Mozambique, officially the
Republic of Mozambique ( or República de
Moçambique, ), is a country in southeastern Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean
to the east, Tanzania to
the north, Malawi
and Zambia
to the
northwest, Zimbabwe
to the west
and Swaziland
and South Africa to the
southwest.
The area
was explored by Vasco da Gama in 1498
and colonized by Portugal
in
1505. Mozambique became independent in 1975, to which it
became the
People's
Republic of Mozambique shortly after, and was the scene of an
intense
civil war lasting from
1977 to 1992.
The country was named Moçambique by the
Portuguese after Msumbiji, the Swahili name of Mozambique
Island
and port-town.
Mozambique
is a member of the Community of Portuguese Language
Countries
and the Commonwealth of Nations and an
observer of the Francophonie.
Mozambique's life expectancy and infant mortality rates are both
among the worst ranked in the world. Its
Human Development Index is one of
the
lowest
on earth.
History
Early migrations
Between
the first and fourth centuries AD, waves of Bantu-speaking people migrated from the west
and north through the Zambezi River
valley and then gradually into the plateau and
coastal areas. They established agricultural communities or
societies based on herding cattle. They brought with them the
technology for iron making, a metal which they used to make weapons
for the conquest of their neighbors.
Cities in Mozambique
during its Middle Ages were not sturdily built, so there is little
left of many medieval cities such as the trading port Sofala
.
Nevertheless several Swahili trade ports dotted the coast of the
country before the arrival of Arabs and the Portuguese which had
been trading with Madagascar and the
Far
East.
Swahili and Portuguese rule
When Portuguese explorers reached East Africa in 1498,
Swahili commercial settlements had existed
along the coast and outlying islands for several centuries. From
about 1500, Portuguese trading posts and forts became regular ports
of call on the new route to the east.
The voyage
of Vasco da Gama around the Cape of Good
Hope
into the Indian Ocean
in 1498 marked the Portuguese entry into trade,
politics, and society in the Indian Ocean world.
The
Portuguese gained control of the Island of Mozambique
and the port city of Sofala in the early 16th
century, and by the 1530s small groups of Portuguese traders and
prospectors penetrated the interior
regions seeking gold, where they set up garrisons and trading posts
at Sena
and Tete
on the
Zambezi
River
and tried to gain exclusive control over the gold
trade. The Portuguese attempted to legitimize and
consolidate their trade and settlement positions through the
creation of
prazos (land grants) tied to Portuguese
settlement and administration. While
prazos were
originally developed to be held by Portuguese, through
intermarriage they became African Portuguese or African Indian
centres defended by large African slave armies known as
Chikunda. Historically within Mozambique there was
slavery. Human beings were bought and sold by African tribal
chiefs, Arab traders, and the Portuguese. Many Mozambican slaves
were supplied by tribal chiefs who raided warring tribes and sold
their captives to the
prazeiros.
Although Portuguese influence gradually expanded, its power was
limited and exercised through individual settlers and officials who
were granted extensive autonomy.
The Portuguese were able to wrest much of
the coastal trade from Arabs between 1500 and 1700, but, with the
Arab seizure of Portugal's key foothold at Fort Jesus
on Mombasa
Island
(now in Kenya) in 1698, the pendulum began to swing
in the other direction. As a result, investment lagged while
Lisbon
devoted
itself to the more lucrative trade with India
and the
Far East and to the colonisation of
Brazil
.
During the 18th and 19th centuries the Mazrui and
Omani Arabs reclaimed much of the Indian
Ocean trade, forcing the Portuguese to retreat south. Many
prazos had declined by the mid-19th century, but several
of them survived.
During the 19th century other European
powers, particularly the British
(British
South Africa Company) and the French
(Madagascar
), became increasingly involved in the trade and
politics of the region around the Portuguese East African
territories.
By the
early 20th century the Portuguese had shifted the administration of
much of Mozambique to large private companies, like the Mozambique Company, the Zambezia Company and the Niassa Company, controlled and financed
mostly by the British
, which established railroad lines to neighbouring
countries. Although slavery had been legally abolished in
Mozambique, at the end of the 19th century the Chartered companies
enacted a forced labor policy and supplied cheap – often forced –
African labor to the
mines and
plantations of
the nearby British colonies and
South
Africa. The Zambezia Company, the most profitable chartered
company, took over a number of smaller
prazeiro holdings,
and established military outposts to protect its property.
