PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Senegal
Geography
Area: 196,840 sq. km. (76,000 sq. mi.), about
the size of South Dakota.
Cities: Capital--Dakar. Other
cities--Diourbel, Kaolack, Kolda, Louga,
Rufisque, Saint-Louis, Thies, Tambacounda,
Ziguinchor, Fatick, Matam, Kedougou, Sedhiou.
Terrain: Flat or rising to foothills.
Climate: Tropical/Sahelian--desert or grasslands
in the north, heavier vegetation in the south
and southeast.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Senegalese (sing. and pl.).
Population (2007 est.): 12,521,851.
Annual growth rate: 2%.
Ethnic groups: Wolof 43%; Fulani (Peulh) and
Toucouleur 23%; Serer 15%; Diola, Mandingo, and
others 19%.
Religions: Muslim 95%, Christian 4%, traditional
1%.
Languages: French (official), Wolof, Pulaar,
Serer, Diola, Mandingo, Soninke.
Education: Attendance--primary
75.8%, middle school 26.5%, secondary 11%
(estimated). Literacy--59.1%.
Health: Infant
mortality rate--60.15/1,000. Life
expectancy--56.69 yrs.
Work force (4.0 million): Agriculture--70%
(subsistence or cash crops). Wage
earners (350,000):
private sector 61%, government and parapublic
39%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: April 4, 1960.
Constitution: March 3, 1963, last amended in
2001.
Branches: Executive--President
(chief of state, commander in chief of armed
forces). Legislative--bicameral
parliament with a 150 member National Assembly
and a 100 member Senate. Judicial--Constitutional
Council (appointed by the president from senior
magistrates and eminent academics and
attorneys), Court of Final Appeals, Council of
State.
Administrative subdivisions: 14 regions, 34
departments, 320 rural councils.
Political parties: 72 political parties are
registered, the most important of which are the
Democratic Party of Senegal (PDS), Rewmi,
Socialist Party (PS), the Alliance of Forces for
Progress (AFP), "AND JEF/PADS", the Union for
Democratic Renewal (URD), “JEF JEL”, the
National Democratic Rally (RND), and the
Independence and Labor Party (PIT).
Suffrage: Universal adult, over 18.
Central government budget (2007): revenues--$2.948
billion; expenditures--$3.036
billion, including capital expenditures of
$1.302 billion.
Defense (2007): $133 million.
National holiday: April 4, Independence Day.
Economy
GDP (2006): $10.6 billion.
Real annual growth rate: 4.6% (2007 estimate).
Per capita GDP (2006): $700 - in terms of
purchasing power parity (PPP) $1,936 (2007).
Natural resources: Fish, peanuts, phosphate,
iron ore, gold, titanium, oil and gas, cotton.
Primary sector: Agriculture represents 15% of
GDP. Products--peanuts,
millet, sorghum, manioc, rice, cotton,
vegetables and flowers, fruit.
Secondary sector: 21.4% of GDP, of which
industry and mining represent 22%. Types--fishing;
agricultural product processing; light
manufacturing; mining including energy, oil
mining, and construction.
Tertiary sector: 63% of GDP, of which services
represent 40% of GDP and trade 22% of GDP.
Trade (2006): Exports--$1.407
billion (fish products, peanut products,
phosphate products). Major
markets--France, other European Union, West
African CFA zone. Imports--$3.040
billion (food, consumer goods, petroleum,
machinery, transport equipment, petroleum
products, computer equipment). Major
suppliers--France, Nigeria, Cameroon,
United States.
Exchange rate: Fixed to the euro. African
Financial Community (CFA) 656 CFA =1 euro.
Economic aid received: In October 2007, major
donors pledged approximately $4 billion in
assistance for the next four years; U.S.
assistance was around $55 million in 2007.
GEOGRAPHY
Senegal is bounded by the Atlantic Ocean,
Mauritania, Mali, Guinea, and Guinea-Bissau. The
Gambia penetrates more than 320 kilometers (200
mi.) into Senegal. Well-defined dry and humid
seasons result from northeast winter winds and
southwest summer winds. Dakar's annual rainfall
of about 61 centimeters (24 in.) occurs between
June and October when maximum temperatures
average 27oC (82oF);
December to February minimum temperatures are
about 17oC (63oF).
Interior temperatures are higher than along the
coast, and rainfall increases substantially
farther south, exceeding 150 centimeters (60
in.) annually in some areas.
