Mauritanian President |
The journey is not yet finished (106)
(Part one hundred and six, Depok, West Java, Indonesia,
20 September 2014, 24.40 pm)
Mauritania is one of the countries in Sub-Saharan Africa
is experiencing high economic growth, as reported by the World Bank:
Mauritania: Harnessing the Country's Natural Resources to
Growth and Sustainable Development
Mauritania registered a robust growth rate of 6.7% in
2013 and continues to be characterized by macroeconomic stability. At the same
time, the country remains exposed to vulnerabilities related to lack of
diversification, international prices volatility and reliance on foreign
inflows. Sound management of natural resources is essential to foster inclusive
and long-term growth, according to the× Bank's first Mauritania Economic
Update, launched today.
The key policy question facing× Mauritania is how to set
up a foundation for long-term growth. The report highlights the need to
reinvest the revenue generated by selling natural resources into other forms of
capital.
"A resource-rich developing economy like×
Mauritania, with its high growth rates, can become one of the success stories
in Sub-Saharan Africa. The country has considerable untapped potential and,
with the ongoing diversification agenda and efforts to increase productivity,
can rapidly achieve sustainable and inclusive development" says Vera
Songwe, Country Director for× Mauritania at the World Bank Group.
The report favors the recent shift of public expenditure,
which put the accent on public investments on energy and key infrastructure
projects, as well as on phasing-out of subsidies and focusing on preventative
rather than reactionary methods to crises.
The wealth of× Mauritania is being depleted, according to
current utilization patterns. However, renewable resources account for
approximately two thirds of natural wealth and with effective management and
adequate policies× Mauritania can create a constant flow of resources and
ensure the same - or higher - levels of welfare for the future generations.
"For a considerably endowed country like×
Mauritania, good management of natural resources is essential to ensuring that
growth is shared" says Gianluca Mele, World Bank Economist for× Mauritania
and author of the report.
The report details major challenges facing× Mauritania.
While the country has succeeded in increasing per capita income over recent
years, income distribution has remained relatively unchanged for the last two
decades and the challenges of unemployment remain daunting. Mauritania has
recorded positive improvements in fiscal consolidation, and the report
encourages to continue consolidating the× Management agenda by strengthening
the efficiency of medium term expenditure frameworks (MTEFs), and by
streamlining public procurement procedures.
Mauritanian Territory |
On social development, while Mauritania has registered
remarkable achievements in primary enrollment and gender balance in schools,
more needs to be done to improve the quality of health-related services, as the
maternal and infant mortality Millennium Development Goals appear out of reach.
It is also critical that the country ensures public sector selection processes
follow transparent paths built on meritocracy, and that statistical
intelligence is produced and disseminated regularly.
History of Mauritania
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The original inhabitants of Mauritania were the Bafour,
presumably a Mande ethnic group, connected to the contemporary Arabized minor
social group of Imraguen ("fishermen") on the Atlantic coast.
The territory of Mauritania was on the fringe of
geographical knowledge of Libya in classical antiquity. Berber immigration took
place from about the 3rd century. Mauritania takes its name from the ancient
Berber kingdom and later Roman province of Mauretania, and thus ultimately from
the Mauri people, even though the respective territories do not overlap,
historical Mauretania being considerably further north than modern Mauritania.
The Muslim conquest of the Maghreb in the 7th and 8th
centuries did not reach as far south, and Islam came to Mauritania only
gradually, from about the 11th century, in the context of the wider
Islamization of the Sudan and medieval Arab slave trade.
The European colonial powers of the 19th century had
little interest in Mauritania. The French Republic was mostly interested in the
territory for strategic reason, as a connection between their possessions in
North and in West Africa. Mauritania thus became part of French West Africa in
1904, but colonial control was mostly limited to the coast and the Saharan
trade routes, and there were territories nominally within French West Africa
which were not reached by European control as late as 1955.
In 1960, the Republic of Mauritania became independent of
France. The conflict over the former Spanish territory of Western Sahara in
1976 resulted in partial annexation by Mauritania, withdrawn in favour of
Morocco in 1979. The long-serving dictator Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya was
ousted by the military of Mauritania and replaced by the Military Council for
Justice and Democracy in a coup d'état in 2005. A new constitution was passed
in 2006. An undecisive election in 2007 triggered another coup in 2008. A
leader of the 2005 coup, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, was elected president in
2009.
