Africa South of the Sahara : Africa South of the Sahara Background Factors
Africa south of Sahara was cradle of human species
poorest of the nine major world regions with 10% of world’s population but only 1 % of GDP
least integrated into world economic system
economically falling farther behind rest of world
diverse ethnic identification based on tribal loyalties, culture, language, etc.
tribal identifications do not always coincide with state boundaries
Slide2 : tribal loyalties today often stronger than loyalty to one’s country
conflicts between tribal customs and and new ways of life based on education, exposure to media, and urbanization
in medieval times, Muslim traders penetrated Sahara desert and brought Islam to northern tier of countries
Muslim push displaced indigenous tribes, causing them to move to the south
slave trade begun by Arabs and supplemented by Europeans looking for plantation labor for new world
11-12 million Africans kidnapped as slaves to work in New World; most died in transit
Slide3 : Christian influence in Africa, particularly Coptic Church in Ethiopia from first century AD
Roman Catholic priests came with Portuguese, Spanish, French and Belgian traders, built schools and hospitals, and provided education
Importance of the Treaty of Berlin 1884 which divided Africa up among the European powers.
All boundaries were artificial creations
Peoples divided, unified regions ripped apart, hostile populations thrown together
Colonialism had a single major objective which was exploitation of these countries
Slide4 : Differences in political rule apparent
British and French encouraged Europeans to settle permanently, made investments in roads, railroads, civil service, hospitals, schools
British ruled indirectly leaving indigenous power structures in place
French tried to culturally assimilate elites into French culture
Belgians and Portuguese exploited their colonies and provided few investments, no preparation for independence, unenlightened rulers
future of many African states dependent on reconciling tribal, ethnic, and religious differences
Slide5 : African Population Problems
640 million people in Africa
45% of Africans live in poverty
rate of population growth high 2 ½-3% / year
African is most rural region of the world with 65-85% of people living in rural areas
world’s youngest population with 50% under 15 years of age
Population increases faster than increases in food production
Slide6 : Impact of AIDS in Africa
70% of all HIV/AIDS cases in Africa
Southern Africa particularly hard hit with 20-30 of population infected by AIDS
Botswana and Zimbabwe have 1/3 of adults infected by AIDS
largest number of cases in South Africa
Number of new cases declining
Infection particularly high among educated strata of society- professionals, teachers, civil servants, truckers, merchants
Fighting AIDS– role of health education and availability of drugs
Slide7 : HIV AIDS in Africa
Slide8 : Natural Environment
most of Africa is a series of plateaus of varying elevations “plateau continent” punctuated by several large basins, i.e. Djouf Basin, Chad Basin, Sudan Basin, Zaire Basin, and Kalahari Basin
river systems traverse many of these plateaus
major rivers include: Niger River (Nigeria); Congo or Zaire River(Democratic Rep of Congo); Zambezi River (Mozambique); Nile River (Sudan and Egypt); Limpopo (South Africa/Mozambique/ Botswana) and Orange (South Africa)
Slide9 : lowland plains around coasts
mountainous areas found in (1) Ethiopia; (2) East African lakes; (3) eastern and southern parts of South Africa.
highest mountains near Lake Victoria, i.e. Kilimanjaro (19K) and Kirinyaga (Mt.. Kenya) (17K)
Great Rift Valley from Mozambique to Red Sea
African rivers rise in the interior uplands and descend to the sea abruptly.
