Eritrea Stamps
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![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott38 $12.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 40m Buy It Now for only: $12.00 |
![]() ITALY MASSAUA ERITREA REGISTERED CENSOR COVER TO UNITED STATES 1919 RARE $8.59 (4 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 9h 50m |
![]() ERITREA Libia Somalia 1916 RED CROSS Blocks 100+ Stamps $21.50 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 1d 11h 5m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott4 $15.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 30m Buy It Now for only: $15.00 |
![]() 1934 Eritrea Air Set of 6 SG 216 221 MH Cat 35 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 9m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott41 $16.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 44m Buy It Now for only: $16.00 |
![]() ERITREA 1916 Red Cross 20c on 15c + 5c Grey Marginal Block of 10 $9.99 Time Remaining: 2d 11h 20m |
![]() Eritrea Colonie Italiane PPC sent to Switzerland 1936 $4.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 3h 22m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott28 $18.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 36m Buy It Now for only: $18.00 |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1910 14 Government Building complete set 4v MH $1.49 Time Remaining: 3d 5h 12m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott30 $18.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 39m Buy It Now for only: $18.00 |
![]() ERITREA 1916 15c + 5c Grey RED CROSS Mint Sheet of 50 Stamps $21.50 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 12h 57m |
![]() ITALY Colonia ERITREA MLH $0.99 Time Remaining: 13h 9m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott63 $13.50 Time Remaining: 9d 18h 45m Buy It Now for only: $13.50 |
![]() ITALY Colonia ERITREA $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 13h 7m |
![]() Eritrea 1917 24 SC Q10 HUsed Parcel Post $1.00 Time Remaining: 29d 15h 48m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() FIUME Colonia ERITREA 1925 used $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 12h 53m |
![]() CLASSIC ITALY ITALIA COLONY ERITREA SET VF USED START 1 GBP $5.20 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 14h 17m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott64 $22.00 Time Remaining: 9d 18h 47m Buy It Now for only: $22.00 |
![]() ITALY Colonia Italiane ERITREA $0.99 Time Remaining: 13h 10m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott93 $25.00 Time Remaining: 29d 19h 29m Buy It Now for only: $25.00 |
![]() ERITREA 1903 25c Blue hhm $39.50 Time Remaining: 1d 1h 45m Buy It Now for only: $99.50 |
![]() 1930 Eritrea Ferrucci SG 161 165 MNH Cat 24+ $1.56 Time Remaining: 2d 13h 59m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott8 $30.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 32m Buy It Now for only: $30.00 |
![]() ERITREA 1916 15c + 5c Grey RED CROSS Mint Sheet of 50 Stamps $20.49 (3 Bids) Time Remaining: 12h 58m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott25 $30.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 35m Buy It Now for only: $30.00 |
![]() 1893 ERITREA Italian Colony YT1 1c olive MNG $1.99 Time Remaining: 10h 34m |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1903 VEIII L5 well centered MNH $1.49 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 3d 5h 21m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott87 $30.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 53m Buy It Now for only: $30.00 |
![]() SC ERITREA MINT HINGED C1 6 CV 24 $3.60 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 5d 11h 38m |
![]() Itialian Colony Eritrea Scott47 $25.00 Time Remaining: 29d 18h 46m Buy It Now for only: $25.00 |
![]() 1936 Eritrea Air Selection MH Cat 29 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 16m |
![]() 1930 Eritrea National Defence SG 166 169 MH Cat 150 $7.90 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h |
![]() ERITREA Sc C4 5MI 230 1F VF LH 15 $5.50 Time Remaining: 24d 15h 52m Buy It Now for only: $5.50 |
![]() Italy Colonies San Marino Collection Libia Somalia Benadir Eritrea Many UNUSED $8.00 Time Remaining: 1d 17h 36m |
![]() 1922 Eritrea No59a1 5 Cents Black Ovpt MH OG $1.00 Time Remaining: 27d 16h 16m Buy It Now for only: $1.00 |
![]() 1934 Eritrea Duke of Abruzzi SG 209 215 MH Cat 85 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 8m |
![]() 1936 Eritrea Air 3l Lake SG 245 MH Cat 29 $1.56 Time Remaining: 2d 14h 12m |
![]() ERITREA Sc 158 67MI 204 13F VF USED 45 $15.00 Time Remaining: 24d 14h 3m Buy It Now for only: $15.00 |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1920 26 Postage Due 30c MH $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 2h 47m |
