{ "Introduction": { "Background": { "text": "
The Berber and Bafour people were among the first to settle in what is now Mauritania. Originally a nomadic people, they were among the first in recorded history to convert from a nomadic to agricultural lifestyle. These groups account for roughly one third of Mauritania’s ethnic makeup. The remainder of Mauritania’s ethnic groups derive from former enslaved peoples and Sub-Saharan ethnic groups originating mainly from the Senegal River Valley. These three groups are organized according to a strict caste system with deep ethnic divides that still exist today.
A former French colony, Mauritania achieved independence from France in 1960. Mauritania initially began as a single-party, authoritarian regime and saw 49 years of dictatorships, flawed elections, failed attempts at democracy, and military coups. Ould Abdel AZIZ led the last coup in 2008, and was elected president in 2009 and reelected in 2014. Mohamed Ould Cheikh GHAZOUANI was elected president in 2019, and his inauguration marked the first peaceful transition of power from one democratically elected president to another, solidifying Mauritania’s status as an emerging democracy. International observers recognized the elections as relatively free and fair.
The country is working to address a continuing practice of slavery and its vestiges. Mauritania officially abolished slavery in 1981, but the practice was not criminalized until 2007. Between 2005 and 2011, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) launched a series of attacks killing American and foreign tourists and aid workers, attacking diplomatic and government facilities, and ambushing Mauritanian soldiers and gendarmes. Although Mauritania has not seen an attack since 2011, AQIM and similar groups remain active in the Sahel region.
" } }, "Geography": { "Location": { "text": "Western Africa, bordering the North Atlantic Ocean, between Senegal and Western Sahara" }, "Geographic coordinates": { "text": "20 00 N, 12 00 W" }, "Map references": { "text": "Africa" }, "Area": { "total": { "text": "1,030,700 sq km" }, "land": { "text": "1,030,700 sq km" }, "water": { "text": "0 sq km" } }, "Area - comparative": { "text": "slightly larger than three times the size of New Mexico; about six times the size of Florida" }, "Land boundaries": { "total": { "text": "5,002 km" }, "border countries": { "text": "Algeria 460 km; Mali 2,236 km; Morocco 1,564 km; Senegal 742 km" } }, "Coastline": { "text": "754 km" }, "Maritime claims": { "territorial sea": { "text": "12 nm" }, "contiguous zone": { "text": "24 nm" }, "exclusive economic zone": { "text": "200 nm" }, "continental shelf": { "text": "200 nm or to the edge of the continental margin" } }, "Climate": { "text": "desert; constantly hot, dry, dusty" }, "Terrain": { "text": "mostly barren, flat plains of the Sahara; some central hills" }, "Elevation": { "highest point": { "text": "Kediet Ijill 915 m" }, "lowest point": { "text": "Sebkhet Te-n-Dghamcha -5 m" }, "mean elevation": { "text": "276 m" } }, "Natural resources": { "text": "iron ore, gypsum, copper, phosphate, diamonds, gold, oil, fish" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "38.5% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 0.4% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 38.1% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "0.2% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "61.3% (2018 est.)" } }, "Irrigated land": { "text": "450 sq km (2012)" }, "Major rivers (by length in km)": { "text": "Senegal river mouth (shared with Guinea [s], Senegal and Mali) - 1,641 km
With a sustained total fertility rate of about 3.5 children per woman and almost 60% of the population under the age of 25 as of 2020, Mauritania's population is likely to continue growing for the foreseeable future. Mauritania's large youth cohort is vital to its development prospects, but available schooling does not adequately prepare students for the workplace. Girls continue to be underrepresented in the classroom, educational quality remains poor, and the dropout rate is high. The literacy rate is only about 50%, even though access to primary education has improved since the mid-2000s. Women's restricted access to education and discriminatory laws maintain gender inequality - worsened by early and forced marriages and female genital cutting.
The denial of education to black Moors also helps to perpetuate slavery. Although Mauritania abolished slavery in 1981 (the last country in the world to do so) and made it a criminal offense in 2007, the millenniums-old practice persists largely because anti-slavery laws are rarely enforced and the custom is so ingrained. According to a 2018 nongovernmental organization's report, a little more than 2% of Mauritania's population is enslaved, which includes individuals subjected to forced labor and forced marriage, while many thousands of individuals who are legally free contend with discrimination, poor education, and a lack of identity papers and, therefore, live in de facto slavery. The UN and international press outlets have claimed that up to 20% of Mauritania's population is enslaved, which would be the highest rate worldwide.
Drought, poverty, and unemployment have driven outmigration from Mauritania since the 1970s. Early flows were directed toward other West African countries, including Senegal, Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, and Gambia. The 1989 Mauritania-Senegal conflict forced thousands of black Mauritanians to take refuge in Senegal and pushed labor migrants toward the Gulf, Libya, and Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Mauritania has accepted migrants from neighboring countries to fill labor shortages since its independence in 1960 and more recently has received refugees escaping civil wars, including tens of thousands of Tuaregs who fled Mali in 2012.
