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Gerald Bauer 2016-11-06 09:47:20 +01:00
parent 780ac9e05b
commit ca94e2fef5
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@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
{
"Introduction": {
"Background": {
"text": "Western Sahara is a disputed territory on the northwest coast of Africa bordered by Morocco, Mauritania, and Algeria. After Spain withdrew from its former colony of Spanish Sahara in 1976, Morocco annexed the northern two-thirds of Western Sahara and claimed the rest of the territory in 1979, following Mauritania's withdrawal. A guerrilla war with the Polisario Front contesting Morocco's sovereignty ended in a 1991 cease-fire and the establishment of a UN peacekeeping operation. As part of this effort, the UN sought to offer a choice to the peoples of the Western Sahara between independence (favored by the Polisario Front) or integration into Morocco. A proposed referendum never took place due to lack of agreement on voter eligibility. The 2,700 km- (1,700 mi-) long defensive sand berm, built by the Moroccans from 1980 to 1987 and running the length of the territory, continues to separate the opposing forces with Morocco controlling the roughly 80 percent of the territory west of the berm. Local demonstrations criticizing the Moroccan authorities occur regularly, and there are periodic ethnic tensions between the native Sahrawi population and Moroccan immigrants. Morocco maintains a heavy security presence in the territory."
"text": "Western Sahara is a disputed territory on the northwest coast of Africa bordered by Morocco, Mauritania, and Algeria. After Spain withdrew from its former colony of Spanish Sahara in 1976, Morocco annexed the northern two-thirds of Western Sahara and claimed the rest of the territory in 1979, following Mauritania's withdrawal. A guerrilla war with the Polisario Front contesting Morocco's sovereignty ended in a 1991 cease-fire and the establishment of a UN peacekeeping operation. As part of this effort, the UN sought to offer a choice to the peoples of Western Sahara between independence (favored by the Polisario Front) or integration into Morocco. A proposed referendum never took place due to lack of agreement on voter eligibility. The 2,700 km- (1,700 mi-) long defensive sand berm, built by the Moroccans from 1980 to 1987 and running the length of the territory, continues to separate the opposing forces with Morocco controlling the roughly 80 percent of the territory west of the berm. Local demonstrations criticizing the Moroccan authorities occur regularly, and there are periodic ethnic tensions between the native Sahrawi population and Moroccan immigrants. Morocco maintains a heavy security presence in the territory."
}
},
"Geography": {
@ -48,12 +48,12 @@
"Terrain": {
"text": "mostly low, flat desert with large areas of rocky or sandy surfaces rising to small mountains in south and northeast"
},
"Elevation extremes": {
"lowest point": {
"text": "Sebjet Tah -55 m"
"Elevation": {
"mean elevation": {
"text": "256 m"
},
"highest point": {
"text": "unnamed elevation 805 m"
"elevation extremes": {
"text": "lowest point: Sebjet Tah -55 m ++ highest point: unnamed elevation 805 m"
}
},
"Natural resources": {
@ -71,7 +71,7 @@
}
},
"Irrigated land": {
"text": "NA"
"text": "0 sq km (2012)"
},
"Natural hazards": {
"text": "hot, dry, dust/sand-laden sirocco wind can occur during winter and spring; widespread harmattan haze exists 60% of time, often severely restricting visibility"
@ -84,6 +84,12 @@
}
},
"People and Society": {
"Population": {
"text": "587,020",
"note": {
"text": "estimate is based on projections by age, sex, fertility, mortality, and migration; fertility and mortality are based on data from neighboring countries (July 2016 est.)"
}
},
"Nationality": {
"noun": {
"text": "Sahrawi(s), Sahraoui(s)"
@ -101,30 +107,24 @@
"Religions": {
"text": "Muslim"
},
"Population": {
"text": "570,866 (July 2013 est.)",
"note": {
"text": "estimate is based on projections by age, sex, fertility, mortality, and migration; fertility and mortality are based on data from neighboring countries (July 2015 est.)"
}
"Demographic profile": {
"text": "Western Sahara is a disputed territory; 85% is under Moroccan control. It was inhabited almost entirely by Sahrawi pastoral nomads until the mid-20th century. Their traditional vast migratory ranges, based on following unpredictable rainfall, did not coincide with colonial and later international borders. Since the 1930s, most Sahrawis have been compelled to adopt a sedentary lifestyle and to live in urban settings as a result of fighting, the presence of minefields, job opportunities in the phosphate industry, prolonged drought, the closure of Western Saharas border with Mauritania from 1979-2002, and the construction of the defensive berm separating Moroccan- and Polisario-controlled (Sahrawi liberalization movement) areas. Morocco supported rapid urbanization to facilitate surveillance and security. Today more than 80% of Western Saharas population lives in urban areas; more than 40% live in the administrative center Laayoune. Moroccan immigration has altered the composition and dramatically increased the size of Western Saharas population. Morocco maintains a large military presence in Western Sahara and has encouraged its citizens to settle there, offering bonuses, pay raises, and food subsidies to civil servants and a tax exemption, in order to integrate Western Sahara into the Moroccan Kingdom and, Sahrawis contend, to marginalize the native population. Western Saharan Sahrawis have been migrating to Europe, principally to former colonial ruler Spain, since the 1950s. Many who moved to refugee camps in Tindouf, Algeria, also have migrated to Spain and Italy, usually alternating between living in cities abroad with periods back at the camps. The Polisario claims that the population of the Tindouf camps is about 155,000, but this figure may include thousands of Arabs and Tuaregs from neighboring countries. Because international organizations have been unable to conduct an independent census in Tindouf, the UNHCR bases its aid on a figure of 90,000 refugees. Western Saharan coastal towns emerged as key migration transit points (for reaching Spains Canary Islands) in the mid-1990s, when Spains and Italys tightening of visa restrictions and EU pressure on Morocco and other North African countries to control illegal migration pushed sub-Saharan African migrants to shift their routes to the south."
