Government
- Cameroon
is governed under a constitution promulgated
in 1972 and subsequently revised. The president
of the republic is chief of state and commander
of the armed forces and is elected to a five-year
term by universal suffrage. The federal ministers,
incuding the prime minister, are appointed by
the president and by statute are not permitted
to be members of the legislature. The president
also appoints the governors of the ten provinces.
Legislature Legislative power in Cameroon is
vested in the unicameral National Assembly,
which consists of 180 members elected to five-year
terms. The leading political party is the Cameroon
People's Democratic Movement, founded in 1966
as the National Cameroonian Union and renamed
in 1985. Judiciary The judicial system of Cameroon
is largely based on the French system with a
mixture of elements from the British system.
The highest judicial body is the Supreme Court.
Other courts are the appeals courts, regional
courts, and magistrates' courts.
History
- The
coast of present-day Cameroon was explored late
in the 15th century by the Portuguese, who named
the estuary to the south of Mount Cameroon Rio
das Camerões ("river of prawns"). Merchants
established trading stations along the coast
in the 17th century, buying slaves, ivory, and
rubber. British traders and missionaries were
especially active in the area after 1845. The
Germans and British began to explore inland
after 1860, and in 1884 the former established
a protectorate over the Douala area; the British,
taken by surprise, offered no resistance to
their claim. European Rule Transportation difficulties
and local resistance slowed German development
of the area, but they managed to cultivate large
cacao, palm, and rubber plantations. They also
built roads and began the construction of a
railroad and the port of Douala on the Atlantic
coast. Anglo-French forces invaded the German
colony in 1916. In 1919 one-fifth of the territory,
which was contiguous with eastern Nigeria, was
assigned to Great Britain, and the remaining
four-fifths were assigned to France as mandates
under the League of Nations. The British Cameroons
consisted of the Northern and Southern Cameroons,
which were separated by a 72-km (45-mi) strip
along the Benue River. The northern territory,
peopled by tribes of Sudanese origin, was always
administered as a part of Northern Nigeria.
The Southern Cameroons, peopled by a variety
of tribes, was administered as part of the Nigerian
federation but had a locally elected legislature.
The French Cameroons was administered as a separate
territory. Neither area, however, experienced
much social or economic progress. Independence
After World War II ended in 1945, the mandates
were made trust territories of the United Nations
(UN). In the following years political ferment
grew enormously in the French territory, where
more than 100 parties were formed between 1948
and 1960. The campaign for independence, intermittently
violent, gained steady momentum during the 1950s,
until the French granted self-government in
December 1958; full independence was achieved
on January 1, 1960. Ahmadou Ahidjo, prime minister
since 1958, became the first president. The
new republic was admitted to the UN in September
1960. The following year the UN sponsored a
plebiscite in the British Cameroons. As a result,
the Southern Cameroons was federated with the
Republic of Cameroon in October 1961, while
the Northern Cameroons joined Nigeria.Back to
Top Rebellion and Unity When Cameroon became
independent, President Ahidjo's government was
faced with a rebellion incited by the Cameroon
People's Union, a pro-Communist party. By 1963,
however, the revolt had been suppressed, and
Ahidjo soon established the authority of his
regime. In 1966 the six major parties merged
into the National Cameroonian Union, which was
declared the only legal party in the country.
In 1972 Ahidjo sponsored a national referendum
that changed Cameroon from a federal to a unitary
state, called the United Republic of Cameroon.
Reaffirmed in office in 1975 and again in 1980,
President Ahidjo resigned unexpectedly in November
1982. He was succeeded in office by Paul Biya,
the former prime minister. Relations between
Biya and Ahidjo deteriorated, and in July 1983
Ahidjo (who had retained the leadership of the
National Cameroonian Union) went into exile
in France and gave up his party post, which
Biya assumed. Biya won election to his first
full term as president in January 1984. During
the same month, the constitution was amended
to abolish the office of prime minister and
change the country's name to the Republic of
Cameroon. Biya suppressed a coup attempt that
April. In late August 1986 an explosive discharge
of gas from a volcanic lake near the Nigerian
border killed more than 1700 people; international
medical and economic aid was sent to the area.
