CHAPTER 8
SUBSAHARAN AFRICA
1. The physical geography of Africa is dominated
by the continents plateau character, variable rainfall, soils
of low fertility and persistent environmental problems such as
desertification.
2. The majority of Africa’s people remain dependent
on farming for their livelihood. Urbanization is accelerating,
but most countries population remain below 40 percent urban.
3. It’s inhabitants continue to face a high incidence
of disease, including malaria, sleeping sickness and river blindness,
AIDS and Eboli are relatively new and virulent diseases.
4. Most of Africa’s political boundaries were
drawn during the colonial period without regard for the human
and physical geography of the areas they divided.
5. Considerable economic
development has occurred in many scattered areas of Africa
but much of the realm’s population continues to have little access
to the goods and services of the world economy.
6. The realm is rich in raw materials vital to
industry and industrialized countries.
7. Patterns of raw-material exploitation and export
routes set up during the colonial period still prevail Interregional
connections are still poor.
8. Africa has increasingly been drawn into the
competition and conflicts among the world’s major powers.
The continent contains about one-third of the world’s refugee
population.
9. Africa’s population growth rate is by far the
highest of any continents despite of a difficult agricultural
environment, numerous hazards and diseases and periodic food shortages.
Some of the best land is used to produce such cash crops as coffee,
tea, cocoa and cotton for sale overseas.
10. Separated by the Sahara from lands to the
north and by vast oceans from lands to the west and east, Africa
is an almost insular continent.
11. Despite post-independent dislocations, civil
wars and massive loss of life, some areas within the realm have
shown relative stability, cohesion and economic growth.
12. In an area about one-seventh that of the inhabited
world is spoken one-third of all languages by a population comprising
less than one-twentieth the entire world’s population.
Physical & Environmental Aspects
The continent is squarely positioned astride
the equator, reaching almost as far to the north as to the south.
It is a large land mass containing 20 percent of the earth’s land
surface. Most of Africa is far removed from maritime sources
of moisture. Even where adjacent to coastal areas of continent
lies in the latitudinal belt of subsiding air (10o-30o
N and S) a small area of Africa receives adequate to excessive
precipitation (higher elevations, 10o to 10o above 30o N and S).
Land masses block the movement of moisture laden air into other
regions of the continents (i.e., like the Gulf of Mexico).
No comparable mountain range exists as in North America, Europe,
Asia and South America. The continent is dominated by a
series of lakes and rift valleys stretching over 6,000 miles. Rift
valleys are formed when huge parallel cracks faults appear in
the
Earth’s crust and the strips of crust between them sink or are
pushed down to form great linear valleys. The rivers on
the continent include the Niger, Zaire (Congo), Zambezi and Nile
which follow
somewhat erratic courses. Africa is a plateau continent.
Almost the entire continent lies above 1000 feet above sea level
and over half is over 2500 feet. Africa’s unusual physiography
was one of the pieces of evidence that Alfred Wegener used to
construct
his hypothesis of continental drift. According to the theory
of continental drift, the present continents were originally connected
as one enormous land mass that has broken up and drifted apart
over the last few hundred million years. The drifting continues
today, so that the contemporary position of the continents is
not
necessarily their ultimate position. Wegener postulated a
massive supercontinent which he called Pangea, having existed
about
250 million years ago and then breaking up into several large sections
that have continued to move away from each other. Wegener
accumulated much evidence to support his hypothesis, most notably
the similarity in geologic features on both sides of the Atlantic
Ocean. Continental margins of the subequatorial portions
of Africa and South America fit together. Petrologic and
paleontologic records on both sides of the Atlantic show many
distributions that
would be continuous if the ocean did not intervene. The southern
portion of this continent was Gondwanda including Africa, South
America,
India, Antarctica and Australia. Africa’s situation, at the
heart of the supercontinent, explains much of what is presently
seen in its landscapes today. The great escarpment is a relic
of the giant faults (fractures) formed when the neighboring land
masses broke off. Rift valleys are the most recent evidence
of the pulling forces that affect the African plate. The
Red Sea is an advanced stage of this. Breaking off of other
continents and Africa’s motion remaining in place resulted in
the continent experiencing more polling transitional forces rather
than the pressures
of plate collisions that generate the uplift of mountains.
Africa is not a densely populated realm with
less than one-tenth of the world’s inhabitants (530 million).
