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République du Niger
Republic of Niger |
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Motto: "Fraternité, Travail, Progrès" (French)
"Fraternity, Work, Progress" |
Anthem: La Nigérienne
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Capital
(and largest city) |
Niamey
13°32′N, 2°05′E |
| Official languages |
French |
| Demonym |
Nigerien |
| Government |
Parliamentary democracy |
| - |
President |
Tandja Mamadou |
| - |
Prime Minister |
Seyni Oumarou |
| Independence |
from France |
| - |
Declared |
August 3, 1960 |
| Area |
| - |
Total |
1,267,000 km² (22nd)
489,678 sq mi |
| - |
Water (%) |
0.02 |
| Population |
| - |
July 2005 estimate |
13,957,000 (64th) |
| - |
Density |
11/km² (216th)
28/sq mi |
| GDP (PPP) |
2005 estimate |
| - |
Total |
$910.951 million (132nd) |
| - |
Per capita |
$872 (171st) |
| Gini (1995) |
50.5 (high) |
| HDI (2007) |
▲ 0.374 (low) (174th) |
| Currency |
West African CFA franc (XOF) |
| Time zone |
WAT (UTC+1) |
| - |
Summer (DST) |
not observed (UTC+1) |
| Internet TLD |
.ne |
| Calling code |
+227 |
Niger (pronounced /niːˈʒɛər/ or /ˈnaɪdʒɚ/); in French pronounced [niʒɛʁ]), officially the Republic of Niger, is a landlocked country in Western Africa, named after the Niger River. It borders Nigeria and Benin to the south, Burkina Faso and Mali to the west, Algeria and Libya to the north and Chad to the east. The capital city is Niamey.
History
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While most of what is now Niger has been subsumed into the inhospitable Sahara desert in the last two thousand years, five thousand years ago the north of the country was fertile grasslands. Populations of pastoralists
have left paintings of abundant wildlife, domesticated animals,
chariots, and a complex culture that dates back to at least 10,000 BCE.
One of the first empires in what is now Niger was the Songhai Empire. During recent centuries, the nomadic Tuareg formed large confederations, pushed southward, and, siding with various Hausa states, clashed with the Fulani Empire of Sokoto, which had gained control of much of the Hausa territory in the late 18th century.
The
Kaouar escarpment, forming an oasis in the
Ténéré desert.
In the 19th century, contact with the West began when the first European explorers—notably Mungo Park (British) and Heinrich Barth (German)—explored the area, searching for the source of the Niger River. Although French efforts at "pacification" began before 1900, dissident ethnic groups, especially the desert Tuareg, were not fully subdued until 1922, when Niger became a French colony.
Niger's colonial history and development parallel that of other French West African territories. France administered its West African colonies through a governor general in Dakar, Senegal,
and governors in the individual territories, including Niger. In
addition to conferring French citizenship on the inhabitants of the
territories, the 1946 French constitution provided for decentralization
of power and limited participation in political life for local advisory
assemblies.
Early independence
A further revision in the organization of overseas territories occurred with the passage of the Overseas Reform Act (Loi Cadre) of July 23, 1956,
followed by reorganizing measures enacted by the French Parliament
early in 1957. In addition to removing voting inequalities, these laws
provided for creation of governmental organs, assuring individual
territories a large measure of self-government. After the establishment
of the Fifth French Republic on December 4, 1958, Niger became an autonomous state within the French Community. Following full independence on August 3, 1960, however, membership was allowed to lapse.
Geography
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Niger is a landlocked nation in West Africa located along the border between the Sahara and Sub-Saharan regions. Its geographic coordinates are latitude 16°N and longitude 8°E. Its area is 1,267,000 square kilometres (489,000 sq mi) of which 300 square kilometres (115 sq mi) is water. This makes Niger slightly less than twice the size of the U.S. state of Texas, and the world's twenty-second largest country (after Chad). Niger is comparable in size to Angola.
