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| Cameroon | Plants and Animal | Back to Top |
Cameroon’s valuable rain forests contain a number of species of trees, oil & bamboo palms, mahogany, teak, ebony, and rubber. Wildlife is various and extensive and includes monkeys, chimpanzees, gorillas, lions and elephants as well as numerous species of birds and snakes.
| Cameroon | Communications | Back to Top |
Available only to business and government
domestic: cable, microwave radio relay, and tropospheric scatter
international: satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat
| Cameroon | Culture | Back to Top |
Each major ethnic group of the nation has developed its own culture. The vigorous rhythms played on the drums by the people of the southern forest region contrast with the flute music of northern Cameroonians. In the Adamawa area, the Muslim Fulani produce elaborately worked leather goods and ornate calabashes and the Kirdi and the Matakam of the western mountains produce typical types of pottery. The powerful masks of the Bali, which represent elephants' heads are used in ceremonies for the dead, and the statuettes of the Bamileke are carved in human and animal figures. The Tikar people are famous for beautifully decorated brass pipes, the Ngoutou people for two-faced masks, and the Bamum for smiling masks.
L'Institut Français d'Afrique Noire - French Institute of black Africa maintains a library in Douala that specializes in the sociology, ethnology, and history of Africa. Of the several museums, the Diamare and Maroua Museum has anthropological collections relating to the Sudanese peoples, and the Cameroon Museum of Douala exhibits objects of prehistory and natural history.
| Cameroon | Defence | Back to Top |
Military branches: Army, Navy, Air Force, National Gendarmerie, Presidential Guard
Military manpower - military age: 18 years of age
Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 3,762,459 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service: males : 174,358 (2001 est.)
| Cameroon | International Disputes | Back to Top |
Delimitation of international boundaries in the vicinity of Lake Chad, the inadequacy of which led to border incidents in the past, is complete and awaits confirmation by Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria; tripartite maritime boundary and economic zone dispute with Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria is currently before the ICJ.
| Cameroon | Economy | Back to Top |
Agricultural activities are the main occupation of 70 % of Cameroon’s population. In 1998 the national budget showed revenues of $1.5 billion and expenditures of $1.3 billion. The principal commercial crops in Cameroon are cacao, coffee, tobacco, cotton, and bananas. In 2000 production of cacao and coffee, the leading agricultural export commodities, was 150,000 metric tons for the former and 70,000 metric tons for the latter. Other commercial products include rubber, palm products, and sugarcane. Subsistence crops include plantains, sweet potatoes, corn and millet farm animal raising is valuable in the Adamawa Plateau region. In 2000 the farm animal population included 5.9 million head of cattle, 3.8 million goats, 3.9 million sheep, and 1.4 million pigs.
Cameroon's main problem, in common with the other developing countries of Africa, is the accomplishment of capital to finance resource development. When foreign investment capital is scarce, the nation depends largely on the sale of its products on the world market. Fluctuations in world prices of raw materials such as cocoa and coffee, make the future unpredictable. Foreign indebtedness rose along with development spending, though the government was successful in keeping its debt service within reasonable levels. In the late 1980s, budget deficits compelled Cameroon to resort to external borrowing and to accept the intercession of the International Monetary Fund's structural readjustment programs.
Cameroon has one of the best-endowed primary commodity economies in sub-Saharan Africa because of its oil resources and favorable agricultural conditions. Still, it faces many of the serious problems facing other underdeveloped countries, such as a top-heavy civil service and a generally unfavorable climate for business enterprise. Since 1990, the government has embarked on various IMF and World Bank programs designed to spur business investment, increase efficiency in agriculture, improve trade, and recapitalize the nation's banks. In June 2000, the government completed an IMF-sponsored, three-year structural adjustment program; the IMF is pressing for more reforms, including increased budget transparency and privatization.
| Cameroon | Education | Back to Top |
Cameroon has achieved one of the highest rates of school attendance in Africa, although the literacy rate is still just 93 %. Mission schools play an valuable role in education and are partly subsidized by the government. In 1996, 86 % of primary school-aged children were listed in school, while only 24 % of appropriately aged children attended secondary school. The University of Yaoundé, which was accomplished in 1962, has faculties of law, arts, and science. In the early 1990s a total of 33,850 students were listed in institutions of higher education.
