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Guinea-Bissau

Guinea-Bissau (/ˌɡɪni bɪˈs/ GHIN-ee bi-SOW; Portuguese: Guiné-Bissau; Fula: 𞤘𞤭𞤲𞤫 𞤄𞤭𞤧𞤢𞥄𞤱𞤮, romanized: Gine-Bisaawo; Mandinka: ߖߌߣߍ ߺ ߓߌߛߊߥߏ߫ Gine-Bisawo), officially the Republic of Guinea-Bissau (Portuguese: República da Guiné-Bissau [ʁɛˈpuβlikɐ ðɐ ɣiˈnɛ βiˈsaw]), is a country in West Africa that covers 36,125 square kilometres (13,948 sq mi) with an estimated population of 2,026,778. It borders Senegal to its north and Guinea to its southeast.[10]

Republic of Guinea-Bissau
República da Guiné-Bissau (Portuguese)
𞤘𞤭𞤲𞤫 𞤄𞤭𞤧𞤢𞥄𞤱𞤮 (Fula)
ߖߌߣߍ ߺ ߓߌߛߊߥߏ߫ (Mandinka)
Motto: 
Unidade, Luta, Progresso
"Unity, Struggle, Progress"
Anthem: 
Esta É a Nossa Pátria Bem Amada
"This is Our Beloved Homeland"
Location of Guinea-Bissau (dark blue)

– in Africa (light blue & dark grey)
– in the African Union (light blue)

Capital
and largest city
Bissau
11°52′N 15°36′W / 11.867°N 15.600°W / 11.867; -15.600
Official languagesPortuguese
Spoken languages
Ethnic groups
(2019)[1]
Religion
(2020)[2][3][4]
Demonym(s)Bissau-Guinean[5]
Guinea-Bissauan
GovernmentUnitary semi-presidential republic
• President
Umaro Sissoco Embaló
Rui Duarte de Barros
LegislatureNational People's Assembly
Independence from Portugal
• Declared
24 September 1973
• Recognized
10 September 1974
Area
• Total
36,125 km2 (13,948 sq mi) (134th)
• Water (%)
22.4
Population
• 2023 estimate
2,078,820[6] (150th)
• Density
46.9/km2 (121.5/sq mi) (154th)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$6 billion[7]
• Per capita
$3,088[7]
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$2 billion[7]
• Per capita
$1,028[7]
Gini (2010) 50.7[8]
high
HDI (2021) 0.483[9]
low · 177th
CurrencyWest African CFA franc (XOF)
Time zoneUTC (GMT)
Driving sideright
Calling code+245
ISO 3166 codeGW
Internet TLD.gw

Guinea-Bissau was once part of the kingdom of Kaabu,[11] as well as part of the Mali Empire.[11] Parts of this kingdom persisted until the 18th century, while a few others were under some rule by the Portuguese Empire since the 16th century. In the 19th century, it was colonised as Portuguese Guinea.[11] Portuguese control was restricted and weak until the early 20th century when pacification campaigns solidified Portuguese sovereignty in the area. The final Portuguese victory over the last remaining bastion of mainland resistance came in 1915 with the conquest of the Papel-ruled Kingdom of Bissau by the Portuguese military officer Teixeira Pinto and the Wolof mercenary Abdul Injai.[12] The Bissagos, islands off the coast of Guinea-Bissau, were officially conquered in 1936, ensuring Portuguese control of both the mainland and islands of the region.[13] Upon independence, declared in 1973 and recognised in 1974, the name of its capital, Bissau, was added to the country's name to prevent confusion with Guinea (formerly French Guinea). Guinea-Bissau has a history of political instability since independence. The current president is Umaro Sissoco Embaló, who was elected on 29 December 2019.[14]

Only about 2% of the population speaks Portuguese, the official language, as a first language, and 33% speak it as a second language. However, Guinea-Bissau Creole, a Portuguese-based creole, is the national language and also considered the language of unity. According to a 2012 study, 54% of the population speak Creole as a first language and about 40% speak it as a second language.[15] The remainder speak a variety of native African languages. The nation is home to numerous followers of Islam, Christianity and traditional faiths, though no single religious group represents a majority of the population.[16][17] The country's per-capita gross domestic product is one of the lowest in the world.

Guinea-Bissau is a member of the United Nations, African Union, Economic Community of West African States, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, Community of Portuguese Language Countries, Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, and the South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone, and was a member of the now-defunct Latin Union.

History edit

Pre-European contact edit

The deep history of what is now Guinea-Bissau is poorly understood by historians. The earliest inhabitants were the Jolas, Papels, Manjaks, Balantas, and Biafadas. Later the Mandinka and Fulani migrated into the region in the 13th and 15th centuries respectively, pushing the earlier inhabitants towards the coast and onto the Bijagos islands.[18][19]: 20 

The Balanta and Jola had weak or non-existent institutions of kingship but instead put an emphasis on heads of villages and families.[19]: 64  The Mandinka, Fula, Papel, Manjak, and Biafada chiefs were vassals to kings. The customs, rites, and ceremonies varied, but nobles commanded all the major positions, including the judicial system.[19]: 66, 67, 73, 227  Social stratification was seen in the clothing and accessories of the people, in housing materials, and in transportation options.[19]: 77–8 

Trade was widespread between ethnic groups. Items traded included pepper and kola nuts from the southern forests; kola nuts, iron, and iron utensils from the savannah-forest zone; salt and dried fish from the coast; and Mandinka cotton cloth.[20]: 4 

Kingdom of Bissau edit

According to oral tradition, the Kingdom of Bissau was founded by the son of the king of Quinara (Guinala) who moved to the area with his pregnant sister, six wives, and subjects of his father's kingdom.[21] Relations between the kingdom and the Portuguese were initially warm, but deteriorated over time.[22]: 55 

The kingdom strongly defended its sovereignty against the Portuguese 'Pacification Campaigns', defeating them in 1891, 1894, and 1904. However, in 1915 the Portuguese under the command of Officer Teixeira Pinto and warlord Abdul Injai fully absorbed the kingdom.[12]

Biafada kingdoms edit

The Biafada people inhabited the area around the Rio Grande de Buba in three kingdoms: Biguba, Guinala, and Bissege.[19]: 65  The former two were important ports with significant lancado communities.[22]: 63, 211  They were subjects of the Mandinka mansa of Kaabu.[22]: 211 

The Bijagos edit

In the Bijagos Islands, different islands were populated by people of different ethnic origins, leading to great cultural diversity in the archipelago.[19]: 24 [22]: 52 

Bijago society was warlike. Men were dedicated to boatbuilding and raiding the mainland, attacking the coastal peoples as well as other islands, believing that on the sea they had no king. Women cultivated land, constructed houses, and gathered food, and could choose their husbands, generally warriors with the best reputation. Successful warriors could have many wives and boats, and were entitled to 1/3 of the spoils of the boat from any expedition.[19]: 204–205 

Bijago night raids on coastal settlements had significant impact on the societies attacked. Portuguese traders on the mainland tried to stop the raids, as they hurt the local economy, but the islanders also sold considerable numbers of slaves to the Europeans, who frequently pushed for more captives.[19]: 205  The Bijagos themselves were mostly safe from enslavement, out of reach of mainland slave raiders. Europeans avoided having them as slaves. Portuguese sources say the children made good slaves but not the adults, whom were likely to commit suicide, lead rebellions aboard slave ships, or escape once reaching the New World.[19]: 218–219 

Kaabu edit

 
States in medieval Africa

Kaabu was established first as a province of Mali through the conquest of the Senegambia by a general of Sundiata Keita named Tiramakhan Traore, in the 13th century. By the 14th century much of Guinea Bissau was under the administration of Mali and ruled by a farim kaabu (commander of Kaabu).[23]

Mali declined gradually, beginning in the 14th century. Formerly secure possessions in what is now Senegal, the Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau were cut off by the expanding power of Koli Tenguella in the early 16th century.[24] Kaabu therefore became an independent federation of kingdoms.[25]: 13 [26] The ruling classes were composed of elite warriors known as the Nyancho (Ñaanco) who traced their patrilineal lineage to Tiramakhan Troare.[27]: 2  The Nyancho were a warrior culture, reputed to be excellent cavalry men and raiders.[25]: 6  The Kaabu Mansaba was seated in Kansala, today known as Gabu, in the eastern Geba region.[20]: 4 

The slave trade dominated the economy, enriching the warrior classes with imported cloth, beads, metalware, and firearms.[25]: 8  Trade networks to North Africa were dominant up to the 14th century, with coastal trade with the Europeans increasing beginning in the 15th century.[20]: 3  In the 17th and 18th centuries an estimated 700 slaves left the region annually, many of them from Kaabu.[20]: 5 

In the late 18th century, the rise of the Imamate of Futa Jallon to the east posed a powerful challenge to animist Kaabu. During the first half of the 19th century civil war erupted as local Fula people sought independence.[20]: 5–6  This long-running conflict in the 1867 Battle of Kansala that marked the end of the Kaabu and the rise of Fuladu, though some smaller Mandinka kingdoms survived until their absorption by the Portuguese.

European contact edit

 
Lesser coat of arms of Portuguese Guinea-Bissau

15th–16th centuries edit

The first Europeans to reach Guinea-Bissau were the Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto in 1455, Portuguese explorer Diogo Gomes in 1456, Portuguese explorer Duarte Pacheco Pareira in the 1480s, and Flemish explorer Eustache de la Fosse in 1479–1480.[28]: 7, 12, 13, 16 

Although the Portuguese authorities initially discouraged white settlement on the mainland, this prohibition was ignored by lançados and tangomãos who assimilated into indigenous culture and customs.[19]: 140  They ignored Portuguese trade regulations banning entering the region or trading without a royal licence, shipping out of unauthorised ports, or assimilating into the native community.[19]: 142  After 1520 trade and settlements increased on the mainland populated by the Portuguese and native traders, as well some Spanish, Genoese, English, French, and Dutch.[19]: 145, 150  The main ports were Cacheu, Bissau, and Guinala, and each river also sported trading centers such as Toubaboudougou at their furthest navigable point that traded directly with the interior for resources such as gum arabic, ivory, hides, civet, dyes, slaves, and gold.[19]: 153–160  Local African rulers generally refused to allow Europeans into the interior, to ensure their control of trade routes.[29]

Disputes became increasingly frequent and serious in the late 1500s as the foreign traders sought to influence the host societies to their benefit.[22]: 74  Meanwhile, the Portuguese monopoly, always leaky, was being increasingly challenged. In 1580 the Iberian Union unified the crowns of Portugal and Spain, leading to the attack of Portuguese possessions in Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde by Spain's enemies. French, Dutch, and English ships increasingly came to trade with the natives and the independent-minded lançados..[19]: 244–53 

17th–18th centuries edit

In the early 17th century the government attempted to force all Guinean trade to go through Santiago and to promote trade and settlement on the mainland while restricting the sale of weapons to the locals. These efforts were largely unsuccessful.[19]: 243–4  With the end of the Iberian Union in 1640, King João IV attempted to restrict the Spanish trade in Guinea that had flourished for the previous 60 years. The Afro-Portuguese, however, were not in a position to deny the free trade that the African kings, who now saw European products as necessities, demanded.[19]: 261–3  The Portuguese were never able to impose their monopolistic vision on the local and Afro-European traders, as the economic interests of the native leaders and Afro-European merchants never aligned with theirs. During this period the power of the Mali Empire in the region was dissipating, and the farim of Kaabu, the king of Kassa and other local rulers began to assert their independence.[19]: 488 

