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yemenmore about yemen

yemen


  2  definitions  found 
 
  From  WordNet  r  1.6  [wn]: 
 
  Yemen 
  n  :  a  republic  on  the  southwestern  corner  of  the  Arabian 
  Peninsula  on  the  Indian  Ocean;  formerly  Southern  Yemen 
  [syn:  {Yemen},  {People's  Democratic  Republic  of  Yemen}] 
 
  From  The  CIA  World  Factbook  (1995)  [world95]: 
 
  Yemen 
 
  Yemen:Geography 
 
  Location:  Middle  East,  bordering  the  Arabian  Sea,  Gulf  of  Aden,  and 
  Red  Sea,  between  Oman  and  Saudi  Arabia 
 
  Map  references:  Middle  East 
 
  Area: 
  total  area:  527,970  sq  km 
  land  area:  527,970  sq  km 
  comparative  area:  slightly  larger  than  twice  the  size  of  Wyoming 
  note:  includes  Perim,  Socotra  the  former  Yemen  Arab  Republic  (YAR  or 
  North  Yemen),  and  the  former  People's  Democratic  Republic  of  Yemen 
  (PDRY  or  South  Yemen) 
 
  Land  boundaries:  total  1,746  km  Oman  288  km  Saudi  Arabia  1,458  km 
 
  Coastline:  1,906  km 
 
  Maritime  claims: 
  contiguous  zone:  18  nm  in  the  North;  24  nm  in  the  South 
  continental  shelf:  200  nm  or  to  the  edge  of  the  continental  margin 
  exclusive  economic  zone:  200  nm 
  territorial  sea:  12  nm 
 
  International  disputes:  undefined  section  of  boundary  with  Saudi 
  Arabia;  a  treaty  with  Oman  defining  the  Yemeni-Omani  boundary  was 
  ratified  in  December  1992 
 
  Climate:  mostly  desert;  hot  and  humid  along  west  coast;  temperate  in 
  western  mountains  affected  by  seasonal  monsoon;  extraordinarily  hot, 
  dry,  harsh  desert  in  east 
 
  Terrain:  narrow  coastal  plain  backed  by  flat-topped  hills  and  rugged 
  mountains;  dissected  upland  desert  plains  in  center  slope  into  the 
  desert  interior  of  the  Arabian  Peninsula 
 
  Natural  resources:  petroleum,  fish,  rock  salt,  marble,  small  deposits 
  of  coal,  gold,  lead,  nickel,  and  copper,  fertile  soil  in  west 
 
  Land  use: 
  arable  land:  6% 
  permanent  crops:  0% 
  meadows  and  pastures:  30% 
  forest  and  woodland:  7% 
  other:  57% 
 
  Irrigated  land:  3,100  sq  km  (1989  est.) 
 
  Environment: 
  current  issues:  very  limited  natural  fresh  water  resources;  inadequate 
  supplies  of  potable  water;  overgrazing  soil  erosion;  desertification 
  natural  hazards:  sandstorms  and  dust  storms  in  summer 
  international  agreements:  party  to  -  Environmental  Modification,  Law 
  of  the  Sea,  Nuclear  Test  Ban;  signed,  but  not  ratified  -  Biodiversity, 
  Climate  Change 
 
  Note:  controls  Bab  el  Mandeb,  the  strait  linking  the  Red  Sea  and  the 
  Gulf  of  Aden,  one  of  world's  most  active  shipping  lanes 
 
  Yemen:People 
 
  Population:  14,728,474  (July  1995  est.) 
 
  Age  structure: 
  0-14  years:  50%  (female  3,551,953;  male  3,776,358) 
  15-64  years:  48%  (female  3,505,735;  male  3,508,229) 
  65  years  and  over:  2%  (female  216,210;  male  169,989)  (July  1995  est.) 
 
  Population  growth  rate:  4.02%  (1995  est.) 
 
  Birth  rate:  44.85  births/1,000  population  (1995  est.) 
 
  Death  rate:  8.01  deaths/1,000  population  (1995  est.) 
 
  Net  migration  rate:  3.39  migrant(s)/1,000  population  (1995  est.) 
 
  Infant  mortality  rate:  58.2  deaths/1,000  live  births  (1995  est.) 
 
  Life  expectancy  at  birth: 
  total  population:  62.51  years 
  male:  61.57  years 
  female:  63.5  years  (1995  est.) 
 
  Total  fertility  rate:  7.15  children  born/woman  (1995  est.) 
 
