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   More Information About Guinea Bissau:

The National Capital of Guinea Bissau is: Bissau
Guinea Bissau Area in Square Kilometers: 36120.0
Population Statistics of Guinea Bissau are: 1503000
Guinea Bissau is located in the continent of Africa. The Africa continent code is AF


Guinea-Bissau

Republic of Guinea-Bissau

Geography
Area (including Bijagos Archipelago): 36,125 sq. km., about the size of Maryland.
Cities: Capital--Bissau. Other cities--Bafata, Gabu, Canchungo, Farim, Cacheu. Regions: Oio, Tombali, Cacheu, Bolama, Quinara, Biombo, Bafata, Gabu.
Terrain: Coastal plain; savanna in the east.
Climate: Tropical.

People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Bissau-Guinean(s).
Population (2005): 1,590,000.
Population growth rate (2005): 3%.
Ethnic groups: Balanta 30%, Fula 20%, Manjaca 14%, Mandinga 13%, Papel 7%, others 16%.
Religions: Indigenous beliefs 50%, Muslim 45%, Christian 5%.
Languages: Portuguese (official), Creole, French, many indigenous languages: Balanta-Kentohe 26%; Pulaar 18%; Mandjak 12%; Mandinka 11%; Pepel 9%; Biafada 3%; Mancanha 3%; Bidyogo 2%; Ejamat 2%; Mansoanka 1%; Bainoukgunyuno 1%; Nalu 1%; Soninke 1%; Badjara 1%; Bayote 0,5%; Kobiana 0,04%; Cassanga 0,04%, Basary 0, 03%.
Education: Years compulsory--4. Literacy (2005)--39.6% of adults.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2005)--126 deaths/1,000 live births. Life expectancy (2005)--45.2.
Work force (480,000): Agriculture--85%; industry, services, and commerce--13%; government--2%.

Government
Type: Republic, multi-party since 1991.
Independence: September 24, 1973 (proclaimed unilaterally); September 10, 1974 (de jure from Portugal).
Constitution: Adopted 1984. The National Assembly adopted a new constitution in 2001, but it was neither promulgated nor vetoed by the President.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of state), prime minister (head of government) and Council of State, ministers and secretaries of state. Legislature--National Popular Assembly (ANP), 100 members directly elected in 2004. Judicial--Supreme Court and lower courts.
Administrative subdivisions: Autonomous sector of Bissau and eight regions.
Political parties: The African Party for the Independence of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde (PAIGC) [leader Carlos Domingos Gomes Jr.] won 45 seats in the March 2004 legislative elections. Other parties represented in the ANP include: the Party for Social Renovation (PRS) [leader Alberto Nambeia] with 35 seats, the United Social Democratic Party (PUSD) [leader Francisco Jose Fadul] with 17 seats, the Electoral Union (UE) [leader Joaquim Balde] with 2 seats, and the United Popular Alliance (APU) with one seat. Other parties include: the Guinea-Bissau Resistance-Ba-Fata Movement (RGB-FM) [leader Salvador Tchongo], the Union for Change (UM) [leader Amin Saad], Front for the Liberation and Independence of Guinea (FLING) [leader Catengul Mendy], Guinean Civic Forum or (FCG) [leader Antonieta Rosa Gomes], International League for Ecological Protection (LIPE), National Union for Democracy and Progress (UNDP), Party for Democratic Convergence (PCD) [leader Victor Mandinga], Party of National Unity (PUN) [leader Idrissa Djalo], Party of Solidarity and Employment (PST) [leader Iamcuba Indjai], Guinean Democratic Movement (MDG) [leader Silvestre Alves], Guinean Popular Party (PPG) [leader Joao Tatis Sa], Socialist Alliance (AS) [leader Fernando Gomes]. Coalitions: Platform for Unity (PU) [leader Victor Mandinga].
Suffrage: Universal at 18.

Economy
GDP (2006): $318.8 million.
Annual growth rate (2006): 2.1%.
GDP per capita, purchasing power parity (2005): $735.
Natural resources: Fish and timber. Bauxite and phosphate deposits are not exploited; offshore petroleum.
Agriculture: Products--cashews, tropical fruits, rice, peanuts, cotton, palm oil. Arable land--11%. Forested--38%.
Industry: Very little industrial capacity remains following the 1998 internal conflict. The cashew processing industry is nascent.
Trade: Exports--$100.8 million (f.o.b., 2005): cashews ($84 million, 2005), fish and shrimp ($1 million, 2005). Major markets (2005)--India 67.4%, Nigeria 19%, Senegal 1.5%, Portugal 1.1%. Imports--$112 million (f.o.b., 2005): food ($49 million, 2005), fuel and energy ($20 million, 2005), capital goods ($8 million, 2005). Major suppliers (2005)--Senegal 34.6%, Italy 20.4%, Portugal 12.7%, Netherlands 3.0%.