 
Flag of the Portuguese Company of Guinea

In the early 1700s the Portuguese abandoned Bissau and retreated to Cacheu after the captain-major was captured and killed by the local king. They would not return until the 1750s. Meanwhile, the Cacheu and Cape Verde Company shut down in 1706.[22]: xliii  For a brief period in the 1790s, the British tried to establish a foothold on Bolama.[30]

Slave trade edit

Guinea-Bissau was among the first regions touched by the Atlantic slave trade and, while it did not produce the same number of enslaved people as other regions, the impact was still significant.[31][29] In Cape Verde Guinean slaves were instrumental in developing the plantation economy, growing indigo and cotton and weaving panos cloth that became a standard currency in West Africa.[18] The 17th and 18th centuries saw thousands of people taken from the region every year by Portuguese, French, and British companies, with an average of 3000 shipped every year from Guinala alone.[19]: 278  The Fula jihads and specifically the wars between the Imamate of Futa Jallon and Kaabu provided many of these.[22]: 377 

Most wars were waged for the sole purpose of capturing slaves to sell to the Europeans in exchange for imported goods, such that they resembled man-hunts more than conflicts over territory or political power.[19]: 204, 209  The nobles and kings benefited, while the common people bore the brunt of the raiding and insecurity. If a noble was captured they were likely to be released, as the captors, whoever they were, would generally accept a ransom in exchange for their freedom.[19]: 229  The relationship between kings and European traders was a partnership, with the two regularly making deals on how the trade was to be conducted, who was to be enslaved and who was not, and the prices of the slaves. Contemporary chroniclers questioned multiple kings on their part in the slave trade, noting that they recognised the trade as evil but participated because the Europeans would buy no other goods from them.[19]: 230–4 

Beginning in the late 18th century, European countries gradually began slowing and/or abolishing the slave trade. Portugal abandoned slavery in 1869 and Brazil in 1888, but a system of contract labor replaced it that was only barely better for the workers.[22]: 377 

Colonialism edit

 
Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913

Up until the late 1800s, Portuguese control of their 'colony' outside of their forts and trading posts was a fiction. Guinea-Bissau became the scene of increased European colonial competition beginning in the 1860s. The dispute over the status of Bolama was resolved in Portugal's favor through the mediation of U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant in 1870, but French encroachment on Portuguese claims continued. In 1886 the Casamance region of what is now Senegal was ceded to them.[18]

Struggle for Independence edit

 
Portuguese Colonial War in Portuguese Guinea, 1968

The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) was founded in 1956 under the leadership of Amílcar Cabral. Initially committed to peaceful methods, the 1959 Pidjiguiti massacre pushed the party towards more militarized tactics, leaning heavily on the political mobilization of the peasantry in the countryside. After years of planning and preparing from their base in Conakry, the PAIGC launched the Guinea-Bissau War of Independence on 23 January 1963.[22]: 289 

Unlike guerrilla movements in other Portuguese colonies, the PAIGC rapidly extended its control over large portions of the territory. Aided by the jungle-like terrain, it had easy access to borders with neighbouring allies and large quantities of arms from Cuba, China, the Soviet Union, and left-leaning African countries. The PAIGC even managed to acquire a significant anti-aircraft capability in order to defend itself against aerial attack.[22]: 289–90  By 1973, the PAIGC was in control of many parts of Guinea, although the movement suffered a setback in January 1973 when its founder and leader Amilcar Cabral was assassinated.[32] After Cabral's death, party leadership fell to Aristides Pereira, who would later become the first president of the Republic of Cape Verde.

 
Portuguese-held (green), disputed (yellow) and rebel-held areas (red) in Portuguese-Guinea and other colonies 1970

Independence (1973) edit

 
PAIGC forces raise the flag of Guinea-Bissau in 1974.

Independence was unilaterally declared on 24 September 1973, which is now celebrated as the country's Independence Day, a public holiday.[33] The country was formally recognized as independent on 10 September 1974.[34] Nicolae Ceaușescu's Romania was the first country to formally recognise Guinea-Bissau and the first to sign agreements with the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde.[35][36]

Upon the nation's independence, it declared Esta É a Nossa Pátria Bem Amada as its national anthem. Until 1996, this was shared with Cape Verde, which later adopted its own official national anthem Cântico da Liberdade.[37][38][39][40]

Luís Cabral, brother of Amílcar and co-founder of PAIGC, was appointed the first president of Guinea-Bissau.[29] Independence had begun under the best of auspices. The Bissau-Guinean diaspora had returned to the country en masse. A system of access to school for all had been created. Books were free and schools seemed to have a sufficient number of teachers. The education of girls, previously neglected, was encouraged and a new school calendar, more adapted to the rural world, was adopted. In 1980, economic conditions deteriorated significantly, leading to general discontent with the government in power. On 14 November 1980, João Bernardo Vieira, known as "Nino Vieira," overthrew President Luís Cabral. The constitution was suspended and a nine-member military council of the revolution, chaired by Vieira, was established. Since then, the country has moved toward a liberal economy. Budget cuts have been made at the expense of the social sector and education.[41]

The country was controlled by a revolutionary council until 1984. The first multi-party elections were held in 1994. An army uprising in May 1998 led to the Guinea-Bissau Civil War and the president's ousting in June 1999.[42] Elections were held again in 2000, and Kumba Ialá was elected president.[43]

In September 2003, a military coup was conducted. The military arrested Ialá on the charge of being "unable to solve the problems".[44] After being delayed several times, legislative elections were held in March 2004. A mutiny in October 2004 over pay arrears resulted in the death of the head of the armed forces.[45]

From Vieira years to present edit

In June 2005, presidential elections were held for the first time since the coup that deposed Ialá. Ialá returned as the candidate for the PRS, claiming to be the legitimate president of the country, but the election was won by former president João Bernardo Vieira, deposed in the 1999 coup. Vieira beat Malam Bacai Sanhá in a run-off election. Sanhá initially refused to concede, claiming that tampering and electoral fraud occurred in two constituencies including the capital, Bissau.[46]

Despite reports of arms entering the country prior to the election and some "disturbances during campaigning", including attacks on government offices by unidentified gunmen, foreign election monitors described the 2005 election overall as "calm and organized".[47]

Three years later, PAIGC won a strong parliamentary majority, with 67 of 100 seats, in the parliamentary election held in November 2008.[48] In November 2008, President Vieira's official residence was attacked by members of the armed forces, killing a guard but leaving the president unharmed.[49]

On 2 March 2009, however, Vieira was assassinated by what preliminary reports indicated to be a group of soldiers avenging the death of the head of joint chiefs of staff, General Batista Tagme Na Wai, who had been killed in an explosion the day before.[50] Vieira's death did not trigger widespread violence, but there were signs of turmoil in the country, according to the advocacy group Swisspeace.[51] Military leaders in the country pledged to respect the constitutional order of succession. National Assembly Speaker Raimundo Pereira was appointed as an interim president until a nationwide election on 28 June 2009.[52] It was won by Malam Bacai Sanhá of the PAIGC, against Kumba Ialá as the presidential candidate of the PRS.[53]

 
Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embaló with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, 25 October 2022

On 9 January 2012, President Sanhá died of complications from diabetes, and Pereira was again appointed as an interim president. On the evening of 12 April 2012, members of the country's military staged a coup d'état and arrested the interim president and a leading presidential candidate.[54] Former vice chief of staff, General Mamadu Ture Kuruma, assumed control of the country in the transitional period and started negotiations with opposition parties.[55][56]

José Mário Vaz was the President of Guinea-Bissau from 2014 until 2019 presidential elections. At the end of his term, Vaz became the first elected president to complete his five-year mandate. He lost the 2019 election, however, to Umaro Sissoco Embaló, who took office in February 2020. Embaló is the first president to be elected without the backing of the PAIGC.[57][58]

On 1 February 2022, there was an attempted coup d'état to overthrow President Umaro Sissoco Embaló.[59][60][61] On 2 February 2022, state radio announced that four assailants and two members of the presidential guard had been killed in the incident.[62] The African Union and ECOWAS both condemned the coup.[63] Six days after the attempted coup d'état, on 7 February 2022, there was an attack on the building of Rádio Capital FM,[64] a radio station critical of the Bissau-Guinean government;[65] this was the second time the radio station suffered an attack of this nature in less than two years.[64] A journalist working for the station recalled, while wishing to stay anonymous, that one of their colleagues had recognized one of the cars carrying the attackers as belonging to the presidency.[65]

In 2022, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky met with his counterpart Umaro Sissoco Embaló in a press conference. Embaló became the first African ruler to visit Ukraine after the beginning of the war.[66]

Politics edit

 
The Presidential Palace of Guinea-Bissau
 
Public Order Police officer during a parade in Guinea-Bissau

Guinea-Bissau is a republic.[67] In the past, the government had been highly centralized. Multi-party governance was not established until mid-1991.[67] The president is the head of state and the prime minister is the head of government. From independence in 1974, until Jose Mario Vaz ended his five-year term as president on 24 June 2019, no president successfully served a full five-year term.[57]

At the legislative level, a unicameral Assembleia Nacional Popular (National People's Assembly) is made up of 100 members. They are popularly elected from multi-member constituencies to serve a four-year term. The judicial system is headed by a Tribunal Supremo da Justiça (Supreme Court), made up of nine justices appointed by the president; they serve at the pleasure of the president.[68]

The two main political parties are the PAIGC (African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde) and the PRS (Party for Social Renewal). There are more than 20 minor parties.[69]

Foreign relations edit

Guinea-Bissau is a founding member state of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP), also known as the Lusophone Commonwealth, and international organisation and political association of Lusophone nations across four continents, where Portuguese is an official language.[70]

Military edit

A 2019 estimate put the size of the Guinea-Bissau Armed Forces at around 4,400 personnel and military spending is less than 2% of GDP.[71]

In 2018, Guinea-Bissau signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.[72]

Administrative divisions edit

 Bafatá RegionBiombo RegionBiombo RegionBissau RegionBissau RegionBolama RegionCacheu RegionGabú RegionOio RegionQuinara RegionQuinara RegionTombali Region
A clickable map of Guinea-Bissau exhibiting its eight regions and one autonomous sector.

Guinea-Bissau is divided into eight regions (regiões) and one autonomous sector (sector autónomo).[73] These, in turn, are subdivided into 37 Sectors.[74] The regions are:[74]

  1. ^ Autonomous sector.