Large population clusters are few. They include Nigeria, Lake
Victoria, and South Africa. Africa suffers from local and
regional famines, diets are not well balanced. Life expectancies
are lower here then anywhere else. Tropical regions are breeding
grounds for infectious diseases. Riverwater used carries the
rectors that may be contaminated. African soils and climates
limit the range of food that can be produced locally. Malaria
is an epidemic to most of Africa with mosquito as the vector.
African Sleeping Sickness is transmitted by the tsetse fly affecting
most of tropical Africa. It also affects people’s livestock,
preventing cattle from being raised in tropical lowlands and pushed
to fly free zones in marginal environmental areas such as the Sahel.
Yellow Fever is also spread by mosquitoes. Shistosomiasis,
though not fatal, is a painful disease carried via snails in slow
moving or standing water. River blindness is transmitted by
flies in the Savanna region. Locusts are a persistent and
common problem. AIDS and Eboli are new and virulent strains
of viruses.
Agriculture
Most African families still depend on subsistence
farming for their living. Farming often mixed with livestock
raising pursuits-herding activity extends a long West African savanna-steppe
transition zone. South Africa is a plateau. Unfortunately
agriculture productivity is declining, having fallen 10 percent
in the last decade despite the development of more productive, higher
yielding types of grains via the Green Revolution. Little
is known about early African society, however, earlier civilizations
may have existed. Agriculture societies built terraces in
Nigeria and East Africa and irrigation canals in Kenya. Great
walls of Zimbabwe were created over 1000 years ago. Goods
whose origin from China and India have been found in the ruins,
suggesting the existence of a trading civilization. The West
African city of Timbuktu was once a thriving trade city between
desert and tropical rainforest. Ghana, at the head of the
Niger River, a stable state for a 1000 years, was conquered by Muslims
in 1062. Slave trade from Europeans and Arabs ended the dominate
interior societies with coastal cities coming to prominence.
Dahomey and Benin are states built on slave trade and when slavery
was abolished these state declined. African middlemen from
the coast raided the interior for slaves and marched them in chains
to the Arab dhows that plied the Indian Ocean and later Europeans
to Europe and their colonies in the New World. As many as
30 million people were forced away from their homelands in bondage.
European presence on the West African coast brought about a complete
reorientation of trade routes. It initiated the decline of
the interior savanna states and strengthening the coastal forest
states. No colonies were established as the African Middlemen
were strong enough to ward off any attempts for centuries.
European settlement occurred where African organization was weak,
i.e., South Africa far from the well organized Bantu states or to
coastal trading stations whose economic influence was strong.
Geographic Implications of Colonial Rule-Colonial Powers
After more than four centuries of contact,
Europe finally laid claim to all of Africa during the second half
of the nineteenth century. Competition and spheres of influence
between the colonial powers led to a political conference in Berlin
to settle the partitioning of Africa convened by Otto Von Bismarck.
Which was also a plan to expand German influence in Africa and play
off the other colonial powers against each other to Germany’s advantage.
British influence the West, South and East African coasts while
the French influence the Senegal River and north of the Congo Basin.
The Portuguese extend their coastal stations in Angola and Mozambique
to the interior and Belgium to the Congo. Germany influences
were Togo, Cameroon, South West Africa (Angola) and East Africa.
Germany’s holdings were intended as a wedge to break the other colonial
powers influence. Boundary lines were drawn dividing unified
African peoples, throwing hostile societies together, disrupting
migration routes and hinterlands. When independence came to
Africa, the realm had acquired a legacy of political fragmentation
difficult to eliminate or operate properly.
European colonialism had far-reaching impacts
to the geography of Africa. Britain emphasized indirect rule.
Indigenous power structures were sometimes left intact and local
rulers were made representatives of the crown. Belgium’s colonial
policy brought paternalism treating locals as children. The
French brought Assimilation-acculturation of Africans to French
ways of life. The Portuguese were exploitative. Few
colonies made a greater contribution, in proportion to their productive
capacities, to the economies of their colonial masters then did
Mozambique and Angola.
