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I
INTRODUCTION
Cape Verde (republic),
republic comprising the Cape Verde Islands, in the Atlantic Ocean, due west of
the westernmost point of Africa, Cape Verde. The archipelago consists of ten
islands and five islets, which are divided into windward and leeward groups. The
windward, or Barlavento, group on the north includes Santo Antão, São Vicente,
São Nicolau, Santa Luzia, Sal, and Boa Vista; the leeward, or Sotavento, group
on the south includes São Tiago, Brava, Fogo, and Maio. Cape Verde has a total
area of 4,033 sq km (1,557 sq mi).
II
LAND AND RESOURCES
The islands are volcanic in
origin, and all but three—Sal, Boa Vista, and Maio—are mountainous. The highest
point, Pico do Cano (2,829 m/9,281 ft) on Fogo, is also the group's only active
volcano. The climate is tropical and dry, showing little variation throughout
the year. The average temperature in Praia, the capital, ranges from 20° to 25°
C (68° to 77° F) in January and 24° to 28° C (75° to 83° F) in July. Winds are
frequent, occasionally carrying clouds of sand from the Sahara Desert in Africa
to the east. Precipitation is slight and irregular, and the islands are subject
to drought. Average precipitation in Praia is 260 mm (10 in), nearly all of
which falls from August through September. Vegetation is sparse and consists of
various shrubs, aloes, and other drought-resistant species. Wildlife is also
limited and includes lizards, monkeys, wild goats, and a variety of birdlife.
Mineral resources are meager and primarily include pozzolana (a volcanic rock
used in making cement) and salt.
III
POPULATION
More than two-thirds of the people
of Cape Verde are of mixed African and European ancestry and are known as
Creoles, or mestiços. Nearly all of the remainder are of African
ancestry. The official language is Portuguese; the national language, however,
is Crioulo, a Creole dialect of archaic Portuguese incorporating many African
elements. Roman Catholicism is the dominant religion. Some 72 percent of the
population is literate.
The census of 1990 counted a
population of 341,491; the estimated population in 1998 was 399,857, giving the
country an overall density of 99 persons per sq km (257 per sq mi). Because Cape
Verde is poor in natural resources and suffers from frequent droughts, it has
experienced large emigration for many years. More people with a Cape Verde
ancestry live outside the country than inside. The population growth rate in
1998 was 1.5 percent annually. Life expectancy at birth was 74 years for women
and 67 years for men. The principal urban centers are Praia (population, 1998
estimate, 95,000), on São Tiago, and Mindelo (1990; 47,109) on São Vicente.
IV
ECONOMY
Although limited by scarce arable
land and diminished by regular drought, agriculture remains an important
economic activity. Staple crops include maize and beans; also cultivated are
sweet potatoes, coconuts, potatoes, cassava, and dates. Some bananas are grown
for export, and sugarcane is raised for the making of rum. Because of its
mountainous terrain, only 9.7 percent of the islands’ area is cultivated.
Subdivision of farms from generation to generation has reduced many farms to a
size smaller than needed for subsistence, and Cape Verde depends on food imports
(much of it in the form of aid) to feed its people.
Cape Verde is located in the midst of rich fishing grounds,
although the industry has yet to develop to its potential. Fish-processing
facilities have been constructed in Mindelo, and the government has initiated
programs to modernize the fishing fleet. The catch in 1996 was 7,081 metric
tons; the catch is usually composed chiefly of skipjack and yellowfin tuna and
wahoo, a type of large mackerel. Some lobsters are caught for export.
Salt is mined on Sal, Boa Vista, and Maio, with annual
production of about 7,000 metric tons. Production has declined to less than
one-quarter of the level achieved in the 1970s, depressed by the lack of steady
markets and readily available ocean transportation, as well as the cost of
repairs to equipment. Pozzolana is extracted for export.
