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Mozambique

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The boundaries and names shown on this map do not imply
official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.

Location: Southern Africa
Bordering countries: Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Swaziland and South Africa

Area: 784,754 sq. km

Populatio
n statistics (based on United Nations sources):
  • Total: 19,286,000 (1999)
  • Growth rate: 2.72
  • Ratio of males per 100 females: 97.5
  • Age structure (1995 figures):
    • Percentage aged 0-4 : 18.1
    • Percentage aged 5-14 : 26.8
    • Percentage aged 15-24 : 18.5
    • Percentage aged 25-60 : 31.5
    • Percentage aged 60-over : 5.1
  • Population density: 23 per sq. km

Literacy rate: 42.3% (1998)
GNP in US$ billions: 3.5 (1998)
GNP per capita in US$: 210 (1998)
Human Development Index value: 0.341 (1998)
Human Development Index rank: 168 of 174 countries
Gender-related Development Index value: 0.326 (1998)
Gender-related Development Index rank: 139 of 174 countries

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Mozambique is a large country in Southern Africa with an area of 784,754 square kilometres and an estimated population of over 18 million people, of whom more than half are under age 20. Thirteen percent of the total population live in urban areas. Mozambique is considered to be one of the poorest countries in the world with over 60% of the people living below the poverty line. After its independence from Portugal in 1975, the country engaged in a long and devastating civil war for nearly three decades. The year 1992 saw the signing of a peace accord between rival parties, and in 1994 free elections generating over 80% voter turnout were held. Since then, with an infrastructure in total ruins, Mozambique has been faced with the challenge to rebuild its society and economy.

Mozambique's telephone network includes over 85,700 connected lines, and the telephone density is 0.44 line per hundred population. There is a high disparity in telecommunications access between the urban and the rural areas, with 64% of all lines concentrated in the capital city, Maputo, and the second and third largest cities in the country having 11% and 7% of all lines, respectively. As part of the larger economic reform underway in the country, the telecommunications sector has been restructured to increase efficiency and profitability.

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