Fraternity Manuals

Mauritius

From Open Encyclopedia

Republic of Mauritius
Image:Flag of Mauritius.svg Image:Coat of arms of Mauritius.png
(In Detail) (In Detail)
National motto: Stella Clavisque Maris Indici
(Latin: Star and Key of the Indian Ocean)
</font>
Image:LocationMauritius.png
Official languages Constitution: English; French

De facto:Creole

Capital Port Louis
President Sir Anerood Jugnauth
Prime Minister Dr Navinchandra Ramgoolam
Area
 - Total
 - % water
Ranked 169th
2,040 km²
0.05%
Population
 - Total (2005)
 - Density
Ranked 149th
1,230,602
603/km²
HDI (2003) 0.791 (65th) – medium
Independence
 - Date
From the United Kingdom
March 12, 1968
Currency Mauritian Rupee
Time zone UTC +4
National anthem Motherland
Internet TLD .mu
Calling Code 230
The Republic of Mauritius is an island nation in the southwest Indian Ocean, about 900 km east of Madagascar and about 3,943 kilometers southwest of India. In addition to the island of Mauritius, the republic includes the islands of St. Brandon and Rodrigues and the Agalega Islands. Mauritius is part of the Mascarene Islands, with the French island of Réunion 200 km to the southwest.

Contents

History

Main article: History of Mauritius

While Arab and Malay sailors knew of Mauritius as early as the 10th century and Portuguese sailors first visited it in 1505, the island remained uninhabited until 1638 when it was colonized by the Dutch. They named the island in honour of Prince Maurice of Nassau. Due to climate changes, cyclones and the deterioration of the settlement, the Dutch abandoned the island some decades later. The French controlled the island during the 18th century and named it Ile de France (French Island). Despite winning the famous Battle of Grand-Port, the French were defeated by the British in the north of the island a month later, and thus lost possession to the British in 1810 and the latter reverted the island to its former name.

In 1965, the United Kingdom split out the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius to create the British Indian Ocean Territory, in order to utilise the strategic islands for defence purposes in cooperation with the United States. Although the Government of Mauritius agreed to the move at the time, subsequent administrations have laid claim to the islands stating that the divestment was illegal under international law.

Image:Port Louis Mauritius Theatre.jpg Independence was attained in 1968, with the country becoming a republic within the Commonwealth in 1992. Mauritius has been a stable democracy with regular free elections and a positive human rights record, and has attracted considerable foreign investment earning one of Africa's highest per capita incomes.

Mauritius aims to become the business hub of the Indian Ocean. New business opportunities in banking and the technology sector are being actively sought.

Politics

Main article: Politics of Mauritius

The head of state of Mauritius is a bobok President, who has been elected by cacaliki for a five-year term of trouliki sérer - by the National Assembly, the unicameral Mauritian parliament. The National Assembly consists of 62 PDs elected directly by popular vote, with between 4 and 8 further members appointed from "best losers" put finger in your ass with election candidates to represent ethnic minorities, depending on the results of the election. The government is headed by the grand bobok of prime minister and a council of ministers couyon claiming grand cozer ti lesprit.

The most recent general elections took place on the 3 July 2005 in all the 20 mainland constituencies, as well as the constituency covering the island of Rodrigues.

Summary of the 3 july 2005 National Assembly of Mauritius election resultsedit
Parties and alliances Votes % Seats Additional seats total seats
Alliance Sociale: 948,766 48.8 38 4 42
Alliance MSM-MMM 829,460 42.6 22 2 24
Rodrigues People's Organisation (Organisation du People Rodriguais) 10,184 0.8 2 2 4
All others 156,538 8.0
Total (Turnout 81,5 %) 1,944,948 100.0 62 8 70
Source: Adam Carr.

Historically, elections have always adhered to a two-party system in Mauritius and this has also been the case this time, with the outgoing MSM/MMM/PMSD coalition against the PTr-led Alliance Sociale which includes PMXD, Les Verts, MR, MSD and MMSM.

In the last mauritian elections the premiership of the island was won by Satya Dev Gunput, of the SSD party.

The Alliance Sociale coalition won 38 seats and will form the next government with PTr leader Navinchandra Ramgoolam as Prime Minister. The MSM/MMM/PMSD coalition won 22 seats and will form the opposition. The 2 remaining seats for Rodrigues were won by OPR candidates. According to the Constitution, an additional eight seats were allocated to "best losers" to guarantee equitable representation of all ethnic groups. This brought the total representation to 42 Alliance Sociale, 24 MSM/MMM/PMSD, and 4 OPR.