![]() Eritrea J3 MNH SCV17+ $17.00 Time Remaining: 6d 10h 21m Buy It Now for only: $17.00 |
![]() Italy Eritrea 1928 SG130 Fine Used $0.99 Time Remaining: 1d 3h 15m |
![]() ERITREA PARCEL POST MNH $1.99 Time Remaining: 12h 6m |
![]() ERITREA OVERPRINT ON EARLY ITALY ISSUES $10.00 Time Remaining: 16d 17h 7m Buy It Now for only: $10.00 |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1903 Arms 1c inverted overprint variety MNH $1.49 Time Remaining: 3d 5h 15m |
![]() Olympics Athletics Eritrea 053020 $1.50 Time Remaining: 28d 15h 3m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() Eritrea 1936 Italian Administration airmail MH $0.99 Time Remaining: 2h 35m |
![]() Eritrea Scott International Pages Stamps Collection Italy $4.95 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 1d 21h 25m |
![]() Olympics Athletics Eritrea 053021 $1.50 Time Remaining: 28d 15h 3m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() 1931 Eritrea St Anthony SG 184 190 MH Cat 22 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 2m |
![]() Eritrea 1936 cover canc POSTA MILITARE N84 $20.00 Time Remaining: 19d 14h 29m Buy It Now for only: $20.00 |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES 1944 OCCUPATION OF ERITREA $7.50 Time Remaining: 2d 12h 55m Buy It Now for only: $8.50 |
![]() Eritrea 1999 Registered Cover to US Wildlife Strip Nice $6.00 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 14h 10m |
![]() Athletics Olympics Eritrea 053037 $1.50 Time Remaining: 28d 15h 4m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() ITALY ERITREA registered cover from ASMARA 1920 to Milano $9.00 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 3d 9h 45m |
![]() Olympics Athletics Eritrea 053038 $1.50 Time Remaining: 28d 15h 4m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() ERITREA 003 1910 25c Blue Perf 13 some raged SG 37 FU $2.83 Time Remaining: 3h 42m |
![]() ERITREA 002 1910 15c Slate Perf 13 thin topRcrSG 36 FU $3.15 Time Remaining: 3h 42m |
![]() Eritrea 1903 Postage Due 5c Sc J1 MH $7.00 Time Remaining: 6d 11h 24m Buy It Now for only: $7.00 |
![]() ITALY ERITREA cover from ADI UGRI 1927 to Rome $7.00 Time Remaining: 3d 9h 41m |
![]() Eritrea Scott 132 used stamp $6.00 Time Remaining: 20d 14h 36m Buy It Now for only: $6.00 |
![]() ITALY ERITREA STAMP MNH $3.00 Time Remaining: 12h 53m |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1939 Authorized Delivery stamp 10c MNH $1.49 Time Remaining: 3d 5h 7m |
![]() Independent Eritrea 1993 Flag of Eritrea Blue Border Scott 205 210 $165.35 Time Remaining: 29d 22m Buy It Now for only: $165.35 |
![]() ERITREA 1929 National Defense set of 4 lhm $4.50 Time Remaining: 1d 1h 45m Buy It Now for only: $9.50 |
![]() Independent Eritrea 2001 MNH Wild Animals of Eritrea Scott 351 352 $4.85 Time Remaining: 21d 22h 54m Buy It Now for only: $4.85 |
![]() Eritrea 1934 SC C1 6 Air Post Colonial Arts Exhibit Set MLH $5.99 Time Remaining: 2d 18h 52m |
![]() ERITREA SCARCE VARIETY on POSTAGE DUE cat 65 $3.48 (2 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 28m |
![]() Independent Eritrea 2002 Martyrs Day Scott 360 363 $4.75 Time Remaining: 21d 22h 59m Buy It Now for only: $4.75 |
![]() ITALY ERITREA pc cancel ASMARA 1914 to CHEREN $9.00 Time Remaining: 3d 9h 44m |
![]() Olympics Athletics Ski Eritrea 053034 $1.50 Time Remaining: 28d 15h 4m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() ITALIAN COLONIES ERITREA 1903 Arms 1c with inverted overprinted used value $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 3h 4m |
![]() Eritrea selection of stamps $1.58 Time Remaining: 5h 25m |
![]() Eritrea 1930 Postman 5c MH $4.00 Time Remaining: 6d 11h 24m Buy It Now for only: $4.00 |
![]() 1927 Eritrea National Defence SG 116 119 MH Cat 16 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 13h 54m |
![]() Art Nude Eritrea Private issue 012540 $1.50 Time Remaining: 6d 3h 24m Buy It Now for only: $1.50 |
![]() Eritrea Italy 50 Cent Stamp c1903 Used $1.56 Time Remaining: 11h 31m |
![]() Eritrea SC 119 21 MH Used 3 stamps from set Issued in 1930 $6.48 Time Remaining: 4d 15h 46m |
![]() Overprint ERITREA European ITALIAN STAMPS 3 Pages Old Collection LOT 1310L $29.00 Time Remaining: 15d 14h 42m Buy It Now for only: $29.00 |
![]() ITALY COLONIE ERITREA SERIE USED $3.00 Time Remaining: 2d 8h 34m |
![]() Independent Eritrea 2004 Ope Fenkil Liberation of Massawa Scott 377 379 $6.75 Time Remaining: 21d 22h 59m Buy It Now for only: $6.75 |
![]() 1934 Eritrea Postage Set of 6 SG 222 227 MH Cat 35 $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 10m |
![]() 1936 Eritrea Air 5l Green SG 246 MNH Cat 16+ $1.56 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 14m |