rapids block inland water travel but provide good potential for hydroelectric
Slide11 : Tropical Climates
most of region lies within low latitudes and has a tropical climate
continent bisected by the equator
types of climate include:
tropical rain forest
near equator
from Gulf of Guinea to highlands of East Africa
includes southern Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, south Cameroon, and north Congo basin
tropical savanna
extensive areas of Africa with wet and dry season
dry forest or scrub intermixed with tall grasses
Slide12 : steppe and desert
southern border of Sahara known as Sahel was once steppe, but Sahara is creeping southward. Multi-year drought in 70’s
desertification is problem for region
Mediterranean climate
northwest African and southwestern tip near Cape Town
rainy winters and dry summers
humid subtropical
high interior grasslands of South Africa also known as High Veld
well marked dry season
found in Natal province in South Africa
Slide14 : Africa: Vegetation Map
Slide15 : Africa: Rainfall
Slide16 : Water Resources
total precipitation large but poorly distributed
wide fluctuations in rainfall in many parts of Africa
need for more control over water, i.e. irrigation projects, converting marshes and swamps to rice fields or other productive uses, development of dams to control floods, provide hydroelectric power
most villagers (women) carry water by hand from streams or shallow wells
Slide17 : Problems of African Development
considerable variety of environments and potential wealth
drought a persistent problem in most states
great poverty of most countries with low GNP rates, high infant mortality, high rates of disease
lack of education hampers development
high percentage of rural dwellers
relatively unproductive agriculture
per capital food output has declined or remained stationary since independence
Slide18 : economies underindustrialized and dependent on few primary products
heavy debts to foreign lenders
authoritarian governments the rule rather than the exception
serious political instability in many countries
poor transportation is a bottleneck to development
Slide19 : Regions
West Africa
countries of western coast and Sahara margin from Senegal and Mauritania to Nigeria and Niger
includes Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, Nigeria
Equatorial Africa
central Africa focusing on Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo, Gabon, Cameroons, Central African Republic, southern part of Chad and Sudan
Slide20 : East Africa
Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, and Highland Ethiopia
Southern Africa
extends from southern border of Tanzania and Democratic Republic of Congo to Cape of Good Hope
includes Angola, Zambia, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, Swaziland and Lesotho
Slide21 : West Africa
West Africa has more links with world economy
long coastline led to penetration by Europeans in search of slaves, gold, and ivory
plantations established by British and French to produce cocoa and palm oil
more educated civil service, more economically advanced at time of independence
Nigeria largest and most populous country with 100 million people
very high birth rates with death rates falling
Slide22 : most large cities began as colonial ports, i.e. Lagos, Nigeria (3 mil); Abidjan, Ivory Coast (3 mil); Dakar, Senegal (2 mil); Accra, Ghana (2 mil); Freetown, Sierre Leone (.8 mil); Monrovia, Liberia (.5 mil); Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (.5 mil)
Britain, France, and Germany raced each other to colonize Africa in 19th C
English and French remain the official and commercial languages of many former colonies
agriculture remains source of employment for 50%-80% of the people
Slide23 : major producer of palm oil, cacao, rubber, tropical fruits, rice and coffee
Liberia became major producer of rubber following establishment of plantations by Firestone Rubber Co. in 1920’s; Ivory Coast also a major rubber producer
Nigeria a major oil producer with 90% of exports based on petroleum
oil income in Nigeria used to built major infrastructure projects, neglect of agriculture with the result that living standards in Nigeria now lower than before oil boom
Slide24 : limited manufacturing in West Africa
mainly import substitution products like soft drinks, household products, and processing of agricultural products
production of “pagne” cloth (brightly colored cloth used to make women’s dresses) in Ivory Coast is a growth industry
high government employment in most West African states
political leadership problems in most West African states with one party states or military rulers
Slide26 : Nigeria
Background
most populous country in Africa with 127 million
brought under British rule in 1906 (Britain followed policy of indirect rule in Nigeria)
independence in 1960 with democratic system
250 different ethnic groups in Nigeria with largest being Hausa-Faulani in north with 75%; Yorba in the southwest, and Ibo in southeast
tension between major ethnic groups led to bloody civil war in 1965; Biafrian independence sought
military rule off and on since 1969; human rights abuses
English the official language; Hausa used in trade
Slide27 : Nigeria
Slide28 : Regions
coast composed of mangrove swamps, lagoons, and shallow rivers
Niger delta spreads 60 miles inland
forested belt rises to Jos Plateau
savanna in interior which becomes an arid desert in north
Climate
equatorial maritime climate along coast with high humidity and heavy rain
north has dry conditions, dusty winds from Sahara
Religion
50% Muslim especially in north
34% Christian (Catholic, Methodist, Anglican)
Slide29 : economy
predominately agricultural country producing its own food (sorghum, millet, maize, rice, yams) and exporting cacao, palm oil, beans, and rubber
90% of exports by value consist of oil
Nigerian oil of low sulfur, high quality, high demand
country too heavily dependent on oil revenue, low demand for oil in 90’s hurt economy
largest deposits of natural gas in Africa
Slide30 : political problems
restructuring of Nigerian federation several times since 1964.