Mauritania was an important transit point for Sub-Saharan migrants moving illegally to North Africa and Europe. In the mid-2000s, as border patrols increased in the Strait of Gibraltar, security increased around Spain's North African enclaves (Ceuta and Melilla), and Moroccan border controls intensified, illegal migration flows shifted from the Western Mediterranean to Spain's Canary Islands. In 2006, departure points moved southward along the West African coast from Morocco and then Western Sahara to Mauritania's two key ports (Nouadhibou and the capital Nouakchott), and illegal migration to the Canaries peaked at almost 32,000. The numbers fell dramatically in the following years because of joint patrolling off the West African coast by Frontex (the EU's border protection agency), Spain, Mauritania, and Senegal; the expansion of Spain's border surveillance system; and the 2008 European economic downturn.
" }, "Age structure": { "0-14 years": { "text": "36.11% (male 769,229/female 763,465)" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "59.58% (male 1,197,311/female 1,331,815)" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "4.31% (2023 est.) (male 77,123/female 105,935)" } }, "Dependency ratios": { "total dependency ratio": { "text": "82.7" }, "youth dependency ratio": { "text": "76.8" }, "elderly dependency ratio": { "text": "6" }, "potential support ratio": { "text": "16.8 (2021 est.)" } }, "Median age": { "total": { "text": "21 years" }, "male": { "text": "20.1 years" }, "female": { "text": "22 years (2020 est.)" } }, "Population growth rate": { "text": "1.96% (2023 est.)" }, "Birth rate": { "text": "27.61 births/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Death rate": { "text": "7.33 deaths/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Net migration rate": { "text": "-0.71 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Population distribution": { "text": "with most of the country being a desert, vast areas of the country, particularly in the central, northern, and eastern areas, are without sizeable population clusters; half the population lives in or around the coastal capital of Nouakchott; smaller clusters are found near the southern border with Mali and Senegal as shown in this population distribution map" }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "57.7% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "3.84% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Major urban areas - population": { "text": "1.492 million NOUAKCHOTT (capital) (2023)" }, "Sex ratio": { "at birth": { "text": "1.03 male(s)/female" }, "0-14 years": { "text": "1.01 male(s)/female" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "0.9 male(s)/female" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "0.73 male(s)/female" }, "total population": { "text": "0.93 male(s)/female (2023 est.)" } }, "Mother's mean age at first birth": { "text": "21.8 years (2019/21)", "note": "note: data represents median age at first birth among women 25-49" }, "Maternal mortality ratio": { "text": "465 deaths/100,000 live births (2020 est.)" }, "Infant mortality rate": { "total": { "text": "49.95 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "male": { "text": "55.84 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "female": { "text": "43.89 deaths/1,000 live births (2023 est.)" } }, "Life expectancy at birth": { "total population": { "text": "65.57 years" }, "male": { "text": "63.1 years" }, "female": { "text": "68.12 years (2023 est.)" } }, "Total fertility rate": { "text": "3.46 children born/woman (2023 est.)" }, "Gross reproduction rate": { "text": "1.71 (2023 est.)" }, "Contraceptive prevalence rate": { "text": "11.5% (2019/20)" }, "Drinking water source": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 98.7% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 68.4% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 85.2% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 1.3% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 31.6% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 14.8% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Current health expenditure": { "text": "3.4% of GDP (2020)" }, "Physicians density": { "text": "0.19 physicians/1,000 population (2018)" }, "Sanitation facility access": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 83.5% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 25.2% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 57.5% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 16.5% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 74.8% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 42.5% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Major infectious diseases": { "degree of risk": { "text": "very high (2023)" }, "food or waterborne diseases": { "text": "bacterial and protozoal diarrhea, hepatitis A, and typhoid fever" }, "vectorborne diseases": { "text": "malaria and dengue fever" }, "animal contact diseases": { "text": "rabies" }, "respiratory diseases": { "text": "meningococcal meningitis" }, "note": "note: on 21 March 2022, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a Travel Alert for polio in Africa; Mauritania is currently considered a high risk to travelers for circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (cVDPV); vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) is a strain of the weakened poliovirus that was initially included in oral polio vaccine (OPV) and that has changed over time and behaves more like the wild or naturally occurring virus; this means it can be spread more easily to people who are unvaccinated against polio and who come in contact with the stool or respiratory secretions, such as from a sneeze, of an “infected” person who received oral polio vaccine; the CDC recommends that before any international travel, anyone unvaccinated, incompletely vaccinated, or with an unknown polio vaccination status should complete the routine polio vaccine series; before travel to any high-risk destination, the CDC recommends that adults who previously completed the full, routine polio vaccine series receive a single, lifetime booster dose of polio vaccine" }, "Obesity - adult prevalence