PEOPLE
About 75% of Senegal's population is rural. In
rural areas, density varies from about 77 per
square kilometer (200 per sq. mi.) in the
west-central region to 2 per square kilometer (5
per sq. mi.) in the arid eastern section. About
50,000 Europeans (mostly French) and Lebanese
reside in Senegal, mainly in the cities. French
is the official language but is used regularly
only by the literate minority. All Senegalese
speak an indigenous language, of which Wolof has
the largest usage.
HISTORY
Archaeological findings throughout the area
indicate that Senegal was inhabited in
prehistoric times. Islam established itself in
the Senegal River valley in the 11th century;
95% of Senegalese today are Muslims. In the 13th
and 14th centuries, the area came under the
influence of the Mandingo empires to the east;
the Jolof Empire of Senegal also was founded
during this time.
In January 1959, Senegal and the French Soudan
merged to form the Mali Federation, which became
fully independent on June 20, 1960, as a result
of the independence and the transfer of power
agreement signed with France on April 4, 1960.
Due to internal political difficulties, the
Federation broke up on August 20, 1960. Senegal
and Soudan (renamed the Republic of Mali)
proclaimed independence. Leopold Sedar Senghor,
internationally known poet, politician, and
statesman, was elected Senegal's first President
in August 1960.
After the breakup of the Mali Federation,
President Senghor and Prime Minister Mamadou Dia
governed together under a parliamentary system.
In December 1962, their political rivalry led to
an attempted coup by Prime Minister Dia.
Although this was put down without bloodshed,
Dia was arrested and imprisoned, and Senegal
adopted a new constitution that consolidated the
President’s power. In 1980, President Senghor
decided to retire from politics, and he handed
over power in 1981 to his handpicked successor,
Abdou Diouf. Abdou Diouf was President from
1981-2000. He encouraged broader political
participation, reduced government involvement in
the economy, and widened Senegal's diplomatic
engagements, particularly with other developing
nations. Domestic politics on occasion spilled
over into street violence, border tensions, and
a violent separatist movement in the southern
region of the Casamance. Nevertheless, Senegal's
commitment to democracy and human rights
strengthened. Diouf served four terms as
President. In the presidential election of 2000,
he was defeated, in a free and fair election, by
opposition leader Abdoulaye Wade. Senegal
experienced its second peaceful transition of
power, and its first from one political party to
another. Parliamentary and presidential
elections were held in 2007.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Senegal is a secular republic with a strong
presidency, bi-cameral legislature, reasonably
independent judiciary, and multiple political
parties. Senegal is one of the few African
states that has never experienced a coup d’état.
As noted above, power was transferred
peacefully, if not altogether democratically,
from Senghor to Diouf in 1981, and once again,
this time in fully democratic elections, from
Diouf to Wade in March 2000.
The president is elected by universal adult
suffrage to a 5-year term. The bicameral
parliament has a National Assembly with 150
members who are elected separately from the
president, and a Senate with 100 members of
which 35 are elected and 65 are chosen by the
president. The Socialist Party dominated the
National Assembly until April 2001, when in free
and fair legislative elections President Wade’s
coalition won a majority (89 of 120 seats). The
Cour de Cassation (Highest Appeals Court,
equivalent to the U.S. Supreme Court) and the
Constitutional Council, the justices of which
are named by the president, are the nation's
highest tribunals. Senegal is divided into 14
administrative regions, each headed by a
governor appointed by and responsible to the
president. The law on decentralization, which
came into effect in January 1997, distributed
significant central government authority to
regional assemblies.
Senegal’s principal political party was for 40
years the Socialist Party (PS). Its domination
of political life came to an end in March 2000,
when Abdoulaye Wade, the leader of the
Senegalese Democratic Party (PDS) and leader of
the opposition for more than 25 years, won the
presidency. Under the terms of the 2001
constitution, future presidents will serve for 5
years and be limited to two terms. Wade was the
last President to be elected to a 7-year term.
On February 25, 2007 President Abdoulaye Wade
(pronounced "wahd") won 56% of the vote in a
field of 15 candidates, with 73% of registered
voters going to the polls. Twice-postponed
parliamentary elections took place on June 3,
2007, but most of the major opposition parties
boycotted them, allowing the ruling Senegalese
Democratic party (PDS) and its allies to capture
131 of the 150 seats in the National Assembly
that met for the first time on June 20. In 2000
and 2007, Wade won open, peaceful, and highly
competitive elections due to a strong Senegalese
national desire for change after nearly 40 years
of Socialist Party governments. Having come
under tough scrutiny and criticism for not
having realized many of his campaign promises,
he has undertaken major public works projects
that benefited him politically.