![]() Eritrea to US 1935 Multifranked Cover With Sc 160 x 3 164 $9.99 Time Remaining: 18d 21h Buy It Now for only: $9.99 |
![]() ITALY Colonia ERITREA int difer Old stamps $0.99 Time Remaining: 13h 18m |
![]() ERITREA Sc 58 64 MINT LH $18.00 Time Remaining: 20d 16h 28m Buy It Now for only: $18.00 |
![]() ITALY Colonia ERITREA int difer Old stamps $0.99 Time Remaining: 13h 21m |
![]() Italian Colonies 1933 Eritrea Airmails C13 19 Mint 154 $80.00 Time Remaining: 3d 11h 10m |
![]() Independent Eritrea 1996 MNH Summer Olympics Atlanta Scott 267 270 $11.80 Time Remaining: 13d 21h 34m Buy It Now for only: $11.80 |
![]() Eritrea SC J19 J21 J23 MH 3 Postage Due stamps Issued in 1934 $6.88 Time Remaining: 4d 15h 50m |
![]() Independent Eritrea 1993 Referendum for Eritrea Independence Scott 200 204 $27.85 Time Remaining: 29d 21m Buy It Now for only: $27.85 |
![]() ITALY Colonia ERITREA $0.99 (1 Bid) Time Remaining: 13h 40m |
![]() Eritrea Italy 5 Cent Overprint Stamp c1916 Used $1.56 Time Remaining: 11h 37m |
![]() 1926 Asmara Eritrea real picture postcard cover to USA Native Girls RPPC $149.99 Time Remaining: 27d 18h 40m Buy It Now for only: $149.99 |
![]() Italy Cols Eritrea 1934 Exhibition Complete mnh 12 $36.34 Time Remaining: 11h 18m |
![]() ITALY COLONY ERITREA CAMEL PLANE MLH STAMP 80 $33.00 Time Remaining: 25d 15h 59m Buy It Now for only: $33.00 |
![]() ERITREA FINE USED RANGE ON ALBUM LEAF $2.85 (3 Bids) Time Remaining: 2d 14h 28m |
![]() Eritrea Italy 5 Lire Stamp c1903 Used $1.56 Time Remaining: 11h 35m |
![]() 1934 ERITREA TSET5SECOND COLONIAL ARTS EXHIBITIONN $9.99 Time Remaining: 13d 16h 8m Buy It Now for only: $9.99 |
![]() STAMPS ERITREA ITALY MH F24701 $0.99 Time Remaining: 2d 18h 17m |
Eritrea Stamps

Central African Republic
History
Main article: History of the Central African Republic
Pre-history
Between about 1000 BC and 1000 AD, Adamawa-Eastern-speaking peoples spread eastward from Cameroon to Sudan and settled in most of the territory of the CAR. During the same period, a much smaller number of Bantu-speaking immigrants settled in Southwestern CAR and some Central Sudanic-speaking populations settled along the Oubangi.
The majority of the CAR's inhabitants thus speak Adamawa-Eastern languages or Bantu languages belonging to the Niger-Congo family. A minority speak Central Sudanic languages of the Nilo-Saharan family. More recent immigrants include many Muslim merchants who most often speak Arabic or Hausa.
Exposure to the outside world
Until the early 1800s, the peoples of the CAR lived beyond the expanding Islamic frontier in the Sudanic zone of Africa and thus had relatively little contact with Abrahamic religions or northern economies. During the first decades of the nineteenth century, however, Muslim traders began increasingly to penetrate the region of the CAR and to cultivate special relations with local leaders in order to facilitate their trade and settlement in the region.
The initial arrival of Muslim traders in the early 1800s was relatively peaceful and depended upon the support of local peoples, but after about 1850, slave traders with well-armed soldiers began to penetrate the region. Between c. 1860 and 1910, slave traders from Sudan, Chad, Cameroon, Dar al-Kuti in Northern CAR and Nzakara and Zande states in Southeastern CAR exported much of the population of Eastern CAR, a region with very few inhabitants today.
French colonialism
Main article: Ubangi-Shari
Oubangui-Chari in 1910
European penetration of Central African territory began in the late nineteenth century during the so-called Scramble for Africa (c. 18751900). Count Savorgnan de Brazza took the lead in establishing the French Congo with headquarters in the city named after him, Brazzaville, and sent expeditions up the Ubangi River in an effort to expand France's claims to territory in Central Africa. King Leopold II of Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom also competed to establish their claims to territory in the Central African region.
In 1889 the French established a post on the Ubangi River at Bangui, the future capital of Ubangi-Shari and the CAR. De Brazza then sent expeditions in 189091 up the Sangha River in what is now Southwestern CAR, up the center of the Ubangi basin toward Lake Chad, and eastward along the Ubangi River toward the Nile. De Brazza and the procolonial in France wished to expand the borders of the French Congo to link up with French territories in West Africa, North Africa and East Africa.
In 1894, the French Congo's borders with Leopold II's Congo Free State and German Cameroon were fixed by diplomatic agreements. Then, in 1899, the French Congo's border with Sudan was fixed along the Congo-Nile watershed, leaving France without her much coveted outlet on the Nile and turning Southeastern Ubangi-Shari into a cul-de-sac.
