|
Burundi Demographics
Burundi's
first democratically elected
president was assassinated in
October 1993 after only one
hundred days in office,
triggering widespread ethnic
violence between Hutu and Tutsi
factions. Over 200,000
Burundians perished during the
conflict that spanned almost a
dozen years. Hundreds of
thousands of Burundians were
internally displaced or became
refugees in neighboring
countries. An internationally
brokered power-sharing agreement
between the Tutsi-dominated
government and the Hutu rebels
in 2003 paved the way for a
transition process that led to
an integrated defense force,
established a new constitution
in October 2004, and elected a
majority Hutu government in
2005. The new government, led by
President Pierre NKURUNZIZA,
faces many challenges,
particularly from the country's
last rebel group who remains
outside of the peace process and
continue attacks in the western
provinces of Burundi.
|
Location:
|
Central
Africa, east
of
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
|
|
Geographic
coordinates:
|
3 30 S, 30
00 E
|
|
Area:
|
total:
27,830 sq km
land:
25,650 sq km
water:
2,180 sq km
|
|
Area -
comparative:
|
slightly
smaller than
the state of
Maryland in
the U.S.A. |
|
Land
boundaries:
|
total:
974 km
border
countries:
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
233 km,
Rwanda 290
km, Tanzania
451 km |
|
Coastline:
|
0 km
(landlocked)
|
|
Maritime
claims:
|
none
(landlocked)
|
|
Climate:
|
equatorial;
high plateau
with
considerable
altitude
variation
(772 m to
2,670 m
above sea
level);
average
annual
temperature
varies with
altitude
from 23 to
17 degrees
centigrade
but is
generally
moderate as
the average
altitude is
about 1,700
m; average
annual
rainfall is
about 150
cm; wet
seasons from
February to
May and
September to
November,
and dry
seasons from
June to
August and
December to
January
|
|
Terrain:
|
hilly and
mountainous,
dropping to
a plateau in
east, some
plains |
|
Elevation
extremes:
|
lowest
point:
Lake
Tanganyika
772 m
highest
point:
Heha 2,670 m
|
|
Natural
resources:
|
nickel,
uranium,
rare earth
oxides,
peat,
cobalt,
copper,
platinum,
vanadium,
arable land,
hydropower,
niobium,
tantalum,
gold, tin,
tungsten,
kaolin,
limestone
|
|
Land
use:
|
arable
land:
35.05%
permanent
crops:
14.02%
other:
50.93%
(2001)
|
|
Irrigated
land:
|
740 sq km
(1998 est.)
|
|
Natural
hazards:
|
flooding,
landslides,
drought
|
|
Environment
-
current
issues:
|
soil erosion
as a result
of
overgrazing
and the
expansion of
agriculture
into
marginal
lands;
deforestation
(little
forested
land remains
because of
uncontrolled
cutting of
trees for
fuel);
habitat loss
threatens
wildlife
populations
|
|
Environment
-
international
agreements:
|
party to:
Biodiversity,
Climate
Change,
Climate
Change-Kyoto
Protocol,
Desertification,
Endangered
Species,
Hazardous
Wastes,
Ozone Layer
Protection
signed,
but not
ratified:
Law of the
Sea |
|
Geography
- note:
|
landlocked;
straddles
crest of the
Nile-Congo
watershed;
the Kagera,
which drains
into Lake
Victoria, is
the most
remote
headstream
of the White
Nile |
|
Population:
|
6,370,609
note:
estimates
for this
country
explicitly
take into
account the
effects of
excess
mortality
due to AIDS;
this can
result in
lower life
expectancy,
higher
infant
mortality
and death
rates, lower
population
and growth
rates, and
changes in
the
distribution
of
population
by age and
sex than
would
otherwise be
expected
(July 2005
est.) |
|
Age
structure:
|
0-14
years:
46% (male
1,479,941/female
1,450,808)
15-64
years:
51.3% (male
1,617,864/female
1,653,331)
65 years
and over:
2.6% (male
66,199/female
102,466)
(2005 est.)
