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REUTERS
COUNTRY PROFILE |
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| Capital: |
Bogota |
| Area: |
1,142,000
square km, bounded to the north by the Caribbean, to the east by
Venezuela and Brazil, to the south by Peru and Ecuador and to the
west by the Pacific Ocean and by Panama. The western half of the
area is crossed from south to north by three Andean mountain chains.
The eastern half comprises the Ilanos (plains) and Amazon jungle.
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| Population: |
41.6
million (1999), 59.8 million (2025)
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| Language: |
The
official language is Spanish. |
| Ethnic
groups: |
Mainly
of mestizo (mixed European and Indian) descent, but with black and
pure Indian minorities. |
| Religion: |
Christianity,
mostly Roman Catholics |
| Climate: |
Tropical
in the coastal regions, temperate on the plateaux to cold in the Andes
mountains. |
| Currency: |
Colombian
Peso. |
| Time
zone: |
GMT
-5 |
| Public
holidays: |
Jan
1,8, Mar 19, Apr 20, 21, May 1, 28, Jun 18, 25, Jul 2, 20, Aug 7,
20, Oct 15, Nov 5, 12, Dec 8, 25 |
| Electricity: |
110/120V
60Hz |
| Travel
rules: |
Passport,
with six months validity, and visa required, as well as return/onward
travel ticket and proof of sufficient funds. |
| Driving: |
International
Driving Permit required. |
| Health
rules: |
Hepatitis
A, malaria, polio, tetanus, typhoid and yellow fever immunisation
is recommended. Hepatitis B and diphtheria immunisation is recommended
in some circumstances, seek advice. Malaria exists all year in rural
areas below 800 metres, Chloroquine is highly resistant and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine
resistance has been reported. Precautions: boil or sterilise drinking
water and milk. All food should be well cooked. Avoid bathing in fresh
water.
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| (Source:
The State of World Population 1999, UNFPA) |
POLITICAL
PROFILE
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At the
time of the Spanish arrival in Colombia at the end of the 15th century,
it was populated by various Indian tribes, each with distinct languages
and cultures. The most distinct were the Tayronas, fine goldsmiths
who lived on the Caribbean coast, the warrior Chibchas who settled
the mountainous centre of the country and the culture which inhabited
the area around San Agustin in the south, leaving behind them a
series of mysterious burial grounds and statues.
The Spaniards founded their first city at Santa Marta on the Caribbean
coast in 1525 and European settlement quickly spread, with Bogota
founded in 1538. In 1718, the Madrid Crown created the Vice-royalty
of New Granada which included modern-day Colombia.
Independence from the Spanish Crown was declared in 1819, when the
new republic joined with Venezuela and Ecuador to form Simon Bolivar's
"Greater Colombia." Venezuela broke off in 1829 and Ecuador a year
later, while Panama was lost to the United States in 1903. Politics
during the Nineteenth Century was dominated by a number of wars
between the Liberal and Conservative parties and between regional
chieftains.
The country's most brutal civil war, known as "La Violencia" was
sparked in 1948 by the assassination of the popular Liberal leader,
Jorge Eliecer Gaitan.
Some 300,000 people died in the ensuing bloodshed, which also featured
a 1953-57 military dictatorship and ended in 1958 with a formal
agreement between the two countries to share power which lasted
until 1978. The military has not held power or mounted a coup attempt
since 1957.
Elections to a constitutional convention were held in 1990, in which
the former guerrilla movement M19 gained 30 percent of the vote,
and a new constitution was promulgated in 1991. Congressional elections
to the 102-seat Senate and the 163-seat House of Representatives
held in March 1994 heralded the re-emergence of the traditional
parties. The Liberal candidate Ernesto Samper narrowly defeated
the Social Conservative Party (PSC) candidate.
National elections were next held in March 1998. Although Samper
is a member of the PSC, the PL has a majority in both the Chamber
of Deputies and the Senate.
The next congressional elections are due by March 2002, and the
next presidential elections by May 2002. Local and regional elections
are scheduled for 29 October 2000, but municipalities want them
postponed in rebel areas.
A three-decade-long conflict has cost some 35,000 lives. Marxist
guerrilla groups began their insurgency in the early 1960s. An estimated
10,000 rebels remain active in various areas. The largest is the
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), followed by the National
Liberation Army (ELN) and a splinter group of the Popular Liberation
Army (EPL).
Right-wing paramilitary groups number an estimated 5,000 to 7,000,
and are accused of widespread human rights abuses.
Both paramilitaries and guerrillas are reported to rely on growing
and selling coca to finance their operations. Paramilitaries are
accused of deliberately displacing civilians, often to benefit wealthy
patrons.
As many as 1.8 million Colombians were internally displaced at the
end of 1999. The number of Colombians seeking refuge abroad was
also on the increase, both in neighbouring countries and in North
America and Europe.
Following a number of fierce rebel attacks in November and December
1998, President Pastrana received the full support of political
leaders and members of Congress to pursue peace negotiations with
the various guerrilla movements; grant presidential pardons to rebels,
and offer guarantees for their return to society.
