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The National Capital of Gabon is: Libreville
Gabon Area in Square Kilometers: 267667.0
Population Statistics of Gabon are: 1484000
Gabon is located in the continent of Africa. The Africa continent code is AF


Gabon

Gabonese Republic

Geography
Area: 267,667 sq. km. (103,347 sq. mi.); about the size of Colorado.
Cities: Capital--Libreville (pop. 673,995). Other cities--Port-Gentil (118,940), Franceville.
Terrain: Narrow coastal plain; hilly, heavily forested interior (about 80% forested); some savanna regions in east and south.
Climate: Hot and humid all year with two rainy and two dry seasons.

People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Gabonese (sing. and pl.).
Population (July 2007 est.): 1,454,867.
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 2.036%.
Ethnic groups: Fang (largest), Myene, Bapounou, Eshira, Bandjabi, Bakota, Nzebi, Bateke/Obamba.
Religions: Christian (55%-75%), Muslim, animist.
Languages: French (official), Fang, Myene, Bateke, Bapounou/Eschira, Bandjabi.
Education: Years compulsory--to age 16. Attendance--60%. Literacy--63%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--54/1,000. Life expectancy--54 yrs.
Work force (500,000 est.): Agriculture--52%; industry and commerce--16%; services and government--33%.

Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: August 17, 1960.
Constitution: February 21, 1961 (revised April 15, 1975; rewritten March 26, 1991; revised July 29, 2003).
Branches: Executive--president (head of state); prime minister (head of government) and appointed Council of Ministers. Legislative--bicameral legislature (National Assembly and Senate). Judicial--Supreme Court.
Administrative subdivisions: 9 provinces, 36 prefectures, and 8 subprefectures.
Political parties: Parti Democratique Gabonais (PDG) holds the largest number of seats in the National Assembly; there are several others.
Suffrage: Universal, direct.
Central government budget (2001 est.): Receipts--$1.6 billion; expenses--$1.2 billion; defense (1999)--3.0% of government budget.

Economy
GDP (2006 est.): $7.052 billion.
Annual real growth rate (2006 est.): 2.8%.
Per capita income (2006 est.): $7,200.
Avg. inflation rate (2006 est.): 2.2%.
Natural resources: Petroleum (43% of GDP), timber, manganese, uranium.
Agriculture and forestry (5.9% of GDP): Products--cocoa, coffee, rubber, sugar, and pineapples. Cultivated land--1%.
Industry (59.7% of GDP): Types--petroleum related, wood processing, food and beverage processing.
Services (25% of GDP).
Trade (2006): Exports--$6.677 billion (f.o.b.): petroleum, wood, manganese. Major markets--U.S. 53%, China 8.5%, France 7.4%, EU, Asia. Imports--$1.607 billion (f.o.b.): construction equipment, machinery, food, automobiles, manufactured goods. Major suppliers--France 43%, U.S. 6.3%, U.K. 5.8%, Netherlands 4%. Current account balance (2006 est.)--$1.807 billion.

PEOPLE
Almost all Gabonese are of Bantu origin. Gabon has at least 40 ethnic groups, with separate languages and cultures. The largest is the Fang (about 30%). Other ethnic groups include the Myene, Bandjabi, Eshira, Bapounou, Bateke/Obamba, Nzebi, and Bakota. Ethnic group boundaries are less sharply drawn in Gabon than elsewhere in Africa. French, the official language, is a unifying force. More than 12,000 French people live in Gabon, including an estimated 2,000 dual nationals, and France dominates foreign cultural and commercial influences. Historical and environmental factors caused Gabon's population to decline between 1900 and 1940. It is one of the least densely inhabited countries in Africa, and a labor shortage is a major obstacle to development and a draw for foreign workers. The population is generally accepted to be just over 1 million but remains in dispute.