},
"Age structure": {
"0-14 years": {
"text": "37.83% (male 109,147/female 106,789)"
"text": "37.54% (male 111,389/female 108,958)"
},
"15-24 years": {
"text": "19.63% (male 56,412/female 55,624)"
"text": "19.57% (male 57,855/female 57,049)"
},
"25-54 years": {
"text": "33.93% (male 95,296/female 98,391)"
"text": "34.14% (male 98,659/female 101,733)"
},
"55-64 years": {
"text": "4.87% (male 12,974/female 14,829)"
"text": "4.95% (male 13,552/female 15,490)"
},
"65 years and over": {
"text": "3.75% (male 9,406/female 11,998) (2015 est.)"
},
"population pyramid": {
"text": null
"text": "3.8% (male 9,823/female 12,512) (2016 est.)"
}
},
"Dependency ratios": {
@ -143,23 +143,23 @@
},
"Median age": {
"total": {
"text": "20.9 years"
"text": "21.1 years"
},
"male": {
"text": "20.5 years"
"text": "20.7 years"
},
"female": {
"text": "21.4 years (2015 est.)"
"text": "21.6 years (2016 est.)"
}
},
"Population growth rate": {
"text": "2.82% (2015 est.)"
"text": "2.76% (2016 est.)"
},
"Birth rate": {
"text": "30.24 births/1,000 population (2015 est.)"
"text": "29.8 births/1,000 population (2016 est.)"
},
"Death rate": {
"text": "8.34 deaths/1,000 population (2015 est.)"
"text": "8.2 deaths/1,000 population (2016 est.)"
},
"Urbanization": {
"urban population": {
@ -186,39 +186,39 @@
"text": "0.97 male(s)/female"
},
"55-64 years": {
"text": "0.88 male(s)/female"
"text": "0.87 male(s)/female"
},
"65 years and over": {
"text": "0.78 male(s)/female"
},
"total population": {
"text": "0.99 male(s)/female (2015 est.)"
"text": "0.99 male(s)/female (2016 est.)"
}
},
"Infant mortality rate": {
"total": {
"text": "54.7 deaths/1,000 live births"
"text": "53.3 deaths/1,000 live births"
},
"male": {
"text": "59.61 deaths/1,000 live births"
"text": "58.1 deaths/1,000 live births"
},
"female": {
"text": "49.6 deaths/1,000 live births (2015 est.)"
"text": "48.2 deaths/1,000 live births (2016 est.)"
}
},
"Life expectancy at birth": {
"total population": {
"text": "62.64 years"
"text": "63 years"
},
"male": {
"text": "60.35 years"
"text": "60.7 years"
},
"female": {
"text": "65.02 years (2015 est.)"
"text": "65.4 years (2016 est.)"
}
},
"Total fertility rate": {
"text": "4 children born/woman (2015 est.)"
"text": "3.93 children born/woman (2016 est.)"