| Cameroon | Government | Back to Top |
The 1972 constitution as modified by 1996 reforms provides for a strong central government controlled by the administrator. The president is empowered to name and dismiss cabinet members, judges, generals, provincial governors, prefects and heads of Cameroon's parastatal firms, obligate or disburse expenditures, approve or veto regulations, declare states of emergency, and appropriate and spend profits of parastatal firms. The president is not required to consult the National Assembly.
The 180-member National Assembly meets in ordinary session three times a year in March/April, June/July and Nov./Dec. and has seldom, until newly, made major changes in legislation proposed by the administrator. Laws are adopted by majority vote of members present or, if the president demands a second reading, of a total membership.
Following government pledges to reform the strongly centralized 1972 constitution, the National Assembly adopted a number of amendments in December 1995, which were published in a new Constitution in January 1996. The amendments call for the establishment of a 100-member senate as part of a bicameral legislature, the creation of regional councils, and the fixing of the presidential term to 7 years, renewable once. One-third of senators are to be assigned by the President and the remaining two-thirds are to be chosen by indirect elections. As of November 2003, the government has not accomplished the Senate or regional councils.
While the president, the minister of justice, and the president's judicial advisers top the judicial hierarchy, orthodox rulers, courts, and councils also exercise functions of government. orthodox courts still play a major role in domestic, property, and probate law. Tribal laws and customs are honored in the formal court system when not in conflict with national law. orthodox rulers obtain stipends from the national government.
The government adopted legislation in 1990 to authorize the formation of multiple political parties and ease restrictions on forming civil associations and private newspapers. Cameroon's first multiparty legislative and presidential elections were held in 1992 followed by municipal elections in 1996 and another round of legislative and presidential elections in 1997. Because the government refused to consider opposition demands for an independent election commission, the three major opposition parties boycotted the October 1997 presidential election, which Biya easily won. The leader of one of the opposition parties, Bello Bouba Maigari of the NUDP, consequently joined the government. In December 2000, the National Assembly passed legislation creating the National Elections Observatory (NEO), an election watchdog body. NEO played an active role in supervising the conduct of local and legislative elections in June 2002. Implementation of NEO's supervisory role is to be expanded to all phases of the electoral process in the 2004 presidential elections, including the voter registration process -- a orthodox problem in Cameroonian elections.
| Cameroon | History | Back to Top |
The earliest inhabitants of Cameroon were likely the Bakas. They still inhabit the forests of the south and east provinces. Bantu speakers originating in the Cameroonian highlands were among the first groups to move out before other invaders. During the late 1770s and early 1800s, the Fulani, a pastoral Islamic people of the western Sahel, conquered most of what is now northern Cameroon, subjugating or displacing its largely non-Muslim inhabitants.
Although the Portuguese arrived on Cameroon's coast in the 1500s, malaria prevented remarkable European settlement and conquest of the interior until the late 1870s, when large supplies of the malaria suppressant, quinine, became available. The early European presence in Cameroon was primarily devoted to coastal trade and the acquisition of slaves. The northern part of Cameroon was an valuable part of the Muslim slave trade network. The slave trade was largely suppressed by the mid-l9th century. Christian missions accomplished a presence in the late 19th century and continue to play a role in Cameroonian life.