|
|
Median
age:
|
total:
16.6 years
male:
16.27 years
female:
16.95 years
(2005 est.)
|
|
Population
growth
rate:
|
2.22% (2005
est.)
|
|
Birth
rate:
|
39.66
births/1,000
population
(2005 est.)
|
|
Death
rate:
|
17.43
deaths/1,000
population
(2005 est.)
|
|
Net
migration
rate:
|
0 migrant(s)/1,000
population
(2005 est.)
|
|
Sex
ratio:
|
at birth:
1.03 male(s)/female
under 15
years:
1.02 male(s)/female
15-64
years:
0.98 male(s)/female
65 years
and over:
0.65 male(s)/female
total
population:
0.99 male(s)/female
(2005 est.)
|
|
Infant
mortality
rate:
|
total:
69.29
deaths/1,000
live births
male:
75.87
deaths/1,000
live births
female:
62.5
deaths/1,000
live births
(2005 est.)
|
|
Life
expectancy
at
birth:
|
total
population:
50.29 years
male:
49.61 years
female:
50.99 years
(2005 est.)
|
|
Total
fertility
rate:
|
5.81
children
born/woman
(2005 est.)
|
|
HIV/AIDS
- adult
prevalence
rate:
|
6% (2003
est.) |
|
HIV/AIDS
- people
living
with
HIV/AIDS:
|
250,000
(2003 est.)
|
|
HIV/AIDS
-
deaths:
|
25,000 (2003
est.) |
|
Major
infectious
diseases:
|
degree of
risk:
very high
food or
waterborne
diseases:
bacterial
diarrhea,
hepatitis A,
and typhoid
fever
vectorborne
disease:
malaria
(2004)
|
|
Nationality:
|
noun:
Burundian(s)
adjective:
Burundian
|
|
Ethnic
groups:
|
Hutu (Bantu)
85%, Tutsi (Hamitic)
14%, Twa
(Pygmy) 1%,
Europeans
3,000, South
Asians 2,000
|
|
Religions:
|
Christian
67% (Roman
Catholic
62%,
Protestant
5%),
indigenous
beliefs 23%,
Muslim 10%
|
|
Languages:
|
Kirundi
(official),
French
(official),
Swahili
(along Lake
Tanganyika
and in the
Bujumbura
area)
|
|
Literacy:
|
definition:
age 15 and
over can
read and
write
total
population:
51.6%
male:
58.5%
female:
45.2% (2003
est.)
|
|
Country
name:
|
conventional
long form:
Republic of
Burundi
conventional
short form:
Burundi
local
long form:
Republika
y'u Burundi
local
short form:
Burundi
former:
Urundi |
|
Government
type:
|
republic
|
|
Capital:
|
Bujumbura
|
|
Administrative
divisions:
|
16
provinces;
Bubanza,
Bujumbura,
Bururi,
Cankuzo,
Cibitoke,
Gitega,
Karuzi,
Kayanza,
Kirundo,
Makamba,
Muramvya,
Muyinga,
Mwaro, Ngozi,
Rutana,
Ruyigi |
|
Independence:
|
1 July 1962
(from UN
trusteeship
under
Belgian
administration)
|
|
National
holiday:
|
Independence
Day, 1 July
(1962) |
|
Constitution:
|
28 February
2005;
ratified by
popular
referendum
|
|
Legal
system:
|
based on
German and
Belgian
civil codes
and
customary
law; has not
accepted
compulsory
ICJ
jurisdiction
|
|
Suffrage:
|
NA years of
age;
universal
adult |
|
Executive
branch:
|
chief of
state:
President
Pierre
NKURUNZIZA
(since 26
August
2005); Vice
President
Martin
NDUWIMANA
(since 26
August 2005)
head of
government:
President
Pierre
NKURUNZIZA
(since 26
August
2005); Vice
President
Martin
NDUWIMANA
(since 26
August 2005)
cabinet:
Council of
Ministers
appointed by
president
elections:
the
president is
elected by
popular vote
to a five
year term;
elections
(by the
legislature)
last held 19
August 2005
(next to be
held NA
2010); note
- the
constitution
adopted in
February
2005 permits
the
post-transition
president to
be elected
by a
two-thirds
majority of
the
legislature
election
results:
Pierre
NKURUNZIZA
was elected
president by
the
