System 

ENTENTE 

Political-Economic  Association  of  Ivory  Coast,  Benin,  Niger, 
Burkina,  and  Togo 

ESCAP 

Economic  and  Social  Commission  for  Asia  and  the  Pacific  (UN) 

ESRO 

European  Space  Research  Organization 

F                                           FAO 

Food  and  Agriculture  Organization  (UN) 

G                                           G-77 

Group  of  77 

GA 

General  Assembly  (UN) 

GATT 

General  Agreement  on  Tariffs  and  Trade  (UN) 

GCC 

Gulf  Cooperation  Council 

I                                            IADB 

Inter-American  Defense  Board 

IAEA 

International  Atomic  Energy  Agency  (UN) 

IATP 

International  Association  of  Tungsten  Producers 

IBA 

International  Bauxite  Association 

IBEC 

International  Bank  for  Economic  Cooperation 

279 


IBRD 


International  Bank  for  Reconstruction  and  Development  ("World  Bank,"  UN) 


ICAC 


International  Cotton  Advisory  Committee 


ICAO 


International  Civil  Aviation  Organization  (UN) 


ICCAT 


ICCO 


International  Commission  for  the  Conservation  of  Atlantic  Tunas 


International  Cocoa  Organization 


1CEM 


Intergovernmental  Committee  for  European  Migration 


ICES 


ICJ 


International  Cooperation  in  Ocean  Exploration 


International  Court  of  Justice  (UN) 


ICO 


International  Coffee  Organization 


IDA 


International  Development  Association  (IBRD  affiliate,  UN) 


IDE 


Inter-American  Development  Bank 


IDE 


Islamic  Development  Bank 


IEA 


IFAD 


International  Energy  Agency  (associated  with  OECD) 


International  Fund  for  Agricultural  Development  (UN) 


IFC: 

UK) 


International  Finance  Corporation  (IBRD  affiliate,  UN) 


International  Hydrographic  Organization 


HE 


International  Investment  Bank 


ILO 


International  Labor  Organization  (UN) 


International  Lead  and  Zinc  Study  Group 


IMF 


International  Monetary  Fund  (UN) 


IMO 


International  Maritime  Organization  (UN) 


INRO 


International  Natural  Rubber  Organization 


INTELSAT 


International  Telecommunications  Satellite  Organization 


IOOC 


International  Olive  Oil  Council 


IPU 


Inter-Parliamentary  Union 


IRC 


International  Rice  Council 


ISO 


International  Sugar  Organization 


ITC 


International  Tin  Council 


ITU 


IWC 


IWC 


International  Telecommunication  Union  (UN) 


International  Whaling  Commission 


International  Wheat  Council 


LAIA 


Latin  American  Integration  Association 


NAM 


NATO 


Nonaligned  Movement 


North  Atlantic  Treaty  Organization 


O 


I1 

s~ 


OAPEC 
OAS 


OAU 


OCAM 


ODECA 


oF.cn 


QIC 


OPEC 


PAHO 


Organization  of  Arab  Petroleum  Exporting  Countries 


Organization  of  American  States 


Organization  of  African  Unity 


Afro-Malagasy  and  Mauritian  Common  Organization 


Organization  of  Central  American  States 


Organization  for  Economic  Cooperation  and  Development 


Organization  of  the  Islamic  Conference 


Organization  of  Petroleum  Exporting  Countries 


Pan  American  Health  Organization 


SAARC 


SADCC 


SC 


SELA 


SPC 


SPEC 


SPF 


South  Asian  Association  for  Regional  Cooperation 


Southern  African  Development  Coordination  Committee 


Security  Council  (UN) 


Latin  American  Economic  System 


South  Pacific  Commission 


South  Pacific  Bureau  for  Economic  Cooperation 


South  Pacific  Forum 


280 


T                                           TC 

Trusteeship  Council  (UN) 

TDB 

Trade  and  Development  Board  (UN) 

U                                           UDEAC 

Economic  and  Customs  Union  of  Central  Africa 

UEAC 

Union  of  Central  African  States 

UNCTAD 

UN  Conference  on  Trade  and  Development 

UNDP 

UN  Development  Program 

UNESCO 

UN  Educational,  Scientific,  and  Cultural  Organization 

UNICEF 

UN  Children's  Fund 

UNIDO 

UN  Industrial  Development  Organization 

UPEB 

Union  of  Banana  Exporting  Countries 

UPU 

Universal  Postal  Union  (UN) 

