1 GeoFroggy

Background

The Central African Republic (CAR) is a perennially weak state that sits at the crossroads of ethnic and linguistic groups in the center of the African continent. Among the last areas of sub-Saharan Africa to be drawn into the world economy, its introduction into trade networks around the early 1700s fostered significant competition among its population. The local population sought to benefit from the lucrative Atlantic, trans-Saharan, and Indian Ocean trade in enslaved people and ivory. Slave raids aided by representatives from the local populations fostered animosity between ethnic groups that remains today. The territory was established as a French colony named Ubangui-Shari in 1903, and France modeled its administration of the colony after the Belgian Congo, subcontracting control of the territory to private companies that collected rubber and ivory. Although France banned the domestic slave trade in CAR in the 1910s, the private companies continued to exploit the population through forced labor. The colony of Ubangi-Shari gained independence from France as the Central African Republic in August 1960, but the death of independence leader Barthelemy BOGANDA six months prior led to an immediate struggle for power.CAR’s political history has since been marred by a series of coups, the first of which brought Jean-Bedel BOKASSA to power in 1966. BOKASSA’s regime was characterized by widespread corruption and an intolerance of opposition, which manifested in the disappearances of many who challenged BOKASSA’s rule. In an effort to prolong his mandate, he named himself emperor in 1976 and changed the country’s name to the Central African Empire. His regime’s economic mismanagement culminated in widespread student protests in early 1979 that were violently suppressed by security forces. BOKASSA, rumored to have participated in the killing of some young students after the protests, fell out of favor with the international community and was overthrown in a French-backed coup in 1979. After BOKASSA’s departure, the country’s name once again became the Central African Republic.CAR’s fifth coup in March 2013 unseated President Francois BOZIZE after a mainly Muslim rebel coalition named the Seleka seized the capital and forced BOZIZE, who himself had taken power in a coup in 2003, to flee the country. Widespread abuses by the Seleka spurred the formation of mainly Christian self-defense groups that called themselves the anti-Balaka, which have also committed human rights abuses against Muslim populations in retaliation. Since the rise of the self-defense groups, conflict in CAR has become increasingly ethnoreligious-based, although focused on identity as opposed to religious ideology. Elections organized by a transitional government in early 2016 installed independent candidate Faustin-Archange TOUADERA as president; he was reelected in December 2020. A peace agreement signed in February 2019 between the government and the main armed factions has had little effect, and armed groups remain in control of large swaths of the country's territory.

Location

Central Africa, north of Democratic Republic of the Congo

Area Comparative

Slightly smaller than Texas; about four times the size of Georgia

Maritime Claims

none (landlocked)

Climate
Tropical; hot, dry winters; mild to hot, wet summers

Population Distribution

Majority of residents live in the western and central areas of the country, especially in and around the capital of Bangui as shown in this population distribution map

Natural Hazards

Hot, dry, dusty harmattan winds affect northern areas; floods are common

Geography Note

Landlocked; almost the precise center of Africa
Year

Map Reference

  • Africa

Irrigated Land 2012

  • 10 sq km

Area 2021

  • Total
    622,984 sq km
  • Land
    622,984 sq km
  • Water
    0 sq km

Coastline

  • 0 km

Geographical Coordinates

  • 7 00 N, 21 00 E

Land use 2021

  • Agricultural Land
    8.1%
  • Arable Land
    2.9%
  • Permanent Crops
    0.1%
  • Permanent Pasture
    5.1%
  • Forest
    36.2%
  • Other
    55.7%

Terrain

  • Vast
  • Flat to rolling plateau; scattered hills in northeast and southwest

Elevation

  • Highest Point: Mont Ngaoui 1,410 m
  • Lowest Point: Oubangui River 335 m
  • Mean Elevation: 635 m

Land Boundaries

  • Total
    5,920 km
  • Cameroon
    901 km
  • Chad
    1556 km
  • Democratic Republic Of The Congo
    1747 km
  • Republic Of The Congo
    487 km
  • South Sudan
    1055 km
  • Sudan
    174 km

Natural Resources

  • Diamonds
  • Uranium
  • Timber
  • Gold
  • Oil
  • Hydropower
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