Geography edit

 
Rare salt water hippopotamuses on Orango Island
 
Caravela, Bissagos Islands
 
Typical scenery in Guinea-Bissau

Guinea-Bissau is bordered by Senegal to the north and Guinea to the south and east,[74] with the Atlantic Ocean to its west.[74] It lies mostly between latitudes 11° and 13°N (a small area is south of 11°), and longitudes 11° and 15°W.[75]

At 36,125 square kilometres (13,948 sq mi),[74] the country is larger in size than Taiwan or Belgium. The highest point is Monte Torin with an elevation of 262 metres (860 ft). Its terrain is mostly low coastal plains with swamps of the Guinean mangroves rising to the Guinean forest–savanna mosaic in the east.[76] Its monsoon-like rainy season alternates with periods of hot, dry harmattan winds blowing from the Sahara. The Bijagos Archipelago lies off of the mainland.[77] The country is home to two ecoregions: Guinean forest–savanna mosaic and Guinean mangroves.[78]

Climate edit

Guinea-Bissau is warm all year round with mild temperature fluctuations; it averages 26.3 °C (79.3 °F). The average rainfall for Bissau is 2,024 millimetres (79.7 in), although this is almost entirely accounted for during the rainy season which falls between June and September/October. From December through April, the country experiences drought.[79]

 

Environmental problems edit

Severe environmental problems include deforestation, soil erosion, overgrazing, and overfishing.[76] Guinea-Bissau had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5.7/10, ranking it 97th globally out of 172 countries.[80]

Wildlife edit

Economy edit

 
A proportional representation of Guinea-Bissau exports, 2019
 
Seat of the Central Bank of Guinea-Bissau
 
Petrol station in São Domingos

Guinea-Bissau's GDP per capita is one of the lowest in the world, and its Human Development Index is one of the lowest on earth. More than two-thirds of the population lives below the poverty line.[81] The economy depends mainly on agriculture; fish, cashew nuts, and ground nuts are its major exports.[82]

A long period of political instability has resulted in depressed economic activity, deteriorating social conditions, and increased macroeconomic imbalances. It takes longer on average to register a new business in Guinea-Bissau (233 days or about 33 weeks) than in any other country in the world except Suriname.[83]

Guinea-Bissau has started to show some economic advances after a pact of stability was signed by the main political parties of the country, leading to an IMF-backed structural reform program.[84]

After several years of economic downturn and political instability, in 1997, Guinea-Bissau entered the CFA franc monetary system, bringing about some internal monetary stability.[85] The civil war that took place in 1998 and 1999, and a military coup in September 2003 again disrupted economic activity, leaving a substantial part of the economic and social infrastructure in ruins and intensifying the already widespread poverty. Following the parliamentary elections in March 2004 and presidential elections in July 2005, the country is trying to recover from the long period of instability, despite a still-fragile political situation.[86]

Beginning around 2005, drug traffickers based in Latin America began to use Guinea-Bissau, along with several neighbouring West African nations, as a transshipment point to Europe for cocaine.[87] The nation was described by a United Nations official as being at risk for becoming a "narco-state".[88] The government and the military have done little to stop drug trafficking, which increased after the 2012 coup d'état.[89] The government of Guinea-Bissau continues to be ravaged by illegal drug distribution, according to The Economist.[90] Guinea-Bissau is a member of the Organization for the Harmonisation of Business Law in Africa (OHADA).[91]

Society edit

Demographics edit

 
 
(Left) Guinea-Bissau's population between 1950 and 2020. (Right) Guinea-Bissau's population pyramid, 2005. In 2010, 41.3% of Guinea-Bissau's population were aged under 15.[92]

According to the 2022 revision of the World Population Prospects[93][94], Guinea-Bissau's population was 2,060,721 in 2021, compared to 518,000 in 1950. The proportion of the population below the age of 15 in 2010 was 41.3%, 55.4% were aged between 15 and 65 years of age, while 3.3% were aged 65 years or older.[92]

Ethnic groups edit

Ethnic groups in Guinea-Bissau[95]
Ethnic groups percent
Fula
28.5%
Balanta
22.5%
Mandinka
14.7%
Papel
9.1%
Manjaca
8.3%
Beafada
3.5%
Mancanha
3.1%
Bijagós [pt]
2.1%
Felupe
1.7%
Mansoanca
1.4%
Balanta Mane
1%
Nalu
0.9%
Saracule
0.5%
Sosso
0.4%
Not Stated
2.2%
 
Guinea-Bissau present-day settlement pattern of the ethnic groups

The population of Guinea-Bissau is ethnically diverse and has many distinct languages, customs, and social structures.[67]

Bissau-Guineans can be divided into the following ethnic groups:[67]

  • Fula and the Mandinka-speaking people, who constitute the largest portion of the population and are concentrated in the north and northeast;[67]
  • Balanta and Papel people, who live in the southern coastal regions;[67] and
  • Manjaco and Mancanha, who occupy the central and northern coastal areas.[67]

Most of the remainder are mestiços of mixed Portuguese and African descent.[96][97]

Portuguese natives are a very small percentage of Bissau-Guineans.[96] After Guinea-Bissau gained independence, most of the Portuguese nationals left the country. The country has a tiny Chinese population.[98] These include traders and merchants of mixed Portuguese and Cantonese ancestry from the former Asian Portuguese colony of Macau.[96]

Major cities edit

Main cities in Guinea-Bissau include:[99]

Rank City Population
2015 estimate Region
1 Bissau 492,004 Bissau
2 Gabú 48,670 Gabú
3 Bafatá 37,985 Bafatá
4 Bissorã 29,468 Oio
5 Bolama 16,216 Bolama
6 Cacheu 14,320 Cacheu
7 Bubaque 12,922 Bolama
8 Catió 11,498 Tombali
9 Mansôa 9,198 Oio
10 Buba 8,993 Quinara

Languages edit

Languages in Guinea-Bissau[95]
Languages percent
Portuguese Creole
90.4%
Portuguese
32.1%
Fula
16.0%
Balanta
14.0%
French
7.1%
Mandinka
7.0%
Manjak
5.0%
Papel
3.0%
English
2.9%
Felupe
1.0%
Spanish
0.5%
Russian
0.1%
Other
1.8%
 
Voter education posters in Kriol for Guinea-Bissau legislative election, 2008, Biombo Region

Though a small country, Guinea-Bissau has several ethnic groups which are very distinct from each other, with their own cultures and languages. This is due to Guinea-Bissau being a refugee and migration territory within Africa. Colonisation and racial intermixing brought Portuguese and the Portuguese creole known as Kriol or crioulo.[100]

The sole official language of Guinea-Bissau since independence, Standard Portuguese is spoken mostly as a second language, with few native speakers and its use is often confined to the intellectual and political elites. It is the language of government and national communication as a legacy of colonial rule. Schooling from the primary to tertiary levels is conducted in Portuguese, although only 67% of children have access to any formal education. Data suggests that the number of Portuguese speakers ranges from 11 to 15%.[96] In the latest census (2009) 27.1% of the population claimed to speak non-creole Portuguese (46.3% of city dwellers and 14.7% of the rural population, respectively).[101] Portuguese creole is spoken by 44% of the population and is effectively the lingua franca among distinct groups for most of the population.[96] Creole's usage is still expanding, and it is understood by the vast majority of the population. However, decreolisation processes are occurring, due to undergoing interference from Standard Portuguese and the creole forms a continuum of varieties with the standard language, the most distant are basilects and the closer ones, acrolects. A post-creole continuum exists in Guinea-Bissau and crioulo 'leve' ('soft' creole) variety being closer to the Portuguese-language norm.[100]

The remaining rural population speaks a variety of native African languages unique to each ethnicity: Fula (16%), Balanta (14%), Mandinka (7%), Manjak (5%), Papel (3%), Felupe (1%), Beafada (0.7%), Bijagó (0.3%), and Nalu (0.1%), which form the ethnic African languages spoken by the population.[100][102] Most Portuguese and Mestiços speakers also have one of the African languages and Kriol as additional languages. Ethnic African languages are not discouraged, in any situation, despite their lower prestige. These languages are the link between individuals of the same ethnic background and daily used in villages, between neighbours or friends, traditional and religious ceremonies, and also used in contact between the urban and rural populations. However, none of these languages are dominant in Guinea-Bissau.[100]

French is taught as a foreign language in schools, because Guinea-Bissau is surrounded by French-speaking nations.[96] Guinea-Bissau is a full member of the Francophonie.[103]

Religion edit

Religion in Guinea-Bissau (CIA, 2020 est.)[104]
Religion Percent
Islam
46.1%
Folk religions
30.6%
Christianity
18.9%
Other/unaffiliated
4.4%

Various studies suggest that slightly less than half of the population of Guinea-Bissau is Muslim, while substantial minorities follow folk religions or Christianity. The CIA World Factbook's 2020 estimate stated that the population was 46.1% Muslim, 30.6% following folk religions, 18.9% Christian, 4.4% other or unaffiliated.[104] In 2010, a Pew Research survey determined that the population was 45.1% Muslim and 19.7% Christian, with 30.9% practicing folk religion and 4.3 other faiths.[17][105] A 2015 Pew-Templeton study found that the population was 45.1% Muslim, 30.9% practicing folk religions, 19.7% Christian, and 4.3% unaffiliated.[106] The ARDA projected in 2020 the share of the Muslim population to be 44.7%. It also estimated 41.2% of the population to be practitioners of ethnic religions and 13% to be Christians.[107]

 
Men in Islamic garb, Bafatá, Guinea-Bissau

Concerning religious identity among Muslims, a Pew report determined that in Guinea-Bissau there is no prevailing sectarian identity. Guinea-Bissau shared this distinction with other Sub-Saharan countries like Tanzania, Uganda, Liberia, Nigeria and Cameroon.[108] This Pew research also stated that countries in this specific study that declared to not have any clear dominant sectarian identity were mostly concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa.[109] Another Pew report, The Future of World Religions, predicts that from 2010 to 2050, practitioners of Islam will increase their share of the population in Guinea-Bissau.[106]

Many residents practice syncretic forms of Islamic and Christian faiths, combining their practices with traditional African beliefs.[76][110] Muslims dominate the north and east, while Christians dominate the south and coastal regions. The Roman Catholic Church claims most of the Christian community.[111]

The 2021 US Department of State Report on International Religious Freedom[112] mentions the fact that leaders of different religious communities believe that the existing communities are essentially tolerant, but express some concerns about rising religious fundamentalism in the country. An incident in July 2022, when a Catholic church in the overwhelmingly Muslim region of Gabú was vandalised, raised concern amongst the Christian community that Islamic extremism might be infiltrating the country. However, there have been no further similar incidents, and no direct links to Islamic extremists have surfaced.[113]

Health edit

Education edit

 
 
Universidade Lusófona of Bissau (up). Students at Biblioteca Jovem, Bairro da Ajuda, in Guinea-Bissau. (down)

Education is compulsory from the age of 7 to 13.[114] Pre-school education for children between three and six years of age is optional and in its early stages. There are five levels of education: pre-school, elemental and complementary basic education, general and complementary secondary education, general secondary education, technical and professional teaching, and higher education (university and non-universities). Basic education is under reform, and now forms a single cycle, comprising six years of education. Secondary education is widely available and there are two cycles (7th to 9th classe and 10th to 11th classe). Professional education in public institutions is nonoperational, however private school offerings opened, including the Centro de Formação São João Bosco (since 2004) and the Centro de Formação Luís Inácio Lula da Silva (since 2011).[100]

Higher education is limited and most prefer to be educated abroad, with students preferring to enroll in Portugal.[100] A number of universities, to which an institutionally autonomous Faculty of Law as well as a Faculty of Medicine that is maintained by Cuba and functions in different cities.