fragmentation of the political system, lack of trust among ethnic groups
military has dominated politics for 25 years, lost its perspective, too corrupt
civilians not organized sufficiently to challenge military rule
presidential elections in 1993 nullified by the military, promised reform not delivered
threat of fundamentalist Islam in north
recent elections in 1999 reestablished democratic rule
Slide31 : Equatorial Africa
heart of Africa with equatorial climate, dense rain forest, isolated from world
some of poorest countries in Africa but with potentially large natural resources
Democratic Republic of Congo (formerly known as Zaire) largest country in equatorial Africa with 40% of land area and 50% of people of region
Burundi, Rwanda, Chad, and Central African Republic are landlocked, produce few commercial goods, and have difficulty communicating with outside world
Slide32 : Equatorial Africa
Slide33 : large rural populations with some urbanization due more to civil strife than search for jobs
largest urban areas former colonial trading centers like Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo ( 4 mil); Yaounde, Cameroon (1 mil); N'djamena, Chad ( .2 mil); Brazzaville, Congo (.8 mil); Libreville, Gabon (.3 mil)
rapid population growth of region with population growth outstripping economic growth and food production
tensions between Tutsi and Hutus in Rwanda and Burundi at independence in 1962
Slide34 : majority Hutus took control in Rwanda, but minority Tutsis in charge in Burundi
death of presidents in both countries in air crash set off tribal war as Hutus massacred Tutsis, and Tutsis responded with armed rebellion
2.5 million people either killed or fled to Democratic Republic of Congo in conflicts
tensions between Muslim northerners in Chad backed by Libya and Christian southerners erupted in open warfare in 1980’s
civil war in Democratic Republic of Congo led to ouster of Joseph Mobutu and replacement by Laurent Kabila
Slide35 : most people are subsistence farmers who grow root crops, fruits, vegetables
cattle farming restricted by tsetse fly
timber production of mahogany and ebony wood from Cameron and Congo
Democratic Republic of Congo one of world’s largest producer of copper
Democratic Republic of Congo also mines diamonds, cobalt and produces some oil
Gabon possesses large unexploited iron ore deposits
hydroelectric potential of Zaire Basin needed for further economic development of region
Slide37 : East Africa
landscapes of high plateaus cut by rift valleys
less water resources than other African areas and fewer mineral resources
Ethiopia only African country south of Sahara never colonized
most inland areas not developed with few links to coastal area
countries among the poorest in Africa
Ethiopia ruled by monarchy established in 2 AD until communist revolution in 1974; communists overthrown in 1991
Slide38 : Ethiopia’s troubled history, rebel groups
Eritrea gained independence in 1993 after a 30 yrs war with Ethiopia
Uganda’s prosperity destroyed by civil war in 60’s followed by harsh dictatorship under Idi Amin
Kenya and Tanzania fortunate to have avoided civil strife but have had to deal with refugees from Rwanda and Burundi
rapid population growth with high birth rates and low death rates
most countries predominantly rural with 25% of people living in cities
Slide39 : main cities of East Africa are: Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (2.5 mil); Nairobi, Kenya (2.5 mil); Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (1.2 mil); Kampala, Uganda (.5); Mombasa, Kenya (.7 mil)
rural to urban migration growing fast
cultural divide between northern Ethiopians who claim ancestry from King Solomon and Queen of Sheba who converted to Coptic Christian Church and Muslim peoples who established coastal settlements in Eritrea, Djibouti, and Somalia and became part of Ottoman Empire in 16th C
Slide40 : Britain involved in slave trade run out of Zanzibar by sultans of Oman and Muscat
in 1886 Britain annexed Kenya and Uganda and built railroad from Mombasa to Lake Victoria. British settlers encouraged to move to Kenyan highlands
Germans settled in East Africa to engage in tea and coffee production but lost Tanganyika to British after WW I.
most East African countries rely on agriculture, earn foreign exchange by agricultural exports
coffee constitutes 90% of Ethiopian exports
coffee, tea, and tobacco constitute 90% of Uganda’s exports
Slide41 : coffee, tea, sisal , cotton, cashews, and cloves are Tanzania’s major exports
price fluctuations can hurt earnings
cattle herding important in East Africa
famines in Ethiopia and Somalia in 1983-85 led to 500,000 millions deaths by starvation
Tanzanian approach to development emphasizes African socialism or communal farming. Less social stratification but low productivity
Kenya has made most economic progress of East African countries with some manufacturing, and center of UN activities
Slide42 : tourist industry important in Kenya and Tanzania to observe the largest herds of wild animals in the world.
