Angola (country) - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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Portugal in 1975, it had approximately 400,000 Portuguese settlers.
The vast majority of the Portuguese community has since departed for Portugal.
A Population Characteristics
The 2008 estimated population of Angola, including Cabinda, was 12,531,357.
The population distribution, however, was uneven, with about 70 percent of thepopulation concentrated in the north and along the coast.
The rate of population increase was 2.1 percent annually in 2008.
The population is overwhelmingly rural; only37 percent of the people live in urban areas.
The war for independence and the civil war following independence took their toll on Angola’s population.
Many people died of hunger.
Others became refugees in othercountries during the war for independence.
Although many returned afterwards, others became exiles.
The civil war displaced many Angolans, especially in thecountryside.
Many of them fled to the cities, which soon became overcrowded.
B Principal Cities
Luanda, the capital, has a population (2003 estimate) of 2.6 million.
Other major cities are Huambo, Benguela, the port of Lobito, and Lubango.
Luanda is a majorshipping port and the chief governmental, commercial, and banking center.
Lobito is the terminus of the Benguela Railroad and a chief shipping port.
Namibe andBenguela are fishing centers.
Huambo, Malange, and Lubango serve as governmental, agricultural, and transport centers for the interior.
The cities grew rapidly in the1980s and 1990s as a result of the civil war waged in the countryside.
C Language and Religion
Portuguese is the official language.
More than 90 percent of the population speaks Bantu languages, the most important of which are Kimbundu, Umbundu, and Kikongo(see African Languages: The Niger-Congo Family ).
The Ovimbunda people, the country’s largest ethnic group, speak Umbundu.
They are concentrated in the central plateau.
The Mbundu people, who speak Kimbundu, live mainly in Luanda and its neighboring region.
The Bakongo people speak Kikongo.
Portuguese is spoken inAngola’s cities.
Before independence an estimated 2.2 million Roman Catholics, including most of the 400,000 Portuguese, lived in Angola, as well as a smaller number of Protestants.At the beginning of the 21st century more than three-fourths of the population professed Christian beliefs.
Most Angolans also practiced traditional African religions.
D Education
In principle, education is free and compulsory for children between the ages of 6 and 9 in the 2000 school year.
By 1990 the literacy rate had been increased to 42percent.
The rate for men (56 percent) has been consistently higher than that for women.
Schooling in African languages has also increased.
A lack of teachers andeffects of the long-running civil conflict have hindered further educational gains.
Until the late 1990s Angola had only one university: Agostinho Neto University, which was founded in 1963 and named for Angola’s first president after independence.Headquartered in Luanda, the university also has branches in other cities.
The Catholic University of Angola was established in 1997 and the Jean Piaget University ofAngola in 1998; both are in Luanda.
E Culture
There are rich traditions of sculpture, dance, music, and theater in Angola’s indigenous cultures.
A statue called The Thinker , by an anonymous Chokwe sculptor, is much reproduced and has become a widely recognized symbol of national culture.
Luanda has a Museum of Anthropology, a Museum of Natural History, and a SlaveMuseum.
Modern Angolan popular music is closely tied with Caribbean and Brazilian musical traditions, and there has been much influence back and forth across theAtlantic.
Traditional literature in Angola’s African languages was collected beginning in the 19th century.
In the late 19th century Angolan newspapers published articles in bothPortuguese and Kimbundu.
In 1901 a manifesto entitled “The Voice of Angola Crying in the Wilderness” protested against Portuguese colonialism.
The later developmentof Angolan nationalism was closely related to literary expression.
The country’s first president, Agostinho Neto, was only one of many poets well known in Angola.
Under Portuguese rule Angolan writers sympathetic to the nationalist movement were often censored, exiled, or imprisoned.
Most literature was published overseas ordistributed secretly.
After independence the Angolan Writers Union, founded while war was raging in 1975, sponsored publication of previously censored and newwriting, including poems, short stories, and novels.
IV ECONOMY
Angola’s economy has suffered severe setbacks since independence.
A shortage of skilled workers after the departure of the Portuguese and devastation from the long-running civil war have hampered economic growth.
An upsurge in fighting during the 1990s severely disrupted agricultural production, leading to famine conditions inmany parts of Angola and a dependence on food relief from international organizations.
Only the petroleum industry has prospered in Angola since independence.
Petroleum and diamonds bring in most of the country’s revenues.
Despite abundant naturalresources, warfare, corruption, and mismanagement have left the economy in disarray.
A National Output and Labor
At the beginning of the 21st century, some 75 percent of Angola’s labor force was engaged in agriculture, most of it at a subsistence level.
Per capita output was amongthe lowest in the world.
In 2006 gross domestic product (GDP), a measure of the value of all goods and services produced, was $45.2 billion, or about $2,727.70 perperson.
B Agriculture
Cultivated fields and plantations constitute only 2.9 percent of Angola’s total area.
The leading export crop, coffee, is grown in the northern part of the country; annualoutput has dropped from about 15,000 metric tons in the late 1980s to 1,860 tons in 2006.
The leading subsistence crop is cassava, or manioc.
Other major cropsinclude sugarcane, fruits such as bananas, and corn.
Also important are vegetables, cotton, palm products, and sisal.
Livestock raising, mostly in the south, remains asubsistence activity and suffers from the presence of the tsetse fly.
The tsetse fly carries disease to cattle as well as to humans..
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Liens utiles
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