HISTORY
During the last seven centuries, Bantu ethnic groups arrived in the area from several directions to escape enemies or find new land. Little is known of tribal life before European contact, but tribal art suggests rich cultural heritages. Gabon's first European visitors were Portuguese traders who arrived in the 15th century and named the country after the Portuguese word "gabao," a coat with sleeve and hood resembling the shape of the Komo River estuary. The coast became a center of the slave trade. Dutch, British, and French traders came in the 16th century. France assumed the status of protector by signing treaties with Gabonese coastal chiefs in 1839 and 1841. American missionaries from New England established a mission at Baraka (now Libreville) in 1842. In 1849, the French captured a slave ship and released the passengers at the mouth of the Komo River. The slaves named their settlement Libreville--"free town." An American, Paul du Chaillu, was among the first foreigners to explore the interior of the country in the 1850s. French explorers penetrated Gabon's dense jungles between 1862 and 1887. The most famous, Savorgnan de Brazza, used Gabonese bearers and guides in his search for the headwaters of the Congo River. France occupied Gabon in 1885 but did not administer it until 1903. In 1910, Gabon became one of the four territories of French Equatorial Africa, a federation that survived until 1959. The territories became independent in 1960 as the Central African Republic, Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), and Gabon.

At the time of Gabon's independence in 1960, two principal political parties existed: the Bloc Democratique Gabonais (BDG), led by Leon M'Ba, and the Union Democratique et Sociale Gabonaise (UDSG), led by J.H. Aubame. In the first post-independence election, held under a parliamentary system, neither party was able to win a majority. The BDG obtained support from three of the four independent legislative deputies, and M'Ba was named Prime Minister. Soon after concluding that Gabon had an insufficient number of people for a two-party system, the two party leaders agreed on a single list of candidates. In the February 1961 election, held under the new presidential system, M'Ba became President and Aubame became Foreign Minister.

This one-party system appeared to work until February 1963, when the larger BDG element forced the UDSG members to choose between a merger of the parties or resignation. The UDSG cabinet ministers resigned, and M'Ba called an election for February 1964 and a reduced number of National Assembly deputies (from 67 to 47). The UDSG failed to muster a list of candidates able to meet the requirements of the electoral decrees. When the BDG appeared likely to win the election by default, the Gabonese military toppled M'Ba in a bloodless coup on February 18, 1964. French troops re-established his government the next day. Elections were held in April 1964 with many opposition participants. BDG-supported candidates won 31 seats and the opposition 16. Late in 1966, the constitution was revised to provide for automatic succession of the vice president should the president die in office. In March 1967, Leon M'Ba and Omar Bongo (then Albert Bongo) were elected President and Vice President. M'Ba died later that year, and Omar Bongo became President.

In March 1968, Bongo declared Gabon a one-party state by dissolving the BDG and establishing a new party--the Parti Democratique Gabonais (PDG). He invited all Gabonese, regardless of previous political affiliation, to participate. Bongo was elected President in February 1975; in April 1975, the office of vice president was abolished and replaced by the office of prime minister, who had no right to automatic succession. Bongo was re-elected President in December 1979 and November 1986 to 7-year terms. Using the PDG as a tool to submerge the regional and tribal rivalries that divided Gabonese politics in the past, Bongo sought to forge a single national movement in support of the government's development policies.

Economic discontent and a desire for political liberalization provoked violent demonstrations and strikes by students and workers in early 1990. In response to grievances by workers, Bongo negotiated with them on a sector-by-sector basis, making significant wage concessions. In addition, he promised to open up the PDG and to organize a national political conference in March-April 1990 to discuss Gabon's future political system. The PDG and 74 political organizations attended the conference. Participants essentially divided into two loose coalitions, the ruling PDG and its allies, and the United Front of Opposition Associations and Parties, consisting of the breakaway Morena Fundamental and the Gabonese Progress Party.