migration of animals from Ngorongoro National Park and Serengeti National Park in Tanzania to the Masai Mara Reserve in Kenya
growth of hotel and transportation industries to support this activity
Tanzanian government has resisted efforts to build large luxury hotels to serve tourists; tourism smaller in Tanzania as a result
Slide43 : Southern Africa
greatest potential of all African regions
largest amount of rail traffic in Africa
prospects of region tied to economic progress of South Africa
South Africa has 1/3 of southern Africa’s population but produced 75% of its GDP
South Africa is the engine of economic growth in region
export of minerals, farm products, and manufactured products from South Africa is great and its economy is linked to rest of the world
Slide44 : Southern Africa
Slide45 : Botswana, Malawi, and Zambia were hostile to apartheid policies (racial separation) of South Africa but maintained economic relations with RSA
Lesotho and Swaziland were encircled by RSA so had to maintain political relations with them
Namibia under occupation of RSA, fought a civil war with SWAPO until the UN brokered a deal that led to independence for Namibia in 1990 and removal of Cuban troops from Angola in 1988
South African Development Coordination Conference (SADCC) was collection of southern African states opposed to apartheid that tried to promote economic development among them
Slide46 : South Africa now a welcomed partner of this group
environment of South Africa different from that of other African countries
RSA has warm mid latitude conditions with winter rains in the Cape and summer rains on southeastern coasts. Attractive environment for Europeans
natural vegetation is desert and savanna grasslands giving way to forests in higher elevations
population of southern Africa expanding rapidly
South Africa is only state with a sizable non-Black population (75% Black; 13% white; 4% Asian; and 8% mixed races)
Slide47 : largest cities of region include: Cape Town, RSA (3 mil); Johannesburg, RSA (2 mil); Durban and Pretoria, RSA (1.5 mil each); Port Elizabeth, RSA (.8 mil); Maputo, Mozambique (2.5 mil) Luanda, Angola (2.5 mil); Harare, Zimbabwe (1.5 mil); Lusaka, Zambia .7 mil)
unique history of South Africa
Dutch settlers arrived in Cape Town in 1652 and displaced indigenous African peoples (White tribe of Africa
separation from Netherlands led to distinctive culture (Boers) and language (Afrikaans)
British purchased Cape colonial from Dutch in 1814, demanded use of English, end to slavery, and protection for natives
Slide48 : Boers undertook the “Great Trek” northward to territory near Orange and Vaal River valleys. Established Orange Free State and Transvaal.
Displacement of more native peoples north of Limpopo R
Boers declared South Africa a Republic
discovery of gold and diamonds discovered in Transvaal in 1860’s and threat of Germans in South West Africa led to Boer War
UK established Union of South Africa as self-governing dominion in British Empire linking Cape, Natal, Orange Free State and Transvaal in new political system
Afrikaans-speaking politicians established the National Party and promoted apartheid (separation of the races) with onerous racial legislation by 1948
Slide49 : African National Congress (ANC) under Nelson Mandela campaigned for freedom and equality for blacks
when democratic means of influencing the apartheid government fail, they turned to guerrilla war
Nelson Mandala jailed for 30 years on Robben Is
peaceful political protests led to brutal repression and deaths of prominent leaders like Steve Biko in 1977
diplomatic isolation of South Africa, economic sanctions, and domestic pressure led Nationalist Party leaders to the conclusion that South Africa must “adapt or die.”
free elections in 1994 led to first Black majority government under the leadership of President Nelson Mandela
Slide50 : Nelson Mandela
President of the Republic of South Africa
Slide51 : Steve Biko
Black political activist in the 60
Murdered in jail by the RSA Security Forces
Slide52 : Mozambique and Angola devastated by slave trade through 19th C
Portugal was one of least enlightened colonial rulers who provided few opportunities for schooling or social services
mineral resources in Angola and plantation crops in Mozambique provided motivation for colonial policy of Portuguese
bloody civil war in 1970’s led to independence for both countries
mining dominates economies of Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe
Slide53 : RSA is world top producer of platinum used for aerospace and catalytic converters
RSA is major producer of goal and diamonds in Witswaterand
RSA produces a host of exotic minerals like chromium, manganese, vanadium used in specialty steels
Namibia is major producer of uranium, diamonds, zinc, copper
Zambian copper mines suffering from inefficiencies, lack of investment, inability to compete with more efficient producers like Chile
Slide54 : tourism is growing industry in South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe with Victoria Falls a major attraction
national parks in Zambia attract many tourists eager to see large animals