Main article: Precolonial Mauritania
The Sahara has linked rather than divided the peoples who
inhabit it and has served as an avenue for migration and conquest. Mauritania,
lying next to the Atlantic coast at the western edge of the desert, received
and assimilated into its complex society many waves of these migrants and
conquerors.
What is now Mauritania was a dry savanna area during
classical antiquity, where independent tribes like the Pharusii and the Perorsi
(and the Nigritae near the Niger river) did a seminomadic life facing a growing
desertification.
Romans did explorations toward this area and probably
reached, with Suetonius Paulinus, the area of Adrar. There are evidences
(coins, fibulas) of Roman commerce in Akjoujt and Tamkartkart near Tichit.[1]
Mauritanian Women |
Berbers moved south to Mauritania beginning in the 3rd
century, followed by Arabs in the 8th century,[dubious – discuss] subjugating
and assimilating Mauritania's original inhabitants. From the 8th through the
15th century, black kingdoms of the western Sudan, such as Ghana, Mali, and
Songhai, brought their political culture from the south.[2]
The divisive tendencies of the various groups within
Mauritanian society have always worked against the development of Mauritanian
unity. Both the Sanhadja Confederation, at its height from the 8th to the 10th
century, and the Almoravid Empire, from the 11th to the 12th century, were
weakened by internecine warfare, and both succumbed to further invasions from
the Ghana Empire and the Almohad Empire, respectively.[2]
Islamization[edit]
The Islamization of Mauritania was a gradual process that
spanned more than 500 years. Beginning slowly through contacts with Berber and
Arab merchants engaged in the important caravan trades and rapidly advancing
through the Almoravid conquests, Islamization did not take firm hold until the
arrival of Yemeni Arabs in the 12th and 13th centuries and was not complete
until several centuries later. Gradual Islamization was accompanied by a
process of Arabization as well, during which the Berber masters of Mauritania
lost power and became vassals of their Arab conquerors.[2]
From the 15th to the 19th century, European contact with
Mauritania was dominated by the trade for gum arabic. Rivalries among European
powers enabled the Arab-Berber population, the Maures (Moors), to maintain
their independence and later to exact annual payments from France, whose
sovereignty over the Senegal River and the Mauritanian coast was recognized by
the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Although penetration beyond the coast and the
Senegal River began in earnest under Louis Faidherbe, governor of Senegal in
the mid-19th century, European conquest or "pacification" of the
entire country did not begin until 1900. Because extensive European contact
began so late in the country's history, the traditional social structure
carried over into modern times with little change.[2]
French colonization[edit]
Main article: Colonial Mauritania
The history of French colonial policy in Mauritania is
closely tied to that of the other French possessions in West Africa,
particularly to that of Senegal, on which Mauritania was economically,
politically, and administratively dependent until independence. The French
policy of assimilation and direct rule, however, was never applied with any
vigor in Mauritania, where a system that corresponded more to Britain's
colonial policies of association and indirect rule developed. Colonial
administrators relied extensively on Islamic religious leaders and the
traditional warrior groups to maintain their rule and carry out their policies.
Moreover, little attempt was made to develop the country's economy.[2]
After World War II, Mauritania, along with the rest of
French West Africa, was involved in a series of reforms of the French colonial
system, culminating in independence in 1960. These reforms were part of a trend
away from the official policies of assimilation and direct rule in favor of
administrative decentralization and internal autonomy. Although the
nationalistic fervor sweeping French West Africa at this time was largely
absent in Mauritania, continuous politicking (averaging one election every
eighteen months between 1946 and 1958) provided training for political leaders
and awakened a political consciousness among the populace. On 28 July 1960
France agreed to Mauritania becoming fully independent.[3] Nevertheless, when
Mauritania declared its independence on 28 November 1960, its level of
political as well as economic development was, at best, embryonic.[2]
Independence, Ould Daddah era, and the Saharan War[edit]
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2007)
Main article: History of Mauritania (1960–78)
As the country gained independence on November 28, 1960,
the capital city Nouakchott was founded at the site of a small colonial
village, the Ksar, while 90% of the population was still nomadic. With
independence, larger numbers of ethnic Sub-Saharan Africans (Haalpulaar,
Soninke, and Wolof) entered Mauritania, moving into the area north of the
Senegal River. As before independence, the sedentary lifestyle of these groups
made them more receptive to and useful in state formation, and they quickly
came to dominate state administration, even if the Moorish groups built up by
the French remained in charge of the political process. Moors reacted to this
change by increasing pressures for Arabization, to Arabicize many aspects of
Mauritanian life, such as law and language, and ethnic tension built up -
helped by a common memory of warfare and slave raids.