PEOPLE
The population of Guinea-Bissau is ethnically diverse with distinct languages, customs, and social structures. Most people are farmers, with traditional religious beliefs (animism); 45% are Muslim, principally Fula and Mandinka speakers concentrated in the north and northeast. Other important groups are the Balanta and Papel, living in the southern coastal regions, and the Manjaco and Mancanha, occupying the central and northern coastal areas.

HISTORY
The rivers of Guinea and the islands of Cape Verde were among the first areas in Africa explored by the Portuguese in the 15th century. Portugal claimed Portuguese Guinea in 1446, but few trading posts were established before 1600. In 1630, a "captaincy-general" of Portuguese Guinea was established to administer the territory. With the cooperation of some local tribes, the Portuguese entered the slave trade and exported large numbers of Africans to the Western Hemisphere via the Cape Verde Islands. Cacheu became one of the major slave centers, and a small fort still stands in the town. The slave trade declined in the 19th century, and Bissau, originally founded as a military and slave-trading center in 1765, grew to become the major commercial center.

Portuguese conquest and consolidation of the interior did not begin until the latter half of the 19th century. Portugal lost part of Guinea to French West Africa, including the center of earlier Portuguese commercial interest, the Casamance River region. A dispute with Great Britain over the island of Bolama was settled in Portugal's favor with the involvement of U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant.

Before World War I, Portuguese forces, with some assistance from the Muslim population, subdued animist tribes and eventually established the territory's borders. The interior of Portuguese Guinea was brought under control after more than 30 years of fighting; final subjugation of the Bijagos Islands did not occur until 1936. The administrative capital was moved from Bolama to Bissau in 1941, and in 1952, by constitutional amendment, the colony of Portuguese Guinea became an overseas province of Portugal.

In 1956, Amilcar Cabral and Raphael Barbosa organized the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) clandestinely. The PAIGC moved its headquarters to Conakry, Guinea, in 1960 and started an armed rebellion against the Portuguese in 1961. Despite the presence of Portuguese troops, which grew to more than 35,000, the PAIGC steadily expanded its influence until, by 1968, it controlled most of the country.

It established civilian rule in the territory under its control and held elections for a National Assembly. Portuguese forces and civilians increasingly were confined to their garrisons and larger towns. The Portuguese Governor and Commander in Chief from 1968 to 1973, Gen. Antonio de Spinola, returned to Portugal and led the movement that brought democracy to Portugal and independence for its colonies.

Amilcar Cabral was assassinated in Conakry in 1973, and party leadership fell to Aristides Pereira, who later became the first President of the Republic of Cape Verde. The PAIGC National Assembly met at Boe in the southeastern region and declared the independence of Guinea-Bissau on September 24, 1973. Following Portugal's April 1974 revolution, it granted independence to Guinea-Bissau on September 10, 1974. The United States recognized the new nation that day. Luis Cabral, Amilcar Cabral's half-brother, became President of Guinea-Bissau. In late 1980, the government was overthrown in a relatively bloodless coup led by Prime Minister and former armed forces commander Joao Bernardo "Nino" Vieira.

From November 1980 to May 1984, power was held by a provisional government responsible to a Revolutionary Council headed by President Joao Bernardo Vieira. In 1984, the council was dissolved, and the National Popular Assembly (ANP) was reconstituted. The single-party assembly approved a new constitution, elected President Vieira to a new 5-year term, and elected a Council of State, which was the executive agent of the ANP. Under this system, the president presided over the Council of State and served as head of state and government. The president also was head of the PAIGC and commander in chief of the armed forces.

There were alleged coup plots against the Vieira government in 1983, 1985, and 1993. In 1986, first Vice President Paulo Correia and five others were executed for treason following a lengthy trial. In 1994, the country's first multi-party legislative and presidential elections were held. An army uprising against the Vieira government in June 1998 triggered a bloody civil war that created hundreds of thousands of displaced persons and resulted in President Vieria having to request assistance from the governments of Senegal and Guinea, who provided troops to quell the uprising. The President was ousted by a military junta in May 1999. An interim government turned over power in February 2000 when opposition leader Kumba Yala, founder of the Social Renovation Party (PRS), took office following two rounds of transparent presidential elections.

