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Benin
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Republic of Benin
National name: Republique du
Benin
President: Yayi Boni (2006)
Current government officials
Land area: 42,710 sq mi (110,619 sq km);
total area: 43,483 sq mi (112,620 sq km)
Population (2008 est.): 8,294,941
(growth rate: 2.6%); birth rate: 37.3/1000; infant mortality rate:
76.1/1000; life expectancy: 53.8; density per sq mi: 75
Capital (2003 est.):
Porto-Novo (official), 231,600; Largest
city and seat of government: Cotonou 734,600
Other large cities: Parakou
205,300; Djougou, 184,200
Monetary unit: CFA Franc
Languages:
French (official), Fon, Yoruba, tribal
languages
Ethnicity/race:
African 99% (42 ethnic groups, most important
being Fon, Adja, Yoruba, Bariba), Europeans 5,500
Religions:
indigenous 50%, Christian 30%, Islam 20%
National Holiday:
National Day, August 1
Literacy rate: 41% (2000)
Economic summary: GDP/PPP (2005
est.): $8.669 billion; per capita $1,100. Real growth rate:
3.9%. Inflation: 3.2%. Unemployment: n.a. Arable
land: 25.53%. Agriculture: cotton, corn, cassava
(tapioca), yams, beans, palm oil, peanuts; livestock. Labor
force: n.a. Industries: textiles, food processing,
construction materials, cement. Natural resources: small
offshore oil deposits, limestone, marble, timber. Exports:
$826.9 million f.o.b. (2005 est.): cotton, crude oil, palm
products, cocoa. Imports: $1.043 billion f.o.b. (2005 est.):
foodstuffs, capital goods, petroleum products. Major trading
partners: China, India, Ghana, Niger, Indonesia, Nigeria,
France, Thailand, Côte d'Ivoire (2004).
Communications: Telephones: main lines
in use: 66,500 (2003); mobile cellular: 236,200 (2003). Radio
broadcast stations: AM 2, FM 9, shortwave 4 (2000).
Television broadcast stations: 1 (2001). Internet hosts:
879 (2004). Internet users: 70,000 (2003).
Transportation: Railways: total: 578 km
(2004). Highways: total: 6,787 km; paved: 1,357 km (including
10 km of expressways); unpaved: 5,430 km (1999 est.).
Waterways: 150 km (on River Niger along northern border)
(2004). Ports and harbors: Cotonou. Airports: 5 (2004
est.).
International disputes: two villages
remain in dispute along the border with Burkina Faso; accuses
Burkina Faso of moving boundary pillars; much of Benin-Niger
boundary, including tripoint with Nigeria, remains undemarcated, and
the states expect a ruling in 2005 from the ICJ over the disputed
Niger and Mekrou River islands; a joint task force was established
in 2004 that resolved disputes over and redrew the maritime and the
870-km land boundary with Nigeria, including the sovereignty over
seven villages along the Okpara River; a joint boundary commission
continues to resurvey the boundary with Togo to verify Benin's claim
that Togo moved boundary stones.
Major sources and definitions
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Geography
This West African nation on the Gulf of Guinea,
between Togo on the west and Nigeria on the east, is about the size of
Tennessee. It is bounded also by Burkina Faso and Niger on the north. The
land consists of a narrow coastal strip that rises to a swampy, forested
plateau and then to highlands in the north. A hot and humid climate
blankets the entire country.
Government
Republic under a multiparty democratic rule.
History
The Abomey kingdom of the Dahomey, or Fon,
peoples was established in 1625. A rich cultural life flourished, and
Dahomey's wooden masks, bronze statues, tapestries, and pottery are world
renowned. One of the smallest and most densely populated regions in
Africa, Dahomey was annexed by the French in 1893 and incorporated into
French West Africa in 1904. It became an autonomous republic within the
French Community in 1958, and on Aug. 1, 1960, Dahomey was granted its
independence within the Community.
Gen. Christophe Soglo deposed the first
president, Hubert Maga, in an army coup in 1963. He dismissed the civilian
government in 1965, proclaiming himself chief of state. A group of young
army officers seized power in Dec. 1967, deposing Soglo. In Dec. 1969,
Benin had its fifth coup of the decade, with the army again taking power.
In May 1970, a three-man presidential commission with a six-year term was
created to take over the government. In May 1972, yet another army coup
ousted the triumvirate and installed Lt. Col. Mathieu
Kérékou as president. Between 1974 and 1989 Dahomey embraced
socialism, and changed its name to the People's Republic of Benin. The
name Benin commemorates an African kingdom that flourished from the
15th to the 17th century in what is now southwest Nigeria. In 1990, Benin
abandoned Marxist ideology, began moving toward multiparty democracy, and
changed its name again, to the Republic of Benin.
By the end of the 1980s, Benin's economy was
near collapse. As its oil boom ended, Nigeria expelled 100,000 Beninese
migrant workers and closed the border with Benin. Kérékou's
socialist collectivization of Benin's agriculture and the ballooning
bureaucracy further damaged the economy. By 1988, international financial
institutions feared Benin would default on its loans and pressured
Kérékou to make financial reforms.
Kérékou subsequently embarked on a
major privatization campaign, cut the government payroll, and reduced
social services, prompting student and labor union unrest. Fearing a
revolution, Kérékou agreed to a new constitution and free
elections. In 1991, Nicéphore Soglo, an economist and former
director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, was
elected president. Although he enjoyed widespread support at first, Soglo
gradually became unpopular as austerity measures reduced living standards
and a 50% currency devaluation in 1994 caused inflation.
Kérékou defeated Soglo in the 1996 elections and was easily
reelected in March 2001. Term limits prevented him from running again. In
April 2006, Yayi Boni assumed the presidency. The World Bank and IMF
agreed to cancel much of Benin's foreign debt after the country
demonstrated significant economic reforms.
See also Encyclopedia: Benin. U.S. State Dept. Country Notes:
Benin
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