Child labor is very common.[115] The enrollment of boys is higher than that of girls. In 1998, the gross primary enrollment rate was 53.5%, with higher enrollment ratio for males (67.7%) compared to females (40%).[115]

Non-formal education is centered on community schools and the teaching of adults.[100] In 2011, the literacy rate was estimated at 55.3% (68.9% male, and 42.1% female).[116]

Conflicts edit

Usually, the many different ethnic groups in Guinea-Bissau coexist peacefully, but when conflicts do erupt, they tend to revolve around access to land.[117]

Culture edit

 
Gabú is Guinea-Bissau's second largest city
 
Port of Bissau
 
Bridge in São Vicente, Cacheu
 
Hotels at Bissagos Islands
 
Carnival in Bissau
 
National singer Manecas Costa

Media edit

Music edit

The music of Guinea-Bissau is usually associated with the polyrhythmic gumbe genre, the country's primary musical export. However, civil unrest and other factors have combined over the years to keep gumbe, and other genres, out of mainstream audiences, even in generally syncretist African countries.[118]

The cabasa is the primary musical instrument of Guinea-Bissau,[119] and is used in extremely swift and rhythmically complex dance music. Lyrics are almost always in Guinea-Bissau Creole, a Portuguese-based creole language, and are often humorous and topical, revolving around current events and controversies.[120]

The word gumbe is sometimes used generically, to refer to any music of the country, although it most specifically refers to a unique style that fuses about ten of the country's folk music traditions.[121] Tina and tinga are other popular genres, while extent folk traditions include ceremonial music used in funerals, initiations, and other rituals, as well as Balanta brosca and kussundé, Mandinga djambadon, and the kundere sound of the Bissagos Islands.[122]

Cuisine edit

Common dishes include soups and stews. Common ingredients include yams, sweet potato, cassava, onion, tomato, and plantain. Spices, peppers, and chilis are used in cooking, including Aframomum melegueta seeds (Guinea pepper).[123]

Film edit

Flora Gomes is an internationally renowned film director; his most famous film is Nha Fala (English: My Voice).[124] Gomes's Mortu Nega (Death Denied) (1988)[125] was the first fiction film and the second feature film ever made in Guinea-Bissau. (The first feature film was N’tturudu, by director Umban u’Kest [fr] in 1987.) At FESPACO 1989, Mortu Nega won the prestigious Oumarou Ganda Prize. In 1992, Gomes directed Udju Azul di Yonta,[126] which was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival.[127] Gomes has also served on the boards of many Africa-centric film festivals.[128] The actress Babetida Sadjo was born in Bafatá, Guinea-Bissau.[129]

Sports edit

Football is the most popular sport in Guinea-Bissau. The Guinea-Bissau national football team is under the authority of the Federação de Futebol da Guiné-Bissau. They are a member of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) and FIFA.[citation needed]

See also edit

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Sources edit

  • Barry, Boubacar (1998). Senegambia and the Atlantic slave trade. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Clarence-Smith, W. G. (1975). The Third Portuguese Empire, 1825-1975. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press.
  • Hair, P.E.H. (22 January 2009). "Ethnolinguistic Continuity on the Guinea Coast" (PDF). The Journal of African History. 8 (2): 247–268. doi:10.1017/S0021853700007040. JSTOR 179482. S2CID 161528479 – via JSTOR.
  • Niane, Djibril Tamsir (1989). Histoire des Mandingues de l'Ouest: le royaume du Gabou. Paris, France: Karthala. ISBN 9782865372362. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  • Ogilby, John (1670). Africa: being an accurate description of the regions of Aegypt, Barbary, Lybia, and Billedulgerid, the land of Negroes, Guinee, Aethiopia, and the Abyssines, with all the adjacent islands, either in the Mediterranean, Atlantick, Southern, or Oriental Sea, belonging thereunto: with the several denominations of their coasts, harbors, creeks, rivers, lakes, cities, towns, castles, and villages: their customs, modes, and manners, languages, religions, and inexhaustible treasure: with their governments and policy, variety of trade and barter, and also of their wonderful plants, beasts, birds, and serpents. London: Printed by Tho. Johnson for the author. Retrieved 25 November 2022 – via Early English Books.

  This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook. CIA.

Further reading edit

  • Abdel Malek, K.,"Le processus d'accès à l'indépendance de la Guinée-Bissau", In : Bulletin de l'Association des Anciens Elèves de l'Institut National de Langues et de Cultures Orientales, N°1, Avril 1998. – pp. 53–60
  • Forrest, Joshua B., Lineages of State Fragility. Rural Civil Society in Guinea-Bissau (Ohio University Press/James Currey Ltd., 2003)
  • Galli, Rosemary E, Guinea Bissau: Politics, Economics and Society, (Pinter Pub Ltd., 1987)
  • Lobban Jr., Richard Andrew and Mendy, Peter Karibe, Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Guinea-Bissau, third edition (Scarecrow Press, 1997)
  • Vigh, Henrik, Navigating Terrains of War: Youth And Soldiering in Guinea-Bissau, (Berghahn Books, 2006)

External links edit

Government

  • Official website
  • Guinea-Bissau: Prime Minister's fate unknown after apparent military coup – West Africa – Portuguese American Journal
  • Guinea-Bissau Holds First Post-Coup Election

Trade

  • Guinea-Bissau 2005 Summary Trade Statistics

News media

Tourism

  •   Guinea-Bissau travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Guinea-Bissau Turismo – RIOS AND LAGOONS