The
chartered companies built roads and ports to bring their goods to
market including a railroad linking present day Zimbabwe with the
Mozambican port of Beira
.
Because
of their unsatisfactory performance and because of the shift, under
the Estado
Novo
regime of Oliveira
Salazar, towards a stronger Portuguese control of Portuguese empire's economy, the
companies' concessions were not renewed when they ran out.
This was what happened in 1942 with the Mozambique Company, which
however continued to operate in the agricultural and commercial
sectors as a corporation, and had already happened in 1929 with the
termination of the Niassa Company's concession. In 1951, the
Portuguese overseas colonies in Africa were rebranded as Overseas
Provinces of Portugal.
Independence movement
As
communist and
anti-colonial ideologies spread out across
Africa, many clandestine political movements were established in
support of Mozambican independence. These movements claimed that
since policies and development plans were primarily designed by the
ruling authorities for the benefit of Mozambique's Portuguese
population, little attention was paid to Mozambique's tribal
integration and the development of its native communities.
According to the official guerrilla statements, this affected a
majority of the indigenous population who suffered both
state-sponsored discrimination and enormous social pressure. Many
felt they had received too little opportunity or resources to
upgrade their skills and improve their economic and social
situation to a degree comparable to that of the Europeans.
Statistically, Mozambique's Portuguese whites were indeed wealthier
and more skilled than the black indigenous majority. As a response
to the guerrilla movement, the Portuguese government from the 1960s
and principally the early 1970s, initiated gradual changes with new
socioeconomic developments and equalitarian policies for all.
The
Front for the
Liberation of Mozambique (FRELIMO), initiated a guerrilla
campaign against Portuguese rule in September 1964.
This conflict, along
with the two others already initiated in the other Portuguese
colonies of Angola
and Portuguese Guinea
, became part of the so-called Portuguese Colonial War
(1961–1974). From a military standpoint, the Portuguese
regular army maintained control of the population centres while the
guerrilla forces sought to undermine their influence in rural and
tribal areas in the north and west. As part of their response to
FRELIMO the Portuguese government began to pay more attention to
creating favourable conditions for social development and economic
growth.
After 10
years of sporadic warfare and Portugal's return to democracy
through a leftist military coup in Lisbon
which
replaced Portugal's Estado Novo
regime for a military junta (the Carnation Revolution of April 1974),
FRELIMO took control of the territory. Within a year, most
of the 250,000 Portuguese in Mozambique had left – some expelled by
the government of the nearly-independent territory, some fleeing in
fear – and Mozambique became independent from Portugal on June 25,
1975. Within a few years, almost the entire ethnic Portuguese
population which had remained at independence had also
departed.
Conflict and civil war
The new government, under president
Samora
Machel, gave shelter and support to South African (
African National Congress) and
Zimbabwean (
Zimbabwe
African National Union) liberation movements while the
governments of first
Rhodesia and later
South Africa (at that time still operating the
Apartheid laws) fostered and financed an armed
rebel movement in central Mozambique called the
Mozambican National
Resistance (RENAMO). Starting shortly after the independence,
the country was plagued from 1977 to 1992 by a long and violent
civil war between the opposition forces of anti-
Communist RENAMO rebel
militias and the
Marxist FRELIMO regime - the
Mozambican Civil War. Hence, civil war,
combined with sabotage from the neighbouring white-ruled state of
Rhodesia and the Apartheid regime of South Africa, ineffective
policies, failed central planning and the resulting economic
collapse, characterized the first decades of Mozambican
independence. Marking this period were the mass exodus of
Portuguese nationals and Mozambicans of Portuguese heritage, a
collapsed infrastructure, lack of investment in productive assets,
and government nationalisation of privately owned industries.
During most of the civil war, the government was unable to exercise
effective control outside of urban areas, many of which were cut
off from the capital. An estimated one million Mozambicans perished
during the civil war, 1.7 million took refuge in neighbouring
states, and several million more were internally displaced.