Colonial Spatial Organization
The British possessed the most far-flung
colonial empire in Africa. British colonial policy tended
to adjust to individual situations. Colonies-white settler
minorities had substantial autonomy (Kenya and Southern Rhodesia
(Zimbabwe)). Protectorates-rights of African peoples were
guarded more effectively. Mandate-British upheld League of
Nations (later United Nations) administration. Condominium-shared
administration with another country (Egypt over Sudan). France
demanded uniformity among their colonial territories in subsaharan
Africa. France's colonial empire extended from Senegal eastward
to Chad and southward to the former French Congo. With France
as an example, their colonies resembled centralized unitary states
whose capital is the cultural political and economic focus of the
nation. The French brought their concept of centralization
to Africa as well. French West Africa was divided into administrative
units, each centered on the largest town and all oriented toward
the governor’s headquarters at Dakar. Boundaries were drawn
not on the basis of African realities, but for France’s administrative
convenience.
Belgium’s administration consisted of rule
by several, sometimes competing, interests (Rwanda, Burundi, Congo
(Zaire). They are Belgium government, mining corporations,
and the Roman Catholic Church. Portugal, known for labor supply
for the interior mines, transit functions and port facilities, agricultural
production and minerals. Very rigid control involving forced
labor and compulsory farming of certain crops. Movement and
communications even within a single African ethnic region were kept
to a minimum. Portuguese colonial rule was often described
as the harshest of all European colonial governments.
African Regions
West Africa
ppWest Africa occupies
most of the bulge of Africa extending south from the margins of
the Sahara to the Gulf of Guinea and from Lake Chad to Senegal.
West Africa comprises four former British and nine former French
dependencies. The British influenced countries of Nigeria, Ghana,
Sierra Leone and Gambia are separated from each other while Francophone
West Africa is contiguous. Internal connections between West African
countries are poor while external ties between West African countries
and their former colonial rulers are stronger.
ppWest Africa is Subsaharan
Africa's most populous region. Nigeria (est. population 110 million)
is Africa's most populous nation. West Africa claims regional identity
in that it constitutes one of Africa's major population clusters.
The southern half of the region is home to the majority of the
people , while the northern half of the region is home to Niger,Mali
and
Mauritania located in the environmentally marginal Sahel of Africa.
The most populous country of the region, Nigeria
consists of three regions based on the major population clusters
within its border. The western region is based around the Yoruba
people who have an agricultural and urban tradition. Lagos, the
country's largest city of 12 million,is one of the most polluted
cities in the world and also suffers from crime and corruption.
The eastern region,east of the Niger River, contains the countries
substantial petroleum reserves. This region tried to secede in
1967
as a separate political entity but was defeated by the west in
a costly civil war which ended in 1971. Nigeria's federal system
has
been modified since then to adjust to changing political circumstances.
ppThe third federal
region was the Northern region consisting of Islamic and Christian
elements. This is the most populous region of Nigeria. This three-region
system changed after the civil war in 1971, with 30 states as well
as the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja. The military takeover
of the government in 1983 has led to a series of dictatorships
that enriched the rulers and impoverished the country.
ppOil exploration
in the Niger delta brought Nigeria prosperity particularly during
the
1970's. Before the 1973 OPEC embargo, oil brought in $1.8 billion
in revenue. Oil revenues soared to $7 billion in 1974 and $12.9
billion in 1980, falling back to $6 billion in 1986. With petroleum
and petroleum products accounting for more than 90 percent of
the
export total it is not difficult to imagine the impact of that
growth and retreat. Initial growth in revenues changed the economy
and
heavy investments were made in made in roads, schools and other
urban infrastructure. With drops in revenue during the 1980's,
much
investment was halted and the economy went into a crisis.
ppDuring the 1990's,
Nigeria became an example of a promising economy destroyed by military
rule. In 1993, the military regime permitted an election
but refused to accept the voters choice for president, imprisoning
him
instead. In 1995, a long-brewing conflict over land rights and
environmental damage between radical leaders of the Ogoni People,
who inhabit
oil-rich areas of the Niger Delta and the military dictator General
Abacha, had disastrous consequences. Nine Ogoni leaders were
executed,
followed by economic embargoes from around the world. Eventually
General Abacha died of a heart attack followed by the death
of the
president elect he imprisoned, Moshood Abiola. Riots now plague
Nigeria which once a Third World success story, now seems on
the
verge of complete collapse.
Equatorial Africa
ppThe Equatorial African
region adjoins West Africa along with the crest of the Adamawa
Highlands
and across the Sahelian steppe in Chad. Equatorial Africa is the
low-lying part of Africa's equatorial zone consisting of Zaire
(now
Democratic Republic of Congo-again), Congo the Central African
Republic, Gabon, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, southern Chad and
the southern
region of Sudan.