Mauritania Capital City |
President Moktar Ould Daddah, originally helped to the
post by the French, rapidly reformed Mauritania into an authoritarian one-party
state in 1964, with his new constitution. Daddah's own Parti du Peuple
Mauritanien (PPM) became the ruling organization. The President justified this
decision on the grounds that he considered Mauritania unready for western-style
multi-party democracy. Under this one-party constitution, Daddah was reelected
in uncontested elections in 1966, 1971 and 1976.
To take advantage of the country's sizable iron ore
deposits in Zouérat, the new government built a 675-km railway and a mining
port. Production began in 1963. The mines were operated by a foreign owned
consortium that paid its approximately 3,000 expatriate workers handsomely -
their salaries accounted for two-thirds of the country's entire wages bill.
When the Mauritanian miners went on a two-month strike in the late 1960s the
army intervened and eight miners were killed. Left-wing opposition to the
government mounted and some miners formed a clandestine Marxist union in 1973.
President Ould Daddah survived the challenge from left-wing opponents by
nationalising the company in 1974 and withdrawing from the franc zone, substituting
the ouguiya for the CFA.
In 1975, partly for nationalist reasons and partly for
fear of Moroccan expansionism,[1] Mauritania invaded and annexed the southern
third of the former Spanish Sahara (now Western Sahara) in 1975, renaming it
Tiris al-Gharbiyya. However, after nearly three years of raids by the Sahrawi
guerrillas of the Polisario Front, Mauritania's economic and political
stability began to crumble. Despite French and Moroccan military aid[2],
Polisario raids against the Zouerate railway and mines threatened to bring
about economic collapse, and there were deep misgivings in the military about
the Saharan adventure. Ethnic unrest contributed to the disarray. Black
Africans from the south were conscripted as front-line soldiers, after the
northern Sahrawi minorities and their Moorish kin had proven unreliable in the
fight against Polisario, but many of the southerners rebelled against having to
fight what they considered an inter-Arab war. After the government quarters in
Nouakchott had twice been shelled by Polisario forces, unrest simmered, but
Daddah's only response was to further tighten his hold on power.
On July 10, 1978, Col. Mustafa Ould Salek led a bloodless
coup d'état that ousted the President, who would later go into exile in France.
Power passed to the military strongmen of the Military Committee for National
Recovery (CMRN). Polisario immediately declared a cease-fire, and peace
negotiations began under the sponsorship of Polisario's main backer, Algeria.
With the CMSN's leader reluctant to break with France and Mauritania, the
country refused to give in to Polisario demands for a troop retreat, and Ould
Salek's careless handling of the ethnic issue (massively discriminating against
Black Africans in nominating for government posts [3]) contributed to further
unrest. In early 1979, he was pushed aside by another group of officers, who
renamed the junta the Military Committee for National Salvation (CMSN). Col.
Mohamed Khouna Ould Haidalla soon emerged as its main strongman.
Mauritania Children |
1978 to 1991[edit]
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Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2007)
Main article: History of Mauritania (1978–91)
In 1979, Polisario broke off the cease-fire and unleashed
a string of new attacks on military and government targets. Mauritania, under
its new government, immediately returned to the table to meet Polisario's
goals, declaring full peace, a troop retreat, relinquishing their portion of
Western Sahara and recognizing the Front as the Sahrawi people's sole
representative.[4] Morocco, occupying the northern half of Western Sahara and
also involved in combat against Polisario, reacted with outrage, and launched a
failed 1981 coup against the CMSN. Mauritania broke off relations with Rabat in
protest, although ties were later restored.[5][6]
In interior policy, Haidallah sought to improve relations
between White Moors and Black Moors, among other things officially decreeing
the ban of slavery for the first time in the country's history, but he neither
tried nor achieved a radical break with the sectarian and discriminating
policies of previous regimes. An attempt to reinstate civilian rule was
abandoned after the above-mentioned Moroccan-sponsored coup attempt nearly
brought down the regime; foreign-backed plots also involved Persian Gulf
countries and Libya, and the country several times appeared to be under
military threat from Morocco.[7]
Car Rally in Mauritania Desets |
With Haidallah's ambitious political and social reform
program undone by continuing instability, regime inefficiency and a plethora of
coup attempts and intrigues from within the military establishment, the CMSN
chairman turned increasingly autocratic, excluding other junta officers from
power, and provoking discontent by frequently reshuffling the power hierarchy
to prevent threats to his position.
