Background Notes: Union of the Comoros
OFFICIAL NAME:
Union of the Comoros
Geography
Area: 2,171 sq. km. (838 sq. mi.); slightly less than
half the size of Delaware. Major islands--Grande Comore
(1,025 sq. km.), Anjouan (424 sq. km.), Mayotte (374 sq.
km.), and Moheli (211 sq. km.).
Cities: Capital--Moroni
(pop. 30,000); Mutsamudu (pop. 20,000).
Terrain: Rugged.
Climate: Tropical marine.
People
Nationality:
Noun and adjective--Comoran(s).
Population (July 2009
est.): 752,438. Mayotte (1990 est.)--70,000.
Annual
growth rate (2009 est.): 2.766%.
Ethnic groups:
Antalote, Cafre, Makoa, Oimatsaha, Sakalava.
Religions:
Sunni Muslim 98%, Roman Catholic 2%.
Languages:
Shikomoro (a Swahili-Arabic blend), Arabic (official),
French (official).
Education: Attendance--60% primary,
34% secondary. Literacy--56.5%.
Health: Life
expectancy--63.47 yrs. Infant mortality rate--66.57/1,000.
Work force (1996): 144,500. Agriculture--80%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: July
6, 1975 (Mayotte remains under French administration).
Constitution: Adopted by referendum on December 23,
2001.
Branches: Executive--national president; regional
island presidents. Legislative--National Assembly.
Judicial--traditional Muslim and codified law from French
sources.
Political parties: 17 political parties.
Suffrage: Universal adult.
Economy
GDP
(purchasing power parity, 2008 est.): $741.4 million.
Annual growth rate: 0.5%.
GDP per capita (2008
est.): $1,000.
Agriculture (40% of GDP):
Products--vanilla, cloves, perfume essences, copra, banana,
cassava, coconuts.
Services (56% of GDP): Commerce,
tourism.
Industry (4% of GDP): Types--perfume
distillation.
Trade: Exports (2006 est.)--$32 million
f.o.b.: vanilla, cloves, perfume essences, copra. Major
markets--Turkey, France, Singapore, Saudi Arabia. Imports
(2006 est.)--$143 million: rice and other foodstuffs,
consumer goods, petroleum, cement, transport equipment.
Major suppliers--France 18.2%, U.A.E. 10.8%, South Africa
8.5%, Pakistan 7.2%, Kenya 5.7%, China 5.4%, India 5%.
PEOPLE
The Comorans inhabiting Grande Comore,
Anjouan, and Moheli (86% of the population) share
African-Arab origins. Islam is the dominant religion, and
Koranic schools for children reinforce its influence.
Although Arab culture is firmly established throughout the
archipelago, a substantial minority of the citizens of
Mayotte (the Mahorais) are Catholic and have been strongly
influenced by French culture.
The most common language
is Shikomoro, a Swahili dialect. French and Arabic also are
spoken. About 57% of the population is literate.
HISTORY
Over the centuries, the islands were
invaded by a succession of diverse groups from the coast of
Africa, the Persian Gulf, Indonesia, and Madagascar.
Portuguese explorers visited the archipelago in 1505.
"Shirazi" Arab migrants introduced Islam at about the same
time. Between 1841 and 1912, France established colonial
rule over Grande Comore, Anjouan, Mayotte, and Moheli and
placed the islands under the administration of the governor
general of Madagascar. Later, French settlers, French-owned
companies, and wealthy Arab merchants established a
plantation-based economy that now uses about one-third of
the land for export crops. After World War II, the islands
became a French overseas territory and were represented in
France's National Assembly. Internal political autonomy was
granted in 1961. Agreement was reached with France in 1973
for Comoros to become independent in 1978. On July 6, 1975,
however, the Comoran parliament passed a resolution
declaring unilateral independence. The deputies of Mayotte
abstained. As a result, the Comoran Government has effective
control over only Grande Comore, Anjouan, and Moheli.
Mayotte remains under French administration.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Union of
Comoros is ruled by President Ahmed Abdallah Sambi. Comoros
has been plagued by political instability and civil strife
following numerous coups and secession attempts since
independence from France in 1975. Former President Azali
seized power in a bloodless coup in April 1999, overthrowing
interim President Tadijiddine Ben Said Massounde, who
himself had held the office since the death of
democratically elected President Mohamed Taki Abdoulkarim in
November 1998. In May 1999, Azali decreed a constitution
that gave him both executive and legislative powers. When
Azali took power, he had pledged to step down in 2000 and
relinquish control to a democratically elected president.