},
"HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate": {
"text": "NA"
@ -240,10 +240,13 @@
},
"former": {
"text": "Rio de Oro, Saguia el Hamra, Spanish Sahara"
},
"etymology": {
"text": "self-descriptive name specifying the territory's location on the African continent's vast desert"
}
},
"Government type": {
"text": "legal status of territory and issue of sovereignty unresolved; territory contested by Morocco and Polisario Front (Popular Front for the Liberation of the Saguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro), which in February 1976 formally proclaimed a government-in-exile, the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), based out of refugee camps near Tindouf, Algeria, led by President Mohamed ABDELAZIZ"
"text": "legal status of territory and issue of sovereignty unresolved -territory contested by Morocco and Polisario Front (Popular Front for the Liberation of the Saguia el Hamra and Rio de Oro), which in February 1976 formally proclaimed a government-in-exile of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), near Tindouf, Algeria, led by President Mohamed ABDELAZIZ; territory partitioned between Morocco and Mauritania in April 1976 when Spain withdrew, with Morocco acquiring northern two-thirds; Mauritania, under pressure from Polisario guerrillas, abandoned all claims to its portion in August 1979; Morocco moved to occupy that sector shortly thereafter and has since asserted administrative control; the Polisario's government-in-exile was seated as an Organization of African Unity (OAU) member in 1984 - Morocco between 1980 and 1987 built a fortified sand berm delineating the roughly 80 percent of Western Sahara west of the barrier that currently is controlled by Morocco; guerrilla activities continued sporadically until a UN-monitored cease-fire was implemented on 6 September 1991 (Security Council Resolution 690) by the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO)"
},
"Capital": {
"text": "Laayoune (administrative center)",
@ -264,7 +267,7 @@
"text": "none"
},
"Political pressure groups and leaders": {
"text": "none"
"text": "Polisario Front"
},
"International organization participation": {
"text": "AU, CAN (observer), WFTU (NGOs)"
@ -278,7 +281,7 @@
},
"Economy": {
"Economy - overview": {
"text": "Western Sahara has a small market-based economy whose main industries are fishing, phosphate mining, and pastoral nomadism. The territory's arid desert climate makes sedentary agriculture difficult, and Western Sahara imports much of its food. The Moroccan Government administers Western Sahara's economy and is a key source of employment, infrastructure development, and social spending in the territory. Western Sahara's unresolved legal status makes the exploitation of its natural resources a contentious issue between Morocco and the Polisario. Morocco and the EU in December 2013 finalized a four-year agreement allowing European vessels to fish off the coast of Morocco, including disputed waters off the coast of Western Sahara. Oil has never been found in Western Sahara in commercially significant quantities, but Morocco and the Polisario have quarreled over who has the right to authorize and benefit from oil exploration in the territory. Western Sahara's main long-term economic challenge is the development of a more diverse set of industries capable of providing greater employment and income to the territory."
"text": "Western Sahara has a small market-based economy whose main industries are fishing, phosphate mining, and pastoral nomadism. The territory's arid desert climate makes sedentary agriculture difficult, and Western Sahara imports much of its food. The Moroccan Government administers Western Sahara's economy and is a key source of employment, infrastructure development, and social spending in the territory. ++ ++ Western Sahara's unresolved legal status makes the exploitation of its natural resources a contentious issue between Morocco and the Polisario. Morocco and the EU in December 2013 finalized a four-year agreement allowing European vessels to fish off the coast of Morocco, including disputed waters off the coast of Western Sahara. ++ ++ Oil has never been found in Western Sahara in commercially significant quantities, but Morocco and the Polisario have quarreled over who has the right to authorize and benefit from oil exploration in the territory. Western Sahara's main long-term economic challenge is the development of a more diverse set of industries capable of providing greater employment and income to the territory. However, following King MOHAMMED VIs November 2015 visit to Western Sahara, the Government of Morocco announced a series of investments aimed at spurring economic activity in the region, while the General Confederation of Moroccan Enterprises announced a $609 million investment initiative in the region in March 2015."
},
"GDP (purchasing power parity)": {
"text": "$906.5 million (2007 est.)"
@ -373,7 +376,7 @@
"text": "$NA"
},
"Exchange rates": {
"text": "Moroccan dirhams (MAD) per US dollar - ++ 8.3798 (2014) ++ 8.3803 (2013) ++ 8.6 (2012) ++ 8.0899 (2011) ++ 8.4172 (2010)"
"text": "Moroccan dirhams (MAD) per US dollar - ++ 9.7351 (2015) ++ 8.3803 (2013) ++ 8.3803 (2013) ++ 8.6 (2012) ++ 8.0899 (2011)"
}
},
"Energy": {
@ -456,18 +459,12 @@
"text": "NA"
},
"international": {
"text": "country code - 212; tied into Morocco's system by microwave radio relay, tropospheric scatter, and satellite; satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat (Atlantic Ocean) linked to Rabat, Morocco (2008)"
"text": "country code - 212; tied into Morocco's system by microwave radio relay, tropospheric scatter, and satellite; satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat (Atlantic Ocean) linked to Rabat, Morocco (2015)"
}
},
"Broadcast media": {
"text": "Morocco's state-owned broadcaster, Radio-Television Marocaine (RTM), operates a radio service from Laayoune and relays TV service; a Polisario-backed radio station also broadcasts (2008)"
},
"Radio broadcast stations": {
"text": "AM 2, FM 0, shortwave 0 (1998)"
},
"Television broadcast stations": {
"text": "NA"
},
"Internet country code": {
"text": ".eh"
}
@ -495,7 +492,7 @@
"text": "1"
},
"under 914 m": {
"text": " ++ 1 (2013)"
"text": "1 (2013)"
}
},
"Ports and terminals": {
@ -504,24 +501,6 @@
}
}
},
"Military": {
"Manpower fit for military service": {
"males age 16-49": {
"text": "79,489"
},
"females age 16-49": {
"text": "87,362 (2010 est.)"
}
},
"Manpower reaching militarily significant age annually": {
"male": {
"text": "5,523"
},
"female": {
"text": "5,429 (2010 est.)"
}
}
},
"Transnational Issues": {
"Disputes - international": {
"text": "many neighboring states reject Moroccan administration of Western Sahara; several states have extended diplomatic relations to the \"Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic\" represented by the Polisario Front in exile in Algeria, while others recognize Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara; approximately 90,000 Sahrawi refugees continue to be sheltered in camps in Tindouf, Algeria, which has hosted Sahrawi refugees since the 1980s"