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 Rwanda| Facts & Figures |
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Republic of Rwanda
President: Paul Kagame (2000) Prime Minister: Pierre Damien Habumuremyi (2011) Land area: 9,633 sq mi (24,949 sq km);
total area: 10,169 sq mi (26,338 sq km) Population (2012 est.): 11,689,696
(growth rate: 2.75%); birth rate: 36.14/1000; infant mortality rate:
62.51/1000; life expectancy: 58.44
Capital and largest city (2009 est.):
Kigali, 965,398 Monetary unit: Rwanda franc More Facts & Figures |
Republic of Rwanda
GeographyRwanda, in east-central Africa, is surrounded by the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Uganda, Tanzania, and Burundi. It is slightly
smaller than Maryland. Steep mountains and deep valleys cover most of the
country. Lake Kivu in the northwest, at an altitude of 4,829 ft (1,472 m),
is the highest lake in Africa. Extending north of it are the Virunga
Mountains, which include the volcano Karisimbi (14,187 ft; 4,324 m),
Rwanda's highest point.
GovernmentRepublic.
HistoryThe original inhabitants of Rwanda were the Twa, a Pygmy people who now
make up only 1% of the population. While the Hutu and Tutsi are often
considered to be two separate ethnic groups, scholars point out that they
speak the same language, have a history of intermarriage, and share many
cultural characteristics. Traditionally, the differences between the two
groups were occupational rather than ethnic. Agricultural people were
considered Hutu, while the cattle-owning elite were identified as Tutsi.
Supposedly Tutsi were tall and thin, while Hutu were short and square, but
it is often impossible to tell one from the other. The 1933 requirement by
the Belgians that everyone carry an identity card indicating tribal
ethnicity as Tutsi or Hutu enhanced the distinction. Since independence,
repeated violence in both Rwanda and Burundi has increased ethnic
differentiation between the groups.
Rwanda, which became a part of German East Africa in 1890, was first
visited by European explorers in 1854. During World War I, it was occupied
in 1916 by Belgian troops. After the war, it became a Belgian League of
Nations mandate, along with Burundi, under the name of Ruanda-Urundi. The
mandate was made a UN trust territory in 1946. Until the Belgian Congo
achieved independence in 1960, Rwanda-Urundi was administered as part of
that colony. Belgium at first maintained Tutsi dominance but eventually
encouraged power sharing between Hutu and Tutsi. Ethnic tensions led to
civil war, forcing many Tutsi into exile. When Rwanda became the
independent nation of Rwanda on July 1, 1962, it was under Hutu rule.
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