French Cameroon achieved freedom in 1960 as the Republic of Cameroon. The following year the largely Muslim northern two-thirds of British Cameroon voted to join Nigeria; the largely Christian southern third voted to join with the Republic of Cameroon to form the Federal Republic of Cameroon. The formerly French and British regions each maintained substantial autonomy. Ahmadou Ahidjo, a French-educated Fulani, was chosen president of the federation in 1961. Ahidjo, relying on a pervasive internal security apparatus, outlawed all political parties but his own in 1966. Ahidjo resigned as president in 1982 and was constitutionally succeeded by his Prime Minister, Paul Biya, a career official from the Bulu-Beti ethnic group. Ahidjo later regretted his choice of successors, but his supporters failed to overthrow Biya in a 1984 coup. Biya won single-candidate elections in 1984 and 1988 and flawed multiparty elections in 1992 and 1997. His CPDM party holds a sizeable majority in the legislature -- 149 deputies out of a total of 180.
| Cameroon | Introduction | Back to Top |
Cameroon, republic in western Africa, bounded on the north by Lake Chad; on the east by Chad and the Central African Republic; on the south by the Republic of the Congo, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea; and on the west by the Bight of Biafra and Nigeria. The nation is shaped like an elongated triangle, and forms a bridge between western Africa and central Africa. The nation has a total area of 475,442 sq km (183,569 sq mi). Yaoundé is the capital, and Douala is the largest city.
Official Name -Republic of Cameroon| Cameroon | Land | Back to Top |
N/A
| Cameroon | Languages | Back to Top |
Cameroon contains about 200 ethnic groups who speak as many different languages. In general, Bantu-speaking peoples inhabit the south, and Sudanic-speaking peoples dominate in the north. Among the more valuable ethnic groups are the Bamileke, a Bantu-speaking people, and the Fulani, a Muslim people. French and English are both official languages. French dominates, however; English is confined mainly to the west.
| Cameroon | Life | Back to Top |
The nation has been described as a racial crossroads because of its more than 200 different ethnic groups. There are three main linguistic groups: the Bantu-speaking people of the south, the Sudanic-speaking people of the north, and those who speak the Semi-Bantu languages of the west. The Bantu settled in the Cameroons from equatorial Africa. The first group that invaded the nation included the Maka, Ndjem and Duala. They were followed at the beginning of the 19th century by the Fang and Beti peoples.
| Cameroon | organization | Back to Top |
ACCT, ACP, AfDB, BDEAC, C, CCC, CEEAC, CEMAC, ECA, FAO, FZ, G-19, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICFTU, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Inmarsat, Intelsat, Interpol, IOC, ISO, ITU, NAM, OAU, OIC, OPCW, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNITAR, UPU, WCL, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO.
| Cameroon | People | Back to Top |
The Sudanic speaking peoples include the Sao, who live on the Adamawa Plateau; the Fulani; and the Kanuri. The Fulani came from the Niger basin in two waves, in the 11th and 19th centuries; they were Muslims who converted and subjugated the peoples of the Logone valley and the Kébi and Faro river valleys. The third ethnic group consists mainly of small tribes, except for the Bantu-related Bamileke, who live between the lower slopes of the Adamawa Plateau and Mount Cameroon. Other western Semi-Bantu-speaking tribes include the Tikar, who live in the Bamenda region and in the western high plateau.
The population of Cameroon is 15,803,220. The overall population density is 33 persons per sq km (87 per sq mi). Cameroon contains about 200 ethnic groups who speak 24 major languages. The capital is Yaoundé. Douala, on the Bight of Biafra, with an around population of 1,500,000 in 1997, is the chief port. Other principal towns include Garoua (160,000) and Maroua (140,000). About 27 % of the population adheres to orthodox religions; about 22 % of the population is Muslim; the remaining majority is Christian. Muslims predominate in the north and Christians in the south.
Cameroon's around 250 ethnic groups form five large regional -- cultural groups: western highlanders, including the Bamileke, Bamoun, and many smaller entities in the northwest est. 39% of population; coastal tropical forest peoples, including the Bassa, Douala, and many smaller entities in the Southwest (12%); southern tropical forest peoples, including the Ewondo, Bulu, and Fang, Maka and Pygmies (18%); predominantly Islamic peoples of the northern semi-arid regions and central highlands, including the Fulani, also known as Peuhl in French (14%); and the "Kirdi", non-Islamic or newly Islamic peoples of the northern desert and central highlands (18%).