Biya ran unopposed in the presidential election
of April 1988, held a year ahead of schedule
to coincide with legislative balloting. Facing
rising popular discontent in the early 1990s,
he began to implement political reforms. Biya
won a 40 percent plurality in the nation's first
multiparty presidential election, held in October
1992. Early in 1994 a border dispute arose between
Nigeria and Cameroon after Nigerian troops invaded
Cameroonian territory in the petroleum-rich
Bakassi Peninsula. The Cameroonian government
filed a complaint with the International Court
of Justice and the two nations started negotiations
in March. Nigerian troops led a surprise attack
on the region in September, leaving 10 Cameroonian
soldiers dead.
Geography
- Land
and Resources Cameroon has four distinct topographical
regions. In the south is a coastal plain, a
region of dense equatorial rain forests. In
the center is the Adamawa Massif, a plateau
region with elevations reaching about 1370 m
(about 4500 ft) above sea level. This is a transitional
area where forest gives way in the north to
savanna country. In the far north the savanna
gradually slopes into the marshland surrounding
Lake Chad. In the west is an area of high, forested
mountains of volcanic origin. Located here is
Mount Cameroon (4095 m/14,435 ft), the highest
peak in western Africa and an active volcano.
The country's most fertile soils are found in
this region. Among the principal streams, the
Sanaga and Nyong rivers flow generally west
to the Atlantic Ocean, and the Mbéré and Logone
rivers flow north from the central plateau into
Lake Chad. A network of rivers in the Chad Basin,
including the Benue River, links the country
with the vast Niger River system to the east
and north.Back to Top Climate Cameroon has a
tropical climate, humid in the south but increasingly
dry to the north. On the coast the average annual
rainfall is about 4060 mm (about 160 in). On
the exposed slopes of the Cameroon Mountains
in the west, rainfall is almost constant and
sometimes reaches 10,160 mm (400 in) a year.
In the semiarid northwest annual rainfall averages
about 380 mm (about 15 in). A dry season in
the north lasts from October to April. The average
temperature in the south is 25° C (77° F), on
the plateau it is 21° C (70° F), and in the
north it is 32° C (90° F). Plants and Animals
Cameroon's valuable rain forests contain a number
of species of trees, including oil palms, bamboo
palms, mahogany, teak, ebony, and rubber. Wildlife
is diverse and abundant and includes monkeys,
chimpanzees, gorillas, antelope, lions, and
elephants, as well as numerous species of birds
and snakes. Natural Resources The economy of
Cameroon is dependent primarily on its agricultural
and timber resources, although receipts from
petroleum reserves constitute a primary source
of government revenue. High-yield deposits of
bauxite exist in northern Cameroon. A significant
reserve of natural gas is found near Douala,
but it remains unexploited. A small amount of
gold is mined. Hydroelectric potential is significant;
the largest power station is at Edéa, on the
Sanaga River.Back to Top Population The majority
of the people are farmers who live in small
towns or villages in southern and central Cameroon.
Seminomadic herders inhabit the north. Population
Characteristics The population of Cameroon (1999
estimate) is about 15,435,000. The overall population
density is about 28 persons per sq km (72 per
sq mi). The capital is Yaoundé (population 900,000).
Douala, on the Bight of Biafra, with an estimated
population of 2,500,000, is the chief port.