Health

  • The State of the World's Midwifery – Guinea-Bissau Country Profile

GIS information

  • Master Thesis about the developing Geographical Information for Guinea-Bissau

12°N 15°W / 12°N 15°W / 12; -15

guinea, bissau, confused, with, guinea, equatorial, guinea, western, guinea, papua, guinea, ghin, portuguese, guiné, bissau, fula, 𞤘𞤭𞤲𞤫, 𞤄𞤭𞤧𞤢, 𞤱𞤮, romanized, gine, bisaawo, mandinka, ߖߌߣߍ, ߓߌߛߊߥߏ, gine, bisawo, officially, republic, portuguese, república, guin. Not to be confused with Guinea Equatorial Guinea Western New Guinea or Papua New Guinea Guinea Bissau ˌ ɡ ɪ n i b ɪ ˈ s aʊ GHIN ee bi SOW Portuguese Guine Bissau Fula 𞤘𞤭𞤲𞤫 𞤄𞤭𞤧𞤢 𞤱𞤮 romanized Gine Bisaawo Mandinka ߖߌߣߍ ߺ ߓߌߛߊߥߏ Gine Bisawo officially the Republic of Guinea Bissau Portuguese Republica da Guine Bissau ʁɛˈpublikɐ dɐ ɣiˈnɛ biˈsaw is a country in West Africa that covers 36 125 square kilometres 13 948 sq mi with an estimated population of 2 026 778 It borders Senegal to its north and Guinea to its southeast 10 Republic of Guinea BissauRepublica da Guine Bissau Portuguese 𞤘𞤭𞤲𞤫 𞤄𞤭𞤧𞤢 𞤱𞤮 Fula ߖߌߣߍ ߺ ߓߌߛߊߥߏ Mandinka Flag EmblemMotto Unidade Luta Progresso Unity Struggle Progress Anthem Esta E a Nossa Patria Bem Amada This is Our Beloved Homeland source source Location of Guinea Bissau dark blue in Africa light blue amp dark grey in the African Union light blue Capitaland largest cityBissau11 52 N 15 36 W 11 867 N 15 600 W 11 867 15 600Official languagesPortugueseSpoken languagesList Guinea Bissau CreoleEnglishFrenchArabicBalantaHassaniyaJola FonyiMandinkaMandjakMankanyaNoonPortuguesePulaarSererSoninkeEthnic groups 2019 1 30 Balanta30 Fula14 Manjak13 Mandinka7 Papel6 UnspecifiedReligion 2020 2 3 4 46 1 Islam30 6 Traditional faiths18 9 Christianity4 4 Others NoneDemonym s Bissau Guinean 5 Guinea BissauanGovernmentUnitary semi presidential republic PresidentUmaro Sissoco Embalo Prime MinisterRui Duarte de BarrosLegislatureNational People s AssemblyIndependence from Portugal Declared24 September 1973 Recognized10 September 1974Area Total36 125 km2 13 948 sq mi 134th Water 22 4Population 2023 estimate2 078 820 6 150th Density46 9 km2 121 5 sq mi 154th GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 6 billion 7 Per capita 3 088 7 GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 2 billion 7 Per capita 1 028 7 Gini 2010 50 7 8 highHDI 2021 0 483 9 low 177thCurrencyWest African CFA franc XOF Time zoneUTC GMT Driving siderightCalling code 245ISO 3166 codeGWInternet TLD gwGuinea Bissau was once part of the kingdom of Kaabu 11 as well as part of the Mali Empire 11 Parts of this kingdom persisted until the 18th century while a few others were under some rule by the Portuguese Empire since the 16th century In the 19th century it was colonised as Portuguese Guinea 11 Portuguese control was restricted and weak until the early 20th century when pacification campaigns solidified Portuguese sovereignty in the area The final Portuguese victory over the last remaining bastion of mainland resistance came in 1915 with the conquest of the Papel ruled Kingdom of Bissau by the Portuguese military officer Teixeira Pinto and the Wolof mercenary Abdul Injai 12 The Bissagos islands off the coast of Guinea Bissau were officially conquered in 1936 ensuring Portuguese control of both the mainland and islands of the region 13 Upon independence declared in 1973 and recognised in 1974 the name of its capital Bissau was added to the country s name to prevent confusion with Guinea formerly French Guinea Guinea Bissau has a history of political instability since independence The current president is Umaro Sissoco Embalo who was elected on 29 December 2019 14 Only about 2 of the population speaks Portuguese the official language as a first language and 33 speak it as a second language However Guinea Bissau Creole a Portuguese based creole is the national language and also considered the language of unity According to a 2012 study 54 of the population speak Creole as a first language and about 40 speak it as a second language 15 The remainder speak a variety of native African languages The nation is home to numerous followers of Islam Christianity and traditional faiths though no single religious group represents a majority of the population 16 17 The country s per capita gross domestic product is one of the lowest in the world Guinea Bissau is a member of the United Nations African Union Economic Community of West African States Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Community of Portuguese Language Countries Organisation internationale de la Francophonie and the South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone and was a member of the now defunct Latin Union Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre European contact 1 1 1 Kingdom of Bissau 1 1 2 Biafada kingdoms 1 1 3 The Bijagos 1 1 4 Kaabu 1 2 European contact 1 2 1 15th 16th centuries 1 2 2 17th 18th centuries 1 2 3 Slave trade 1 3 Colonialism 1 4 Struggle for Independence 1 5 Independence 1973 1 6 From Vieira years to present 2 Politics 2 1 Foreign relations 2 2 Military 2 3 Administrative divisions 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Environmental problems 3 3 Wildlife 4 Economy 5 Society 5 1 Demographics 5 2 Ethnic groups 5 3 Major cities 5 4 Languages 5 5 Religion 5 6 Health 5 7 Education 5 8 Conflicts 6 Culture 6 1 Media 6 2 Music 6 3 Cuisine 6 4 Film 6 5 Sports 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editMain article History of Guinea Bissau Pre European contact edit The deep history of what is now Guinea Bissau is poorly understood by historians The earliest inhabitants were the Jolas Papels Manjaks Balantas and Biafadas Later the Mandinka and Fulani migrated into the region in the 13th and 15th centuries respectively pushing the earlier inhabitants towards the coast and onto the Bijagos islands 18 19 20 The Balanta and Jola had weak or non existent institutions of kingship but instead put an emphasis on heads of villages and families 19 64 The Mandinka Fula Papel Manjak and Biafada chiefs were vassals to kings The customs rites and ceremonies varied but nobles commanded all the major positions including the judicial system 19 66 67 73 227 Social stratification was seen in the clothing and accessories of the people in housing materials and in transportation options 19 77 8 Trade was widespread between ethnic groups Items traded included pepper and kola nuts from the southern forests kola nuts iron and iron utensils from the savannah forest zone salt and dried fish from the coast and Mandinka cotton cloth 20 4 Kingdom of Bissau edit According to oral tradition the Kingdom of Bissau was founded by the son of the king of Quinara Guinala who moved to the area with his pregnant sister six wives and subjects of his father s kingdom 21 Relations between the kingdom and the Portuguese were initially warm but deteriorated over time 22 55 The kingdom strongly defended its sovereignty against the Portuguese Pacification Campaigns defeating them in 1891 1894 and 1904 However in 1915 the Portuguese under the command of Officer Teixeira Pinto and warlord Abdul Injai fully absorbed the kingdom 12 Biafada kingdoms edit The Biafada people inhabited the area around the Rio Grande de Buba in three kingdoms Biguba Guinala and Bissege 19 65 The former two were important ports with significant lancado communities 22 63 211 They were subjects of the Mandinka mansa of Kaabu 22 211 The Bijagos edit In the Bijagos Islands different islands were populated by people of different ethnic origins leading to great cultural diversity in the archipelago 19 24 22 52 Bijago society was warlike Men were dedicated to boatbuilding and raiding the mainland attacking the coastal peoples as well as other islands believing that on the sea they had no king Women cultivated land constructed houses and gathered food and could choose their husbands generally warriors with the best reputation Successful warriors could have many wives and boats and were entitled to 1 3 of the spoils of the boat from any expedition 19 204 205 Bijago night raids on coastal settlements had significant impact on the societies attacked Portuguese traders on the mainland tried to stop the raids as they hurt the local economy but the islanders also sold considerable numbers of slaves to the Europeans who frequently pushed for more captives 19 205 The Bijagos themselves were mostly safe from enslavement out of reach of mainland slave raiders Europeans avoided having them as slaves Portuguese sources say the children made good slaves but not the adults whom were likely to commit suicide lead rebellions aboard slave ships or escape once reaching the New World 19 218 219 Kaabu edit nbsp States in medieval AfricaMain article Kaabu Kaabu was established first as a province of Mali through the conquest of the Senegambia by a general of Sundiata Keita named Tiramakhan Traore in the 13th century By the 14th century much of Guinea Bissau was under the administration of Mali and ruled by a farim kaabu commander of Kaabu 23 Mali declined gradually beginning in the 14th century Formerly secure possessions in what is now Senegal the Gambia and Guinea Bissau were cut off by the expanding power of Koli Tenguella in the early 16th century 24 Kaabu therefore became an independent federation of kingdoms 25 13 26 The ruling classes were composed of elite warriors known as the Nyancho Naanco who traced their patrilineal lineage to Tiramakhan Troare 27 2 The Nyancho were a warrior culture reputed to be excellent cavalry men and raiders 25 6 The Kaabu Mansaba was seated in Kansala today known as Gabu in the eastern Geba region 20 4 The slave trade dominated the economy enriching the warrior classes with imported cloth beads metalware and firearms 25 8 Trade networks to North Africa were dominant up to the 14th century with coastal trade with the Europeans increasing beginning in the 15th century 20 3 In the 17th and 18th centuries an estimated 700 slaves left the region annually many of them from Kaabu 20 5 In the late 18th century the rise of the Imamate of Futa Jallon to the east posed a powerful challenge to animist Kaabu During the first half of the 19th century civil war erupted as local Fula people sought independence 20 5 6 This long running conflict in the 1867 Battle of Kansala that marked the end of the Kaabu and the rise of Fuladu though some smaller Mandinka kingdoms survived until their absorption by the Portuguese European contact edit Main articles British Guinea and Portuguese Guinea nbsp Lesser coat of arms of Portuguese Guinea Bissau15th 16th centuries edit The first Europeans to reach Guinea Bissau were the Venetian explorer Alvise Cadamosto in 1455 Portuguese explorer Diogo Gomes in 1456 Portuguese explorer Duarte Pacheco Pareira in the 1480s and Flemish explorer Eustache de la Fosse in 1479 1480 28 7 12 13 16 Although the Portuguese authorities initially discouraged white settlement on the mainland this prohibition was ignored by lancados and tangomaos who assimilated into indigenous culture and customs 19 140 They ignored Portuguese trade regulations banning entering the region or trading without a royal licence shipping out of unauthorised ports or assimilating into the native community 19 142 After 1520 trade and settlements increased on the mainland populated by the Portuguese and native traders as well some Spanish Genoese English French and Dutch 19 145 150 The main ports were Cacheu Bissau and Guinala and each river also sported trading centers such as Toubaboudougou at their furthest navigable point that traded directly with the interior for resources such as gum arabic ivory hides civet dyes slaves and gold 19 153 160 Local African rulers generally refused to allow Europeans into the interior to ensure their control of trade routes 29 Disputes became increasingly frequent and serious in the late 1500s as the foreign traders sought to influence the host societies to their benefit 22 74 Meanwhile the Portuguese monopoly always leaky was being increasingly challenged In 1580 the Iberian Union unified the crowns of Portugal and Spain leading to the attack of Portuguese possessions in Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde by Spain s enemies French Dutch and English ships increasingly came to trade with the natives and the independent minded lancados 19 244 53 17th 18th centuries edit In the early 17th century the government attempted to force all Guinean trade to go through Santiago and to promote trade and settlement on the mainland while restricting the sale of weapons to the locals These efforts were largely unsuccessful 19 243 4 With the end of the Iberian Union in 1640 King Joao IV attempted to restrict the Spanish trade in Guinea that had flourished for the previous 60 years The Afro Portuguese however were not in a position to deny the free trade that the African kings who now saw European products as necessities demanded 19 261 3 The Portuguese were never able to impose their monopolistic vision on the local and Afro European traders as the economic interests of the native leaders and Afro European merchants never aligned with theirs During this period the power of the Mali Empire in the region was dissipating and the farim of Kaabu the king of Kassa and other local rulers began to assert their independence 19 488 nbsp Flag of the Portuguese Company of GuineaIn the early 1700s the Portuguese abandoned Bissau and retreated to Cacheu after the captain major was captured and killed by the local king They would not return until the 1750s Meanwhile the Cacheu and Cape Verde Company shut down in 1706 22 xliii For a brief period in the 1790s the British tried to establish a foothold on Bolama 30 Slave trade edit Guinea Bissau was among the first regions touched by the Atlantic slave trade and while it did not produce the same number of enslaved people as other regions the impact was still significant 31 29 In Cape Verde Guinean slaves were instrumental in developing the plantation economy growing indigo and cotton and weaving panos cloth that became a standard currency in West Africa 18 The 17th and 18th centuries saw thousands of people taken from the region every year by Portuguese French and British companies with an average of 3000 shipped every year from Guinala alone 19 278 The Fula jihads and specifically the wars between the Imamate of Futa Jallon and Kaabu provided many of these 22 377 Most wars were waged for the sole purpose of capturing slaves to sell to the Europeans in exchange for imported goods such that they resembled man hunts more than conflicts over territory or political power 19 204 209 The nobles and kings benefited while the common people bore the brunt of the raiding and insecurity If a noble was captured they were likely to be released as the captors whoever they were would generally accept a ransom in exchange for their freedom 19 229 The relationship between kings and European traders was a partnership with the two regularly