On
October 19, 1986 Samora Machel was on his way back from an
international meeting in Zambia
in the
presidential Tupolev Tu-134 aircraft
when the plane crashed
in the Lebombo Mountains
, near Mbuzini. There were ten survivors but
President Machel and thirty-three others died, including ministers
and officials of the Mozambique government.
The United Nations' Soviet Union
delegation issued a minority report contending that
their expertise and experience had been undermined by the South
Africans. Representatives of the Soviet Union advanced the
theory that the plane had been intentionally diverted by a false
navigational beacon
signal, using a technology provided by military intelligence
operatives of the South African government.
Machel's successor,
Joaquim
Chissano, continued the reforms and began peace talks with
RENAMO. The new constitution enacted in 1990 provided for a
multi-party political system, market-based economy, and free
elections. The civil war ended in October 1992 with the
Rome General Peace Accords, first
brokered by the CCM, the Christian Council of Mozambique (Council
of Protestant Churches) and then taken over by
Community of Sant'Egidio. Under
supervision of the
ONUMOZ peacekeeping force
of the United Nations, peace returned to Mozambique.
By
mid-1995 more than 1.7 million Mozambican refugees who had
sought asylum in neighbouring Malawi
, Zimbabwe
, Swaziland
, Zambia
, Tanzania, and South Africa as a result of war and
drought had returned, as part of the largest repatriation witnessed
in sub-Saharan Africa. Additionally, a further estimated
four million internally displaced persons returned to their areas
of origin.
Foreign relations
While allegiances dating back to the liberation struggle remain
relevant, Mozambique's foreign policy has become increasingly
pragmatic. The twin pillars of Mozambique's foreign policy are
maintenance of good relations with its neighbors and maintenance
and expansion of ties to development partners.
During the 1970s and the early 1980s, Mozambique's foreign policy
was inextricably linked to the struggles for majority rule in
Rhodesia and South Africa as well as
superpower competition and the
Cold War.
Mozambique's decision to enforce UN sanctions against Rhodesia and
deny that country access to the sea led
Ian
Smith's government to undertake overt and covert actions to
destabilize the country. Although the change of government in
Zimbabwe in 1980 removed this threat, the government of South
Africa continued to finance the destabilization of Mozambique.
Mozambique also belonged to the
Front
Line States.
The 1984
Nkomati Accord, while
failing in its goal of ending South African support to RENAMO,
opened initial diplomatic contacts between the Mozambican and South
African governments. This process gained momentum with South
Africa's elimination of
apartheid, which
culminated in the establishment of full diplomatic relations in
October 1993. While relations with neighbouring Zimbabwe, Malawi,
Zambia, and Tanzania show occasional strains, Mozambique's ties to
these countries remain strong.
In the years immediately following its independence, Mozambique
benefited from considerable assistance from some Western countries,
notably the
Scandinavians. The Soviet
Union and its allies, however, became Mozambique's primary
economic, military, and political supporters and its foreign policy
reflected this linkage.
This began to change in 1983; in 1984
Mozambique joined the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund
. Western aid by the Scandinavian countries of Sweden
, Norway
, Denmark
and Iceland
quickly replaced Soviet support.
Finland
and the Netherlands
are becoming increasingly important sources of
development assistance. Italy
also
maintains a profile in Mozambique as a result of its key role
during the peace process. Relations with Portugal
, the former colonial power, continue to be
important, as Portuguese investors play a visible role in
Mozambique's economy.
Mozambique is a member of the
Non-Aligned Movement and ranks among
the moderate members of the African bloc in the
United Nations and other international
organisations. Mozambique also belongs to the
African Union (formerly the
Organisation of African Unity)
and the
Southern
African Development Community. In 1994, the government became a
full member of the
Organisation of the
Islamic Conference, in part to broaden its base of
international support but also to please the country's sizable
Muslim population. Similarly, in early 1996 Mozambique joined its
Anglophone neighbours in the
Commonwealth of Nations. At the time
it was the only nation to have joined the Commonwealth that was
never part of the
British Empire.
In the
same year, Mozambique became a founding member and the first
President of the Community of Portuguese Language
Countries
(CPLP), and maintains close ties with other
Lusophone states.
Provinces, districts, and postos
Mozambique is divided into ten
provinces
(
provincias) and one capital city (
cidade
capital) with provincial status. The provinces are subdivided
into 129
districts (
distritos).