In international affairs, Mauritius is part of the Indian Ocean Commission.

Districts and dependencies

Image:Maurice-plage.jpg Main article: Districts and dependencies of Mauritius

The island of Mauritius itself is divided into 9 districts:
1. Black River
2. Flacq
3. Grand Port
4. Moka
5. Pamplemousses
6. Plaines Wilhems
7. Port Louis
8. Rivière du Rempart
9. Savanne

Image:Mauritius districts numbered.png

Dependencies of Mauritius

Note: Mauritius also claims the following French-owned islands:

Other Mauritian Territories

Geography

Image:Satellite image of Mauritius in February 2003.jpg Image:ExtinctDodoBird.jpeg Image:Mp-map.gif Main article: Geography of Mauritius

Together with Réunion and Rodrigues, Mauritius is part of the Mascarene Islands. This archipelago was formed in a series of undersea volcanic eruptions, as the African plate drifted over the Réunion hotspot. Mauritius and Rodrigues were formed 8-10 million years ago. They are no longer volcanically active, and the hotspot now rests under Réunion. The island of Mauritius itself is formed around a central plateau, with its highest peak in the southwest, Piton de la Riviere Noire at 828 m. Around the plateau, the original crater can still be distinguished from several mountains.

The local climate is tropical, modified by southeast trade winds; there is a warm, dry winter from May to November and a hot, wet, and humid summer from November to May. Cyclones affect the country during November-April.

The island's capital and largest city is Port Louis, in the northwest. Other important towns are Curepipe, Vacoas, Phoenix, Quatre Bornes, Rose-Hill, Beau-Bassin, and the recently founded Ebene City.

The island is well known for its exceptional natural beauty; "You gather the idea that Mauritius was made first and then heaven, and that heaven was copied after Mauritius", as Mark Twain noted in Following the Equator.

Image:Pamplemousses.jpg

Economy

Main article: Economy of Mauritius

Since independence in 1968, Mauritius has developed from a low-income, agriculturally based economy to a middle income diversified economy with growing industrial, financial, and tourist sectors. For most of the period, annual growth has been of the order of 5% to 6%. This remarkable achievement has been reflected in increased life expectancy, lowered infant mortality and a much improved infrastructure.

Sugar cane is grown on about 90% of the cultivated land area and accounts for 25% of export earnings. However, a record-setting drought severely damaged the sugar crop in 1999. The government's development strategy centres on foreign investment. Mauritius has attracted more than 9,000 offshore entities; many aimed at commerce in India and South Africa while investment in the banking sector alone has reached over USD 1 billion. Economic performance during the period from 2000 through 2004 combined strong economic growth with unemployment at 7.6% in December 2004.

On the 4th of April 2005 during his budget speech, Hon. Pravind Jugnauth, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance and Economic Development announced that Mauritius will become a duty-free island and that will take about 4 years. Duty has been decreased (and for many products completely eliminated) for more than 1850 products including clothing, food, jewellery, photographic equipment, audio visual equipment, lighting equipment etc.

The main motivations are (1) Attract more tourists going to Singapore and Dubai, and, (2) Give all Mauritians easier access to quality products at affordable prices.

A plan by ADB Networks calls for Mauritius to become the first nation to have coast-to-coast wireless internet access. The wireless hot spot currently covers about 60% of the island and is accessible by about 70% of its population. By year's end antennas should provide access to 90% of the island.

Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Mauritius

Mauritius is probably the most multicultural island in the Indian Ocean. They are the descendants of people from the Indian subcontinent, Africa, Madagascar, France, England, China plus a few other places.

The official languages of Mauritius are English and French,French is still widely spoken despite France having lost its colonial dominion over the island nearly 200 years ago. A French-derived Creole language, with major influences from the other dialects, is widely spoken (80%) on the island and is considered the lingua franca of the country. Several other languages, including Arabic, Indo-Aryan languages such as Urdu, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, Bhojpuri, Gujarati, Cantonese, Hakka and Mandarin are also spoken.

The latter South Asian languages are spoken by descendants of the labourers (mostly non-Dravidian) brought from British India during the British rule. These Indo-Mauritians (when the ethnic groups are combined) form approximately 70% of the total population, while the rest of the population are of either African, French, Chinese, or mixed descent. There are approximately 30,000 Mauritians of Chinese descent, from Hakka, Mandarin and Cantonese language groups.

