Friday, April 24, 2020
Mozambique Essays - Africa, Mozambique, Republics, Southeast Africa
  Mozambique         Mozambique is a country located on the southeast coast of Africa. It  covers 308,642 square miles and has a population of about sixteen million.  Maputo is the capitol, largest city, and chief port.       Mozambique was governed by Portugal from the early 1500's until 1975  when it became independent after a ten year struggle against Portuguese  rule.       Mozambique is now controlled by Frelimo (the front for the liberation  of Mozambique) the nations only political party. The president of Frelimo  is also the nations president. Mozambiques highest governmental power lies  with the parties central committee which is made up of fifteen members  appointed by Frelimo. This party appoints the two hundred and ten members  of the peoples assembly,(Mozambiques legislative body).This group meets  twice a year. It's permanent committee handles legislative matters between  sessions.       Most Mozambicans are black Africans. Other groups such as Arabs,  Europeans, and Pakistanis make up less than one percent of the population.  Most blacks belong to groups that speak one of the Bantu languages. The  largest of these groups, the Makua-Lomwe, accounts for forty percent of the  population. The countries official language is Portuguese but few blacks  can speak it. Some Mozambicans speak English when conducting business  activities.       Most Mozambicans are farmers with extremely simple techniques although  farmers in some areas of the country use modern techniques.       Fifty five percent of the people of Mozambique practice traditional  African religions. Of this large group, many are animists who believe that  everything in nature has a soul. Others worship spirits of their ancestors.  About thirty percent of the population is Christian, mostly Roman Catholic.  Many of the remaining are Muslim.       Only about twenty five percent of Mozambiques people fifteen or older  can read or write but the government has begun programs to help improve  education.       Almost one half of Mozambique is covered by a flat plain that extends  inland from the coast. Land rises steadily beyond the plain and high  plateaus and mountains run along much of the western border. Sand dunes  and swamps line the coast. Grasslands and tropical rain forests cover much  of the country.       Many sizable rivers flow east through Mozambique into the Indian  Ocean, there basins have extremely fertile soil. Cashew trees and coconut  palms grow throughout the country. Animal life in Mozambique includes  crocodiles, elephants, lions, and zebras.       Mozambiques climate is basically tropical but temperatures and  rainfall may vary considerably in different areas. Temperatures average  from sixty eight degrees Fahrenheit in July to eighty degrees Fahrenheit in  January. About eighty percent of the annual rainfall occurs from November  to March. Rainfall ranges from sixteen to fourty eight inches a year.       Mozambique is not well developed. Agriculture is its major economics  activity. Mozambique is the leading producer of cashews. Other important  products include coconuts, cotton, sugar cane , and cassava (a starchy  root). Some people catch fish and shrimp in the Indian Ocean. Mozambiques  economy depends partly on payments from South Africa, Zimbabwe, Swaziland,  and Malawi for the use of railroads and port facilities. Many Mozambicans  also work in South Africa.       Industrial development has been slow and has occurred mainly in food  processing and oil refining industries. Coal is mined in central  Mozambique. The Cahora Bassa damn in the northwest produces electrical  power, much of which is transmitted to South Africa.       Most of the roads in Mozambique are unpaved. Many railroads link  Mozambiques ports with other countries. The chief airport of Mozambique is  located in Maputo. Three daily newspapers are published in this country  and the basic unit of money is metical.       People have lived in what is now Mozambique since the 4000's B.C.  Bantu speaking people settled there before A.D. 100. Arabs lived in the  area by the 800's. Portuguese explorers first visited Mozambique in 1497.  They established a trading post there in 1505, and the country became a  slave trading center. But most of Mozambique was undeveloped until the  1900's.    
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