Once European negotiators agreed upon the borders of the French Congo, France had to decide how to pay for the costly occupation, administration, and development of the territory. The reported financial successes of Leopold II's concessionary companies in the Congo Free State convinced the French government in 1899 to grant 17 private companies large concessions in the Ubangi-Shari region. In return for the right to exploit these lands by buying local products and selling European goods, the companies promised to pay rent to the colonial state and to promote the development of their concessions. The companies employed European and African agents who frequently used extremely brutal and atrocious methods to force Central Africans to work for them. At the same time, the French colonial administration began to force Central Africans to pay taxes and to provide the state with free labor. The companies and French administration often collaborated in their efforts to force Central Africans to work for their benefit, but they also often found themselves at odds.
Some French officials reported abuses committed by private company militias and even by their own colonial colleagues and troops, but efforts to bring these criminals to justice almost always failed. When news of atrocities committed against Central Africans by concessionary company employees and colonial officials or troops reached France and caused an outcry, there were investigations and some feeble attempts at reform, but the situation on the ground in Ubangi-Shari remained essentially the same.
Stamp from 1924
In the meantime, during the first decade of French colonial rule (c. 19001910), the rulers of African states in the Ubangi-Shari region increased their slave raiding activities and also their sale of local products to European companies and the colonial state. They took advantage of their treaties with the French to procure more weapons which were used to capture more slaves and so much of the eastern half of Ubangi-Shari was depopulated as a result of the export of Central Africans by local rulers during the first decade of colonial rule. Those who had power, Africans and Europeans, often made life miserable for those who did not have the power to resist.
During the second decade of colonial rule (c. 19101920), armed employees of private companies and the colonial state continued to use brutal methods to deal with local populations who resisted forced labor but the power of local African rulers was destroyed and so slave raiding was greatly diminished. In 1911, the Sangha and Lobaye basins were ceded to Germany as part of an agreement which gave France a free-hand in Morocco and so Western Ubangi-Shari came under German rule until World War I, during which France reconquered this territory by using Central African troops.
The third decade of colonial rule (19201930) was a period of transition during which a network of roads was built, cash crops were promoted, mobile health services were formed to combat sleeping sickness, and Protestant missions established stations in different parts of the country. New forms of forced labor were also introduced, however, as the French conscripted large numbers of Ubangians to work on the Congo-Ocean Railway and many of these recruits died of exhaustion and illness.
In 1925 the French writer Andr Gide published Voyage au Congo in which he described the alarming consequences of conscription for the Congo-Ocean railroad and exposed the continuing atrocities committed against Central Africans in Western Ubangi-Shari by employees of the Forestry Company of Sangha-Ubangi, for example. In 1928 a major insurrection, the Kongo-Wara 'war of the hoe handle' broke out in Western Ubangi-Shari and continued for several years. The extent of this insurrection, perhaps the largest anticolonial rebellion in Africa during the interwar years, was carefully hidden from the French public because it provided evidence, once again, of strong opposition to French colonial rule and forced labor.
During the fourth decade of colonial rule (c. 19301940), cotton, tea, and coffee emerged as important cash crops in Ubangi-Shari and the mining of diamonds and gold began in earnest. Several cotton companies were granted purchasing monopolies over large areas of cotton production and were thus able to fix the prices paid to cultivators in order to assure profits for their shareholders. Europeans established coffee plantations and Central Africans also began to cultivate coffee.
The fifth decade of colonial rule (c. 19401950) was shaped by the Second World War and the political reforms which followed in its wake. In September 1940 pro-Gaullist French officers took control of Ubangi-Shari.
Independence
On 1 December 1958 the colony of Ubangi-Shari became an autonomous territory within the French Community and took the name Central African Republic. The founding father and president of the Conseil de Gouvernement, Barthlmy Boganda, died in a mysterious plane accident in 1959, just eight days before the last elections of the colonial era. On 13 August 1960 the Central African Republic gained its independence and two of Boganda's closest aides, Abel Goumba and David Dacko, became involved in a power struggle. With the backing of the French, Dacko took power and soon had Goumba arrested. By 1962 President Dacko had established a one-party state.
On 31 December 1965 Dacko was overthrown in the Saint-Sylvestre coup d'tat by Colonel Jean-Bdel Bokassa, who suspended the constitution and dissolved the National Assembly. President Bokassa declared himself President for life in 1972, and named himself Emperor Bokassa I of the Central African Empire on 4 December 1976. A year later, Emperor Bokassa crowned himself in a lavish and expensive ceremony that was ridiculed by much of the world. In 1979 France carried out a coup against Bokassa and "restored" Dacko to power. Dacko, in turn, was overthrown in a coup by General Andr Kolingba on 1 September 1981.
Kolingba suspended the constitution and ruled with a military junta until 1985. He introduced a new constitution in 1986 which was adopted by a nationwide referendum. Membership in his new party, the Rassemblement Dmocratique Centrafricain (RDC) was voluntary. In 1987, semi-competitive elections to parliament were held and municipal elections were held in 1988. Kolingba's two major political opponents, Abel Goumba and Ange-Flix Patass, boycotted these elections because their parties were not allowed to compete.
By 1990, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a pro-democracy movement became very active. In May 1990 a letter signed by 253 prominent citizens asked for the convocation of a National Conference but Kolingba refused this request and detained several opponents. Pressure from the United States, more reluctantly from France, and from a group of locally represented countries and agencies called GIBAFOR (France, USA, Germany, Japan, EU, World Bank and UN) finally led Kolingba to agree, in principle, to hold free elections in October 1992, with help from the UN Office of Electoral Affairs. After using the excuse of alleged irregularities to suspend the results of the elections as a pretext for holding on to power, President Kolingba came under intense pressure from GIBAFOR to establish a "Conseil National Politique Provisoire de la Rpublique" (Provisional National Political Council) (CNPPR) and to set up a "Mixed Electoral Commission" which included representatives from all political parties.