The districts are further divided in 405 "Postos Administrativos"
(Administrative Posts) and then into Localidades (Localities), the
lowest geographical level of the central state administration.
Since 1998, 33 "Municípios" (Municipalities) have been created in
Mozambique.
Geography and climate
At
309,475 square miles (801,590 km²), Mozambique is the world's
35th-largest country (after Pakistan
). It is comparable in size to Turkey
.
Mozambique is located on the southeast coast of Africa.
It is
bound by Swaziland
to the south, South
Africa to the southwest, Zimbabwe
to the west, Zambia
and Malawi
to the
northwest, Tanzania to the north and the
Indian
Ocean
to the east. The country is divided into two
topographical regions by the Zambezi River
. To the north of the Zambezi River, the
narrow coastline moves inland to hills and low plateaus, and
further west to rugged highlands, which include the Niassa
highlands,
Namuli
or Shire
highlands, Angonia highlands, Tete
highlands
and the Makonde plateau, covered with
miombo woodlands. To the south of the
Zambezi River, the lowlands are broader with the Mashonaland
plateau and
Lebomo mountains located in the
deep south.
The country is drained by five principal rivers and several smaller
ones with the largest and most important the Zambezi.
The country has three
lakes, Lake
Niassa
(or Malawi), Lake Chiuta
and Lake
Shirwa
, all in the north. The major cities are
Maputo
, Beira
, Nampula
, Tete
, Quelimane
, Chimoio
, Pemba
, Inhambane
, Xai-Xai
and Lichinga
.
Mozambique has a tropical climate with two seasons, a wet season
from October to March and a dry season from April to September.
Climatic conditions, however, vary depending on altitude. Rainfall
is heavy along the coast and decreases in the north and south.
Annual precipitation varies from 500 to 900 mm (20 to
35 inches) depending on the region with an average of
590 mm (23 inches). Cyclones are also common during the
wet season. Average temperature ranges in Maputo are from 13 to 24
degrees Celsius (55 to 75 degrees Fahrenheit) in July to 22 to 31
degrees Celsius (72 to 88 degrees Fahrenheit) in February.
Politics
Mozambique is a multi-party
democracy
under the 1990
constitution. The
executive branch comprises a president,
prime minister, and
Council of Ministers. There is a
National Assembly and
municipal assemblies. The judiciary comprises a Supreme Court and
provincial, district, and municipal courts.
Suffrage is universal at eighteen.
In the 1994
elections,
Joaquim Chissano was elected President with 53% of the vote, and a
250-member National Assembly was voted in with 129 Liberation Front
of Mozambique (
FRELIMO) deputies, 112
Mozambican National
Resistance (RENAMO) deputies, and nine representatives of three
smaller parties that formed the
Democratic Union (UD). Since
its formation in 1994, the National Assembly has made progress in
becoming a body increasingly more independent of the executive. By
1999, more than one-half (53%) of the legislation passed originated
in the Assembly.
After some delays, in 1998 the country held its first local
elections to provide for local representation and some budgetary
authority at the municipal level. The principal opposition party,
RENAMO, boycotted the local elections, citing flaws in the
registration process. Independent slates contested the elections
and won seats in municipal assemblies. Turnout was very low.
In the aftermath of the 1998 local elections, the government
resolved to make more accommodations to the opposition's procedural
concerns for the second round of multiparty national elections in
1999. Working through the National Assembly, the electoral law was
rewritten and passed by consensus in December 1998. Financed
largely by international donors, a very successful voter
registration was conducted from July to September 1999, providing
voter registration cards to 85% of the potential electorate (more
than seven million voters).
The second general elections were held December 3–5, 1999, with
high
voter turnout. International and
domestic observers agreed that the voting process was well
organized and went smoothly. Both the opposition and observers
subsequently cited flaws in the tabulation process that, had they
not occurred, might have changed the outcome. In the end, however,
international and domestic observers concluded that the close
result of the vote reflected the will of the people.
President Chissano won the presidency with a margin of 4% points
over the RENAMO-Electoral Union coalition candidate, Afonso
Dhlakama, and began his five-year term in January, 2000. FRELIMO
increased its majority in the National Assembly with 133 out of 250
seats. RENAMO-UE coalition won 116 seats, one went independent, and
no third parties are represented.
