Нигерия
Нигерия
The official name of Nigeria is Federal Republic of Nigeria. The
capital city is Abuja. The nigerian government is federal republic,
independent since 1960. The civilian constitution of the Second Republic,
with a US-style president, senate and house of representatives, was
suspended when the military took over on December 31, 1983.
The population is more than 100 millions of people. More than 50% of
them are Christians, and less than 45% are Muslims. The official language
of Negeria is English, but there also exist a variety of local languages.
The coastline, much of it bordered by mangrove swamp, is intersected
by numerious creeks; the southeast coast, dominated by the Niger river
delta, is the location of the offshore oil reserves. Inland lies an area of
tropical rain forest nd bush. Savannah and woodland cover much of the
central upland area; the Jos plateau is the watershed of hundreds of
streams and rivers flowing as far as Lake Chad and the Niger and Benue
rivers. The far north, bordering with Sahara, is mainly savannah.
Spectacular highlands line the eastern border with Cameroon. The highest
point is Vogel peak of 2040 meters, and total area is over 924000 sq km.
Democratically elected governments have so far proved unequal to the
task of managing this unruly nation of more than 100 millions people;
civilians have ruled for a total of only 10 years since independence in
1960. The most recent civilian government, that of President Shehu Shagari,
lasted four years before the military took power again in 1983. The
idealistic and rigid General Muhammadu Buhari was in turn replaced in a
bloodless coup two years later by the more genial and pragmatic General
Ibrahim Babangida.
Babangida’s task was made more complex by the collapse of oil prices
in early 1986. Oil earnings, which accounted over 97% of export revenue,
were halved to $6.1bn in just one year.
Oil production started in the late 1950s, rising steadily tp apeak of
2.4m barrels a day at the start of 1980s. Agriculture was neglected and
construction boomed as the oil money flowed in. Cocoa exports were halved,
cotton and groundnut exports all but ceased and the public developed a
taste for new imported foods. Foreign contractors lined up to build the oil
refineries, steel works and vehicle assembly lines that were to ensure
Nigeria’s industrial future.
By the mid-1980s Nigeria was saddled with foreign debt of $26bn with
few of its investments in industry or infrastructure starting to pay their
way. The Babangida government lost little time in introducing drastic
policy changes. Inessential and many essential imports were banned,
agricultural marketing was put into private hands, a foreign exchange
auction system was introduced, resulting in a rapid devaluation of the
overvalued naira, and an extensive programme of privatization was
announced. The government’s econoic measures were generally in accordance
with IMF recommendations although negotiations about conditional fund loans
had broken down. The realtionship between Nigeria and its creditors has
been a rocky one, but many foreign aid donors have been sympathetic to its
aims and large loans from bodies like the World Bank havve helped ease the
path to reform.
The new policies soon started to show results. Cash-crop exports
revived, as did production of traditional food crops. Industry bore the
brunt of recession and the constraints of inports, and was working at
barely 30% of capacity in 1988. For the Nigerian in he street, economic
adjustment has meant high unemployment, rising inflation and a general
decline in living standarts.
With its economic reforms under way, the Babangida government is
talking of a return to civilian ruke in 1992. To this end, it has set out a
complex timetable of regional and legislatie elections, from which all
former politicians have been excluded.