Despite the elections, democracy did not take root in the succeeding 3 years. President Yala neither vetoed nor promulgated the new constitution that was approved by the National Assembly in April 2001. The resulting ambiguity undermined the rule of law. Impulsive presidential interventions in ministerial operations hampered effective governance. On November 14, 2002, the President dismissed the government of Prime Minister Alamara Nhasse, dissolved the National Assembly, and called for legislative elections. Two days later, he appointed Prime Minister Mario Pires to lead a caretaker government controlled by presidential decree. Elections for the National Assembly were scheduled for April 2003, but later postponed until June and then October. On September 12, 2003, the President of the National Elections Commission announced that it would be impossible to hold the elections on October 12, 2003, as scheduled. The army, led by Chief of Defense General Verrisimo Correia Seabra, intervened on September 14, 2003. President Yala announced his "voluntary" resignation and was placed under house arrest. The government was dissolved and a 25-member Committee for Restoration of Democracy and Constitutional Order was established. On September 28, 2003, businessman Henrique Rosa was sworn in as President. He had the support of most political parties and of civil society. Artur Sanha, PRS President, was sworn in as Prime Minister. On March 28 and 30, 2004, Guinea-Bissau held legislative elections which international observers deemed acceptably free and fair. On May 9, 2004, Carlos Gomes Junior became Prime Minister

Guinea-Bissau



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Guinea Bissau(pu)

Country Code: PU
Guinea Bissau in Wikipedia

Guinea Bissau Facts
Republic of Guinea-Bissau *República da Guiné-Bissau* : 
 
*Motto: **"Unidade, Luta, Progresso"* (Portuguese) "Unity, Struggle, Progress" : 
 
*Anthem: **Esta é a Nossa Pátria Bem Amada* (Portuguese) : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Bissau 11°52′N 15°36′W / 11.867, -15.6
Official languages : 
Portuguese
Recognised regional languages : 
Crioulo
Demonym : 
Guinean
Government : 
Republic
Government President : 
Jo?o Bernardo Vieira
Government Prime Minister : 
Carlos Correia
Independence : 
from Portugal
Independence Declared : 
26931
Independence Recognised : 
27282
Area : 
 
Area Total : 
36,544 km² (136th) 13,948 sq mi
Area Water (%) : 
22.4
Population : 
 
Population July 2005 estimate : 
1,586,000 (148th)
Population 2002 census : 
1345479
Population Density : 
44/km² (154th) 114/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (PPP) Total : 
$808 million[1]
*GDP* (PPP) Per capita : 
$484[1]
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
*GDP* (nominal) Total : 
$356 million[1]
*GDP* (nominal) Per capita : 
$213[1]
*Gini* (1993) : 
47 (high)
*HDI* (2007) : 
▲ 0.374 (low) (175th)
Currency : 
West African CFA franc (XOF)
Time zone : 
GMT (UTC+0)
Internet TLD : 
.gw
Calling code : 
+245
Republic of Guinea-Bissau *Rep?blica da Guin?-Bissau* : 
 
*Motto: **"Unidade, Luta, Progresso"* (Portuguese) "Unity, Struggle, Progress" : 
 
*Anthem: **Esta ? a Nossa P?tria Bem Amada* (Portuguese) : 
 
*Capital* (and largest city) : 
Bissau 11?52?N 15?36?W? / ?11.867, -15.6
Official languages : 
Portuguese
Recognised regional languages : 
Crioulo
Demonym : 
Guinean
Government : 
Republic
President : 
Jo?o Bernardo Vieira
Prime Minister : 
Carlos Correia
Independence : 
from Portugal
Declared : 
9/24/1973
Recognised : 
9/10/1974
Area : 
 
Total : 
36,544 km? (136th) 13,948 sq mi
Water (%) : 
22.4
Population : 
 
July 2005 estimate : 
1,586,000 (148th)
2002 census : 
1345479
Density : 
44/km? (154th) 114/sq mi
*GDP* (PPP) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$808 million[1]
Per capita : 
$484[1]
*GDP* (nominal) : 
2007 estimate
Total : 
$356 million[1]
Per capita : 
$213[1]
*Gini* (1993) : 
47 (high)
*HDI* (2007) : 
? 0.374 (low) (175th)
Currency : 
West African CFA franc (XOF)
Time zone : 
GMT (UTC+0)
Internet TLD : 
.gw
Calling code : 
+245

Guinea Bissau

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