| Cameroon | Politics | Back to Top |
Cameroonian Democratic Union or UDC [Adamou NDAM NJOYA]; Democratic Rally of the Cameroon People or RDCP [Paul BIYA]; Movement for the Defense of the Republic or MDR [Dakole DAISSALA]; Movement for the Liberation and Development of Cameroon or MLDC; Movement for the Youth of Cameroon or MLJC [Marcel YONDO]; National Union for Democracy and Progress or UNDP [Maigari BELLO BOUBA, chairman]; Social Democratic Front or SDF [John FRU NDI]; Union of Cameroonian Populations has two sections UPC-N [Ndeh NTUMAZAH] and UPC-K [Augustin Frederic KODOCK]
| Cameroon | Provinces | Back to Top |
Adamaoua, Centre, Est, Extreme-Nord, Littoral, Nord, Nord-Ouest, Ouest, Sud, Sud-Ouest.
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| Cameroon | Time | Back to Top |
| Cameroon | Currency and General Information | Back to Top |
| Africaine Francs BCEAO | United States Dollars |
| 1.00 XOF | 0.00132837 USD |
| 752.801 XOF | 1 USD |
| Countries Currency Unit | USD/Unit | Units/USD | |
| DZD | Algeria Dinars | 0.0129554 | 77.1877 |
| USD | United States Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| ARS | Argentina Pesos | 0.341293 | 2.93004 |
| AUD | Australia Dollars | 0.533413 | 1.87472 |
| ATS | Austria Schillings ** | 0.0632609 | 15.8076 |
| BSD | Bahamas Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BBD | Barbados Dollars | 0.502513 | 1.99000 |
| BEF | Belgium Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| BMD | Bermuda Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BRL | Brazil Reals | 0.430318 | 2.32386 |
| GBP | United Kingdom Pounds | 1.42399 | 0.702251 |
| BGL | Bulgaria Leva | 0.447293 | 2.23567 |
| CAD | Canada Dollars | 0.627606 | 1.59336 |
| CLP | Chile Pesos | 0.00152392 | 656.202 |
| CNY | China Yuan Renminbi | 0.120813 | 8.27726 |
| CYP | Cyprus Pounds | 1.49883 | 0.667186 |
| CZK | Czech Republic Koruny | 0.0281883 | 35.4758 |
| DKK | Denmark Kroner | 0.117155 | 8.53568 |
| XCD | East Caribbean Dollars | 0.370370 | 2.70000 |
| EGP | Egypt Pounds | 0.217271 | 4.60255 |
| EUR | Euro | 0.870489 | 1.14878 |
| FJD | Fiji Dollars | 0.447227 | 2.23600 |
| FIM | Finland Markkaa ** | 0.146406 | 6.83034 |
| FRF | France Francs ** | 0.132705 | 7.53550 |
| DEM | Germany Deutsche Marks ** | 0.445074 | 2.24682 |
| XAU | Gold Ounces | 301.977 | 0.00331151 |
| GRD | Greece Drachmae ** | 0.00255463 | 391.447 |
| HKD | Hong Kong Dollars | 0.128215 | 7.79939 |
| HUF | Hungary Forint | 0.00358416 | 279.006 |
| ISK | Iceland Kronur | 0.00999868 | 100.013 |
| INR | India Rupees | 0.0205205 | 48.7319 |
| IDR | Indonesia Rupiahs | 0.000102055 | 9,798.61 |
| IEP | Ireland Pounds ** | 1.10529 | 0.904738 |
| ILS | Israel New Shekels | 0.212386 | 4.70841 |
| ITL | Italy Lire ** | 0.000449570 | 2,224.35 |
| JMD | Jamaica Dollars | 0.0210041 | 47.6099 |
| JPY | Japan Yen | 0.00754183 | 132.594 |
| JOD | Jordan Dinars | 1.41057 | 0.708931 |
| LBP | Lebanon Pounds | 0.000660937 | 1,513.00 |
| LUF | Luxembourg Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| MYR | Malaysia Ringgits | 0.263330 | 3.79751 |