Other principal towns include Nkongsamba (150,000),
Maroua (123,000), Bafoussam (113,000), and Foumban
(1985 estimate, 50,100). About 25 percent of
the population adheres to traditional religions;
about 22 percent of the population is Muslim;
the remaining majority is Christian. Muslims
predominate in the north and Christians in the
south. Cameroon contains about 200 ethnic groups
who speak 24 major languages. In general, Bantu-speaking
peoples inhabit the south, and Sudanic-speaking
peoples dominate in the north. Among the more
important 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. Education Cameroon
has achieved one of the highest rates of school
attendance in Africa, although the literacy
rate is still just 54 percent. Mission schools
play an important role in education and are
partly subsidized by the government. In the
early 1990s total annual enrollment in primary
and preprimary schools was about 2.1 million,
and in secondary schools, about 410,000. The
University of Yaoundé, which was established
in 1962, has faculties of law, arts, and science.
A total of more than 64,500 students are enrolled
in institutions of higher education.
Economy
- While
agricultural activities are the main occupation
of about 60 percent of the population of Cameroon,
petroleum products constitute more than half
of all exports. In the early 1990s the estimated
national budget showed revenues of about $1.7
billion and expenditures of about $2.4 billion
annually.
- Agriculture
The principal commercial crops in Cameroon are
cacao, coffee, tobacco, cotton, and bananas.In
the early 1990s yearly production of cacao and
coffee, the leading agricultural export commodities,
was about 94,000 metric tons for the former
and 85,000 tons for the latter. Other commercial
products include rubber, palm products, and
sugarcane. Subsistence crops include plantains,
sweet potatoes, cassava, corn, and millet.
- Livestock
raising is important in the Adamawa Massif region.In
the early 1990s the livestock population included
4.7 million head of cattle, 3.6 million goats,
3.6 million sheep, and 1.4 million pigs.
- Forestry
and Fishing Timber is traditionally one of Cameroon's
most valuable exports, consisting mainly of
mahogany, ebony, and teak. The annual timber
cut in the early 1990s amounted to some 14.6
million cu m (515 million cu ft).
- Fishing
is dominated by freshwater subsistence activity.
However, deep-sea fishing activity is increasing,
especially from the port of Douala. About 78,000
metric tons of fish are caught annually.
- Back
to Top Mining and Manufacturing One of the largest
single industrial enterprises in Cameroon is
the aluminum smelting plant at Edéa, which produces
about 92,000 metric tons annually from imported
bauxite.
- The
processing of agricultural products, however,
dominates industrial activity; other manufactures
include textiles, fertilizers, and cement.
- Offshore
petroleum exploitation began in the late 1970s,
and an oil refinery has been built on the coast
at Limboh Point. Cameroon's output of crude
petroleum, mostly for export, reached 61 million
barrels a year during the early 1990s.
- Small
amounts of gold and tin concentrates are also
produced.
- An
exchange rate of 50 CFA francs equal to 1 French
franc was in force until 1994, when the CFA
franc was devalued by 50 percent. The currency
is issued by the Bank of the States of Central
Africa (headquartered in Yaoundé), the central
bank of a monetary union formed by five Central
African states.
- In
the early 1990s, Cameroon's annual exports earned
an estimated $1.8 billion while imports cost
about $1.2 billion. France, the United States,
and the Netherlands are leading partners for
exports; France and Germany are leading partners
for imports.
- Transportation
and Communications Of the approximately 70,050
km (approximately 43,530 mi) of roads, about
11 percent are paved. Unpaved roads are frequently
impassable during the rainy season. The country
has 1104 km (about 686 mi) of railroad. The
overwhelming majority of port traffic is handled
at Douala; Kribi is the country's second port.
The port of Garoua on the Benue River in the
north is open two to three months a year and
handles most of the trade with Nigeria. Cameroon
Airlines provides domestic and international
service.
- The
main international airport is at Douala; three
other international airports and many smaller
airfields exist. The national radio and television
broadcasting system has its headquarters at
Yaoundé and local radio stations in Douala,
Garoua, and Buea.
Sources: "Cameroon," Microsoft® Encarta®
96 Encyclopedia. © 1993-1995 Microsoft Corporation.
All rights reserved, © Funk & Wagnalls Corporation.
All rights reserved, and many more
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