legislature
by a vote of
151 to 9;
note - the
constitution
adopted in
February
2005 permits
the
post-transition
president to
be elected
by a
two-thirds
majority of
the
legislature
|
|
Legislative
branch:
|
bicameral,
consists of
a National
Assembly or
Assemblee
Nationale
(minimum 100
seats;
additional
seats
appointed by
a National
Independent
Electoral
Commission
to ensure
ethnic
representation;
members are
elected by
popular vote
to serve
five-year
terms) and a
Senate (54
seats; 34 by
indirect
vote to
serve five
year terms,
with
remaining
seats
assigned to
ethnic
groups and
former
chiefs of
state)
elections:
last held 4
July 2005
(next to be
held in
2010)
election
results:
percent of
vote by
party -
CNDD-FDD
58.6%,
FRODEBU
21.7%,
UPRONA 7.2%,
CNDD 4.1%,
MRC-Rurenzangemero
2.1%, others
6.2%; seats
by party -
CNDD-FDD 59,
FRODEBU 25,
UPRONA 10,
CNDD 4,
MRC-Rurenzangemero
2
|
|
Judicial
branch:
|
Supreme
Court or
Cour
Supreme;
Constitutional
Court;
Courts of
Appeal
(there are
three in
separate
locations);
Tribunals of
First
Instance (17
at the
province
level and
123 small
local
tribunals)
|
|
Political
parties
and
leaders:
|
the three
national,
mainstream,
governing
parties are:
Unity for
National
Progress or
UPRONA
[Jean-Baptiste
MANWANGARI,
secretary
general];
Burundi
Democratic
Front or
FRODEBU [Leonce
NGENDAKUMANA,
president];
National
Council for
the Defense
of
Democracy,
Front for
the Defense
of Democracy
of CNDD-FDD
[Hussein
RADJABU,
president]
note:
a multiparty
system was
introduced
after 1998,
included
are:
National
Resistance
Movement for
the
Rehabilitation
of the
Citizen or
MRC-Rurenzangemero
[Epitace
BANYAGANAKANDI];
Party for
National
Redress or
PARENA
[Jean-Baptiste
BAGAZA]
|
|
Political
pressure
groups
and
leaders:
|
Party for
the
Liberation
of the Hutu
People -
National
Liberation
Front
(Palipehutu
- FNL); note
- as of
December
2005, the
only
insurgent
group still
fighting the
government
|
|
International
organization
participation:
|
ACCT, ACP,
AfDB, AU,
CEPGL,
COMESA, FAO,
G-77, IBRD,
ICAO, ICCt,
ICFTU, ICRM,
IDA, IFAD,
IFC, IFRCS,
ILO, IMF,
Interpol,
IOC, IOM
(observer),
ISO
(subscriber),
ITU, MIGA,
NAM, OPCW,
UN, UNCTAD,
UNESCO,
UNIDO, UPU,
WCO, WHO,
WIPO, WMO,
WToO, WTO
|
|
Diplomatic
representation
in the
US:
|
chief of
mission:
Ambassador
Antoine
NTAMOBWA
chancery:
Suite 212,
2233
Wisconsin
Avenue NW,
Washington,
DC 20007
telephone:
[1] (202)
342-2574
FAX:
[1] (202)
342-2578
|
|
Diplomatic
representation
from the
US:
|
chief of
mission:
Ambassador
(vacant, as
of 20
December
2005)
embassy:
Avenue des
Etats-Unis,
Bujumbura
mailing
address:
B. P. 1720,
Bujumbura
telephone:
[257] 223454
FAX:
[257] 222926
|
|
Flag
description:
|
divided by a
white
diagonal
cross into
red panels
(top and
bottom) and
green panels
(hoist side
and outer
side) with a
white disk
superimposed
at the
center
bearing
three red
six-pointed
stars
outlined in
green
arranged in
a triangular
design (one
star above,
two stars
below) |
|
Economy
-
overview:
|
Burundi is a
landlocked,
resource-poor
country with
an
underdeveloped
manufacturing
sector. The
economy is
predominantly
agricultural
with more
than 90% of
the
population
dependent on
subsistence
agriculture.