The opposition coalition did not accept the
National Election
Commission's results of the presidential vote and filed a
formal complaint to the Supreme Court. One month after the voting,
the court dismissed the opposition's challenge and validated the
election results. The opposition did not file a complaint about the
results of the legislative vote.
The second local elections, involving thirty-three municipalities
with some 2.4 million registered voters, took place in
November 2003. This was the first time that FRELIMO, RENAMO-UE, and
independent parties competed without significant boycotts. The 24%
turnout was well above the 15% turnout in the first municipal
elections. FRELIMO won twenty-eight mayoral positions and the
majority in twenty-nine municipal assemblies, while RENAMO won five
mayoral positions and the majority in four municipal assemblies.
The voting was conducted in an orderly fashion without violent
incidents. However, the period immediately after the elections was
marked by objections about voter and candidate registration and
vote tabulation, as well as calls for greater transparency.
In May 2004, the government approved a new general elections law
that contained innovations based on the experience of the 2003
municipal elections.
Presidential and National Assembly elections took place on December
1–2, 2004. FRELIMO candidate Armando Guebuza won with 64% of the
popular vote. His opponent, Afonso Dhlakama of RENAMO, received 32%
of the popular vote. FRELIMO won 160 seats in Parliament. A
coalition of RENAMO and several small parties won the 90 remaining
seats. Armando Guebuza was inaugurated as the President of
Mozambique on February 2, 2005. RENAMO and some other opposition
parties made claims of election fraud and denounced the result.
These claims were supported by international observers (among
others by the European Union Election Observation Mission to
Mozambique and the Carter Centre) to the elections who criticised
the fact that the National Electoral Commission (CNE) did not
conduct fair and transparent elections. They listed a whole range
of shortcomings by the electoral authorities that benefited the
ruling party FRELIMO. However, according to EU observers, the
elections shortcomings have probably not affected the final result
in the presidential election. On the other hand, the observers have
declared that the outcome of the parliamentary election and thus
the distribution of seats in the National Assembly does not reflect
the will of the Mozambican people and is clearly to the
disadvantage of RENAMO.
Economy

Women in Mozambique with maize.
The official currency is the
New
Metical (as of 2009, 1 USD is roughly equivalent to 27
Meticals), which replaced old Meticals at the rate of a thousand to
one. The old currency will be redeemed by the
Bank of Mozambique until the end of 2012.
The
US dollar,
South African rand, and recently the
euro are also widely accepted and used in
business transactions. The minimum legal salary is around US$60 per
month. Mozambique is a member of the
Southern African
Development Community (SADC). The SADC
free trade protocol is aimed at making the
Southern African region more competitive by eliminating
tariffs and other
trade
barriers. The
World Bank in 2007
talked of Mozambique’s ‘blistering pace of economic growth’.
A joint
donor-government study in early 2007 said ‘Mozambique is generally
considered an aid success story.’ The IMF
in early
2007 said ‘Mozambique is a success story in Sub-Saharan Africa.’
Yet, despite this apparent success, both the World Bank and
UNICEF used the word ‘paradox’ to describe
rising chronic child malnutrition
in the face of GDP growth. Between 1994 and 2006, average
annual GDP growth was approximately 8%, however, the country
remains one of the poorest and most underdeveloped in the world. In
a 2006 survey, three-quarters of Mozambicans said that in the past
five years their economic position had remained the same or become
worse.
Rebounding growth
The resettlement of
civil war
refugees and successful economic reform
have led to a high growth rate: the country has enjoyed a
remarkable recovery, achieving an average annual rate of economic
growth of 8% between 1996 and 2006. The devastating
floods of early 2000 slowed GDP growth
to 2.1%. A full recovery was achieved with growth of 14.8% in 2001.
In 2003, the growth rate was 7%. The government projects the
economy to continue to expand between 7%-10% a year for the next
five years, although rapid expansion in the future hinges on
several major foreign investment projects, continued economic
reform, and the revival of the agriculture, transportation, and
tourism sectors. More than 75% of the population engages in
small-scale agriculture, which still suffers from inadequate
infrastructure, commercial networks, and investment. However, 88%
of Mozambique's arable land is still
uncultivated.