Niger borders seven countries on all sides and has a total of 5,697 kilometres (3,540 mi) of borders. The longest border is with Nigeria to the south (1,497 km; 930 mi). This is followed by Chad to the east, at 1,175 kilometres (730 mi), Algeria to the north-northwest (956 km; 594 mi), and Mali at 821 kilometres (510 mi). Niger also has small borders in its far southwest frontier with Burkina Faso at 628 kilometres (390 mi) and Benin at 266 kilometres (165 mi) and to the north-northeast (Libya at 354 kilometres (220 mi).
Niger's subtropical climate is mainly very hot and dry, with much desert area. In the extreme south there is a tropical climate on the edges of the Niger River basin. The terrain is predominantly desert plains and sand dunes, with flat to rolling savanna in the south and hills in the north.
The lowest point is the Niger River, with an elevation of 200 metres (722 ft). The highest point is Mont Idoukal-n-Taghès in the Aïr Massif at 2,022 metres (6,634 ft).
- See also: List of cities in Niger
Politics
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For its first fourteen years as an independent state, Niger was run by a single-party civilian regime under the presidency of Hamani Diori. In 1974, a combination of devastating drought and accusations of rampant corruption resulted in a coup d'état that overthrew the Diori regime. Col. Seyni Kountché and a small military group ruled the country until Kountché's death in 1987. He was succeeded by his Chief of Staff, Col. Ali Saibou, who released political prisoners, liberalized some of Niger's laws and policies, and promulgated a new constitution.
However, President Saibou's efforts to control political reforms failed
in the face of union and student demands to institute a multi-party democratic system.
The Saibou regime acquiesced to these demands by the end of 1990. New
political parties and civic associations sprang up, and a national
peace conference was convened in July 1991 to prepare the way for the
adoption of a new constitution and the holding of free and fair
elections. The debate was often contentious and accusatory, but under
the leadership of Prof. André Salifou, the conference developed consensus on the modalities of a transition government.
A transition government was installed in November 1991 to manage the
affairs of state until the institutions of the Third Republic were put
into place in April 1993. While the economy deteriorated over the
course of the transition, certain accomplishments stand out, including
the successful conduct of a constitutional referendum;
the adoption of key legislation such as the electoral and rural codes;
and the holding of several free, fair, and non-violent nationwide
elections. Freedom of the press flourished with the appearance of several new independent newspapers.
The results of the January 1995 parliamentary election meant cohabitation between a rival president and prime minister; this led to governmental paralysis, which provided Col. Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara a rationale to overthrow the Third Republic in January 1996. While leading a military authority that ran the government (Conseil de Salut National)
during a 6-month transition period, Baré enlisted specialists to draft
a new constitution for a Fourth Republic announced in May 1996. Baré
organized a presidential election in July 1996. While voting was still
going on, he replaced the electoral commission. The new commission
declared him the winner after the polls closed. His party won 57% of
parliament seats in a flawed legislative election in November 1996.
When his efforts to justify his coup and subsequent questionable elections failed to convince donors to restore multilateral and bilateral economic assistance, a desperate Baré ignored an international embargo against Libya
and sought Libyan funds to aid Niger's economy. In repeated violations
of basic civil liberties by the regime, opposition leaders were
imprisoned; journalists often arrested, and deported by an unofficial
militia composed of police and military; and independent media offices
were looted and burned.
As part of an initiative started under the 1991 national conference,
however, the government signed peace accords in April 1995 with all,
meaning Tuareg and Toubou
groups that had been in rebellion since 1990. The Tuareg claimed they
lacked attention and resources from the central government. The
government agreed to absorb some former rebels into the military and,
with French assistance, help others return to a productive civilian life.
On April 9, 1999, Baré was killed in a coup led by Maj. Daouda Malam Wanké,
who established a transitional National Reconciliation Council to
oversee the drafting of a constitution for a Fifth Republic with a
French style semi-presidential system.