Economic
growth
depends on
coffee and
tea exports,
which
account for
90% of
foreign
exchange
earnings.
The ability
to pay for
imports,
therefore,
rests
primarily on
weather
conditions
and
international
coffee and
tea prices.
The Tutsi
minority,
14% of the
population,
dominates
the
government
and the
coffee trade
at the
expense of
the Hutu
majority,
85% of the
population.
Since
October 1993
an
ethnic-based
war has
resulted in
more than
200,000
deaths,
forced
450,000
refugees
into
Tanzania,
and
displaced
140,000
others
internally.
Only one in
two children
go to
school, and
approximately
one in ten
adults has
HIV/AIDS.
Food,
medicine,
and
electricity
remain in
short
supply.
Political
stability
and the end
of the civil
war have
improved aid
flows and
economic
activity has
increased,
but
underlying
weaknesses -
a high
poverty
rate, poor
education
rates, a
weak legal
system, and
low
administrative
capacity -
risk
undermining
planned
economic
reforms.
|
|
GDP
(purchasing
power
parity):
|
$4.432
billion
(2005 est.)
|
|
GDP
(official
exchange
rate):
|
$739.5
million
(2005 est.)
|
|
GDP -
real
growth
rate:
|
5.5% (2005
est.) |
|
GDP -
per
capita:
|
purchasing
power parity
- $700 (2005
est.) |
|
GDP -
composition
by
sector:
|
agriculture:
45.6%
industry:
20.8%
services:
33.6% (2005
est.)
|
|
Labor
force:
|
2.99 million
(2002) |
|
Labor
force -
by
occupation:
|
agriculture
93.6%,
industry
2.3%,
services
4.1% (2002
est.) |
|
Unemployment
rate:
|
NA |
|
Population
below
poverty
line:
|
68% (2002
est.)
|
|
Household
income
or
consumption
by
percentage
share:
|
lowest
10%:
1.8%
highest
10%:
32.9% (1998)
|
|
Distribution
of
family
income -
Gini
index:
|
33.3 (1998)
|
|
Inflation
rate
(consumer
prices):
|
14% (2005
est.) |
|
Investment
(gross
fixed):
|
11.5% of GDP
(2005 est.)
|
|
Budget:
|
revenues:
$215.4
million
expenditures:
$278
million,
including
capital
expenditures
of NA (2005
est.) |
|
Agriculture
-
products:
|
coffee,
cotton, tea,
corn,
sorghum,
sweet
potatoes,
bananas,
manioc
(tapioca);
beef, milk,
hides
|
|
Industries:
|
light
consumer
goods such
as blankets,
shoes, soap;
assembly of
imported
components;
public works
construction;
food
processing
|
|
Industrial
production
growth
rate:
|
18% (2001)
|
|
Electricity
-
production:
|
141.3
million kWh
(2003) |
|
Electricity
-
consumption:
|
141.4
million kWh
(2003) |
|
Electricity
-
exports:
|
0 kWh (2003)
|
|
Electricity
-
imports:
|
10 million
kWh; note -
supplied by
the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
(2003) |
|
Oil -
production:
|
0 bbl/day
(2003) |
|
Oil -
consumption:
|
3,000
bbl/day
(2003 est.)
|
|
Oil -
exports:
|
NA (2001)
|
|
Oil -
imports:
|
NA (2001)
|
|
Current
account
balance:
|
$-55 million
(2005 est.)
|
|
Exports:
|
$52 million
f.o.b. (2005
est.)
|
|
Exports
-
partners:
|
Germany
20.7%,
Belgium
8.6%,
Pakistan 7%,
US 5.9%,
Rwanda 5.9%
(2004) |
|
Imports:
|
$200 million
f.o.b. (2005
est.)