On December 12, 1984, Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya deposed
Haidallah and declared himself Chairman of the CMSN. Like other rulers before
him, he promised a swift transfer to democracy, but then made little of these
promises.
The discord between conflicting visions of Mauritanian
society as either black or Arab, again rose to the surface during the
inter-communal violence that broke out in April 1989 (the "1989
Events"), when a Mauritania–Senegal border dispute escalated into violence
between the two communities. Tens of thousands of black Mauritanians fled or
were expelled from the country,[8] and many remain in Senegal as refugees. This
is also where the black Mauritanian movement FLAM is based. Although tension
has since subsided, the Arab-African racial tension remains an important
feature of the political dialog today. The country continues to experience
ethnic tensions between its black minority population and the dominant Mauri
(Arab–Berber) populace. A significant number from both groups, however, seek a
more diverse, pluralistic society.
Mauritanian Army |
1991 to present[edit]
Main article: History of Mauritania (1991–present)
Opposition parties were legalized and a new constitution
approved in 1991 which put an end to formal military rule. However, Ould Taya's
election wins were dismissed as fraudulent by both opposition groups and
external observers. In 1998, Mauritania became the third Arab country to
recognize Israel, despite strong internal opposition.
In 2001, elections incorporated more safeguards against
voter fraud, but opposition candidate (and former leader) Mohamed Khouna Ould
Haidallah was nevertheless arrested prior to election day on charges of
planning a coup, released the same day and rearrested after the election.
Attempted military coups and unrest instigated by Islamist opponents of the
regime marred the early years of the 21st century, and the Taya regime's
heavy-handed crackdowns were criticized by human rights groups.
On June 8, 2003, a failed coup attempt was made against
President Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya by forces unhappy with his imprisonment
of Islamic leaders in the wake of the US-led invasion of Iraq and his
establishment of full diplomatic relations with Israel. The coup was suppressed
after one day of fighting in the capital when pro-Taya military forces arrived
from the countryside. A number of government officials were detained after the
coup including the head of the Supreme Court, Mahfoud Ould Lemrabott, and the
Secretary of State for Women's Affairs, Mintata Mint Hedeid. The coup leader,
Saleh Ould Hanenna, a former army colonel sacked for opposing Taya's pro-Israel
policies, was not captured or killed during the coup. (See this BBC article on
theories behind the coup.)
On August 3, 2005, the Mauritanian military, including
members of the presidential guard, seized control of key points in the capital
of Nouakchott, performing a coup against the government of President Maaouya
Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya who was out of the country attending the funeral of Saudi
King Fahd. The officers released the following statement:
The national armed forces and security forces have
unanimously decided to put a definitive end to the oppressive activities of the
defunct authority, which our people have suffered from during the past years.
(BBC)
Taya was never able to return to the country and remains
in exile. The new junta called itself the Military Council for Justice and
Democracy, and democracy and rule of law. Col.. Ely Ould Mohamed Vall emerged
as leader at an early stage. Dissidents were released, and the political
climate relaxed. A new constitution was approved in June 2006. Elections were
held in March 2007, Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi was elected president and Vall
stood down.
In 2009, the Faroese trawler Næraberg fished there.
On August 6, 2008, Mauritania's presidential spokesman
Abdoulaye Mamadouba said President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, Prime Minister
Yahya Ould Ahmed El Waghef and the interior minister were arrested by renegade
Senior Mauritanian army officers, unknown troops and a group of generals and
were held under house arrest at the presidential palace in Nouakchott.[4][5][6]
In the apparently successful and bloodless coup d'état, Abdallahi daughter,
Amal Mint Cheikh Abdallahi said: "The security agents of the BASEP (Presidential
Security Battalion) came to our home and took away my father."[7] The coup
plotters are top fired Mauritania's security forces, which include General
Muhammad Ould 'Abd Al-'Aziz, General Muhammad Ould Al-Ghazwani, General
Philippe Swikri, and Brigadier General (Aqid) Ahmad Ould Bakri.[8] Mauritanian
lawmaker, Mohammed Al Mukhtar, announced that "many of the country's
people were supporting the takeover attempt and the government is "an
authoritarian regime" and that the president had "marginalized the
majority in parliament."[9] (Continoe)
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