W                                          WEU 

Western  European  Union 

WFC 

World  Food  Council  (UN) 

WFTU 

World  Federation  of  Trade  Unions 

WHO 

World  Health  Organization  (UN) 

WIPO 

World  Intellectual  Property  Organization  (UN) 

WMO 

World  Meteorological  Organization  (UN) 

WPC 

World  Peace  Council 

WSG 

International  Wool  Study  Group 

WTO 

World  Tourism  Organization 

281 


Appendix  C 

Country  Membership  in  International  Organizations 


Country 


International  Organizations 


ADB     ARAB          ASEAN       CACM        CARICOM        CEMA        EC       G-77 
LEAGUE 


CCC       IDBa       IDBb        INTEI^AT       LAIA 


NATO        OAPEC     OAS 


•  Inter-American  Development  Bank 


b  Islamic  Development  Bank 


Not  a  member  of  UN 


United  Nations  Organizations 


OAU      OECD       QIC         OPEC       SELA        WFTU        FAO       GATT       IAEA        IBRD       ICAO        ICJ       IDA       IFAD       IFC       ILO       IMF        IMO         ITU        UNESCO        UPU       WHO       WMO 


*  •  * 


*  • 


*  Ceased  to  participate  in  1961 


: Suspended 


f  Excluded  since  1962 


Country 


International  Organizations 


ARAB         ASEAN 
LEAGUE 


CACM        CARICOM        CEMA        EC       G-77          GCC       IDBa       IDBb        INTELSAT       LAIA 


NATO        OAPEC     OAS 


German  Democratic 
Republic 


Germany,  Federal 
Republic  of 


284 


United  Nations  Organizations 


OAU      OECD       OIC         OPEC       SELA        WFTU        FAO       CATT       IAEA        IBRD       ICAO        1C]        IDA        IFAD        IFC       IIX)       IMF         IMO         ITU        UNESCO        UPU       WHO       WHO 


285 


Country 


International  Organizations 


ARAB          ASEAN 
LEAGUE 


CACM        CARICOM        CEMA        EC       C-77          GCC       IDBa       IDBb        INTEI.SAT       LAIA 


NATO        OAPEC     OAS 


St.  Vincent  and 
the  Grenadines 


286 


United  Nations  Organizations 


OAU      OECD       QIC         OPEC       SELA       WFTU        FAO       GATT       IAEA        IBRD       ICAO       ICJ        IDA       IFAD       IFC       ILO       IMF        IMO         ITU       UNESCO        UPU       WHO       WMO 


*      E     • 


287 


Country 


International  Organizations 


ADB     ARAB          ASEAN 
LEAGUE 


CACM        CABICOM        CEMA        EC       G-77          GCC        1DB"       IDBb        INTELSAT       LAIA          NAM          NATO        OAPEC     OAS 


Suriname 


Swaziland 


Sweden 


Switzerland1 


Syria 


Tanzania 


Thailand 


Togo 


Tonga' 


Trinidad  and  Tobago 
Tunisia 

Turkey 

Tuvalu c 

Uganda 

Union  of  Soviet  Socialist 
Republics 

United  Arab  Emirates 
United  Kingdom 
United  States 
Uruguay 

Vanuatu 

Vatican  City 

Venezuela 

Vietnam 


Western  Samoa 


Yemen  Arab  Republic 

Yemen,  People's  Demo- 
cratic Republic  of 


Yugoslavia 


Zaire 


Zambia 


Zimbabwe 
Taiwan c 


288 


United  Nations  Organizations 


OAU      OECD       QIC         OPEC       SELA       WFTU        FAO       CATT       IAEA        IBRD       ICAO       ICJ        IDA        IFAD        IFC       IIX)       IMF        IMO         ITU        UNESCO        UPU       WHO       WMO 