Zaire (Democratic Republic of Congo)
ppThe country of Zaire,
the largest in the region, contains a variety of natural resources,
the regions largest cities and its greatest potential for development.
It has been hampered by lack of national cohesion, corrupt and
autocratic
rule,infrastructure problems, falling prices for international
exports and from devoulutionary forces from within and without
(especially
nearby Rwanda and Burundi). with its borders touching ten different
countries (see fig.7-10 de Blij and Muller), Zaire occupies a
strategic
position in Central Africa and could be a stable force in the region,
rather than providing weapons which destabilize the entire region.
ppZaire is a nation
with diverse mineral resources and considerable agricultural potential.
it has relied on the export of copper for its domestic revenue.
Other mining resources include silver, iron ore, manganese, cobalt,
oil and diamonds with much of this mineral wealth found in the
Katanga Plateau of Southern Zaire. Although agriculture (which
includes
coffee and palm oil) has not lived up to its potential, there exists
a base for large-scale agriculture left behind by the plantations
set up by the European powers (in this case, Belgium), which are
no longer functioning. Consequently the country must import a
majority
of its food for domestic consumption.
ppZaire has the long
term advantage of one of the world's largest hydroelectric power
sites at Inga near the mouth of the Congo River. This energy source
is the key to the development of the industrial economy including
steel, polyvinyl, nitrogen fertilizer,aluminum smelters and caustic
soda factories and other industrial complexes. Many of the projects
are in doubt due to the countries internal chaos.
ppDespite the fall
of the military regime of Moboto Sese Seko in 1997, the now Democratic
Republic of the Congo is still suffering from internal
and external chaos with elections to be held in the sometime
distant future. the rich raw material base has not prevented
the
country from a descent into total anarchy. Even a stable government
would have trouble unifying the regions over 200 cultural groups
and poorly developed infrastructure. Much of this can be blamed
on the lingering effects of colonialism, but Congo's current
ills have
more to do with Africa's embrace of authoritarian governments.
The current crisis is due to the despotic rule of Moboto and
the nearby
Rwandan-Barundi Civil War which spilled into eastern Zaire engulfing
the military and innocent victims. The Democratic Republic of
Congo
may be that in name only, as the present rulers are suspicious
of foreign influence and seem intent on reinventing the statist
model
of self-sufficiency that has proved unsuccessful in nearby African
countries.
Lowland Equatorial Africa
ppOnly two of the seven
remaining countries of this region are landlocked: the Central African
Republic and southern Chad. Southern Chad while physiographically
connected to this region is politically tied to the Red Sea as the
tributaries of the Nile connect it and Sudan to the north and east.
The other four countries, Congo (not to be confused with the aforementioned
Democratic Republic of Congo), Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon
have coastlines on the Atlantic Ocean.
ppCongo lying west
of the former Zaire, has few natural resources but does enjoy some
locational advantages. Brazzaville, its capital was French Equatorial
Africa's headquarters and Pointe Noire was its major port. This
gave Congo a transit function that brought in revenues, but the
country has little to trade. Its western neighbor of Gabon has better
prospects, its economic geography includes oil reserves, manganese,
uranium and iron ores as well as a productive logging industry.
Exports have made this country an upper-middle income economy, unique
in this poor and politically unstable part of the world.
ppCameroon's economy
is similar to that of Gabon but not as diversified or as well off.
Oil is the primary export, but low prices in the 1980's and 1990's
have reduced revenues raised from export. The agricultural sector
is promising and the country is self-sufficient in food with exports
in coffee, cocoa, cotton and palm oil. Timber exports also help
reduce the negative impacts of low oil prices. Western Cameroon
centered on the capital of Yaoundé and the port of Doula
are the economic core region of the country.
East Africa
ppEast of Africa's
Great Lakes Country, Africa becomes a savanna plateau continent.
Volcanoes surround the rift-valley-dissected highland with Lake
Victoria the region's largest lake at the center. Along with the
highland regions of Ethiopia, this area consists of the countries
of Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. Here the Bantu
peoples
that form the great majority of the population met Nilotic peoples
from the north including the Maasai. In Rwanda and Burundi, a
stratified
society developed in which the minority Tutsi, in their cattle-owning
kingdoms, dominated the Hutu peasantry. Coastal East Africa witnessed
the arrival of Islam and Chinese dynasty trading vessels, the Arab
slave trade and competition from Turkish (Ottoman) Empires and
later
competition between European powers.
ppNeither the largest
or the most populous, Kenya has been historically the most dominant
country in the region due in part to its capitalist development
and alignment with western countries. Tourism and agricultural
exports
provide the bulk of revenue unlike other African countries who
rely wholly on mineral exports. Kenya's prosperity has been challenged
recently due to high population growth, the AIDS epidemic, corruption
in the government and poaching in its extensive National Park
system.