rate": { "text": "12.7% (2016)" }, "Alcohol consumption per capita": { "total": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "beer": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "wine": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "spirits": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "other alcohols": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" } }, "Tobacco use": { "total": { "text": "10.7% (2020 est.)" }, "male": { "text": "19.3% (2020 est.)" }, "female": { "text": "2.1% (2020 est.)" } }, "Children under the age of 5 years underweight": { "text": "19.2% (2018)" }, "Currently married women (ages 15-49)": { "text": "66% (2023 est.)" }, "Education expenditures": { "text": "1.9% of GDP (2020 est.)" }, "Literacy": { "definition": { "text": "age 15 and over can read and write" }, "total population": { "text": "67%" }, "male": { "text": "71.8%" }, "female": { "text": "62.2% (2021)" } }, "School life expectancy (primary to tertiary education)": { "total": { "text": "9 years" }, "male": { "text": "8 years" }, "female": { "text": "9 years (2020)" } }, "Youth unemployment rate (ages 15-24)": { "total": { "text": "23%" }, "male": { "text": "20.8%" }, "female": { "text": "27.9% (2021 est.)" } } }, "Environment": { "Environment - current issues": { "text": "overgrazing, deforestation, and soil erosion aggravated by drought are contributing to desertification; limited natural freshwater resources away from the Senegal, which is the only perennial river; locust infestation" }, "Environment - international agreements": { "party to": { "text": "Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands, Whaling" }, "signed, but not ratified": { "text": "none of the selected agreements" } }, "Climate": { "text": "desert; constantly hot, dry, dusty" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "38.5% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 0.4% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 38.1% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "0.2% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "61.3% (2018 est.)" } }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "57.7% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "3.84% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Food insecurity": { "widespread lack of access": { "text": "due to high food prices - according to the latest analysis, over 472,000 people are projected to be in need of humanitarian assistance during the June to August 2023 lean season; this would be an improvement compared to the previous year, mostly due to a substantial increase in cereal production in 2022; high food prices, in particular of imported wheat, continue to worsen acute food security (2023)" } }, "Revenue from forest resources": { "text": "1.3% of GDP (2018 est.)" }, "Revenue from coal": { "text": "0% of GDP (2018 est.)" }, "Air pollutants": { "particulate matter emissions": { "text": "40.82 micrograms per cubic meter (2016 est.)" }, "carbon dioxide emissions": { "text": "2.74 megatons (2016 est.)" }, "methane emissions": { "text": "6.16 megatons (2020 est.)" } }, "Waste and recycling": { "municipal solid waste generated annually": { "text": "454,000 tons (2009 est.)" }, "municipal solid waste recycled annually": { "text": "36,320 tons (2009 est.)" }, "percent of municipal solid waste recycled": { "text": "8% (2009 est.)" } }, "Major rivers (by length in km)": { "text": "Senegal river mouth (shared with Guinea [s], Senegal and Mali) - 1,641 kmMauritania-Algeria: none identified
Mauritania-Mali: there are no border disputes, but the border has not been demarcated; talks on demarcation were reportedly being held in February 2022
Mauritania-Morocco: Mauritanian claims to Western Sahara remain dormant; tensions arose in 2016 when Mauritanian soldiers were deployed to Lagouira, a city in the southernmost part of Morocco, and raised their flag
Mauritania-Senegal: none identified
" }, "Refugees and internally displaced persons": { "refugees (country of origin)": { "text": "26,000 (Sahrawis) (2021); 98,202 (Mali) (2022)" } }, "Trafficking in persons": { "tier rating": { "text": "Tier 2 Watch List — Mauritania does not fully meet the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking but is making significant efforts to do so; the government implemented a new law allowing anti-slavery NGOs to operate more freely, established a permanent anti-trafficking coordinating committee, and increased funding for its national action plan; officials conducted public awareness campaigns, helped organize a sub-regional symposium on combating slavery, and initiated three hereditary slavery investigations; however, Mauritania did not demonstrate overall increasing efforts to expand its anti-trafficking capacity; the government did not prosecute or convict any alleged traffickers, courts effectively dismissed all pending cases against alleged slaveholders from the previous reporting period, and officials did not identify any victims for the fourth consecutive year; because the government has devoted sufficient resources to a written plan that, if implemented, would constitute significant efforts to meet the minimum standards, Mauritania was granted a waiver per the TVPA from an otherwise required downgrade to Tier 3 and, therefore, remained on the Tier 2 Watch List (2022)" }, "trafficking profile": { "text": "human traffickers exploit domestic and foreign victims in Mauritania, as well as Mauritanians abroad; adults and children from traditional slave castes are subjected to slavery-related practices rooted in ancestral master-slave relationships; Mauritanian and other West African boys are trafficked within the country by religious teachers for forced begging; West African women and girls, especially Senegalese and Ivoirians, are exploited in domestic labor and sex trafficking in Mauritania; Sub-Saharan African migrants transiting the port city of Nouadhibou en route to Morocco and Europe are exploited in forced labor and sex trafficking; Mauritanian women and girls, fraudulently recruited for jobs abroad, are transported to Gulf states and subjected to domestic servitude and sex trafficking (2022)" } }, "Illicit drugs": { "text": "NA" } } }