Facts About Madagascar

The World Bank has estimated that 70% of Malagasy live on less than $1 per day. Poverty and the competition for agricultural land have put pressure on the island's dwindling forests, home to much of Madagascar's unique wildlife and key to its emerging tourist industry.

* Full name: Republic of Madagascar
* Population: 20.1 million (via UN, 2010)
* Capital: Antananarivo
* Area: 587,041 sq km (226,658 sq miles)
* Major languages: Malagasy (official), French
* Major religions: Indigenous beliefs, Christianity
* Life expectancy: 61 years (men), 64 years (women) (UN)
* Monetary unit: Ariary
* Main exports: Vanilla, coffee, seafood, cloves, petroleum products, chromium, fabrics
* GNI per capita: US $420 (World Bank, 2009)
* Internet domain: .mg
* International dialling code: +261

Facts About Madagascar

Madagascar is the world's fourth biggest island after Greenland, New Guinea and Borneo. Because of its isolation most of its mammals, half its birds, and most of its plants exist nowhere else on earth.

The island is heavily exposed to tropical cyclones which bring torrential rains and destructive floods, such as the ones in 2000 and 2004, which left thousands homeless.

The Malagasy are thought to be descendants of Africans and Indonesians who settled on the island more than 2,000 years ago. Malagasy pay a lot of attention to their dead and spend much effort on ancestral tombs, which are opened from time to time so the remains can be carried in procession, before being rewrapped in fresh shrouds.

After sometimes harsh French colonial rule, which included the bloody suppression of an uprising in 1947, Madagascar gained independence in 1960. The military seized power in the early 1970s with the aim of achieving a socialist paradise.

This did not materialise. The economy went into decline and by 1982 the authorities were forced to adopt a structural adjustment programme imposed by the International Monetary Fund.

The World Bank has estimated that 70% of Malagasy live on less than $1 per day. Poverty and the competition for agricultural land have put pressure on the island's dwindling forests, home to much of Madagascar's unique wildlife and key to its emerging tourist industry.

The island has strong ties with France as well as economic and cultural links with French-speaking West Africa.

Facts About Madagascar