The Kikuyu are the ethnic group in power (22 percent), but other
peoples include the Luhya, Luo, Kalenjin and Kamba which constitute
50 percent of the population with the Maasi, Turkana Boran and
Galla along the territorial margins of the country.
Tanzania
ppIn contrast to Kenya,
upon independence Tanzania embraced a combination of socialism
and
African tribal society in a policy known as ujamaa-devlopment of
individual, region and nation along communal and cooperative lines.
Involving the people in the development process at a grass-roots
level has produced generally good results in creating a sense
of
national purpose and in improving social welfare, including basic
education. But it has not been an economic success. In the late
1980's, Tanzania reversed course and is adapting to a market-oriented
economy which has resulted in greater productivity. While still
poor, Tanzania's prospects appear better than other countries in
the region.
Uganda
ppUganda contained
the most important African political entity in the region when
the
British entered the scene during the second half of the nineteenth
century. Upon independence from the British, the country had a
well
established hinterland, a large coffee export along with tea, sugar
and cotton exports. Copper was mined in the southwest and an Asian
community of 75,000 played a leading role in the country's commerce.
Resentment towards Bangda rule fueled a revolution and Idi Amin
took over in 1971, who committed genocide against the population
and destroyed the economy and the opposition. In 1979, he was
driven
from power, but by then the damage was done with the country in
ruins. Recovery has been complicated by the AIDS epidemic which
has hit Uganda particularly hard. Ironically, Uganda was in better
shape under British colonial rule than it is today.
Rwanda and Burundi
ppIn terms of population,
Rwanda ( 8 million) and ( Burundi 7 million) are not small by
African
standards. The population is stratified into three layers. Historically
the first group, the minority Tutsi, have been dominant owning
land
and cattle and setting up kingdoms to perpetuate their power. The
Hutu have been numerically superior (85-90 percent) but politically
weak. The third group the Twa (Pygmy) constitute 1 to 2 percent
and have been nearly destroyed by the genocide that has plagued
the two countries.
ppBelguim was the
colonial power of the two countries having won the two countries
from the
Germans at the end of World War II. The Belgians used the indigenous
peoples as a labor pool to work in the mines of nearby Congo (Zaire-now
Congo again-confused? Arrrrgh!). When the Belgians withdrew in
1960, Tutsis and Hutus struggled for power in a series of battles
that
culminated in one of the greatest tragedies of the Twentieth Century.
In 1994, as many as 500,000-some say up to 800,000- were killed
in a civil war after the presidents of both countries were killed
when their plane was shot down. Most of the people killed were
Tutsi
and "moderate" Hutus in an organized genocide campaign by Hutu
militias. More than 2 million refugees fled into nearby Zaire
and many succumbed
to disease and continued fighting between Hutus and Tutsis. The
fighting ultimately destabilized Zaire to the point of collapse
of the government creating the Democratic Republic of Zaire.
Highland Ethiopia
ppThe East African
region also encompasses the highland zone of Ethiopia, including
the capital of Addis Ababa, the source of the Blue Nile, Lake Tana
and the Amharic core area that was the base of the empire that
survived
the colonial onslaught unconquered and only lost its independence
during the Italian invasion by Mussolini in the 1930's and 1940's.
With a population of more than 55 million, Ethiopia is one of the
most populous countries in Africa. It has not been able to translate
its size advantage into a productive and growing economy. A combination
of infrastructure deficiencies, archaic social and political forms,
internal separatist movements and conflicts with neighboring Somalia
have stunted Ethiopia's development. Although the country did
not
suffer any ill effects of colonialism, neither did it reap any
benefits of infrastructure improvements and civil services.
ppIn addition to drought
and war with Somalia, Ethiopia was divided by civil war which
eventually
resulted in the creation of Eritrea on the Red Sea coast in 1993.
This effectively closed off Ethopia's Red Sea outpost and along
with a hostile Somalia to the east, may force Ethiopia to develop
commercial ties with Kenya to the south.