When elections were finally held in 1993, again with the help of the international community, Ange-Flix Patass came in first in the first round and Kolingba came in fourth after Abel Goumba and David Dacko. In the second round, Patass won 53 percent of the vote while Goumba won 45.6 percent. Most of Patass's support came from Gbaya, Kare and Kaba voters in seven heavily populated prefectures in the northwest while Goumba's support came largely from ten less-populated prefectures in the south and east. Furthermore, Patass's party, the Mouvement pour la Libration du Peuple Centrafricain (MLPC) or Movement for the Liberation of the Central African People gained a simple but not an absolute majority of seats in parliament, which meant Patass needed coalition partners.
Patass relieved former President Kolingba of his military rank of general in March 1994 and then charged several former ministers with various crimes. Patass also removed many Yakoma from important, lucrative posts in the government. Two hundred mostly Yakoma members of the presidential guard were also dismissed or reassigned to the army. Kolingba's RDC loudly proclaimed that Patass's government was conducting a "witch hunt" against the Yakoma.
A new constitution was approved on 28 December 1994 and promulgated on 14 January 1995, but this constitution, like those before it, did not have much impact on the practice of politics. In 19961997, reflecting steadily decreasing public confidence in its erratic behaviour, three mutinies against Patass's government were accompanied by widespread destruction of property and heightened ethnic tension. On 25 January 1997, the Bangui Peace Accords were signed which provided for the deployment of an inter-African military mission, the Mission Interafricaine de Surveillance des Accords de Bangui (MISAB). Mali's former president, Amadou Tour, served as chief mediator and brokered the entry of ex-mutineers into the government on 7 April 1997. The MISAB mission was later replaced by a U.N. peacekeeping force, the Mission des Nations Unies en RCA (MINURCA).
In 1998 parliamentary elections resulted in Kolingba' RDC winning 20 out of 109 seats, which constituted a comeback, but in 1999, notwithstanding widespread public anger in urban centers with his corrupt rule, Patass won free elections to become president for a second term. On 28 May 2001 rebels stormed strategic buildings in Bangui in an unsuccessful coup attempt. The army chief of staff, Abel Abrou, and General Francois N'Djadder Bedaya were shot, but Patass regained the upper hand by bringing in at least 300 troops of the rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba from over the river in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and by Libyan soldiers.
In the aftermath of this failed coup, militias loyal to Patass sought revenge against rebels in many neighborhoods of the capital, Bangui, that resulted in the destruction of many homes as well as the torture and murder of many opponents. Eventually Patass came to suspect that General Franois Boziz was involved in another coup attempt against him and so Boziz fled with loyal troops to Chad. In March 2003, Boziz launched a surprise attack against Patass, who was out of the country. Libyan troops and some 1,000 soldiers of Bemba's Congolese rebel organization failed to stop the rebels, who took control of the country and thus succeeded in overthrowing Patass.
Franois Boziz suspended the constitution and named a new cabinet which included most opposition parties. Abel Goumba, "Mr. Clean", was named vice-president, which gave Boziz's new government a positive image. Boziz established a broad-based National Transition Council to draft a new constitution and announced that he would step down and run for office once the new constitution was approved. A national dialogue was held from 15 September to 27 October 2003, and Boziz won a fair election that excluded Patass, to be elected president on a second ballot, in May 2005.
Humanitarian situation, peacebuilding, and development
The Central African Republic is heavily dependent upon multilateral foreign aid and the presence of numerous NGOs which provide services which the government fails to provide. As one UNDP official put it, the CAR is a country "sous serum," or a country metaphorically hooked up to an IV. (Mehler 2005:150). The very presence of numerous foreign personnel and organizations in the country, including peacekeepers and even refugee camps, provides an important source of revenue for many Central Africans.
The country is self-sufficient in food crops, but much of the population lives at a subsistence level. Livestock development is hindered by the presence of the tsetse fly.
In 2006 due to ongoing violence, over 50,000 in the country's north-west were at risk of starvation, and this was only averted thanks to United Nations support.[citation needed]
Peacebuilding Commission places Central African Republic on agenda On 12 June 2008, the Central African Republic became the fourth country to be placed on the agenda of the UN Peacebuilding Commission, which was set up in 2005 to help countries emerging from conflict avoid the slide back into war or chaos. The 31-member body agreed to take up the situation after a request from the government.
Peacebuilding Fund The Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon declared on 8 January 2008 that the Central African Republic was eligible to receive assistance from the Peacebuilding Fund. Three priority areas were identified: 1) Security sector reform 2) Promotion of good governance and the rule of law and 3) Revitalization of communities affected by conflicts.
Politics
Main article: Politics of the Central African Republic
Franois Boziz is President of the country. A new constitution was approved by voters in a referendum held on December 5, 2004. Full multiparty presidential and parliamentary elections were held in March 2005, with a second round in May. Boziz was declared the winner after a run-off vote.
