Facts About Djibouti; What You Need to Know
After independence from France in 1977, Djibouti was left with a government which enjoyed a balance between the two main ethnic groups, the Issa of Somali origin and the Afar of Ethiopian origin.
* Full name: The Republic of Djibouti
* Population: 879,100 (UN, 2010)
* Capital: Djibouti
* Area: 23,200 sq km (8,950 sq miles)
* Major languages: French, Arabic, Somali, Afar
* Major religion: Islam
* Life expectancy: 56 years (men), 58 years (women) (UN)
* Monetary unit: 1 Djiboutian franc = 100 centimes
* Main exports: Re-exports, hides and skins, coffee (re-exported from Ethiopia)
* GNI per capita: US $1,280 (World Bank, 2009)
* Internet domain: .dj
* International dialling code: +253
Facts About Djibouti; What You Need to Know
During the Gulf War it was the base of operations for the French military, who continue to maintain a significant presence.
France has thousands of troops as well as warships, aircraft and armoured vehicles in Djibouti, contributing directly and indirectly to the country's income. The US has stationed hundreds of troops in Djibouti, its only African base, in an effort to counter terrorism in the region.
Djibouti's location is the main economic asset of a country that is mostly barren. The capital, Djibouti city, handles Ethiopian imports and exports. Its transport facilities are used by several landlocked African countries to fly in their goods for re-export. This earns Djibouti much-needed transit taxes and harbour fees.
But the country's first president, Hassan Gouled Aptidon, installed an authoritarian one-party state dominated by his own Issa community. Afar resentment erupted into a civil war in the early 1990s, and though Mr Gouled, under French pressure, introduced a limited multi-party system in 1992, the rebels from the Afar party, the Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy (Frud), were excluded.
Thus, Mr Gouled's Popular Rally for Progress party won every seat and the war went on. It ended in 1994 with a power-sharing deal which brought the main faction of Frud into government. A splinter, radical faction continued to fight until 2000, when it too signed a peace deal with the government of Gouled's successor, Ismael Omar
Facts About Djibouti; What You Need to Know



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