In addition, the profitable exploitation of valuable
titanium reserves has the potential to uplift this
poverty-stricken region of Africa. As a natural resource, it could
play a significant role in solving unemployment and poverty.
Mozambique just passed a bill to help its economy by being able to
give more grants etc...
Inflation
The government's tight control of spending and the money supply,
combined with financial sector reform, successfully reduced
inflation from 70% in 1994 to less than 5%
in 1998–99. Economic disruptions stemming from the devastating
floods of 2000 caused inflation to jump to 12.7% that year, and it
was 13% in 2003. Mozambique's currency, the
Metical (MZM),
devaluated by 50% to the dollar in 2001,
although in late 2001 it began to stabilize. Since then, it has
held steady at about 24,000 MZM to 1 U.S. dollar. New Metical
replaced old Meticals at a rate of a thousand to one on January 1,
2007, bringing the exchange rate to 25 (new) MZN to
1 USD.
Economic reforms
More than 1,200
state-owned
enterprises (mostly small) have been
privatised. Preparations for privatisation
and/or sector liberalisation are underway for the remaining
parastatal enterprises, including telecommunications, energy,
ports, and railways. The government frequently selects a strategic
foreign investor when privatising a parastatal. Additionally,
customs duties have been reduced, and customs management has been
streamlined and reformed. The government introduced a value-added
tax in 1999 as part of its efforts to increase domestic revenues.
Plans for 2003–04 include Commercial Code reform; comprehensive
judicial reform; financial sector strengthening; continued civil
service reform; and improved government budget, audit, and
inspection capability. Further political instability resulting from
the floods left thousands homeless, displaced within their own
country.
Improving trade imbalance
Imports remain almost 40% greater than exports, but this is a
significant improvement over the 4:1 ratio of the immediate
post-war years. In 2003, imports were $1.24 billion and
exports were $910 million. Support programs provided by
foreign donors and private financing of foreign direct investment
mega-projects and their associated raw materials have largely
compensated for balance-of-payments shortfalls. The medium-term
outlook for exports is encouraging, since a number of foreign
investment projects should lead to substantial export growth and a
better trade balance. MOZAL, a large aluminium smelter that
commenced production in mid-2000, has greatly expanded the nation's
trade volume. Traditional Mozambican exports include cashews,
shrimp, fish, copra, sugar, cotton, tea, and citrus fruits. Most of
these industries are being rehabilitated. As well, Mozambique is
less dependent on imports for basic food and manufactured goods
because of steady increases in local production.
Demographics
The north-central provinces of Zambezia and Nampula are the most
populous, with about 45% of the population. The estimated four
million
Macua are the dominant group
in the northern part of the country; the
Sena and
Shona
(mostly
Ndau) are prominent in the Zambezi
valley, and the
Shangaan dominate in
southern Mozambique. Other groups include
Makonde,
Yao,
Swahili,
Tonga,
Chopi, and
Nguni
(including
Zulu).
Bantu people comprise 99.66% of the
population, with the rest including White
Africans (largely of Portuguese ancestry), Euro-Africans
(mestiço people of
mixed Bantu and Portuguese heritage), and Indians
. Roughly 20,000 people of
Indian descent reside in Mozambique.
During Portuguese colonial rule, a large minority of people of
Portuguese descent lived
permanently in almost all areas of the country, and Mozambicans
with Portuguese blood at the time of independence numbered about
360,000. Many of these left the region after independence from
Portugal in 1975.
The remaining minorities in Mozambique claim
heritage from Pakistan
, Portuguese India
, and Arab countries.
There are various estimates for the size of
Mozambique's Chinese community,
ranging from 1,500 to 12,000 .
Despite the influence of Islamic coastal traders and European
colonisers, the people of Mozambique have largely retained an
indigenous culture based on small-scale agriculture. Mozambique's
most well-known art forms are wood sculpture, for which the
Makonde in northern Mozambique are
particularly renowned, and dance. The middle and upper classes
continue to be heavily influenced by the Portuguese colonial and
linguistic heritage.