  Nationality: 
  noun:  Yemeni(s) 
  adjective:  Yemeni 
 
  Ethnic  divisions:  predominantly  Arab;  Afro-Arab  concentrations  in 
  western  coastal  locations;  South  Asians  in  southern  regions;  small 
  European  communities  in  major  metropolitan  areas 
 
  Religions:  Muslim  including  Sha'fi  (Sunni)  and  Zaydi  (Shi'a),  small 
  numbers  of  Jewish,  Christian,  and  Hindu 
 
  Languages:  Arabic 
 
  Literacy:  age  15  and  over  can  read  and  write  (1990  est.) 
  total  population:  38% 
  male:  53% 
  female:  26% 
 
  Labor  force:  no  reliable  estimates  exist,  most  people  are  employed  in 
  agriculture  and  herding  or  as  expatriate  laborers;  services, 
  construction,  industry,  and  commerce  account  for  less  than  half  of  the 
  labor  force 
 
  Yemen:Government 
 
  Names: 
  conventional  long  form:  Republic  of  Yemen 
  conventional  short  form:  Yemen 
  local  long  form:  Al  Jumhuriyah  al  Yamaniyah 
  local  short  form:  Al  Yaman 
 
  Digraph:  YM 
 
  Type:  republic 
 
  Capital:  Sanaa 
 
  Administrative  divisions:  17  governorates  (muhafazat,  singular  - 
  muhafazah);  Abyan,  Adan,  Al  Bayda,  Al  Hudaydah  Al  Jawf,  Al  Mahrah,  Al 
  Mahwit  Dhamar,  Hadramaut  Hajjah  Ibb,  Lahij  Marib,  Sadah,  Sana, 
  Shabwah  Taizz 
  note:  there  may  be  a  new  governorate  for  the  capital  city  of  Sanaa 
 
  Independence:  22  May  1990  Republic  of  Yemen  was  established  on  22  May 
  1990  with  the  merger  of  the  Yemen  Arab  Republic  {Yemen  (Sanaa)  or 
  North  Yemen}  and  the  Marxist-dominated  People's  Democratic  Republic  of 
  Yemen  {Yemen  (Aden)  or  South  Yemen};  previously  North  Yemen  had  become 
  independent  on  NA  November  1918  (from  the  Ottoman  Empire)  and  South 
  Yemen  had  become  independent  on  30  November  1967  (from  the  UK) 
 
  National  holiday:  Proclamation  of  the  Republic,  22  May  (1990) 
 
  Constitution:  16  May  1991 
 
  Legal  system:  based  on  Islamic  law,  Turkish  law,  English  common  law, 
  and  local  tribal  customary  law;  does  not  accept  compulsory  ICJ 
  jurisdiction 
 
  Suffrage:  18  years  of  age;  universal 
 
  Executive  branch: 
  chief  of  state:  President  Ali  Abdallah  SALIH  (since  22  May  1990,  the 
  former  president  of  North  Yemen);  Vice  President  Abd  al-Rab  Mansur 
  al-HADI  (since  NA  October  1994) 
  head  of  government:  Prime  Minister  Abd  al-Aziz  ABD  AL-GHANI  (since  NA 
  October  1994) 
  cabinet:  Council  of  Ministers 
 
  Legislative  branch:  unicameral 
  House  of  Representatives:  elections  last  held  27  April  1993  (next  to 
  be  held  NA  1997);  results  -  percent  of  vote  by  party  NA  seats  -  (301 
  total)  GPC  124,  Islaah  61,  YSP  55,  others  13,  independents  47, 
  election  nullified  1 
 
  Judicial  branch:  Supreme  Court 
 
  Political  parties  and  leaders:  over  40  political  parties  are  active  in 
  Yemen,  but  only  three  project  significant  influence;  since  the 
  May-July  1994  civil  war,  President  SALIH's  General  People's  Congress 
  (GPC)  and  Shaykh  Abdallah  bin  Husayn  al-AHMAR's  Yemeni  Grouping  for 
  Reform,  or  Islaah  have  joined  to  form  a  coalition  government;  the 
  Yemeni  Socialist  Party  (YSP),  headed  by  Ali  Salih  UBAYD  has  regrouped 
  as  a  loyal  opposition 
 