Southern Africa
ppSouthern Africa,
as a geographic region, consists of all the countries and territories
lying south of Equatorial Africa's Congo and East Africa's Tanzania
(fig.7-12 deBlij and Muller).
South Central Africa
ppThis region comprises
the countries of Angola, Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique. Historically
this region has been plagued by Marxist governments and interference
from outsiders. Angola and Mozambique have been particularly hard-hit
by these repressive governments and civil unrest. By the 1990's
both countries economies seemed poised for a turnaround as some
of the worst fighting in Africa came to an end and Marxist economics
have been abandoned.
Zambia
ppIn comparison with
other countries in Africa, Zambia is a moderately prosperous country.
Today, copper still accounts for more than 90 percent of foreign-exchange
earnings and is directly responsible for over 20 percent of government
revenues. Cobalt, zinc and tobacco are minor export commodities.
Ironically much wealth remains untapped because there is not yet
a sufficient reservoir of trained technical and managerial workers
to run the copper mines and other industries that were formerly
run by colonial interests. In agriculture the situation is also
changing, one success story is sugar: in 1960 all of Zambia's sugar
needs were met by imports; by 1974, Zambia had become self-sufficient
as the result of just one start-up project. Zambia has the potential
to become a major exporter of meat and maize as well as fruit particularly
pineapples and mangoes.
Southern Africa
Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Swaziland and
Lesotho have one thing in common: strong ties to the Republic
of
South Africa. Lesotho is completely surrounded by South Africa
(an example of a perforated state); and Swaziland which borders
Mozambique on the northeast, is met on three sides by South Africa.
not surprisingly, both countries are economically dependent on
South Africa, with much of their imports and exports passing through
their
neighbor. Namibia recently gained its independence from South
Africa and Botswana and Zimbabwe have commercial and infrastructural
ties to South Africa despite estrangement over the policy of Apartheid.
The dismantling of this social experiment has improved economic
relations between South Africa and its neighbors.
Botswana
With a population of about 1.6 million people,
Botswana has few significant towns. The mineral industry
has led to the establishment of a number of small towns, but
the country is
essentially one of scattered small villages. One of the world's
poorest countries at independence in 1966, Botswana now boasts
a
per capita GNP of over $2500 as a result of economic growth of
over 12 percent a year for twenty-five years. Male migration
to work in the mines of South Africa has long been a fact of life
for
many in Botswana. But the development of the country's own
mineral industry which is based on diamonds, coal and copper has
reduced Botswana's reliance on South Africa for its economic well-being.
Botswana is a country where rapid economic growth has been accomplished
by political stability and democratic institutions. It is
one of Africa's success stories in a region that is often notorious
for economic and political distress.
Zimbabawe
Formerly known as Rhodesia, Zimbabwe received
its independence in 1980. A small minority population of
Europeans remain in the country, a remnant of its colonial past. Zimbabwe's
economy is more diversified than most African countries with
thriving
mining, manufacturing and commercial agricultural sectors.
Zimbabwe is the world's second leading producer of chrome, has
made significant investments in alternative sources of energy
( solar,
wind and hydroelectric) and has a well-developed commercial agriculture
which supplies many of the jobs for the population. Severe
drought during the 1990's coupled with overuse of communal lands
(a legacy of the inefficient land-tenure system in place during
the colonial period), has upset the balance of power as the country
continues to recover from its worst natural disaster in decades.
South Africa is a large country, the largest
in Southern Africa (471,000 square miles). Its large population
(over 44 million) and developed economy gives it the highest
GNP
of any country is southern Africa. It is also the only sub-Saharan
country that is not in the tropics. Along with the altitude
(mush of it plateau) produces soil and climate that are different
from the rest of Africa. This unique climate is one
reason why so many European descendents live in South Africa.
South Africa’s location also has influenced its human geography.
Founded as a way station by the Dutch along the route to the Dutch
East Indies in 1652, South Africa was settled by the Dutch and
Asians
from the East Indies to serve as domestics and laborers. The
descendents of the Dutch were referred as Boers and descendents
of the Indonesians were called coloured. When the British
settled in the 1860’s they brought indentured laborers from the
South Asian realm (mainly Indians) to work on the sugar plantations
of the province of Natal. Today there are over 1 million
Indians in South Africa.