In votes that international observers found to be generally free and
fair, the Nigerien electorate approved the new constitution in July
1999 and held legislative and presidential elections in October and
November 1999. Heading a coalition of the National Movement for a Developing Society (MNSD) and the Democratic and Social Convention (CDS), Mamadou Tandja won the election.
Niger's new constitution was approved in July 1999. It restored the
semi-presidential system of government of the December 1992
constitution (Third Republic) in which the president of the republic,
elected by universal suffrage for a five-year term, and a prime minister named by the president share executive power. As a reflection of Niger's increasing population, the unicameral National Assembly
was expanded in 2004 to 113 deputies elected for a 5 year term under a
majority system of representation. Political parties must attain at
least 5% of the vote in order to gain a seat in the legislature.
The constitution also provides for the popular election of municipal
and local officials, and the first-ever successful municipal elections
took place on July 24, 2004.
The National Assembly passed in June 2002 a series of decentralization
bills. As a first step, administrative powers will be distributed among
265 communes (local councils); in later stages, regions and departments
will be established as decentralized entities. A new electoral code was
adopted to reflect the decentralization context. The country is
currently divided into 8 regions, which are subdivided into 36
districts (departments). The chief administrator (Governor) in each
department is appointed by the government and functions primarily as
the local agent of the central authorities.
The current legislature elected in December 2004 contains seven political parties. President Mamadou Tandja was re-elected in December 2004 and reappointed Hama Amadou as Prime Minister. Mahamane Ousmane,
the head of the CDS, was re-elected President of the National Assembly
(parliament) by his peers. The new second term government of the Fifth
Republic took office on December 30, 2002. In August 2002, serious unrest within the military occurred in Niamey, Diffa, and Nguigmi, but the government was able to restore order within several days.
In June 2007, Seyni Oumarou
was nominated as the new Prime Minister after Hama Amadou was
democratically forced out of office by the National Assembly through a
motion of no confidence.
From 2007 to 2008, the Second Tuareg Rebellion took place in northern Niger, worsening economic prospects and shutting down political progress.
Regions, Departments, and Communes
Administrative subdivisions of the Republic of Niger, post 1992.
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Niger is divided into 7 Regions and one capital district. These Regions are subdivided into 36 departments.
The 36 Departments are currently broken down into Communes of varying
types. As of 2006 there were 265 communes, including communes urbaines
(Urban Communes: as subdivisions of major cities), communes rurales
(Rural Communes, in sparsely populated areas and postes administratifs
(Administrative Posts) for largely uninhabited desert areas or military
zones. Rural communes may contain official villages and settlements,
while Urban Communes are divided into quarters. Niger subvisions were
renamed in 2002, in the implementation of a decentralisation project,
first begun in 1998. Previously, Niger was divided into 7 Departments,
36 Arrondissements, and Communes. These subdivisions were administered
by officials appointed by the national government. These offices will
be replaced in the future by democratically elected councils at each
level.
The departments and capital district are:
Foreign relations
Niger pursues a moderate foreign policy and maintains friendly relations with the West and the Islamic world as well as nonaligned countries. It belongs to the United Nations and its main specialized agencies and in 1980-81 served on the UN Security Council. Niger maintains a special relationship with France and enjoys close relations with its West African neighbors. It is a charter member of the African Union and the West African Monetary Union and also belongs to the Niger River and Lake Chad Basin Commissions, the Economic Community of West African States, the Non-Aligned Movement, the Organization of the Islamic Conference and the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa (OHADA). The westernmost regions of Niger are joined with contiguous regions Mali and Burkina Faso under the Liptako-Gourma Authority.
The border dispute with Benin, inherited from colonial times and concerning inter alia Lete Island in the River Niger was finally solved by the ICJ in 2005 to Niger's advantage.