  Other  political  or  pressure  groups:  NA 
 
  Member  of:  ACC,  AFESD  AL  AMF,  CAEU,  CCC,  ESCWA  FAO,  G-77,  IBRD, 
  ICAO,  ICRM,  IDA,  IDB,  IFAD,  IFC,  IFRCS  ILO,  IMF,  IMO,  INTELSAT, 
  INTERPOL,  IOC,  ITU,  NAM,  OIC,  UN  UNCTAD  UNESCO,  UNIDO  UPU,  WFTU 
  WHO  WIPO,  WMO,  WTO 
 
  Diplomatic  representation  in  US: 
  chief  of  mission:  Ambassador  Muhsin  Ahmad  al-AYNI 
  chancery:  Suite  705,  2600  Virginia  Avenue  NW  Washington,  DC  20037 
  telephone:  [1]  (202)  965-4760,  4761 
  FAX:  [1]  (202)  337-2017 
 
  US  diplomatic  representation: 
  chief  of  mission:  Ambassador  David  NEWTON 
  embassy:  Dhahr  Himyar  Zone,  Sheraton  Hotel  District,  Sanaa 
  mailing  address:  P.  O.  Box  22347  Sanaa;  Sanaa,  Department  of  State, 
  Washington,  DC  20521-6330 
  telephone:  [967]  (1)  238843  through  238852 
  FAX:  [967]  (1)  251563 
 
  Flag:  three  equal  horizontal  bands  of  red  (top),  white,  and  black; 
  similar  to  the  flag  of  Syria  which  has  two  green  stars  and  of  Iraq 
  which  has  three  green  stars  (plus  an  Arabic  inscription)  in  a 
  horizontal  line  centered  in  the  white  band;  also  similar  to  the  flag 
  of  Egypt  which  has  a  symbolic  eagle  centered  in  the  white  band 
 
  Economy 
 
  Overview:  Whereas  the  northern  city  Sanaa  is  the  political  capital  of 
  a  united  Yemen,  the  southern  city  Aden,  with  its  refinery  and  port 
  facilities,  is  the  economic  and  commercial  capital.  Future  economic 
  development  depends  heavily  on  Western-assisted  development  of  the 
  country's  moderate  oil  resources.  Former  South  Yemen's  willingness  to 
  merge  stemmed  partly  from  the  steady  decline  in  Soviet  economic 
  support.  The  low  level  of  domestic  industry  and  agriculture  has  made 
  northern  Yemen  dependent  on  imports  for  practically  all  of  its 
  essential  needs  Once  self-sufficient  in  food  production,  northern 
  Yemen  has  become  a  major  importer.  Land  once  used  for  export  crops  - 
  cotton,  fruit,  and  vegetables  -  has  been  turned  over  to  growing  a 
  shrub  called  qat,  whose  leaves  are  chewed  for  their  stimulant  effect 
  by  Yemenis  and  which  has  no  significant  export  market.  Economic  growth 
  in  former  South  Yemen  has  been  constrained  by  a  lack  of  incentives, 
  partly  stemming  from  centralized  control  over  production  decisions, 
  investment  allocation,  and  import  choices.  Yemen's  large  trade 
  deficits  have  been  compensated  for  by  remittances  from  Yemenis  working 
  abroad  and  by  foreign  aid.  Since  the  Gulf  crisis,  remittances  have 
  dropped  substantially.  Growth  in  1994-95  is  constrained  by  low  oil 
  prices,  rapid  inflation,  and  political  deadlock  that  are  causing  a 
  lack  of  economic  cooperation  and  leadership.  However,  a  peace 
  agreement  with  Saudi  Arabia  in  February  1995  and  the  expectation  of  a 
  rise  in  oil  prices  brighten  Yemen's  economic  prospects. 
 
  National  product:  GDP  -  purchasing  power  parity  -  $23.4  billion  (1994 
  est.) 
 
  National  product  real  growth  rate:  -1.4%  (1994  est.) 
 
  National  product  per  capita:  $1,955  (1994  est.) 
 
  Inflation  rate  (consumer  prices):  145%  (1994  est.) 
 
  Unemployment  rate:  30%  (December  1994) 
 
  Budget: 
  revenues:  $NA 
  expenditures:  $NA,  including  capital  expenditures  of  $NA 
 
  Exports:  $1.75  billion  (f.o.b.,  1994  est.) 
  commodities:  crude  oil,  cotton,  coffee,  hides,  vegetables,  dried  and 
  salted  fish 
  partners:  Germany  28%,  Japan  15%,  UK  9%,  Austria  7%,  China  7%  (1992) 
 