making deals on how the trade was to be conducted who was to be enslaved and who was not and the prices of the slaves Contemporary chroniclers questioned multiple kings on their part in the slave trade noting that they recognised the trade as evil but participated because the Europeans would buy no other goods from them 19 230 4 Beginning in the late 18th century European countries gradually began slowing and or abolishing the slave trade Portugal abandoned slavery in 1869 and Brazil in 1888 but a system of contract labor replaced it that was only barely better for the workers 22 377 Colonialism edit nbsp Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913Up until the late 1800s Portuguese control of their colony outside of their forts and trading posts was a fiction Guinea Bissau became the scene of increased European colonial competition beginning in the 1860s The dispute over the status of Bolama was resolved in Portugal s favor through the mediation of U S President Ulysses S Grant in 1870 but French encroachment on Portuguese claims continued In 1886 the Casamance region of what is now Senegal was ceded to them 18 Struggle for Independence edit nbsp Portuguese Colonial War in Portuguese Guinea 1968The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde PAIGC was founded in 1956 under the leadership of Amilcar Cabral Initially committed to peaceful methods the 1959 Pidjiguiti massacre pushed the party towards more militarized tactics leaning heavily on the political mobilization of the peasantry in the countryside After years of planning and preparing from their base in Conakry the PAIGC launched the Guinea Bissau War of Independence on 23 January 1963 22 289 Unlike guerrilla movements in other Portuguese colonies the PAIGC rapidly extended its control over large portions of the territory Aided by the jungle like terrain it had easy access to borders with neighbouring allies and large quantities of arms from Cuba China the Soviet Union and left leaning African countries The PAIGC even managed to acquire a significant anti aircraft capability in order to defend itself against aerial attack 22 289 90 By 1973 the PAIGC was in control of many parts of Guinea although the movement suffered a setback in January 1973 when its founder and leader Amilcar Cabral was assassinated 32 After Cabral s death party leadership fell to Aristides Pereira who would later become the first president of the Republic of Cape Verde nbsp Portuguese held green disputed yellow and rebel held areas red in Portuguese Guinea and other colonies 1970Independence 1973 edit nbsp PAIGC forces raise the flag of Guinea Bissau in 1974 Independence was unilaterally declared on 24 September 1973 which is now celebrated as the country s Independence Day a public holiday 33 The country was formally recognized as independent on 10 September 1974 34 Nicolae Ceaușescu s Romania was the first country to formally recognise Guinea Bissau and the first to sign agreements with the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde 35 36 Upon the nation s independence it declared Esta E a Nossa Patria Bem Amada as its national anthem Until 1996 this was shared with Cape Verde which later adopted its own official national anthem Cantico da Liberdade 37 38 39 40 Luis Cabral brother of Amilcar and co founder of PAIGC was appointed the first president of Guinea Bissau 29 Independence had begun under the best of auspices The Bissau Guinean diaspora had returned to the country en masse A system of access to school for all had been created Books were free and schools seemed to have a sufficient number of teachers The education of girls previously neglected was encouraged and a new school calendar more adapted to the rural world was adopted In 1980 economic conditions deteriorated significantly leading to general discontent with the government in power On 14 November 1980 Joao Bernardo Vieira known as Nino Vieira overthrew President Luis Cabral The constitution was suspended and a nine member military council of the revolution chaired by Vieira was established Since then the country has moved toward a liberal economy Budget cuts have been made at the expense of the social sector and education 41 The country was controlled by a revolutionary council until 1984 The first multi party elections were held in 1994 An army uprising in May 1998 led to the Guinea Bissau Civil War and the president s ousting in June 1999 42 Elections were held again in 2000 and Kumba Iala was elected president 43 In September 2003 a military coup was conducted The military arrested Iala on the charge of being unable to solve the problems 44 After being delayed several times legislative elections were held in March 2004 A mutiny in October 2004 over pay arrears resulted in the death of the head of the armed forces 45 From Vieira years to present edit In June 2005 presidential elections were held for the first time since the coup that deposed Iala Iala returned as the candidate for the PRS claiming to be the legitimate president of the country but the election was won by former president Joao Bernardo Vieira deposed in the 1999 coup Vieira beat Malam Bacai Sanha in a run off election Sanha initially refused to concede claiming that tampering and electoral fraud occurred in two constituencies including the capital Bissau 46 Despite reports of arms entering the country prior to the election and some disturbances during campaigning including attacks on government offices by unidentified gunmen foreign election monitors described the 2005 election overall as calm and organized 47 Three years later PAIGC won a strong parliamentary majority with 67 of 100 seats in the parliamentary election held in November 2008 48 In November 2008 President Vieira s official residence was attacked by members of the armed forces killing a guard but leaving the president unharmed 49 On 2 March 2009 however Vieira was assassinated by what preliminary reports indicated to be a group of soldiers avenging the death of the head of joint chiefs of staff General Batista Tagme Na Wai who had been killed in an explosion the day before 50 Vieira s death did not trigger widespread violence but there were signs of turmoil in the country according to the advocacy group Swisspeace 51 Military leaders in the country pledged to respect the constitutional order of succession National Assembly Speaker Raimundo Pereira was appointed as an interim president until a nationwide election on 28 June 2009 52 It was won by Malam Bacai Sanha of the PAIGC against Kumba Iala as the presidential candidate of the PRS 53 nbsp Guinea Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embalo with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow Russia 25 October 2022On 9 January 2012 President Sanha died of complications from diabetes and Pereira was again appointed as an interim president On the evening of 12 April 2012 members of the country s military staged a coup d etat and arrested the interim president and a leading presidential candidate 54 Former vice chief of staff General Mamadu Ture Kuruma assumed control of the country in the transitional period and started negotiations with opposition parties 55 56 Jose Mario Vaz was the President of Guinea Bissau from 2014 until 2019 presidential elections At the end of his term Vaz became the first elected president to complete his five year mandate He lost the 2019 election however to Umaro Sissoco Embalo who took office in February 2020 Embalo is the first president to be elected without the backing of the PAIGC 57 58 On 1 February 2022 there was an attempted coup d etat to overthrow President Umaro Sissoco Embalo 59 60 61 On 2 February 2022 state radio announced that four assailants and two members of the presidential guard had been killed in the incident 62 The African Union and ECOWAS both condemned the coup 63 Six days after the attempted coup d etat on 7 February 2022 there was an attack on the building of Radio Capital FM 64 a radio station critical of the Bissau Guinean government 65 this was the second time the radio station suffered an attack of this nature in less than two years 64 A journalist working for the station recalled while wishing to stay anonymous that one of their colleagues had recognized one of the cars carrying the attackers as belonging to the presidency 65 In 2022 President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky met with his counterpart Umaro Sissoco Embalo in a press conference Embalo became the first African ruler to visit Ukraine after the beginning of the war 66 Politics editMain article Politics of Guinea Bissau nbsp The Presidential Palace of Guinea Bissau nbsp Public Order Police officer during a parade in Guinea BissauGuinea Bissau is a republic 67 In the past the government had been highly centralized Multi party governance was not established until mid 1991 67 The president is the head of state and the prime minister is the head of government From independence in 1974 until Jose Mario Vaz ended his five year term as president on 24 June 2019 no president successfully served a full five year term 57 At the legislative level a unicameral Assembleia Nacional Popular National People s Assembly is made up of 100 members They are popularly elected from multi member constituencies to serve a four year term The judicial system is headed by a Tribunal Supremo da Justica Supreme Court made up of nine justices appointed by the president they serve at the pleasure of the president 68 The two main political parties are the PAIGC African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde and the PRS Party for Social Renewal There are more than 20 minor parties 69 Foreign relations edit Further information Foreign relations of Guinea Bissau Guinea Bissau is a founding member state of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries CPLP also known as the Lusophone Commonwealth and international organisation and political association of Lusophone nations across four continents where Portuguese is an official language 70 Military edit Further information Military of Guinea Bissau A 2019 estimate put the size of the Guinea Bissau Armed Forces at around 4 400 personnel and military spending is less than 2 of GDP 71 In 2018 Guinea Bissau signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons 72 Administrative divisions edit Main articles Regions of Guinea Bissau and Sectors of Guinea Bissau nbsp A clickable map of Guinea Bissau exhibiting its eight regions and one autonomous sector Guinea Bissau is divided into eight regions regioes and one autonomous sector sector autonomo 73 These in turn are subdivided into 37 Sectors 74 The regions are 74 Bafata Biombo Bissau a Bolama Cacheu Gabu Oio Quinara Tombali Autonomous sector Geography editMain article Geography of Guinea Bissau nbsp Rare salt water hippopotamuses on Orango Island nbsp Caravela Bissagos Islands nbsp Typical scenery in Guinea BissauGuinea Bissau is bordered by Senegal to the north and Guinea to the south and east 74 with the Atlantic Ocean to its west 74 It lies mostly between latitudes 11 and 13 N a small area is south of 11 and longitudes 11 and 15 W 75 At 36 125 square kilometres 13 948 sq mi 74 the country is larger in size than Taiwan or Belgium The highest point is Monte Torin with an elevation of 262 metres 860 ft Its terrain is mostly low coastal plains with swamps of the Guinean mangroves rising to the Guinean forest savanna mosaic in the east 76 Its monsoon like rainy season alternates with periods of hot dry harmattan winds blowing from the Sahara The Bijagos Archipelago lies off of the mainland 77 The country is home to two ecoregions Guinean forest savanna mosaic and Guinean mangroves 78 Climate edit Main article Climate of Guinea Bissau Guinea Bissau is warm all year round with mild temperature fluctuations it averages 26 3 C 79 3 F The average rainfall for Bissau is 2 024 millimetres 79 7 in although this is almost entirely accounted for during the rainy season which falls between June and September October From December through April the country experiences drought 79 nbsp Environmental problems edit Severe environmental problems include deforestation soil erosion overgrazing and overfishing 76 Guinea Bissau had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5 7 10 ranking it 97th globally out of 172 countries 80 Wildlife edit Main article Wildlife of Guinea BissauEconomy editMain articles Economy of Guinea Bissau and Mining industry of Guinea Bissau nbsp A proportional representation of Guinea Bissau exports 2019 nbsp Seat of the Central Bank of Guinea Bissau nbsp Petrol station in Sao DomingosGuinea Bissau s GDP per capita is one of the lowest in the world and its Human Development Index is one of the lowest on earth More than two thirds of the population lives below the poverty line 81 The economy depends mainly on agriculture fish cashew nuts and ground nuts are its major exports 82 A long period of political instability has resulted in depressed economic activity deteriorating social conditions and increased macroeconomic imbalances It takes longer on average to register a new business in Guinea Bissau 233 days or about 33 weeks than in any other country in the world except Suriname 83 Guinea Bissau has started to show some economic advances after a pact of stability was signed by the main political parties of the country leading to an IMF backed structural reform program 84 After several years of economic downturn and political instability in 1997 Guinea Bissau entered the CFA franc monetary system bringing about some internal monetary stability 85 The civil war that took place in 1998 and 1999 and a military coup in September 2003 again disrupted economic activity leaving a substantial part of the economic and social infrastructure in ruins and intensifying the already widespread poverty Following the parliamentary elections in March 2004 and presidential elections in July 2005 the country is trying to recover from the long period of instability despite a still fragile political situation 86 Beginning around 2005 drug traffickers based in Latin America began to use Guinea Bissau along with several neighbouring West African nations as a transshipment point to Europe for cocaine 87 The nation was described by a United Nations official as being at risk for becoming a narco state 88 The government and the military have done little to stop drug trafficking which increased after the 2012 coup d etat 89 The government of Guinea Bissau continues to be ravaged by illegal drug distribution according to The Economist 90 Guinea Bissau is a member of the Organization for the Harmonisation of Business Law in Africa OHADA 91 Society editDemographics edit Main article Demographics of Guinea Bissau nbsp nbsp Left Guinea Bissau s population between 1950 and 2020 Right Guinea Bissau s population pyramid 2005 In 2010 41 3 of Guinea Bissau s population were aged under 15 92 According to the 2022 revision of the World