President Wade has advanced a liberal agenda for
Senegal, including privatizations and other
market-opening measures. He has a strong
interest in raising Senegal's regional and
international profile. The country,
nevertheless, has limited means with which to
implement ambitious ideas. The liberalization of
the economy is proceeding, but at a slow pace.
Senegal continues to play a significant role in
regional and international organizations.
President Wade has made excellent relations with
the United States a high priority.
There are presently 72 registered political
parties, most of which are marginal and little
more than platforms for their leaders. The
principal political parties, however, constitute
a true multiparty, democratic political culture,
and they have contributed to one of the most
successful democratic transitions in Africa,
even among all developing countries. A
flourishing independent media, largely free from
official or informal control, also contributes
to the democratic politics of Senegal. The
country’s generally tolerant culture, largely
free from ethnic or religious tensions, has
provided a resilient base for democratic
politics.
Principal Government Officials
President of the Republic--Abdoulaye
Wade
President of the Senate--Pape Diop
President of the National Assembly--Macky Sall
Ministers
Prime Minister--Cheikh Hadjibou Soumaré
Minister of State, Minister of Interior--Cheikh
Tidiane Sy
Minister of State, Minister of Foreign
Affairs--Cheikh Tidiane Gadio
Minister of State, Minister of Economy and
Finance--Abdoulaye Diop
Minister of State, Minister of Justice, Keeper
of Seals--Madické Niang
Minister of State, Minister of Armed
Forces--Bécaye Diop
Minister of State, Minister of Industry, Mines
and SMEs--Ousmane Ngom
Minister of State, Minister of Environment,
Natural Preservation, Retention Basins and
Artificial Lakes--Djibo Leyti Kâ
Minister of State, Minister of Infrastructure,
Land Transportation, Telecommunications and
ITC--Habib Sy
Minister of State, Minister of Maritime Economy,
Maritime Transport, Fishery and Fish
Farming--Souleymane Ndéné Ndiaye
Minister of State, Minister of Town Planning,
Housing, Town Hydraulics, Public Health and
Sanitation--Oumar Sarr
Minister of State, Minister of Decentralization
and Local Government--Ousmane Masseck Ndiaye
Minister of Family, Women Entrepreneurship and
Microfinance--Awa Ndiaye
Minister of Agriculture--Amath Sall
Minister of Country Planning and Decentralized
Cooperation--Abdourahim Agne
Minister of Secondary Education , Regional
University Centers and Universities--Moustapha
Sourang
Minister of Rural Hydraulics and National
Hydrographical Network--Adama Sall
Minister of Civil Service, Employment, Labor and
Professional Organizations--Innocence Ntap
Minister of Commerce--Mamadou Diop
Minister of Crafts and Air Transportation--Farba
Senghor
Minister of Health and Medical
Prevention--Safiétou Thiam
Minister of Breeding--Oumy Khairy Guèye Seck
Minister of Culture, Listed Historic Heritage
Sites, National Languages and Francophonie--Mame
Birame Diouf
Minister of Sports and Leisure--Bacar Dia
Minister of Energy--Samuel Amète Sarr
Minister of Biofuels, Renewable Energy and
Scientific Research--Christian Sina Diatta
Minister of Information, Relations with
Institutions and Spokesperson of the
Government--Abdou Aziz Sow
Minister of Education for Preschools and
Elementary--Kalidou Diallo
Minister of Youth and Youth Employment--Mamadou
Lamine Keita
Minister of Senegalese Living Abroad and
Minister of Tourism--Aminata Lô
Minister of Technical Education and Vocational
Training--Moussa Sakho
Deputy Minister, Ministry of Economy and
Finance, in charge of Budget--Mamadou Ablaye Sow
Ambassador to the United States--Amadou Lamine
Ba
Ambassador to the United Nations--Paul Badji
Senegal maintains an embassy in the United
States at 2112 Wyoming Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20008 (tel. 202-234-0540), and a Mission to
the United Nations at 392 Fifth Avenue, 9th
floor, New York, NY 10018 (tel. 212-517-9030).
ECONOMY
The former capital of French West
Africa, Senegal is a semi-arid country located
on the westernmost point of Africa.
Predominantly rural and with limited natural
resources, the country earns foreign exchange
from fish, phosphates, peanuts, tourism, and
services. Its economy is highly vulnerable to
variations in rainfall and changes in world
commodity prices. Senegal depends heavily on
foreign assistance, which in 2007 represented
about 23% of overall government
spending--including both current expenditures
and capital investments--or African Financial
Community (CFA) 315 billion (U.S. $630 million).