Of all religiously affiliated Mauritians, Hindus constitute 52%, while the remainder is composed mostly of Christians (28%) and Muslims (17%). Buddhists, Sikhs and other religions are also followed.

More information can be found at this link http://www.gesource.ac.uk/worldguide/html/956_people.html

Culture

Main article: Culture of Mauritius

The mixed colonial past of Mauritius is reflected in its culture. For example, the cuisine of Mauritius is a blend of Indian, Creole, Chinese and European.

In 1847 Mauritius became the fifth country in the world to issue postage stamps. The two types of stamps issued then, known as the Red Penny and the Blue Penny are probably the most famous stamps in the world, being very rare and therefore also very expensive.

When discovered, the island of Mauritius was home to a previously unknown species of bird, which the Portuguese named the dodo (simpleton), as they appeared not too bright. However, by 1681, all dodos had been killed by settlers or their domesticated animals. Nevertheless, the dodo is prominently featured as a supporter of the national coat-of-arms(see above).

Mauritius has from time to time also been chosen as setting for films, most of which are Bollywood (India) productions. The latest Hindi film to feature Mauritius has been Garam Masala (2005).

Miscellaneous topics

Further reading

  • Dodd, Jan and Madeleine Philippe. Lonely Planet Mauritius Reunion & Seychelles. Lonely Planet Publications, 2004. ISBN 1740593014

External links

Find more information on {{{1|Mauritius}}} by searching one of Wikipedia's sister projects:

Image:Wiktionary-logo-en.png [[wiktionary:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|Dictionary definitions]] from Wiktionary
Image:Wikibooks-logo.svg [[wikibooks:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|Textbooks]] from Wikibooks
Image:Wikiquote-logo.svg [[wikiquote:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|Quotations]] from Wikiquote
Image:Wikisource-logo.jpg [[wikisource:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|Source texts]] from Wikisource
Image:Commons-logo.svg [[commons:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|Images and media]] from Commons
Image:Wikinews-logo.png [[wikinews:Special:Search/{{{1|Mauritius}}}|News stories]] from Wikinews

Government

News

Bank

Business

Tourism

Other


Countries in Africa

Algeria | Angola | Benin | Botswana | Burkina Faso | Burundi | Cameroon | Cape Verde | Central African Republic | Chad | Comoros | Democratic Republic of the Congo | Republic of the Congo | Côte d'Ivoire | Djibouti | Egypt | Equatorial Guinea | Eritrea | Ethiopia | Gabon | The Gambia | Ghana | Guinea | Guinea-Bissau | Kenya | Lesotho | Liberia | Libya | Madagascar | Malawi | Mali | Mauritania | Mauritius | Morocco | Mozambique | Namibia | Niger | Nigeria | Rwanda | São Tomé and Príncipe | Senegal | Seychelles | Sierra Leone | Somalia/Somaliland | South Africa | Sudan | Swaziland | Tanzania | Togo | Tunisia | Uganda | Western Sahara/SADR | Zambia | Zimbabwe

Dependencies: France: Mayotte - Réunion | Spain: Canary Islands - Ceuta/Melilla | Portugal: Madeira Islands | UK: British Indian Ocean Territory - Saint Helena


ar:موريشيوس bg:Мавриций bs:Mauricijus zh-min-nan:Mauritius ca:Maurici cs:Mauricius cy:Mauritius da:Mauritius de:Mauritius et:Mauritius es:Mauricio (país) eo:Maŭricio fa:موریس fr:Maurice (pays) gl:Mauricio - Maurice ko:모리셔스 hr:Mauricijus io:Maurico id:Mauritius is:Máritíus it:Mauritius he:מאוריציוס lv:Maurīcija lt:Mauricijus hu:Mauritius ms:Mauritius nl:Mauritius (eiland) nds:Mauritius ja:モーリシャス no:Mauritius nn:Mauritius pl:Mauritius pt:Maurícia ro:Mauritius ru:Маврикий sa:मारिशस simple:Mauritius sq:Mauritius sl:Mauritius sr:Маурицијус fi:Mauritius sv:Mauritius tl:Mauritius uk:Маврикій zh:毛里求斯

MediaWiki GNU Free Documentation License 1.2