In November 1998, Pastrana pulled some 2,000 government troops out
of a 16,000-square-mile (42,000-sq-km) area of southeast Colombia
- an area the size of Switzerland - to make way for release of troops
held prisoner by the FARC. The FARC insisted that Pastrana crack
down on illegal right-wing death squads, which it accused of fighting
a "dirty war" with the help of the armed forces against leftist
sympathisers.
Peace talks began in January 1999, but stalled in the same month,
to resume in October. Guerrillas increased their use of kidnapping
during 1999 as a way of raising funds.
In January 1999, a strong earthquake measuring 6.3 killed at least
1,170 people in the central coffee-growing region, centred in the
provincial capital Armenia.
President Pastrana's $7.5 billion "Plan Colombia" aims to destroy
the country's drug market -- the world's leading supplier of cocaine
-- while pouring money into social resources to help turn the economy
around.
A $1.3 billion aid package -- mostly military -- was approved by
the U.S. Senate in June 2000. U.S. President Bill Clinton waived
human rights conditions on aid in August 2000 so that assistance
could be released.
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HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
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| Infant
mortality: |
25
per 1,000 live births
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| Maternal
mortality ratio: |
80
per 100,000 live births
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| Life
expectancy: |
67.6
years male, 74.5 years female
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| Illiteracy: |
0.7
percent male, 0.8 percent female above 15 years
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| Access
to basic care: |
85
percent
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| Access
to safe water: |
87
percent
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| Human
development index value: |
0.764
(1998)
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| (Source:Human
Development Report 2000, UNDP) |
ECONOMIC
INDICATORS
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| GDP: |
Peso
160 trillion, US$ 77 biliion (1999)
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| Per
capita: |
US$5800
(1999)
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| Growth: |
-5.0
percent (1998)
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| Inflation: |
11.2
percent (1998)
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| Defence
budget: |
Peso
4.0 trillion, US$ 2.0 billion (2000)
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| (Source:
The Military Balance,2000/2001, IISS) |
MILITARY
STATISTICS
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| Armed
forces: |
Active
153,000 men (some 74,700 conscripts) ; Reserves 60,700 men (Army 54,700,
Navy 4,800, Air Force 1,200)
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| Army: |
130,000
men (63,800 conscripts) with 30 light tanks (in store)
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| Navy: |
15,000
men (including 8,500 Marines, l00 Naval Aviation and 7,000 conscripts)
with four submarines, four frigates and 104 patrol vessels
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| Air
force: |
8,000
men (some 3,900 conscripts) with 72 combat aircraft and 72 armed helicopters
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| (The
Military Balance 2000/2001, IISS) |
COMMUNICATIONS
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| Civil
aviation: |
Colombia
has more than 100 airports, including 11 international airports:
Santa Fe de Bogota, DC (El Dorado International Airport), Medellin,
Cali, Barranquilla, Bucaramanga, Cartagenas, Cucuta, Leticia, Pereira,
San Andres and Santa Marta.
Aerolineas Centrales de Colombia, SA, operates scheduled domestic
passenger services throughout Colombia and charter flights to the
United States and the Caribbean. Aerotaxa, SA, operates scheduled
domestic passenger services. Avianca operates domestic services
to all cities in Colombia and international services to the Unied
States, France, Germany, Spain and throughout Central and Southern
America. Intercontinental de Aviacion operates scheduled domestic
passenger and cargo services throughout Colombia. Servico Aereo
a Territorios Nacionales, a commercial enterprise attached to the
National Defence Ministry, operates internal services. Transportes
Aeroes Mercantiles Panamericanos operates international cargo services
to destinations throughout South America, also to Puerto Rico and
the United States. Aerosucre Colombia, Aeroatransportes Colombianos,
Aerovias Colombianos, Lineas Aereas del Caribe and Lineas Aereas
Suramericas operate international,domestic charter, and cargo services.
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| Railways: |
Sociedad
Colombiana de Transporte Ferroviaro, SA, operates public rail services
with a network of 2,532 km in 1992.
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| Roads: |
In
1996 there were an estimated 107, 000 km of roads, of which 25,600km
were highways and main roads and 43,900 km were secondary roads.
About 12% of the total road network was paved in the same year.
The country's main highways are the Carribean trunk highway, the Eastern
and Western trunk highways, the Central trunk highway, and there are
also roads into the interior.
There are plans to constuct a Jungle Edge highway to give access to
the interior.
In 1992 the World Bank granted a loan of US$ 266m to Colombia for
the construction of 400km of new roads and the completion of 2000
km of roads begun under an earlier programme.
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| Telecomms: |
There
are 118 main telephone lines per 1000 people (1996) |
| Inland
waterways: |
The
Magdalena - Cauca river system is the centre of river traffic and
is navigable for 687 km. The Orinoco system has more than five navigable
rivers, which total more than 4000 km of potential navigation (mainly
through Venezuala); the Amazonas system has four main rivers, which
total 3000 navigable km. There are plans to connect the Arauca with
the Meta, the Putamayo with the Amazon, and also to constuct an Atrato-
Truando inter-oceanic canal. |
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