In February 2006, there were reports of widespread violence in the northern part of the CAR. Thousands of refugees fled their homes, caught in the crossfire of battles between government troops and rebel forces. More than 7,000 people fled to neighboring Chad. Those who remained in the CAR told of government troops systematically killing men and boys suspected of cooperating with rebels.
Prefectures and sub-prefectures
Prefectures of the Central African Republic
Main articles: Prefectures of the Central African Republic and Sub-prefectures of the Central African Republic
The Central African Republic is divided into 14 administrative prefectures (prfectures), along with 2 economic prefectures (prfectures economiques) and one autonomous commune. The prefectures are further divided into 71 sub-prefectures (sous-prfectures).
The prefectures include:
Bamingui-Bangoran
Basse-Kotto
Haute-Kotto
Haut-Mbomou
Kmo
Lobaye
Mambr-Kad
Mbomou
Nana-Mambr
Ombella-M'Poko
Ouaka
Ouham
Ouham-Pend
Vakaga
the two economic prefectures are Nana-Grbizi and Sangha-Mbar; the commune is Bangui.
Geography
Main article: Geography of the Central African Republic
Satellite image of Central African Republic, generated from raster graphics data supplied by The Map Library
Map of the Central African Republic
Ubangi River on the outskirts of Bangui.
The Central African Republic is a land-locked nation within the interior of the African continent. It is bordered by the countries of Cameroon, Chad, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Republic of the Congo.
Much of the country consists of flat, or rolling plateau savanna, typically about 1,640 feet (500 m) above sea level, of which most of the northern half lies within the World Wildlife Fund's East Sudanian savanna ecoregion. In the northeast are the Fertit Hills, and there are scattered hills in southwest part of the country. To the northwest is the Yade Massif, a granite plateau with an altitude of 3,750 feet (1,143 m).
At 240,519 square miles (622,941 km2), the Central African Republic is the world's 42nd-largest country. It is comparable in size to the Ukraine, and is somewhat smaller than the US state of Texas.
Much of the southern border is formed by tributaries of the Congo River, with the Mbomou River in the east merging with the Uele River to form the Ubangi River. In the west, the Sangha River flows through part of the country. The eastern border lies along the edge of the Nile river watershed.
Estimates of the amount of the country covered by forest ranges up to 8%, with the densest parts in the south. The forest is highly diverse, and includes commercially important species of Ayous, Sapelli and Sipo. The deforestation rate is 0.4% per annum, and lumber poaching is commonplace.
The climate of the C.A.R. is generally tropical. The northern areas are subject to harmattan winds, which are hot, dry, and carry dust. The northern regions have been subject to desertification, and the northeast is desert. The remainder of the country is prone to flooding from nearby rivers.
In the November 2008 issue of National Geographic, the Central African Republic was named the country least affected by light pollution.
Economy
Main article: Economy of the Central African Republic
A boy playing with a burnt kerosene lamp in the city of Birao, Central African Republic. The town was almost completely burnt down in March 2007 during fighting between rebels and government troops.
The economy of the CAR is dominated by the cultivation and sale of food crops such as cassava, peanuts, maize, sorghum, millet, sesame, plantain and sara[disambiguation needed]. The annual real GDP growth rate is just above 3%. The importance of foodcrops over exported cash crops is indicated by the fact that the total production of cassava, the staple food of most Central Africans, ranges between 200,000 and 300,000 tons a year, while the production of cotton, the principal exported cash crop, ranges from 25,000 to 45,000 tons a year. Foodcrops are not exported in large quantities but they still constitute the principal cash crops of the country because Central Africans derive far more income from the periodic sale of surplus foodcrops than from exported cash crops such as cotton or coffee.
The CAR's largest import partner is South Korea (20.2%), followed by France (13.6%) and Cameroon (7.7%), while its largest export partner is Japan (40.4%), followed by Belgium (9.8%) and China (8.2%).
Many rural and urban women also transform foodcrops into alcoholic drinks such as sorghum beer or hard liquor and derive considerable income from the sale of these drinks. Much of the income derived from the sale of foods and alcohol is not "on the books" and thus is not considered in calculating per capita income, which is one reason why official figures for per capita income are not accurate in the case of the CAR.
The per capita income of the CAR is often listed as being around $300 a year, said to be one of the lowest in the world, but this figure is based mostly on reported sales of exports and largely ignores the more important but unregistered sale of foods, locally produced alcohol, diamonds, ivory, bushmeat, and traditional medicine, for example. The informal economy of the CAR is more important than the formal economy for most Central Africans.
Diamonds constitute the most important export of the CAR, accounting for 4055% of export revenues, but an estimated 3050% of the diamonds produced each year leave the country clandestinely. Export trade is hindered by poor economic development, and the location of this country far from the coast.
The wilderness regions of this country have potential as ecotourist destinations. The country is noted for its population of forest elephants. In the southwest, the Dzanga-Sangha National Park is a rain forest area. To the north, the Manovo-Gounda St Floris National Park has been well-populated with wildlife, including leopards, lions, and rhinos. To the northeast the Bamingui-Bangoran National Park. However the population of wildlife in these parks has severely diminished over the past 20 years due to poaching, particularly from the neighboring Sudan.