Languages
Portuguese is the official and
most widely spoken language of the nation, but only 40% of the
population speak it — 33.5%, mostly Bantus, as their second
language and only 6.5%, mostly white Mozambicans and mestiços, as
their first language. Bantus speak several different languages, the
most widely used being
Swahili,
Makhuwa,
Sena,
Ndau, and
Shangaan. Bantu languages as spoken
in Mozambique have many words of Portuguese origin. Arabs, Chinese,
and Indians speak their own languages (Indians from Portuguese
India speak any of the
Portuguese
Creoles of their origin) aside from Portuguese as their second
language. Most educated Mozambicans can also speak
English, which is used in schools and
business, as their second or third language.
Health
The fertility rate is at about 5.5 births per woman. Public
expenditure on health was at 2.7 % of the GDP in 2004, whereas
private expenditure on health was at 1.3 % in the same year. Health
expenditure per capita was 42 US$ (PPP) in 2004. In the early 2000s
there were 3 physicians per 100,000 people in the country.
Infant mortality was at 100 per 1,000
births in 2005.
HIV prevalence among 15 to 49
year olds exceeds 10 %.
Education

Students in front of their school in
Nampula, Mozambique
Since independence from Portugal in 1975, school construction and
teacher training enrollments have not kept up with population
increases. Especially after the
Mozambican Civil War (1977-1992), with
post-war enrollments reaching all-time highs due to stability and
youth population growth, the quality of education suffered. All
Mozambicans are required by law to attend school through the
primary level; however, a lot of children in Mozambique do not go
to primary school because they have to work for their families'
subsistence farms for a living. In 2007, one million children still
did not go to school, most of them from poor rural families, and
almost half of all teachers in Mozambique were still unqualified.
Girls’ enrollment increased from 3 million in 2002 to 4.1 million
in 2006 while the completion rate increased from 31,000 to 90,000,
which testified a very poor completion rate.
After grade 7, students must take standardised national exams to
enter secondary school, which runs from 8th to 10th grade. Space in
Mozambican universities is extremely limited; thus most students
who complete pre-university school do not immediately proceed on to
university studies. Many go to work as teachers or are unemployed.
There are also institutes which give more vocational training,
specialising in agricultural, technical, or pedagogical studies,
which students may attend after grade 10 in lieu of a
pre-university school.
After independence from Portugal in 1975, a number of Mozambican
students continued to be admitted every year at Portuguese high
schools, polytechnical institutes, and universities, through
bilateral agreements between the Portuguese government and the
Mozambican government; in general these students come from the
Mozambican elite.
Religion
The
Roman Catholic Church has
established twelve dioceses (Beira, Chimoio, Gurué, Inhambane,
Lichinga, Maputo, Nacala, Nampula, Pemba, Quelimane, Tete, and
Xai-Xai - archdioceses are Beira, Maputo
and
Nampula
). Statistics for the dioceses range from a
low 7.44% Catholics in the population in the diocese of Chimoio, to
87.50% in Quelimane diocese (2006 official Catholic figures).
Muslims are particularly present in the north of the country. They
are organized in several "tariqa" or brotherhoods (of the Qadiriya
or Shadhuliyyah branch). Two national organizations also exist -
the
Conselho Islâmico de Moçambique (reformists) and the
Congresso Islâmico de Moçambique (pro-Sufi). There are
also important Indo-Pakistani associations as well as some Shia and
particularly Ismaili communities.
Among the main
Protestant churches are
Igreja União Baptista de Moçambique, the
Assembleias de Deus, the
Seventh-day Adventists, the
Anglican Church of Southern
Africa, the
Igreja do Evangelho Completo de
Deus, the
Igreja Metodista Unida, the
Igreja Presbiteriana de Moçambique, the
Igreja de Cristo and the
Assembleia Evangélica de Deus.
The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is also present as well as
the
Jehovah's Witnesses, the
Brazilian
Igreja
Universal do Reino de Deus and Igreja Crista Maranata.
According to the 1997 census, the
Roman
Catholic community makes up 23.8 percent of the population
of Mozambique.
Muslims comprise
17.8 percent of the population, and people of the
Protestant community make up 17.5% of the
country's population. 17.8% of the people have other beliefs, and
23.1% have no religious beliefs.