^BR — 

.  — . — 


Appendix  D 
Mathematical  Conversions 


To  Convert  From 

To 

Multiply  By 

To  Convert  From 

To 

Multiply  By 

Acres 

Hectares 

0.4046856 

Meters,  cubic 

Tons,  register 

0.353147 

Acres 

Kilometers,  square 

0.004046856 

Miles,  nautical 

Kilometers 

1.852 

Acres 

Meters,  square 

4046.856 

Miles,  statute 

Centimeters 

160934.4 

Centimeters 

Meters 

0.01 

Miles,  statute 

Meters 

1609.344 

Centimeters,  square 

Meters,  square 

0.0001 

Miles,  statute 

Kilometers 

1.609344 

Degrees,  Fahrenheit 

Degrees,  Celsius 

subtract  32  and 
multiply  by  5/9 

Miles,  square 

Hectares 

258.9998 

Miles,  square 

Kilometers,  square 

2.589998 

Feet 

Centimeters 

30.48 

Ounces,  avoirdupois 

Grams 

28.349523 

Feet 

Meters 

0.3048 

Ounces,  avoirdupois 

Kilograms 

0.028349523 

Feet 

Kilometers 

0.0003048 

Ounces,  troy 

Pounds,  troy 

0.083333 

Feet,  cubic 

Liters 

28.316847 

Ounces,  troy 

Grams 

31.10348 

Feet,  cubic 

Meters,  cubic 

0.028316847 

Pints,  liquid 

Milliliters 

473.176473 

Feet,  square 

Centimeters,  square 

929.0304 

Pints,  liquid 

Liters 

0.473176473 

Feet,  square 

Meters,  square 

0.09290304 

Pounds,  avoirdupois 

Grams 

453.59237 

Gallons,  US  liquid 

Liters 

3.785412 

Pounds,  avoirdupois 

Kilograms 

0.45359237 

Gallons,  US  liquid 

Meters,  cubic 

0.003785412 

Pounds,  avoirdupois 

Quintals 

0.00453592 

Grams 

Ounces,  troy 

0.032151 

Pounds,  avoirdupois 

Tons,  metric 

0.000453592 

Grams 

Pounds,  troy 

0.002679 

Pounds,  troy 

Ounces,  troy 

12 

Hectares 

Kilometers,  square 

0.01 

Pounds,  troy 

Grams 

373.241722 

Hectares 

Meters,  square 

10,000 

Quarts,  dry 

Liters 

1.101221 

Inches 

Centimeters 

2.54 

Quarts,  dry 

Dekaliters 

0.1101221 

Inches 

Meters 

0.0254 

Quarts,  liquid 

Milliliters 

946.352946 

Inches,  cubic 

Milliliters 

16.387064 

Quarts,  liquid 

Liters 

0.946352946 

Inches,  cubic 

Liters 

0.016387064 

Quintals 

Tons,  metric 

0.1 

Inches,  cubic 

Meters,  cubic 

0.000016387064 

Tons,  long 

Kilograms 

1016.047 

Inches,  square 

Centimeters,  square 

6.4516 

Tons,  long 

Tons,  metric 

1.016047 

Inches,  square 

Meters,  square 

0.00064516 

Tons,  metric 

Quintals 

10 

Kilograms 

Ounces,  troy 

32.15075 

Ton-miles,  long 

Ton-kilometers,  metric 

1.635169 

Kilograms 

Pounds,  troy 

2.679229 

Ton-miles,  short 

Ton-kilometers,  metric 

1.459972 

Kilograms 

Tons,  metric 

0.001 

Tons,  register 

Meters,  cubic 

2.831685 

Kilometers,  square 

Hectares 

100 

Tons,  short 

Kilograms 

907.185 

Liters 

Milliliters 

1000 

Tons,  short 

Tons,  metric 

0.907185 

Liters 

Meters,  cubic 

0.001 

Yards 

Centimeters 

91.44 

Meters 

Millimeters 

1000 

Yards 

Meters 

0.9144 

Meters 

Centimeters 

100 

Yards,  cubic 

Liters 

764.5549 

Meters 

Kilometers 

0.001 

Yards,  cubic 

Meters,  cubic 

0.7645549 

Meters,  cubic 

Liters 

1000 

Yards,  square 

Meters,  square 

0.836127 

290 


HECKMAN 

BINDERY  INC. 


NOV95 

n.pi™je  N.MANCHESTER,