Population Prospects 93 94 Guinea Bissau s population was 2 060 721 in 2021 compared to 518 000 in 1950 The proportion of the population below the age of 15 in 2010 was 41 3 55 4 were aged between 15 and 65 years of age while 3 3 were aged 65 years or older 92 Ethnic groups edit Ethnic groups in Guinea Bissau 95 Ethnic groups percentFula 28 5 Balanta 22 5 Mandinka 14 7 Papel 9 1 Manjaca 8 3 Beafada 3 5 Mancanha 3 1 Bijagos pt 2 1 Felupe 1 7 Mansoanca 1 4 Balanta Mane 1 Nalu 0 9 Saracule 0 5 Sosso 0 4 Not Stated 2 2 nbsp Guinea Bissau present day settlement pattern of the ethnic groupsThe population of Guinea Bissau is ethnically diverse and has many distinct languages customs and social structures 67 Bissau Guineans can be divided into the following ethnic groups 67 Fula and the Mandinka speaking people who constitute the largest portion of the population and are concentrated in the north and northeast 67 Balanta and Papel people who live in the southern coastal regions 67 and Manjaco and Mancanha who occupy the central and northern coastal areas 67 Most of the remainder are mesticos of mixed Portuguese and African descent 96 97 Portuguese natives are a very small percentage of Bissau Guineans 96 After Guinea Bissau gained independence most of the Portuguese nationals left the country The country has a tiny Chinese population 98 These include traders and merchants of mixed Portuguese and Cantonese ancestry from the former Asian Portuguese colony of Macau 96 Major cities edit Main cities in Guinea Bissau include 99 Rank City Population2015 estimate Region1 Bissau 492 004 Bissau2 Gabu 48 670 Gabu3 Bafata 37 985 Bafata4 Bissora 29 468 Oio5 Bolama 16 216 Bolama6 Cacheu 14 320 Cacheu7 Bubaque 12 922 Bolama8 Catio 11 498 Tombali9 Mansoa 9 198 Oio10 Buba 8 993 QuinaraLanguages edit Languages in Guinea Bissau 95 Languages percentPortuguese Creole 90 4 Portuguese 32 1 Fula 16 0 Balanta 14 0 French 7 1 Mandinka 7 0 Manjak 5 0 Papel 3 0 English 2 9 Felupe 1 0 Spanish 0 5 Russian 0 1 Other 1 8 Main article Languages of Guinea Bissau nbsp Voter education posters in Kriol for Guinea Bissau legislative election 2008 Biombo RegionThough a small country Guinea Bissau has several ethnic groups which are very distinct from each other with their own cultures and languages This is due to Guinea Bissau being a refugee and migration territory within Africa Colonisation and racial intermixing brought Portuguese and the Portuguese creole known as Kriol or crioulo 100 The sole official language of Guinea Bissau since independence Standard Portuguese is spoken mostly as a second language with few native speakers and its use is often confined to the intellectual and political elites It is the language of government and national communication as a legacy of colonial rule Schooling from the primary to tertiary levels is conducted in Portuguese although only 67 of children have access to any formal education Data suggests that the number of Portuguese speakers ranges from 11 to 15 96 In the latest census 2009 27 1 of the population claimed to speak non creole Portuguese 46 3 of city dwellers and 14 7 of the rural population respectively 101 Portuguese creole is spoken by 44 of the population and is effectively the lingua franca among distinct groups for most of the population 96 Creole s usage is still expanding and it is understood by the vast majority of the population However decreolisation processes are occurring due to undergoing interference from Standard Portuguese and the creole forms a continuum of varieties with the standard language the most distant are basilects and the closer ones acrolects A post creole continuum exists in Guinea Bissau and crioulo leve soft creole variety being closer to the Portuguese language norm 100 The remaining rural population speaks a variety of native African languages unique to each ethnicity Fula 16 Balanta 14 Mandinka 7 Manjak 5 Papel 3 Felupe 1 Beafada 0 7 Bijago 0 3 and Nalu 0 1 which form the ethnic African languages spoken by the population 100 102 Most Portuguese and Mesticos speakers also have one of the African languages and Kriol as additional languages Ethnic African languages are not discouraged in any situation despite their lower prestige These languages are the link between individuals of the same ethnic background and daily used in villages between neighbours or friends traditional and religious ceremonies and also used in contact between the urban and rural populations However none of these languages are dominant in Guinea Bissau 100 French is taught as a foreign language in schools because Guinea Bissau is surrounded by French speaking nations 96 Guinea Bissau is a full member of the Francophonie 103 Religion edit Main article Religion in Guinea Bissau Religion in Guinea Bissau CIA 2020 est 104 Religion PercentIslam 46 1 Folk religions 30 6 Christianity 18 9 Other unaffiliated 4 4 Various studies suggest that slightly less than half of the population of Guinea Bissau is Muslim while substantial minorities follow folk religions or Christianity The CIA World Factbook s 2020 estimate stated that the population was 46 1 Muslim 30 6 following folk religions 18 9 Christian 4 4 other or unaffiliated 104 In 2010 a Pew Research survey determined that the population was 45 1 Muslim and 19 7 Christian with 30 9 practicing folk religion and 4 3 other faiths 17 105 A 2015 Pew Templeton study found that the population was 45 1 Muslim 30 9 practicing folk religions 19 7 Christian and 4 3 unaffiliated 106 The ARDA projected in 2020 the share of the Muslim population to be 44 7 It also estimated 41 2 of the population to be practitioners of ethnic religions and 13 to be Christians 107 nbsp Men in Islamic garb Bafata Guinea BissauConcerning religious identity among Muslims a Pew report determined that in Guinea Bissau there is no prevailing sectarian identity Guinea Bissau shared this distinction with other Sub Saharan countries like Tanzania Uganda Liberia Nigeria and Cameroon 108 This Pew research also stated that countries in this specific study that declared to not have any clear dominant sectarian identity were mostly concentrated in Sub Saharan Africa 109 Another Pew report The Future of World Religions predicts that from 2010 to 2050 practitioners of Islam will increase their share of the population in Guinea Bissau 106 Many residents practice syncretic forms of Islamic and Christian faiths combining their practices with traditional African beliefs 76 110 Muslims dominate the north and east while Christians dominate the south and coastal regions The Roman Catholic Church claims most of the Christian community 111 The 2021 US Department of State Report on International Religious Freedom 112 mentions the fact that leaders of different religious communities believe that the existing communities are essentially tolerant but express some concerns about rising religious fundamentalism in the country An incident in July 2022 when a Catholic church in the overwhelmingly Muslim region of Gabu was vandalised raised concern amongst the Christian community that Islamic extremism might be infiltrating the country However there have been no further similar incidents and no direct links to Islamic extremists have surfaced 113 Health edit Main article Health in Guinea Bissau Education edit Main article Education in Guinea Bissau nbsp nbsp Universidade Lusofona of Bissau up Students at Biblioteca Jovem Bairro da Ajuda in Guinea Bissau down Education is compulsory from the age of 7 to 13 114 Pre school education for children between three and six years of age is optional and in its early stages There are five levels of education pre school elemental and complementary basic education general and complementary secondary education general secondary education technical and professional teaching and higher education university and non universities Basic education is under reform and now forms a single cycle comprising six years of education Secondary education is widely available and there are two cycles 7th to 9th classe and 10th to 11th classe Professional education in public institutions is nonoperational however private school offerings opened including the Centro de Formacao Sao Joao Bosco since 2004 and the Centro de Formacao Luis Inacio Lula da Silva since 2011 100 Higher education is limited and most prefer to be educated abroad with students preferring to enroll in Portugal 100 A number of universities to which an institutionally autonomous Faculty of Law as well as a Faculty of Medicine that is maintained by Cuba and functions in different cities Child labor is very common 115 The enrollment of boys is higher than that of girls In 1998 the gross primary enrollment rate was 53 5 with higher enrollment ratio for males 67 7 compared to females 40 115 Non formal education is centered on community schools and the teaching of adults 100 In 2011 the literacy rate was estimated at 55 3 68 9 male and 42 1 female 116 Conflicts edit Usually the many different ethnic groups in Guinea Bissau coexist peacefully but when conflicts do erupt they tend to revolve around access to land 117 Culture edit nbsp Gabu is Guinea Bissau s second largest city nbsp Port of Bissau nbsp Bridge in Sao Vicente Cacheu nbsp Hotels at Bissagos Islands nbsp Carnival in Bissau nbsp National singer Manecas CostaMedia edit Main article Media of Guinea Bissau Music edit Main article Music of Guinea Bissau The music of Guinea Bissau is usually associated with the polyrhythmic gumbe genre the country s primary musical export However civil unrest and other factors have combined over the years to keep gumbe and other genres out of mainstream audiences even in generally syncretist African countries 118 The cabasa is the primary musical instrument of Guinea Bissau 119 and is used in extremely swift and rhythmically complex dance music Lyrics are almost always in Guinea Bissau Creole a Portuguese based creole language and are often humorous and topical revolving around current events and controversies 120 The word gumbe is sometimes used generically to refer to any music of the country although it most specifically refers to a unique style that fuses about ten of the country s folk music traditions 121 Tina and tinga are other popular genres while extent folk traditions include ceremonial music used in funerals initiations and other rituals as well as Balanta brosca and kussunde Mandinga djambadon and the kundere sound of the Bissagos Islands 122 Cuisine edit Further information Cuisine of Guinea Bissau Common dishes include soups and stews Common ingredients include yams sweet potato cassava onion tomato and plantain Spices peppers and chilis are used in cooking including Aframomum melegueta seeds Guinea pepper 123 Film edit Flora Gomes is an internationally renowned film director his most famous film is Nha Fala English My Voice 124 Gomes s Mortu Nega Death Denied 1988 125 was the first fiction film and the second feature film ever made in Guinea Bissau The first feature film was N tturudu by director Umban u Kest fr in 1987 At FESPACO 1989 Mortu Nega won the prestigious Oumarou Ganda Prize In 1992 Gomes directed Udju Azul di Yonta 126 which was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival 127 Gomes has also served on the boards of many Africa centric film festivals 128 The actress Babetida Sadjo was born in Bafata Guinea Bissau 129 Sports edit Football is the most popular sport in Guinea Bissau The Guinea Bissau national football team is under the authority of the Federacao de Futebol da Guine Bissau They are a member of the Confederation of African Football CAF and FIFA citation needed See also edit nbsp Africa portalOutline of Guinea Bissau Index of Guinea Bissau related articlesReferences edit Africa GUINEA BISSAU CIA The World Factbook 12 July 2022 Guinea Bissau United States Department of State Retrieved 8 October 2022 Religions in Guinea Bissau PEW GRF www globalreligiousfutures org Retrieved 8 October 2022 Guinea Bissau The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 22 September 2022 retrieved 8 October 2022 Guinea Bissau Field Listing Nationality Archived 26 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine The World Factbook 2013 14 Washington DC Central Intelligence Agency 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2015 Guinea Bissau The World Factbook 2024 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 22 June 2023 a b c d World Economic Outlook Database October 2023 Edition Guinea Bissau IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved 10 December 2023 Gini Index coefficient CIA World Factbook Retrieved 20 August 2021 Human Development Report 2020 The Next Frontier Human Development and the Anthropocene PDF United Nations Development Programme 15 December 2020 pp 343 346 ISBN 978 92 1 126442 5 Archived PDF from the original on 15 December 2020 Retrieved 16 December 2020 Overview World Bank Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b c Guinea Bissau Country Profile Nations Online Project www nationsonline org Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b Bowman Joye L 22 January 2009 Abdul Njai Ally and Enemy of the Portuguese in Guinea Bissau 1895 1919 The Journal of African History 27 3 463 479 doi 10 1017 S0021853700023276 S2CID 162344466 Corbin Amy Tindall Ashley Bijagos Archipelago Sacred Land Film Project Retrieved 2 November 2022 Guinea Bissau Swearing in of new President unlikely to bring stability says UN representative UN News 14 February 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Handem Myrna 2015 Portuguese Creole or Both The Problematic of Language Choice in the Republic of Guinea Bissau The Social Political and Economic Implications of Language Choice Ph D thesis Howard University Africa Guinea Bissau The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 1 January 2020 a b Chapter 1 Religious Affiliation Tolerance and Tension Islam and Christianity in Sub Saharan Africa Report Pew Research Center 15 April 2010 a b c Early history Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 20 August 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Rodney Walter Anthony May 1966 A History of the Upper Guinea Coast 1545 1800 PDF Eprints Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2020 Retrieved 24 November 2022 a b c d e Schoenmakers Hans 1987 Old Men and New State Structures in Guinea Bissau The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law 19 25 26 99 138 doi 10 1080 07329113 1987 10756396 Nanque Neemias Antonio 2016 Revoltas e resistencias dos Papeis da Guine Bissau contra o Colonialismo Portugues 1886 1915 PDF Trabalho de conclusao de curso Universidade da Integracao Internacional da Lusofonia Afro Brasileira Archived PDF from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 24 November 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Lobban Richard Andrew Jr Mendy Peter Karibe 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Guinea Bissau 4th ed