Zambia, which holds
general and presidential elections on Thursday, is a copper-rich nation in
southern Africa that has been hit by falling global commodity prices.
AFP
report continues:
The
leading candidates are interim President Edgar Lungu of the Patriotic Front
(PF), who narrowly won election in January 2015 and Hakainde Hichilema of the
United Party for National Development (UPND). The last election took place
after the sudden death of President Michael Sata.
Zambia,
known as Northern Rhodesia under British rule, has been billed as an African
success story.
But
a sharp decline in copper prices and weaker exports to China, a key trading
partner, along with a series of government policy reversals, have undermined
international investor confidence.
Here
is a brief look at the country.
- Economy: Copper is king
-
Copper
accounts for more than 70% of Zambian exports, making it the second
biggest producer in Africa after the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the
eighth producer in the world.
But
a drop in copper prices of almost one-third from their peak in February 2011
caused the national currency, the kwacha, to fall in value against the dollar
by 42% last year.
The
International Monetary Fund estimates that inflation will spike to 22.5% in 2016 before dropping back to around 9.9% next year.
Annual
economic growth that reached 7% in 2010-2014 is forecast at 3.4% this year and 4.8% in 2017.
Zambia
also faces serious energy problems, with an erratic supply of electricity due
to poor rains and low water levels in the Kariba dam.
That
has hurt heavy industries like copper mines and caused massive blackouts last
year in eight provinces, including the capital Lusaka.
Most
of the copper companies are owned by foreign, notably Chinese investors.
The
country's major crops are sugar cane, maize, tobacco, peanuts and cotton.
-
Stubborn poverty -
Despite
its economic potential, 60 percent of Zambia's 16.2 million population live in
poverty, according to the World Bank "and 42% are considered to be
in extreme poverty".
The
number of poor has risen owing to a rapidly growing population.
Per
capita gross national income was US$1,500 in 2015, down from US$1,750 in 2013,
World Bank data shows, and life expectancy stands at 61 years.
In
2014, roughly 1.15 million people were estimated to have contracted HIV/AIDS in
Zambia, the ninth highest level worldwide, according to the CIA Factbook.
In
addition to its own population, Zambia hosts hundreds of thousands of refugees
from elsewhere in Africa.
It
covers 752,614 square kilometres (291,000 square miles), making it larger than
France and slightly smaller than Turkey.
- The Victoria Falls -
Zambia
is the home of several animal reserves but its main tourist attraction is the
Victoria Falls, one of the most spectacular waterfalls in the world.
Located
on the Zambezi River, the fourth largest river in Africa, the Falls lie on the
border between Zambia and Zimbabwe, and both countries share the flow of
tourists.
Situated
a dozen kilometres from the Victoria Falls, the tourist town of Livingstone was
the former capital of Northern Rhodesia at the time of British colonization.
It takes its name from
David Livingstone, the first European to explore the region.
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