  Imports:  $2.65  billion  (f.o.b.,  1994  est.) 
  commodities:  textiles  and  other  manufactured  consumer  goods,  petroleum 
  products,  sugar,  grain,  flour,  other  foodstuffs,  cement,  machinery, 
  chemicals 
  partners:  US  16%,  UK  7%,  Japan  6%,  France  6%,  Italy  6%  (1992) 
 
  External  debt:  $7  billion  (1993) 
 
  Industrial  production:  growth  rate  NA%,  accounts  for  18%  of  GDP 
 
  Electricity: 
  capacity:  810,000  kW 
  production:  1.8  billion  kWh 
  consumption  per  capita:  149  kWh  (1993) 
 
  Industries:  crude  oil  production  and  petroleum  refining;  small-scale 
  production  of  cotton  textiles  and  leather  goods;  food  processing; 
  handicrafts;  small  aluminum  products  factory;  cement 
 
  Agriculture:  accounts  for  26%  of  GDP;  products  -  grain,  fruits, 
  vegetables,  qat  (mildly  narcotic  shrub),  coffee,  cotton,  dairy, 
  poultry,  meat,  fish;  not  self-sufficient  in  grain 
 
  Economic  aid: 
  recipient:  US  commitments,  including  Ex-Im  (FY70-89),  $389  million; 
  Western  (non-US)  countries,  ODA  and  OOF  bilateral  commitments 
  (1970-89),  $2  billion;  OPEC  bilateral  aid  (1979-89),  $3.2  billion; 
  Communist  countries  (1970-89),  $2.4  billion 
 
  Currency:  Yemeni  rial  (new  currency);  1  North  Yemeni  riyal  YR  =  100 
  fils;  1  South  Yemeni  dinar  YD  =  1,000  fils 
  note:  following  the  establishment  of  the  Republic  of  Yemen  on  22  May 
  1990,  the  North  Yemeni  riyal  and  the  South  Yemeni  dinar  are  to  be 
  replaced  with  a  new  Yemeni  rial 
 
  Exchange  rates:  Yemeni  rials  per  US$1  -  12.0  (official);  90  (market 
  rate,  December  1994) 
 
  Fiscal  year:  calendar  year 
 
  Yemen:Transportation 
 
  Railroads:  0  km 
 
  Highways: 
  total:  51,390  km 
  paved:  4,830  km 
  unpaved:  46,560  km  (1992  est.) 
 
  Pipelines:  crude  oil  644  km  petroleum  products  32  km 
 
  Ports:  Aden,  Al  Hudaydah  Al  Mukalla  Mocha,  Nishtun 
 
  Merchant  marine: 
  total:  3  ships  (1,000  GRT  or  over)  totaling  12,059  GRT/18,563  DWT 
  ships  by  type:  cargo  1,  oil  tanker  2 
 
  Airports: 
  total:  46 
  with  paved  runways  over  3,047  m:  2 
  with  paved  runways  2,438  to  3,047  m:  6 
  with  paved  runways  1,524  to  2,437  m:  1 
  with  paved  runways  914  to  1,523  m:  1 
  with  paved  runways  under  914  m:  4 
  with  unpaved  runways  over  3,047  m:  2 
  with  unpaved  runways  2,438  to  3,047  m:  8 
  with  unpaved  runways  1,524  to  2,438  m:  10 
  with  unpaved  runways  914  to  1,523  m:  12 
 
  Yemen:Communications 
 
  Telephone  system:  65,000  telephones;  since  unification  in  1990, 
  efforts  are  still  being  made  to  create  a  national  domestic  civil 
  telecommunications  network 
  local:  NA 
  intercity:  the  network  consists  of  microwave  radio  relay,  cable,  and 
  troposcatter 
  international:  3  INTELSAT  (2  Indian  Ocean  and  1  Atlantic  Ocean),  1 
  Intersputnik  and  2  ARABSAT  earth  stations;  microwave  radio  relay  to 
  Saudi  Arabia  and  Djibouti 
 
  Radio: 
  broadcast  stations:  AM  4,  FM  1,  shortwave  0 
  radios:  NA 
 
  Television: 
  broadcast  stations:  10 
  televisions:  NA 
 
  Yemen:Defense  Forces 
 
  Branches:  Army,  Navy,  Air  Force,  paramilitary  (includes  Police) 
 
  Manpower  availability:  males  age  15-49  3,135,649;  males  fit  for 
  military  service  1,771,226;  males  reach  military  age  (14)  annually 
  181,057  (1995  est.) 
 
  Defense  expenditures:  exchange  rate  conversion  -  $1.65  billion,  7.1% 
  of  GDP  (1993) 
 
 
 




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