The CAR is a member of the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa (OHADA).
The CAR is ranked 180 out of 181 on 'ease of business' in the 2009 Doing Business Report of the World Bank Group. The 'ease of business' ranking uses a composite index on regulations that enhance business activity and those that constrain it.
Demographics
Main article: Demographics of the Central African Republic
A village in the Central African Republic
The population has almost quadrupled since independence. In 1960 the population was 1,232,000. Now the population is 4,422,000. (2009 UN est.) Note: estimates for this country take into account the effects of excess mortality due to AIDS; this can result in lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality and death rates, lower population and growth rates, and changes in the distribution of population by age and sex than would otherwise be expected.
The United Nations estimates that approximately 11% of the population aged 15 49 is HIV positive. Only 3% of the country has antiretroviral therapy available, compared to 17% coverage in neighbouring countries of Chad and the Republic of the Congo.
The nation is divided into over 80 ethnic groups, each having its own language. The largest ethnic groups are the Baya 33%, Banda 27%, Mandjia 13%, Sara 10%, Mboum 7%, M'Baka 4%, and Yakoma 4%, with 2% others, including Europeans of mostly French descent.
Health
Main article: Health in the Central African Republic
Female life expectancy at birth was 48.2 and male life expectancy at birth was at 45.1 in 2007. The fertility rate is at about five births per woman. Government expenditure on health was at US$ 20 (PPP) per person in 2006. There were 8 physicians per 100,000 people in 2004. Government expenditure on health was at 10.9 % of total government expenditure in 2006.
Religion
Main article: Religion in the Central African Republic
Religion in the Central African Republic
religion
percent
Christian
50%
Indigenous
35%
Islam
15%
Christians form 50 percent of the population, while 35 percent of the population maintain Indigenous beliefs, and Islam is practiced by approximately 15 percent of the country's population.
There are many missionary groups operating in the country, including Lutherans, Baptists, Catholics, Grace Brethren, and Jehovah's Witnesses. While these missionaries are predominantly from the United States, France, Italy, and Spain, many are also from Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and other African countries. Many missionaries left the country due to fighting between rebel and government forces in 2002 and 2003. Many have now returned to the country and resumed their activities.
Culture
Music
Main article: Music of the Central African Republic
Education
Main article: Education in the Central African Republic
Public education in the Central African Republic is free, and education is compulsory from ages 6 to 14. About half the adult population of the country is illiterate. The country has the University of Bangui.
See also
List of writers from the Central African Republic
See also
Africa portal
Main article: Outline of the Central African Republic
List of Central African Republic-related topics
Transport in the Central African Republic
References
^ Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division (2009) (.PDF). World Population Prospects, Table A.1. 2008 revision. United Nations. http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2008/wpp2008_text_tables.pdf. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
^ a b c d "Central African Republic". International Monetary Fund. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2009/02/weodata/weorept.aspx?sy=2006&ey=2009&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=626&s=NGDPD,NGDPDPC,PPPGDP,PPPPC,LP&grp=0&a=&pr.x=53&pr.y=9. Retrieved 2009-10-01.
^ Which side of the road do they drive on? Brian Lucas. August 2005. Retrieved 2009-01-28
^ List of countries by Human Development Index
^ HS Foreign 24.4.2001 Did the Central African Republic surpass Finland in environmental affairs?
^ "Thousands could die of starvation, says United Nations spokesperson Maurizio Giuliano". http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=58581.
^ http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/pbc39.doc.htm
^ http://www.unpbf.org/CAR.shtml
^ Reuters AlertNet CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Polls results to be announced on 22 May, official says
^ BBC NEWS World | Africa | Country profiles | Timeline: Central African Republic
^ BBC NEWS Africa | Thousands flee new CAR 'rebels'
^ BBC NEWS Africa | Thousands flee from CAR violence
^ Sold Down the River (English) March 2001, Forests Monitor
^ The Forests of the Congo Basin: State of the Forest 2006. CARPE 13-Jul-07
^ https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2050.html?countryName=China&countryCode=ch®ionCode=eas&#ch
^ https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2061.html?countryName=China&countryCode=ch®ionCode=eas&#ch
^ OHADA.com: The business law portal in Africa, http://www.ohada.com/index.php, retrieved 2009-03-22
^ http://www.doingbusiness.org/Documents/CountryProfiles/CAF.pdf
^ Countries
^ http://data.unaids.org/pub/GlobalReport/2006/2006_GR_ANN3_en.pdf
^ a b c d http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/data_sheets/cty_ds_CAF.html
^ http://www.afro.who.int/home/countries/fact_sheets/car.pdf
^ the World Factbook
^ U.S. Department of State
^ "Central African Republic". Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor (2001). Bureau of International Labor Affairs, U.S. Department of Labor (2002). ^ http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/car_statistics.html
Further reading
Kalck, Pierre, Historical Dictionary of the Central African Republic, 2004
Petringa, Maria, Brazza, A Life for Africa (2006) ISBN 978-1-4259-1198-0
Titley, Brian, Dark Age: The Political Odyssey of Emperor Bokassa, 2002
External links
Find more about Central African Republic on Wikipedia's sister projects:
Definitions from Wiktionary
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Government
Central African Republic Online
Chief of State and Cabinet Members
Overviews
Country Profile from BBC News
Central African Republic entry at The World Factbook
Central African Republic from UCB Libraries GovPubs
Central African Republic at the Open Directory Project
Wikimedia Atlas of the Central African Republic
News
Humanitarian news and analysis from IRIN Central African Republic
Central African Republic news headline links from AllAfrica.com
(French) RCA Info
Cultural