Military
- Further information: Military of Niger
The Niger Armed Forces total 12,000 personnel with approximately
3,700 gendarmes, 300 air force, and 6,000 army personnel. The air force
has four operational transport aircraft. The armed forces include
general staff and battalion task force organizations consisting of two
paratroop units, four light armored units, and nine motorized infantry
units located in Tahoua, Agadez, Dirkou, Zinder, Nguigmi, N'Gourti, and
Madewela. Since January 2003, Niger has deployed a company of troops to
Côte d’Ivoire as part of the ECOWAS stabilization force. In 1991, Niger
sent four hundred military personnel to join the American-led allied
forces against Iraq during the Gulf War.
Nigerien soldiers in 2007
Niger's defense budget is modest, accounting for about 1.6% of
government expenditures. France provides the largest share of military
assistance to Niger. Morocco, Algeria, China,
and Libya have also provided military assistance. Approximately 15
French military advisers are in Niger. Many Nigerien military personnel
receive training in France, and the Nigerien Armed Forces are equipped
mainly with material either given by or purchased in France. In the
past, U.S. assistance focused on training pilots and aviation support
personnel, professional military education for staff officers, and
initial specialty training for junior officers. A small foreign
military assistance program was initiated in 1983. A U.S. Defense
Attaché office opened in June 1985 and assumed Security Assistance
Office responsibilities in 1987. The office closed in 1996 following a coup d'état.
A U.S. Defense Attaché office reopened in July 2000. The United States
provided transportation and logistical assistance to Nigerien troops
deployed to Cote d’Ivoire in 2003. Additionally, the U.S. provided
initial equipment training on vehicles and communications gear to a
select contingent of Nigerien soldiers as part of the Department of
State Pan Sahel Initiative.
Economy and transport
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Niamey, Niger's capital and economic hub.
The economy of Niger centers on subsistence crops, livestock, and
some of the world's largest uranium deposits. Drought cycles,
desertification, a 2.9% population growth rate, and the drop in world
demand for uranium have undercut the economy.
Niger shares a common currency, the CFA franc, and a common central bank, the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO), with seven other members of the West African Monetary Union.
In December 2000, Niger qualified for enhanced debt relief under the International Monetary Fund program for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) and concluded an agreement with the Fund for Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility
(PRGF). Debt relief provided under the enhanced HIPC initiative
significantly reduces Niger's annual debt service obligations, freeing
funds for expenditures on basic health care, primary education,
HIV/AIDS prevention, rural infrastructure, and other programs geared at
poverty reduction. In December 2005, it was announced that Niger had
received 100% multilateral debt relief from the IMF, which translates
into the forgiveness of approximately $86 million USD in debts to the
IMF, excluding the remaining assistance under HIPC. Nearly half of the
government's budget is derived from foreign donor resources. Future
growth may be sustained by exploitation of oil, gold, coal, and other
mineral resources. Uranium prices have recovered somewhat in the last
few years. A drought and locust infestation in 2005 led to food
shortages for as many as 2.5 million Nigeriens.
Niger's main international airport is Diori Hamani International Airport at Niamey. Other airports in Niger include Mano Dayak International Airport at Agadez and Zinder Airport near Zinder.
Demographics
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The largest ethnic groups in Niger are the Hausa, who also constitute the major ethnic group in northern Nigeria, the Djerma-Songhai, who also are found in parts of Mali. Both groups, along with the Gourmantche, are sedentary farmers who live in the arable, southern tier of the country. The remainder of Nigeriens are nomadic or semi-nomadic livestock-raising peoples—Fulani, Tuareg, Kanuri, Arabs, and Toubou.
With rapidly growing populations and the consequent competition for
meager natural resources, lifestyles of agriculturalists and livestock
herders have come increasingly into conflict in Niger in recent years.
Niger's high infant mortality rate is comparable to levels recorded
in neighboring countries. However, the child mortality rate (deaths
among children between the ages of 1 and 4) is exceptionally high (248
per 1,000) due to generally poor health conditions and inadequate
nutrition for most of the country's children. According to the
organization Save the Children, Niger has the world's highest infant mortality rate [1].