References
- Mozambique by Philip Briggs and Danny
Edmunds
- Arming Slaves, Arming slaves: from classical
times to the modern age, Christopher Leslie Brown, Philip D.
Morgan, Gilder Lehrman: Center for the Study of Slavery,
Resistance, and Abolition. Edition: Yale University Press, 2006
ISBN 0-300-10900-8, 9780300109009
- The Cambridge history of Africa, The Cambridge
history of Africa, John Donnelly Fage, A. D. Roberts, Roland
Anthony Oliver, Edition: Cambridge University Press, 1986, ISBN
0-521-22505-1, 9780521225052
- The Third Portuguese Empire, 1825-1975, The
Third Portuguese Empire, 1825-1975: A Study in Economic
Imperialism, W. G. Clarence-Smith, Edition: Manchester University
Press ND, 1985, ISBN 0-7190-1719-X, 9780719017193
- Agência Geral do Ultramar, "Na sequência do
Decreto-Lei nº 38.300 de 15 de Junho de 1951, que transformou o
Ministério das Colónias em Ministério do Ultramar e o Conselho do
Império Colonial em Conselho Ultramarino, foram também alterados
alguns nomes, pela Portaria n.º 13.593 de 5 de Julho de 1951,
ganhando a designação de Agência Geral do Ultramar e Boletim Geral
do Ultramar. A Agência Geral do Ultramar continuou como organismo
dependente do Ministério do Ultramar, na reorganização conferida
pelo Decreto-Lei n.º 41.169 de 29 de Junho de 1959, e estava
vocacionado para fomentar o conhecimento recíproco das províncias
ultramarinas e da metrópole, a divulgar no estrangeiro informações
relativas àquelas, a orientar e desenvolver o turismo nas
províncias e a exercer na metrópole procuradoria de interesses
ultramarinos, prevendo já os serviços administrativos, os de
informação e relações exteriores, os de turismo, e os
técnicos."
- Independence redux in postsocialist Mozambique,
Alice Dinerman
- CD do Diário de Notícias - Parte 08
- Carnation revolution, By Mia Couto, Le Monde
diplomatique, April 2004
- Dismantling the Portuguese Empire,
Time
Magazine (Monday, July 07, 1975).
- A Mozambique Formally at Peace Is Bled by Hunger
and Brutality, The New York Times, October 13, 1992
-
http://www.tpk.fi/netcomm/news/showarticle.asp?intNWSAID=71407&intSubArtID=28199
- Is Poverty Decreasing in Mozambique?,
Joseph
Hanlon, Senior Lecturer, Open University, England - Paper to be
presented at the Inaugural Conference of the Instituto de Estudos
Sociais e Económicos (IESE) in Maputo, 19 September 2007.
- http://www.iceida.is/english/main-activities/mozambique/
- "Mozambique". CIA World Factbook.
Retrieved 22 May 2007.
- Mozambique (01/09), U.S. Department of
State
-
http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/data_sheets/cty_ds_MOZ.html
- Key facts, Department for International
Development (DFID), a part of the UK Government (24 May 2007)
Bibliography
- Gengenbach, Heidi. Binding Memories: Women as Makers and
Tellers of History in Magude, Mozambique. Columbia University
Press, 2004. Entire Text Online:
http://www.gutenberg-e.org/geh01/main.html
- Abrahamsson, Hans Mozambique: The Troubled Transition, from
Socialist Construction to Free Market Capitalism London: Zed
Books, 1995
- Cahen, Michel Les bandits: un historien au Mozambique_,
Paris: Gulbenkian, 1994
- Pitcher, Anne Transforming Mozambique: The politics of
privatisation, 1975–2000 Cambridge, 2002
- Newitt, Malyn A History of Mozambique Indiana
University Press
- Varia, "Religion in Mozambique", LFM: Social sciences &
Missions No. 17, December 2005
- Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Nyerere and Africa: End of an
Era, Third Edition, New Africa Press, 2006, "Chapter Seven:
"The Struggle for Mozambique: The Founding of FRELIMO in Tanzania,"
pp. 206–225, ISBN 978-0-9802534-1-2; Mwakikagile, Godfrey,
Africa and America in The Sixties: A Decade That Changed The
Nation and The Destiny of A Continent, First Edition, New
Africa Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-9802534-2-9
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