Lanham Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5310 2 Mendy Peter Karibe Jr Richard A Lobban 17 October 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Guinea Bissau Scarecrow Press p 160 ISBN 978 0 8108 8027 6 Barry Boubacar 1998 Senegambia and the Atlantic slave trade Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 21 a b c Wright Donald R 1987 The Epic of Kalefa Saane as a guide to the Nature of Precolonial Senegambian Society and Vice Versa History in Africa 14 287 309 doi 10 2307 3171842 JSTOR 3171842 S2CID 162851641 Page Willie F 2005 Davis R Hunt ed Encyclopedia of African History and Culture Vol III Illustrated revised ed Facts On File p 92 Kaabu Oral History Project Proposal PDF African Union Common Repository 20 June 1980 Retrieved 24 November 2022 Hair P E H 1994 The Early Sources on Guinea PDF History in Africa 21 87 126 doi 10 2307 3171882 JSTOR 3171882 S2CID 161811816 via Cambridge University Press a b c HISTORY OF GUINEA BISSAU www historyworld net Retrieved 26 January 2021 British Library Endangered Archive Programme EAP inep bissau org 18 March 1921 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Gale Group 2017 Guinea Bissau In M S Hill Ed Worldmark encyclopedia of the nations 14th ed Vol 2 pp 379 392 Gale Brittain Victoria 17 January 2011 Africa a continent drenched in the blood of revolutionary heroes The Guardian London Archived from the original on 17 January 2017 Retrieved 14 December 2016 Benzinho Joana Rosa Marta December 2015 Discovering Guinea Bissau PDF NGO afectos com Letra p 29 ISBN 978 989 20 6315 7 Archived PDF from the original on 5 January 2017 Retrieved 20 September 2019 Johnson Thomas A 11 September 1974 Portugal Formally Grants Guinea Bissau Freedom The New York Times Retrieved 26 June 2021 Ratiu Ion Rațiu Ion 1975 Ion Rațiu Foreign Affairs Publishing Company 1975 Contemporary Romania Her Place in World Affairs p 90 Foreign Affairs Publishing Company ISBN 9780900380167 RFE RL 1979 Radio Free Europe Research Volume 4 Issues 15 27 April 1979 Mourao Daniele Ellery April 2009 Guine Bissau e Cabo Verde identidades e nacionalidades em construcao Pro Posicoes in Portuguese 20 83 101 doi 10 1590 S0103 73072009000100006 ISSN 1980 6248 Agency Central Intelligence 4 January 2013 The World Factbook 2012 13 U S Executive Office of the President p 311 ISBN 978 0 16 091142 2 Berg Tiago Jose 26 November 2012 Hinos de todos os paises do mundo Panda Books p 178 ISBN 9788578881917 Diario Nos 16 December 2016 Literatura para a militancia nacional hinos da lusofonia Nos Diario in Galician Retrieved 24 January 2022 Tobias Engel A sina da instabilidade biblioteca diplo Archived from the original on 3 March 2022 Retrieved 3 March 2022 Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Guinea Bissau government in depth Negotiations Veira s surrender and the end of the conflict Archived 31 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine viewed 12 July 2013 Guinea Bissau s Kumba Yala from crisis to crisis Archived 16 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Afrol com Retrieved 22 June 2013 Smith Brian 27 September 2003 US and UN give tacit backing to Guinea Bissau coup Archived 27 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wsws org September 2003 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Armed forces chief killed as soldiers mutiny over pay arrears The New Humanitarian 7 October 2004 Retrieved 28 October 2022 GUINEA BISSAU Vieira officially declared president Archived 25 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine irinnews org 10 August 2005 Army man wins G Bissau election BBC News London 28 July 2005 Archived from the original on 27 June 2006 Retrieved 5 January 2010 Guinea Bissau vote goes smooth amid hopes for stability AFP via Google com 16 November 2008 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Balde Assimo 24 November 2008 Coup attempt fails in Guinea Bissau London The Independent UK independent co uk Archived from the original on 15 May 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2010 Soldiers kill fleeing President Archived from the original on 8 March 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link news com au 2 March 2009 Elections Guinea Bissau 27 May 2009 On the Radio Waves in Guinea Bissau swisspeace Archived from the original on 8 December 2009 Retrieved 7 February 2010 Ja foi escolhida a data para a realizacao das eleicoes presidenciais entecipadas Bissaudigital com 1 April 2009 Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Dabo Alberto 29 July 2009 Sanha wins Guinea Bissau presidential election Reuters Retrieved 17 December 2020 Tiny Guinea Bissau becomes latest West African nation hit by coup Bissau 12 April 2012 Archived from the original on 13 April 2012 Retrieved 14 April 2012 Embalo Allen Yero 14 April 2012 Fears grow for members of toppled G Bissau government Agence France Presse Archived from the original on 3 March 2014 Retrieved 2 May 2012 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Guinea Bissau opposition vows to reach deal with junta Radio Netherlands Worldwide Rnw nl 15 April 2012 Archived from the original on 12 October 2014 Retrieved 2 May 2012 a b Tasamba James 29 November 2019 Guinea Bissau s leader concedes election defeat Anadolu Agency Retrieved 14 June 2021 Guinea Bissau Former PM Embalo wins presidential election BBC news 1 January 2020 Retrieved 14 June 2021 Fears of Guinea Bissau coup attempt amid gunfire in capital The Guardian 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Heavy gunfire heard near presidential palace in Guinea Bissau www aljazeera com Retrieved 1 February 2022 Gunfire near government house in Guinea Bissau France 24 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Dabo Alberto 2 February 2022 Six killed in failed coup in Guinea Bissau Reuters Retrieved 2 February 2022 Guinea Bissau president says many dead after failed attack against democracy France 24 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 a b Portugal Radio e Televisao de 7 February 2022 Radio Capital na Guine Bissau atacada por grupo de homens armados Radio Capital na Guine Bissau atacada por grupo de homens armados in Portuguese Retrieved 13 February 2022 a b Guine Bissau vive clima de terror Jornal SOL in Portuguese 13 February 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2022 Staff writer 26 October 2022 Ukraine interested in building multifaceted relations with African countries Zelenskyy after meeting with President of Guinea Bissau President of Ukraine Official Website Retrieved 3 September 2023 a b c d e f g Guinea Bissau 09 03 U S Department of State Retrieved 26 January 2021 Guinea Bissau Supreme Court Archived 23 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Stj pt Retrieved 22 June 2013 Guinea Bissau Political Parties Archived 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Nationsencyclopedia com Retrieved 22 June 2013 CPLP Comunidade dos Paises de Lingua Portuguesa Historico Como surgiu www cplp org Retrieved 26 January 2021 Guinea Bissau The World Factbook www cia gov Retrieved 26 January 2021 Chapter XXVI Disarmament No 9 Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons United Nations Treaty Collection 7 July 2017 Administrative Map of Guinea Bissau 1200 pixel Nations Online Project www nationsonline org Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b c d e Guinea Bissau Maps amp Facts WorldAtlas Retrieved 26 January 2021 Coordinates of Guinea Bissau GeoDatos 2021 Retrieved 25 February 2021 a b c Guinea Bissau Archived 28 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine CIA the World Factbook Cia gov Retrieved 5 February 2012 Nossiter Adam 4 November 2009 Bijagos a Tranquil Haven in a Troubled Land The New 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2021 The Economist 2007 Pocket World in Figures 2008 ed London Profile Books ISBN 978 1861978448 Guinea Bissau and the IMF Archived 16 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Imf org 13 May 2013 Retrieved 22 June 2013 CFA Franc and Guinea Bissau Archived 26 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Uemoa int Retrieved 22 June 2013 Guinea Bissau Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica inc 2020 Guinea Bissau A narco state Archived 29 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Time 29 October 2009 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Sullivan Kevin 25 May 2008 Route of Evil How a tiny West African nation became a key smuggling hub for Colombian cocaine and the price it is paying The Washington Post Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 27 August 2017 Guinea Bissau drug trade rises since coup BBC News London 31 July 2012 Archived from the original on 27 October 2012 Retrieved 5 October 2012 Guinea Bissau Africa s most famous narco state goes to the polls The Economist 2 November 2019 Archived 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languages and local knowledge in school education PDF Master s thesis in Portuguese Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul hdl 10183 178453 Archived PDF from the original on 24 December 2019 Crioulo Upper Guinea Ethnologue Retrieved 22 June 2013 Welcome to the International Organisation of La Francophonie s Official Website Francophonie org Archived from the original on 1 April 2014 Retrieved 22 June 2013 a b Guinea Bissau The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 14 June 2021 Tolerance and Tension Islam and Christianity in Sub Saharan Africa PDF Report Pew Forum on Religious amp Public life April 2010 p 20 Archived from the original PDF on 30 April 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2018 a b Religions in Guinea Bissau Global Religious Futures Pew Templeton Archived from the original on 29 January 2018 Retrieved 11 October 2019 Guinea Bissau Major World Religions 1900 2050 Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved 8 October 2022 The World s Muslims Unity and Diversity PDF Report Pew Research Center 9 August 2012 pp 28 30 Archived from the original PDF on 24 October 2012 The World s Muslims Unity and Diversity PDF Report Pew Research Center 9 August 2012 p 29 Archived from the original PDF on 24 October 2012 Guinea Bissau Archived 16 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica Guinea Bissau Society amp Culture Complete Report an All Inclusive Profile Combining All of Our Society and Culture Reports 2nd ed Petaluma World Trade Press 2010 p 7 ISBN 978 1607804666 Guinea Bissau United States Department of State Retrieved 1 November 2022 dimasaryo 8 July 2022 Catholics in Guinea Bissau unsettled by vandalism of a church ACN International Retrieved 1 November 2022 Guinea Bissau Education System www scholaro com Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b Guinea Bissau 2001 Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor Bureau of International Labor Affairs U S Department of Labor 2002 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain 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December 2008 at the Wayback Machine California Newsreel Newsreel org Retrieved 22 June 2013 Udju Azul di Yonta Archived 5 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine California Newsreel Newsreel org Retrieved 22 June 2013 Festival de Cannes Udju Azul di Yonta Festival de Cannes Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Flora Gomes The Two Faces of War National Liberation in Guinea Bissau Archived 8 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Watsoninstitute org 25 October 2007 Retrieved 22 June 2013 de Lamalle Patrick 19 October 2018 Babetida Sadjo est ce que vous l avez vu RTBF in French Retrieved 12 January 2019 Sources edit Barry Boubacar 1998 Senegambia and the Atlantic slave trade Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Clarence Smith W G 1975 The Third Portuguese Empire 1825 1975 Manchester UK Manchester University Press Hair P E H 22 January 2009 Ethnolinguistic Continuity on the Guinea Coast PDF The Journal of African History 8 2 247 268 doi 10 1017 S0021853700007040 JSTOR 179482 S2CID 161528479 via JSTOR Niane Djibril Tamsir 1989 Histoire des Mandingues de l Ouest le royaume du Gabou Paris France Karthala ISBN 9782865372362 Retrieved 2 August 2023 Ogilby John 1670 Africa being an accurate description of the regions of Aegypt Barbary Lybia and Billedulgerid the land of Negroes Guinee Aethiopia and the Abyssines with all the adjacent islands either in the Mediterranean Atlantick Southern or Oriental Sea belonging thereunto with the several denominations of their coasts harbors creeks rivers lakes cities towns castles and villages their customs modes and manners languages religions and inexhaustible treasure with their governments and policy variety of trade and barter and also of their wonderful plants beasts birds and serpents London Printed by Tho Johnson for the author Retrieved 25 November 2022 via Early English Books nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook CIA Further reading editAbdel Malek K Le processus d acces a l independance de la Guinee Bissau In Bulletin de l Association des Anciens Eleves de l Institut National de Langues et de Cultures Orientales N 1 Avril 1998 pp 53 60 Forrest Joshua B Lineages of State Fragility Rural Civil Society in Guinea Bissau Ohio University Press James Currey Ltd 2003 Galli Rosemary E Guinea Bissau Politics Economics and Society Pinter Pub Ltd 1987 Lobban Jr Richard Andrew and Mendy Peter Karibe Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Guinea Bissau third edition Scarecrow Press 1997 Vigh Henrik Navigating Terrains of War Youth And Soldiering in Guinea Bissau Berghahn Books 2006 External links editGuinea Bissau at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage Exploring the Challenges and Richness of Guinea Bissau A Small West African Nation Archived 25 July 2023 at the Wayback Machine from GB1 Country Profile from BBC News Guinea Bissau The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Guinea Bissau from UCB Libraries GovPubs Guinea Bissau at Encyclopaedia Britannica Guinea Bissau at Curlie nbsp Wikimedia Atlas of Guinea Bissau Key Development Forecasts for Guinea Bissau from International FuturesGovernment Official website Constitution of the Republic of Guinea Bissau Guinea Bissau Prime Minister s fate unknown after apparent military coup West Africa Portuguese American Journal Guinea Bissau Holds First Post Coup ElectionTrade Guinea Bissau 2005 Summary Trade StatisticsNews media news headline links from AllAfrica comTourism nbsp Guinea Bissau travel guide from Wikivoyage Guinea Bissau Turismo RIOS AND LAGOONSHealth The State of the World s Midwifery Guinea Bissau Country ProfileGIS information Master Thesis about the developing Geographical Information for Guinea Bissau12 N 15 W 12 N 15 W 12 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guinea Bissau amp oldid 1202735002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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