Nonetheless, Niger has the highest fertility rate in the world (7.2
births per woman); this means that nearly half (49%) of the Nigerien
population is under age 15. Between 1996 and 2003, primary school
attendance was around 30% [2], including 36% of males and only 25% of females. Additional education occurs through madrassas.
The majority of Niger's population practises Islam: 80%[1], while 15% practises Animism, and 5% practise Protestant and Catholic Christianity.
Culture and religion
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Nigerien culture is marked by variation, evidence of the cultural crossroads which French colonialism
formed into a unified state from the beginning of the 20th century.
What is now Niger was created from four distinct cultural areas in the
pre-colonial era: the Djerma dominated Niger River valley in the southwest; the northern periphery of Hausaland, made mostly of those states which had resisted the Sokoto Caliphate, and ranged along the long southern border with Nigeria; the Lake Chad basin and Kaouar in the far east, populated by Kanuri farmers and Toubou pastoralists who had once been part of the Kanem-Bornu Empire; and the Tuareg nomads of the Aïr Mountains and Saharan desert in the vast north. Each of these communities, along with smaller ethnic groups like the pastoral Wodaabe Fula,
brought their own cultural traditions to the new state of Niger. While
successive post-independence governments have tried to forge a shared
national culture, this has been slow forming, in part because the major
Nigerien communities have their own cultural histories, and in part
because Nigerian ethnic groups such as the Hausa, Tuareg and Kanuri
are but part of larger ethnic communities which cross borders
introduced under colonialism. Until the 1990s, government and politics
was inordinately dominated by Niamey and the Djerma people of the surrounding region. At the same time the plurality of the population, in the Hausa borderlands between Birni-N'Konni and Maine-Soroa, have often looked culturally more to Hausaland in Nigeria than Niamey.
Religion
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Islam, spread from North Africa
beginning in the 10th century, has greatly shaped the mores of the
people of Niger. More than %90 of the population is Muslim, with small
Animist and Christian communities, the latter a consequence of
missionaries established during the French colonial years, as well as
urban ex-patriot communities from Europe and West Africa.
Since Independence, growing interest has been in the country's
cultural heritage, particularly with respect to traditional
architecture, hand crafts, dance and music. See also:
Media
Niger began developing diverse media in the late 1990s. Niamey
boasts scores of newspapers and magazines, many of which are fiercely
critical of the government.
Radio is the most important medium, as television sets are beyond
the buying power of many of the rural poor, and illiteracy prevents
print media from becoming a mass medium. In addition to the national
and regional radio services of the state broadcaster ORTN, there are
four privately owned radio networks which total more than 100 stations.
Three of them—the Anfani Group, Sarounia and Tenere—are urban based
commercial format FM
networks in the major towns. There is also a network of over 80
community radio stations spread across all seven regions of the
country, governed by the Comité de Pilotage de Radios de Proximité
(CPRP), a civil society organisation. The independent sector radio
networks are collectively estimated by CPRP officials to cover some 7.6
million people, or about 73% of the population (2005).
Aside from Nigerien radio stations, the BBC's
Hausa service is listened to on FM repeaters across wide parts of the
country, particularly in the south, close to the border with Nigeria. Radio France Internationale also rebroadcasts in French through some of the commercial stations, via satellite.
Tenere also runs a national independent television station of the same name.
Despite relative freedom at the national level, Nigerien journalists
say they are often pressured by local authorities. The state ORTN
network depends financially on the government, partly through an
addition to electricity bills and partly through direct subsidy.
The sector is governed by the Conseil Supérieur de Communications,
established as an independent body in the late 1990s, headed by Maryam
Keita, a former TV presenter at ORTN.
See also: Communications in Niger
See also
References
External links
- Government
- News
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- International
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- Domestic publications
- Overviews
- Tourism
- Other
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Member states and observers of La Francophonie |
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