Gross domestic product (GDP) of Cape Verde was $425 million in
1997, or just $1,060 per person. The bulk of exports, valued at $13 million in
1996, are purchased by Portugal, followed by the United Kingdom, Spain, France,
Germany, and the Netherlands. Imports, worth $320 million, come principally from
Portugal, France, and Japan. The economy depends extensively on remittances from
Cape Verdeans living overseas, which help to offset the country's large trade
deficit. The country's basic unit of currency is the Cape Verde escudo
(93.18 escudos equal U.S.$1; 1997 average); 1,000 escudos is known as a conto.
Cape Verde is attempting to capitalize on its strategic location
at the crossroads of mid-Atlantic air and sea lanes by expanding, with the
assistance of foreign aid, airports, and port facilities. Main ports are at
Mindelo and Praia. The international airport at Espargos, on Sal, is a refueling
stop for flights to Africa and South America. A second international airport is
under construction on São Tiago. With unspoiled beaches and a sunny climate, the
government has identified tourism as the primary focus of development, although
the number of visitors in 1997 was only 39,000.
V
GOVERNMENT
A new constitution promulgated in
1992 affirmed Cape Verde as a multiparty democracy, expanding on reforms begun
in 1990 that introduced free and popular elections for president and parliament.
Legislative power is held by the 79-member National Assembly; members are
elected by the voters to five-year terms. The head of state is the president,
also elected to a five-year term. A prime minister holds executive power and is
nominated by the assembly and appointed by the president. In the country's first
multiparty elections in 1991, the presidency and a ruling majority of assembly
seats were won by Movement for Democracy candidates, unseating the African Party
for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV), which had until that time enjoyed a
constitutionally protected rule.
VI
HISTORY
The islands were used by
Senegalese fishers before the first Europeans arrived, about 1456. They were
claimed by Portugal in 1460; Portuguese settlers began to land shortly
afterward. In 1495 the archipelago was declared a crown possession of Portugal,
and slaves were subsequently imported from the African continent to cultivate
the land. After gaining prosperity, the islands became attractive to pirates and
foreign raiders—English, Dutch, and French—who repeatedly attacked during the
following centuries. When the slave trade (for which the islands had served as a
port of call) was abolished in 1876, their importance dwindled, although a
coaling station and a submarine cable station at Mindelo still attracted many
ships until World War I. Trade increased again toward the middle of the 20th
century.
In an attempt to avert growing nationalism, Portugal in 1951
designated its African colonies, including Cape Verde, as overseas provinces.
The provincial status gave Cape Verdeans access to higher education, but lack of
job opportunities and poverty in the islands forced many of the educated to take
administrative jobs on the African mainland. There they began to participate in
growing nationalist movements. Amílcar Cabral, a Cape Verdean, cofounded the
African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (known by its
Portuguese acronym PAIGC) in 1956 in Portuguese Guinea (now Guinea-Bissau). The
party initiated an armed rebellion against Portugal in the early 1960s. For
logistical reasons, the rebels did not attempt to disrupt Portugal's control of
Cape Verde, which was used as a garrison for Portuguese troops fighting on the
mainland. However, desire for independence among Cape Verdeans remained strong
and many residents of the islands went to the mainland to join the rebellion.
A revolution in Portugal in 1974 sparked mass mobilizations in
Cape Verde, which prompted the new Portuguese government to negotiate with the
PAIGC. Talks culminated in independence for Cape Verde on July 5, 1975, ending
five centuries of Portuguese rule. Although the original constitution envisioned
eventual unification with Guinea-Bissau, a coup in that country in 1980 resulted
in strained relations and the dropping of plans for unity.
In 1981 the PAIGC was dissolved
and replaced by the African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV). A
1981 constitution made the PAICV the country's sole political party. Under its
first president, Aristides Pereira, Cape Verde was nonaligned in foreign policy
but heavily dependent on Western aid. Under pressure from church and academic
circles, reforms enacted in 1990 provided for the country's first free
presidential election, won by Antonio Mascarenhas Monteiro in 1991. A new
constitution enshrining the new multiparty system was adopted in 1992. In the
same year the country was named to a two-year position as member of the United
Nations Security Council. Mascarenhas, running uncontested, was reelected in
February 1996 and his party, Movement for Democracy, won a landslide victory in
legislative elections.
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