|
|
Imports
-
partners:
|
Kenya 13.6%,
Tanzania
11.1%, US
8.8%,
Belgium
8.5%, France
8.3%, Italy
5.9%, Uganda
5.6%, Japan
4.6%,
Germany 4.4%
(2004) |
|
Reserves
of
foreign
exchange
and
gold:
|
$76 million
(2005 est.)
|
|
Debt -
external:
|
$1.2 billion
(2003) |
|
Economic
aid -
recipient:
|
$105.5
million
(2003)
|
|
Currency
(code):
|
Burundi
franc (BIF)
|
|
Exchange
rates:
|
Burundi
francs per
US dollar -
1,138
(2005),
1,100.91
(2004),
1,082.62
(2003),
930.75
(2002),
830.35
(2001) |
|
Fiscal
year:
|
calendar
year
|
|
Telephones
- main
lines in
use:
|
23,900
(2003) |
|
Telephones
- mobile
cellular:
|
64,000
(2003) |
|
Telephone
system:
|
general
assessment:
primitive
system
domestic:
sparse
system of
open-wire,
radiotelephone
communications,
and
low-capacity
microwave
radio relay
international:
country code
- 257;
satellite
earth
station - 1
Intelsat
(Indian
Ocean) |
|
Radio
broadcast
stations:
|
AM 0, FM 4,
shortwave 1
(2001) |
|
Television
broadcast
stations:
|
1 (2001)
|
|
Internet
country
code:
|
.bi |
|
Internet
hosts:
|
22 (2003)
|
|
Internet
users:
|
14,000
(2003) |
|
Airports:
|
8 (2004
est.) |
|
Airports
- with
paved
runways:
|
total:
1
over
3,047 m:
1 (2005
est.) |
|
Airports
- with
unpaved
runways:
|
total:
7
914 to
1,523 m:
4
under 914
m: 3
(2005 est.)
|
|
Roadways:
|
total:
14,480 km
paved:
1,028 km
unpaved:
13,452 km
(1999) |
|
Waterways:
|
mainly on
Lake
Tanganyika
(2004)
|
|
Ports
and
terminals:
|
Bujumbura
|
|
Military
branches:
|
National
Defense
Force
(Forces de
Defense
Nationales,
FDN): Army
(includes
Naval
Detachment
and Air
Wing),
National
Gendarmerie
(disbanding
begun in
2004) (2005)
|
|
Military
service
age and
obligation:
|
16 years of
age for
compulsory
and
voluntary
military
service
(2001) |
|
Manpower
available
for
military
service:
|
males age
16-49:
1,379,793
(2005 est.)
|
|
Manpower
fit for
military
service:
|
males age
16-49:
693,956
(2005 est.)
|
|
Manpower
reaching
military
service
age
annually:
|
males:
84,597 (2005
est.) |
|
Military
expenditures
- dollar
figure:
|
$38.7
million
(2004) |
|
Military
expenditures
-
percent
of GDP:
|
6% (2004)
|
|
Disputes
-
international:
|
Tutsi, Hutu,
other
conflicting
ethnic
groups,
associated
political
rebels,
armed gangs,
and various
government
forces
continue
fighting in
the Great
Lakes
region,
transcending
the
boundaries
of Burundi,
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo,
Rwanda, and
Uganda in an
effort to
gain control
over
populated
and natural
resource
areas;
government
heads pledge
to end
conflict,
but
localized
violence
continues
despite the
presence of
about 6,000
peacekeepers
from the UN
Operation in
Burundi (ONUB)
since 2004;
although
some 150,000
Burundian
refugees
have been
repatriated,
as of
February
2005,
Burundian
refugees
still reside
in camps in
western
Tanzania as
well as the
Democratic
Republic of
the Congo
|
|
Refugees
and
internally
displaced
persons:
|
refugees
(country of
origin):
60,288
(Democratic
Republic of
the Congo)
IDPs:
140,000
(armed
conflict
between
government
and rebels;
most IDPs in
northern and
western
Burundi)
(2004) |
|
|