| MXN | Mexico Pesos | 0.111007 | 9.00848 |
| NZD | New Zealand Dollars | 0.440474 | 2.27028 |
| NOK | Norway Kroner | 0.113022 | 8.84780 |
| NLG | Netherlands Guilders ** | 0.395011 | 2.53158 |
| PKR | Pakistan Rupees | 0.0166945 | 59.9000 |
| PHP | Philippines Pesos | 0.0196386 | 50.9202 |
| XPT | Platinum Ounces | 510.962 | 0.00195709 |
| PLN | Poland Zlotych | 0.243488 | 4.10699 |
| PTE | Portugal Escudos ** | 0.00434198 | 230.310 |
| ROL | Romania Lei | 0.0000303433 | 32,956.21 |
| RUR | Russia Rubles | 0.0321342 | 31.1195 |
| SAR | Saudi Arabia Riyals | 0.266668 | 3.74998 |
| XAG | Silver Ounces | 4.65692 | 0.214734 |
| SGD | Singapore Dollars | 0.542540 | 1.84318 |
| SKK | Slovakia Koruny | 0.0208441 | 47.9751 |
| ZAR | South Africa Rand | 0.0883340 | 11.3207 |
| KRW | South Korea Won | 0.000759354 | 1,316.91 |
| ESP | Spain Pesetas ** | 0.00523174 | 191.141 |
| XDR | IMF Special Drawing Rights | 1.24862 | 0.800882 |
| SDD | Sudan Dinars | 0.00384615 | 260.000 |
| SEK | Sweden Kronor | 0.0964189 | 10.3714 |
| CHF | Switzerland Francs | 0.593789 | 1.68410 |
| TWD | Taiwan New Dollars | 0.0286531 | 34.9002 |
| THB | Thailand Baht | 0.0230087 | 43.4619 |
| TTD | Trinidad and Tobago Dollars | 0.163399 | 6.12000 |
| TRL | Turkey Liras | 0.000000763622 | 1,309,549.07 |
| VEB | Venezuela Bolivares | 0.00108696 | 920.000 |
| ZMK | Zambia Kwacha | 0.000239866 | 4,169.00 |
| Cameroon : Geographic coordinates | 6 00 N, 12 00 E |
| Cameroon : Population growth rate | 2.41% |
| Cameroon : Birth rate | 36.12 births/1,000 population |
| Cameroon : Death rate | 11.99 deaths/1,000 population |
| Cameroon : People living with HIV/AIDS | 540,000 |
| Cameroon : Independence | 1 January 1960 |
| Cameroon : National holiday | Republic Day, 20 May |
| Cameroon : Constitution | 20 May 1972 |
| Cameroon : GDP | purchasing power parity - $26 billion |
| Cameroon : GDP - per capita | purchasing power parity - $1,700 |
| Cameroon : Electricity - consumption | 3.227 billion kWh |
| Cameroon : Exports | $2.1 billion crude oil and petroleum products, lumber, cocoa beans, aluminum, coffee, cotton |
| Cameroon : Imports | $1.6 billion machines and electrical equipment, transport equipment, fuel, food |
| Cameroon : Telephones | 75,000 |
| Cameroon : Mobile cellular | 4,200 |
| Cameroon : Radio broadcast stations | AM 11, FM 8, shortwave 3 |
| Cameroon : Radios | 2.27 million |
| Cameroon : Television broadcast stations | 1 |
| Cameroon : Televisions | 450,000 |
| Cameroon : Internet country code | .cm |
| Cameroon : Internet Service Providers (ISPs) | 1 |
| Cameroon : Internet users | 20,000 |
| Cameroon : Railways | 1,104 km |
| Cameroon : Highways | 34,300 km |
| Cameroon : Waterways | 2,090 km |
| Cameroon : Pipelines | N/A |
| Cameroon : Ports and harbors | Bonaberi, Douala, Garoua, Kribi, Tiko |
| Cameroon : Merchant marine | N/A |
| Cameroon : Airports | 49 |
| Cameroon : Heliports | N/A |
| Cameroon : Military branches | Army, Navy (includes Naval Infantry), Air Force, National Gendarmerie |
| Cameroon : Military expenditures | $118.6 million |