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In 1960 the Sudanese Republic and Senegal became independent
of France, forming the Mali Federation. Senegal withdrew
after only a few months. What formerly made up the Sudanese
Republic was renamed Mali. In 1991 Mali held its
first democratic presidential election, replacing a dictatorship.
In 2002 Amadou Toure was elected president.
There
are 11.6 million people in Mali. Bamako is the captiol. The
country is predominately Muslim 90%, with indigenous beliefs
at 9% and Christian at 1%. French is the official language
of Mali. Bambara is spoken by 80%. Only 46% of the total population
are literate. Male literacy rate is at 54% while only 39%
of females are able to read and write.

Mali
is among the poorest countries in the world. 64% of the population
live below the Malian poverty line. The country is heavily
dependent on foreign aid. The death rate for children under
five is 128 per 1000, one of the highest in the world. In
the United States the rate is 4 per 1000. The average woman
gives birth to seven babies. Almost half the population is
under fourteen years of age. Only 3% are over 65 years of
age.
Mali
is located 17° north of the equator and 4° west
of the Prime Meridian (Greenwich). The total area of Mali
is 1.24 million sq km., slightly less than twice the size
of Texas. Mali is landlocked. The climate is subtropical
to arid, hot and dry February to June, rainy, humid and
mild June to November, cool and dry November to February.
The terrain is mostly flat to rolling northern plains covered
by sand (Sahara Desert), savanna in south, rugged hills
in northeast. 4% of the land is arable, .04% is in permanent
crops and 1,380 sq km is irrigated. Cotton, millet, rice,
corn, vegetables, peanuts, cattle, sheep and goats are
the primary agriculture products. Mali natural resources
of gold, phosphates, kaolin, salt, limestone, uranium,
and hydropowe are limited. Mali exports cotton, ground
nuts, rice, livestock. Mali is very dependent on the importation
of petroleum, machinery and equipment, construction materials,
foodstuffs, and textiles. The environment faces the impact
of deforestation, soil erosion, inadequate supplies of
potable water and poaching.
Click
here to download the Mali fact sheet.

Flag
of Mali
Click here to learn more about the country
of Mali by visiting some other selected resources on the
Internet.
Click
here to download the Medicine for Mali Trip Handbook (2008). |