Baka Pygmies Culture and music of the first inhabitants of the Central African Republic, with photos and ethnographic notes
Tourism
Central African Republic travel guide from Wikitravel
Other
Central African Republic Pictures
location of Central African Republic on a 3D globe (Java)
Central African Republic at Humanitarian and Development Partnership Team (HDPT)
Central African Republic reports from Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers
Johann Hari in Birao, Central African Republic Inside France's Secret War from The Independent, October 5, 2007
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Central African Republic topics
Politics and government
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History
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See also: List of Central African Republic-related topics
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Former French colonies in Africa and the Indian Ocean
Mahgreb
Algeria Morocco (Arguin Island) Tunisia
French West Africa
Cte d'Ivoire Dahomey French Sudan Guinea Mauritania Niger Senegal Upper Volta
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Geographic locale
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Countries and territories of Africa
West Africa
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North Africa
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Central Africa
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East Africa
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Partially in Africa
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Dependencies
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Disputed areas
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International membership
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African Union (AU)
Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Cte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Equatorial Guinea Gabon The Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic So Tom and Prncipe Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Zambia Zimbabwe
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Community of Sahel-Saharan States
Benin Burkina Faso Central African Republic Chad Comoros Cte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Eritrea The Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Liberia Libya Mali Morocco Niger Nigeria Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia Sudan Togo Tunisia
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Member states and observers of the Francophonie
Members
Albania Andorra Armenia Belgium (French Community) Benin Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada (New Brunswick Quebec) Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Cyprus1 Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the Congo Cte d'Ivoire Djibouti Dominica Egypt Equatorial Guinea France (French Guiana Guadeloupe Martinique St. Pierre and Miquelon) Gabon Ghana1 Greece Guinea Guinea-Bissau Haiti Laos Luxembourg Lebanon Macedonia2 Madagascar Mali Mauritania Mauritius Moldova Monaco Morocco Niger Romania Rwanda St. Lucia So Tom and Prncipe Senegal Seychelles Switzerland Togo Tunisia Vanuatu Vietnam
Observers
Austria Croatia Czech Republic Georgia Hungary Latvia Lithuania Mozambique Poland Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Thailand Ukraine
1 Associate member. 2 Provisionally referred to by the Francophonie as the "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia"; see Macedonia naming dispute.
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Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC)
Members
Afghanistan Albania Algeria Azerbaijan Bahrain Bangladesh Benin Burkina Faso Brunei Cameroon Chad Comoros Cte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Gabon Gambia Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Indonesia Iran Iraq Jordan Kuwait Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Lebanon Libya Maldives Malaysia Mali Mauritania Morocco Mozambique Niger Nigeria Oman Pakistan Palestine Qatar Saudi Arabia Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia Sudan Suriname Syria Tajikistan Turkey Tunisia Togo Turkmenistan Uganda Uzbekistan United Arab Emirates Yemen
Observers
Countries and territories
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Muslim communities
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International organizations
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Languages
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Niger-Congo-speaking nations
Kordofanian
Sudan
Mande
Gambia
Guinea
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Mali
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Nigeria
Burkina Faso
Benin
Togo
Atlantic-Congo
Atlantic
Benin
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Cameroon
CAR
Ijoid
Nigeria
Chad
Cte d'Ivoire
Gambia
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Dogon
Mali
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Liberia
Mali
Mauritania
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Togo
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Senufo
Benin
Cte d'Ivoire
Mali
Gur
Benin
Burkina Faso
Cte d'Ivoire
Ghana
Mali
Nigeria
Togo
Adamawa-Ubangi
Cameroon
CAR
Chad
Nigeria
Kru
Burkina Faso
Cte d'Ivoire
Liberia
Kwa
Benin
Cte d'Ivoire
Ghana
Nigeria
Togo
Benue-Congo
Bantu
Angola
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Burundi
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DRC
Yoruba and Igbo
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Nigeria
Malawi
Mozambique
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Rwanda
South Africa
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Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
CAR = Central African Republic DRC = Democratic Republic of the Congo
Categories: Central African Republic | African countries | African Union member states | Least Developed Countries | French-speaking countries | Landlocked countries | Member states of La Francophonie | States and territories established in 1960Hidden categories: Wikipedia pages move-protected due to vandalism | Articles containing French language text | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from December 2007 | Articles with links needing disambiguation
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If I visit Ethiopia first, will I be refused entry into Eritrea if they see my passport stamp?
Or vice versa?
Yes, definitely, Ethiopian Eritrean border is off limits.
you can go through air, but not by land.




































































