The April 1990 conference approved sweeping political reforms, including creation of a national Senate, decentralization of the budgetary process, freedom of assembly and press, and cancellation of the exit visa requirement. In an attempt to guide the political system's transformation to multiparty democracy, Bongo resigned as PDG chairman and created a transitional government headed by a new Prime Minister, Casimir Oye-Mba. The Gabonese Social Democratic Grouping (RSDG), as the resulting government was called, was smaller than the previous government and included representatives from several opposition parties in its cabinet. The RSDG drafted a provisional constitution in May 1990 that provided a basic bill of rights and an independent judiciary but retained strong executive powers for the president. After further review by a constitutional committee and the National Assembly, this document came into force in March 1991. Under the 1991 constitution, in the event of the president's death, the prime minister, the National Assembly president, and the defense minister were to share power until a new election could be held.

Opposition to the PDG continued, however, and in September 1990, two coup d'etat attempts were uncovered and aborted. Despite anti-government demonstrations after the untimely death of an opposition leader, the first multiparty National Assembly elections in almost 30 years took place in September-October 1990, with the PDG garnering a large majority.

Following President Bongo's re-election in December 1993 with 51% of the vote, opposition candidates refused to validate the election results. Serious civil disturbances led to an agreement between the government and opposition factions to work toward a political settlement. These talks led to the Paris Accords in November 1994, under which several opposition figures were included in a government of national unity. This arrangement soon broke down, however, and the 1996 and 1997 legislative and municipal elections provided the background for renewed partisan politics. The PDG won a landslide victory in the legislative election, but several major cities, including Libreville, elected opposition mayors during the 1997 local election.

President Bongo coasted to easy re-elections in December 1998 and November 2005, with large majorities of the vote against a divided opposition. While Bongo's major opponents rejected the outcome as fraudulent, some international observers characterized the results as representative despite any perceived irregularities. Legislative elections held in 2001-02, which were boycotted by a number of smaller opposition parties and were widely criticized for their administrative weaknesses, produced a National Assembly almost completely dominated by the PDG and allied independents. National Assembly elections were held again in December 2006.

Gabon



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Gabon(gb)

Country Code: GB


Gabon Facts
Gabonese Republic *République Gabonaise* : 
 
*Anthem: **La Concorde* : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Libreville 0°23′N 9°27′E / 0.383, 9.45
Official languages : 
French
Demonym : 
Gabonese
Government : 
Republic
Government President : 
Omar Bongo
Government Prime Minister : 
Jean Eyeghe Ndong
Independence : 
 
Independence from France : 
22145
Area : 
 
Area Total : 
267,668 km² (76th) 103,347 sq mi
Area Water (%) : 
0.0376
Population : 
 
Population July 2005 estimate : 
1,454,867 (150th)
Population Density : 
5.4/km² (216th) 13.5/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (PPP) Total : 
$20.194 billion[1] (136th)
*GDP* (PPP) Per capita : 
$14,094[1] (53rd)
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (nominal) Total : 
$11.584 billion[1]
*GDP* (nominal) Per capita : 
$8,085[1]
*HDI* (2007) : 
▲ 0.677 (medium) (119th)
Currency : 
CFA franc (XAF)
Time zone : 
WAT (UTC+1)
Time zone Summer (DST) : 
not observed (UTC+1)
Internet TLD : 
.ga
Calling code : 
+241
Gabonese Republic *R?publique Gabonaise* : 
 
*Anthem: **La Concorde* : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Libreville 0?23?N 9?27?E? / ?0.383, 9.45
Official languages : 
French
Demonym : 
Gabonese
Government : 
Republic
President : 
Omar Bongo
Prime Minister : 
Jean Eyeghe Ndong
Independence : 
 
from France : 
8/17/1960
Area : 
 
Total : 
267,668 km? (76th) 103,347 sq mi
Water (%) : 
3.76%
Population : 
 
July 2005 estimate : 
1,454,867 (150th)
Density : 
5.4/km? (216th) 13.5/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$20.194 billion[1] (136th)
Per capita : 
$14,094[1] (53rd)
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$11.584 billion[1]
Per capita : 
$8,085[1]
*HDI* (2007) : 
? 0.677 (medium) (119th)
Currency : 
CFA franc (XAF)
Time zone : 
WAT (UTC+1)
Summer (DST) : 
not observed (UTC+1)
Internet TLD : 
.ga
Calling code : 
+241

Gabon

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