Instead, in 2001, Azali resigned from the military and ran
as a civilian candidate for the national presidency. He was
elected in 2002 in flawed but fair elections.
On May 26,
2006, following a two-stage electoral process that was
generally free and fair, Ahmed Abdallah Mohamed Sambi was
installed as the new President of the Union of the Comoros.
The inauguration of President Sambi in June 2006 marked the
first democratic transition of power in Comoran history. In
June 2007, individual island elections on Grande Comore and
Moheli were held on schedule and judged to have been free
and fair. On Anjouan, however, island governor Mohamed Bacar
refused to step down, held a sham election and declared
himself Island Governor for another term. In March 2008,
Comoran and African Union (AU) forces restored
constitutional rule on Anjouan. A new election for island
governor was held peacefully in June 2008.
Principal
Government Officials
President--Ahmed Abdallah Sambi
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Ahmed Ben Said Jaffar
Ambassador to the United States and to the United
Nations--Mohamed Toihiri
Comoros maintains a mission to the United States at 866 United Nations Plaza, Suite 418 New York, NY 10017.
ECONOMY
Comoros, with an estimated
gross domestic product (GDP) per capita income of about
$1,000, is among the world's poorest and least developed
nations. Although the quality of the land differs from
island to island, most of the widespread lava-encrusted soil
formations are unsuited to agriculture. As a result, most of
the inhabitants make their living from subsistence
agriculture and fishing.
Agriculture, involving more
than 80% of the population and 40% of the gross domestic
product, provides virtually all foreign exchange earnings.
Services including tourism, construction, and commercial
activities constitute the remainder of the GDP. Plantations
engage a large proportion of the population in producing the
islands' major cash crops for export: vanilla, cloves,
perfume essences, and copra. Comoros is the world's leading
producer of essence of ylang-ylang, used in manufacturing
perfume. It also is the world's second-largest producer of
vanilla. Principal food crops are coconuts, bananas, and
cassava. Foodstuffs constitute 32% of total imports.
The
country lacks the infrastructure necessary for development
Some villages are not linked to the main road system or at
best are connected by tracks usable only by four-wheel-drive
vehicles. The islands' ports are rudimentary, although a
deepwater facility functions in Anjouan. Only small vessels
can approach the existing quays in Moroni on Grande Comore,
despite improvements. Long-distance, ocean-going ships must
lie offshore and be unloaded by smaller boats; during the
cyclone season, this procedure is dangerous, and ships are
reluctant to call at the island. Most freight is sent first
to Mombasa, Kenya or the island of Reunion and transshipped
from there.
France, Comoros' major trading partner,
finances small projects only. The United States receives a
growing percentage of Comoros' exports but supplies only a
negligible fraction of its imports (less than 1%).
Comoros has an international airport at Hahaya on Grande
Comore. Comoros has its own currency, the Comorian Franc,
which is currently valued at 361.4 CF = U.S. $1.
NATIONAL SECURITY
The military resources of the
Comoros consist of a small standing army and a 500-member
police force, as well as a 500-member defense force. A
defense treaty with France provides naval resources for
protection of territorial waters, training of Comorian
military personnel, and air surveillance. France maintains a
small maritime base and a Foreign Legion contingent on
Mayotte.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
In November 1975,
Comoros became the 143rd member of the United Nations. The
new nation was defined as consisting of the entire
archipelago, despite the fact that France maintains control
over Mayotte.
Comoros also is a member of the African
Union, the European Development Fund, the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund, the Indian Ocean Commission,
and the African Development Bank.
U.S.-COMORIAN
RELATIONS
The United States recognized the Comoran
Government in 1977. The two countries enjoy friendly
relations. The U.S. closed its Embassy in Moroni in 1993 and
is now represented by a nonresident Ambassador in
neighboring Madagascar.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
(all officers resident in Antananarivo, Madagascar)
Ambassador--R. Niels Marquardt
Deputy Chief of
Mission--Eric Stromayer
Chief Political-Economic
Officer--vacant
Management Officer--Stephen Dodson
Public Affairs Officer--Rodney Ford
Consular
Officer--Melanie Rubenstein
The address of the U.S.
Embassy in Madagascar is 14-16 Rue Rainitovo, Antsahavola,
Antananarivo. The mailing address is B.P. 620, Antsahavola,
Antananarivo, Madagascar.
ENDS