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- 1. People's Republic of the (Republique
- Populaire du Congo) area 342,000 sq
- km/132,012 sq mi capital Brazzaville towns
- chief port Pointe Noire physical Zaire
- (Congo) river on the border; half the country
- is rainforest head of state and government
- Denis Sassau-Nguesso from 1979 political
- system one-party socialist republic political
- parties Congolese Labour Party (PCT),
- Marxist-Leninist exports timber, potash,
- petroleum currency CFA franc (485.00 = 1 Feb
- 1990) population (1987) 2,270,000 (chiefly
- Bantu); annual growth rate 2.6% life
- expectancy men 45, women 48 language French
- (official) religion animist 50%, Christian
- 48% literacy 79% male/55% female (1985 est)
- GDP $2.1 bn (1983); $500 per head of
- population chronology 1960 Achieved full
- independence from France, with Abbe Youlou as
- the first president. 1963 Youlou forced to
- resign. New constitution approved, with
- Alphonse Massamba-Debat as president. 1964
- The Congo became a one-party state. 1968
- Military coup, led by Capt Marien Ngouabi,
- ousted Massamba-Debat. 1970 A Marxist state,
- the People's Republic of the Congo, was
- announced, with the PCT as the only legal
- party. 1977 Ngouabi assassinated. Col
- Yhombi-Opango became president. 1979
- Yhombi-Opango handed over the presidency to
- PCT, who chose Col Denis Sassou-Ngessou as
- his successor. 1984 Sassou-Ngessou elected
- for another five-year term.
-
- 2. Country in W central Africa, bounded to
- the north by Cameroon and the Central African
- Republic, to the east and south by Zaire, to
- the west by the Atlantic Ocean, and to the
- northwest by Gabon. government The Congo is a
- one-party state based on the Marxist-Leninist
- Congolese Labour Party (PTC). The president
- of the central committee of PTC is
- automatically elected state president for a
- five-year term and chairs the council of
- ministers. The single-chamber legislature is
- the 153-member people's national assembly,
- elected by universal suffrage from a list
- prepared by PTC. history Occupied from the
- 15th century by the Bakongo, Bateke, and
- Sanga, the area was exploited by Portuguese
- slave traders. From 1889 it came under French
- administration, becoming part of French
- Equatorial Africa in 1910. The Congo became
- an autonomous republic within the French
- Community in 1958 and Abbe Fulbert Youlou, a
- Roman Catholic priest who involved himself in
- politics and was suspended by the Church,
- became prime minister and then president when
- full independence was achieved in 1960. Two
- years later plans were announced for a
- one-party state but in 1963, after industrial
- unrest, Youlou was forced to resign. A new
- constitution was approved and Alphonse
- Massamba-Debat, a former finance minister,
- became president, adopting a policy of
- `scientific socialism'. The National
- Revolutionary Movement (MNR) was declared the
- only political party. In 1968 Captain Marien
- Ngouabi overthrew Massamba-Debat in a
- military coup and the national assembly was
- replaced by a national council of the
- revolution. Ngouabi proclaimed a Marxist
- state but kept economic links with France. In
- 1970 the nation became the People's Republic
- of the Congo, with the PTC as the only party,
- and in 1973 a new constitution provided for
- an assembly chosen from a single party list.
- In 1977 Ngouabi was assassinated and Colonel
- Joachim Yhombi-Opango took over. He resigned
- in 1979, after discovering a plot to
- overthrow him, and was succeeded by Denis
- Sassou-Nguessou, who has moved away from
- Soviet influence, strengthening links with
- France, the USA, and China. In 1982 President
- Mitterrand of France paid an official visit
- to the Congo. In 1984 Sassou-Nguessou was
- elected for another five-year term. He
- increased his control by combining the posts
- of head of state, head of government and
- president of the central committee of PTC.
-
- 3. Congo, former name 1960-71 of Zaire.
-