South Africa was an area of European settlement
and occupation long before the colonial penetration of Africa began
during the late nineteenth century. The Dutch moved into the
high plateau country (or high veld) as the British took over control
of the Cape Town area. Here they involved themselves in extensive
farming. When gold and diamonds were discovered in these regions,
the British challenged the Boers claims to these resources and the
Boer Wart (1899-1902) erupted with the British ultimately victorious
and took economic control of South Africa. The Afrikaners
(the Dutch word for African-they shed the Boer term) did receive
favorable terms and retained much political power, which they wield
when the British gave up their colonial holdings after WWII.
African peoples were also warning over territory
in South Africa. The Xhosa nation was moving toward the
Cape along the natural corridor and in the Natal province, the
Zulu nation
became the most powerful empire. Unlike Australian aborigines
the native peoples of South Africa had substantial numbers
to insure their numerical survival.
After the British withdrew, the Afrikaner
led white government extended its policies and locked the country
into a sociopolitical design of separate development better known
as apartheid, an Afrikaner word that means “apartness”. Under
these provisions nearly 80 percent of South Africa was designated
as white-owned and only 15 percent of the land was available to
the 70 percent of the population which was largely black.
Apartheid took on several aspects. “Petty apartheid” was similar
to segregation in the American South as blacks were barred from
restaurants, places of businesses, etc. “Grand Apartheid”
was the more sinister aspect (if that’s possible) of apartheid which
created individual homelands for different ethnic and linguistic
groups. Each member of these homelands would be a citizen
of these regions and would have to leave permits in order to work
or visit other homelands. The majority of the black population
were crammed into these homeland or townships as they were called.
These townships became breeding grounds for crime, violence and
organized opposition to Apartheid. By the mid 1980’s international
opposition to Apartheid resulted in economic sanctions to South
Africa. Economic difficulties were already undoing the financial
propping of this regime. Rising petroleum prices during the
1970’s (South Africa has no petroleum reserves) and falling precious
metal prices during the 1980’s, devastated the South African economy
that supported this politico-geographic policy. Apartheid
also damaged the economic geography by interfering with normal market
forces by restricting free movement of people and goods. The
black populations skills were not utilized as the majority of the
well paying jobs were not in Black townships, and may had to obtain
permits to work in difficult conditions in South Africa’s mines.
Nelson Mandela, the leader of the once outlawed
African National Congress (ANC), was released from jail in 1990
as internal pressures to dismantle apartheid began to build in the
1990’s. He became the primary African representative in negotiations
with the white government for political and economic reform.
In 1991 President F. W. de Klerk introduced legislation to repeal
all aspects of apartheid and this was followed by a political transition
to majority rule. The international community subsequently
lifted all sanctions against South Africa. In 1994, elections
brought Nelson Mandela to power as head of the first ever inter-racial
government.
Several different scenarios are possible in
post-apartheid South Africa. Despite unity in overthrowing
apartheid, confrontations now exist between different groups of
black South Africans. The ANC composed primarily of Xhosas
and other tribal peoples, has had violent confrontations with the
Inkatha, led by Chief Buthelezi and composed mostly of Zulus.
A commission called the Truth and Reconciliation Commission has
granted limited amnesty to human rights abuse committed during apartheid.
While there has been reconciliation between black and white, concern
exists among Afrikaners that retribution will be taken against them.
Extremist groups on both sides have continued violence and there
still remains difficult challenges to erase the legacy of apartheid.
Economic Geography
South Africa is the world’s leading producer
of gold, antimony, platinum and diamonds. It is the second
leading producer of uranium, chromium manganese, vermiculite and
vanadium. It also has substantial reserves of copper, nickel
and over 50 percent of the entire continents coal reserves.
The country’s southerly location results
in a strong competitive advantage in the production of fruit and
vegetables
for markets in the Northern Hemisphere. Sheep and cattle
ranchers are also present as well as production of Mediterranean
crops such
as wheat and vineyards. The lifting of economic sanctions
promotes tourism as South Africa has some of the most unique ecosystems
in the world with flora and fauna found no where else.
Questions for Review
1. Discuss Wegener's theory of Continental
Drift and some of the evidence he used in order to make his hypothesis.
What are the dominant physical features in Africa?
2. What are the environmental problems that
plague Africa?
3. Discuss in detail who the colonial powers
were and how they spatially organized their individual colonies.
What problems resulted from colonialism in general and specifically
in countries such as Rwanda and Burundi and the Congo.
4. Explain why Apartheid was geographically
incompatible with the economic geography of South Africa.
5. Click on the "dictatorship"
link and read the devolutionary forces that plague Nigeria
(optional).
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