The fishing sector has replaced the groundnut
sector as Senegal's export leader. Its export
earnings reached $249 million in 2005. The
industrial fishing operations struggle with high
costs, and Senegalese tuna is rapidly losing the
French market to more efficient Asian
competitors.
Phosphate production, the second major foreign
exchange earner, has been steady at about $230
million (around 1500 tons). Exports of peanut
products reached $63 million in 2003. Peanut
production has decreased by 30%, one of its
lowest levels. Receipts from tourism, the fourth
major foreign exchange earner, have picked up
since the January 1994 devaluation. Today,
tourism constitute between 5 and 6% of national
income. Senegal has about 250 tourist class
hotels and the sector employs about 100.000
people.
Senegal’s Agency for the Promotion of Investment
(APIX) plays an important role in the
government’s foreign investment program. Its
objective is to increase the investment rate
from its current level of 20.6% to 30%.
Currently, there are no restrictions on the
transfer or repatriation of capital and income
earned, or investment financed with convertible
foreign exchange. Direct U.S. investment in
Senegal remains about $38 million, mainly in
petroleum marketing, pharmaceuticals
manufacturing, chemicals, and banking. Economic
assistance comes largely from France, the IMF,
the World Bank, and the United States. The
European Union, the African Development bank,
China, Canada, Spain, Japan, and Germany also
provide fund significant aid programs.
Senegal has well-developed though costly port
facilities, an international airport serving 28
international airlines that serves as a regional
hub, and a reasonable telecommunications
infrastructure, including a fiber optics
backbone and cellular phone penetration
approaching 15% of the population.
DEFENSE
Senegal has well-trained and
disciplined armed forces consisting of about
17,000 personnel in the army, air force, navy,
and gendarmerie. The Senegalese military force
receives most of its training, equipment, and
support from France and the United States.
Germany also provides support but on a smaller
scale. Military noninterference in political
affairs has contributed to Senegal's stability
since independence.
Senegal has participated in many international
and regional peacekeeping missions. Its history
of participation in peacekeeping is impressive.
Most recently, Senegal provided peacekeeping
forces for the African Union (AU) mission in
Darfur, Sudan (AMIS), the UN mission in Liberia
(UNIMIL), and the UN mission in Cote d’Ivoire (UNOMCI),
where Lieutenant General Abdoulaye. Fall, who is
now Chief of Defense of the Senegalese Armed
Forces, was the Force Commander. In 2000,
Senegal sent a battalion to the Democratic
Republic of Congo to participate in MONUC, the
UN peacekeeping mission, and agreed to deploy a
U.S.-trained battalion to Sierra Leone to
participate in UNAMSIL, another UN peacekeeping
mission. A Senegalese contingent was deployed on
a peacekeeping mission to the Central African
Republic in 1997, and in 1994, Senegal sent a
battalion-sized force to Rwanda to participate
in the UN peacekeeping mission there. In 1992
Senegal sent 1,500 men to the ECOMOG
peacekeeping group in Liberia, and in 1991, it
was the only Sub-Saharan nation to send a
contingent to participate in Operation Desert
Storm in the Middle East.
In August 1981, the Senegalese military was
invited into The Gambia by President Dawda
Kairaba Jawara to put down a coup attempt. In
August 1989, Senegalese-Gambian military
cooperation, which began with the joint
Senegalese-Gambian efforts during the 1981 coup
attempt, ceased with the dissolution of the
Senegambian Confederation. Senegal intervened in
the Guinea-Bissau civil war in 1998 at the
request of former President Vieira.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
President Senghor advocated close relations with
France and negotiation and compromise as the
best means of resolving international
differences. To a large extent, the two
succeeding Presidents have carried on Senghor's
policies and philosophies. Senegal has long
supported functional integration among
French-speaking West African states through the
West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Senegal has a high profile in many international
organizations and was a member of the UN
Security Council in 1988-89. It was elected to
the UN Commission on Human Rights in 1997.
Friendly to the West, especially to France and
to the U.S., Senegal also is a vigorous
proponent of more assistance from developed
countries to the Third World.
Senegal enjoys mostly cordial relations with its
neighbors. Clear progress have been made on many
fronts with Mauritania to include border
security, resource management, economic
integration and the return of an estimated
30,000 Afro-Mauritanian refugees living in
Senegal.
U.S.-SENEGALESE RELATIONS
Senegal enjoys an excellent relationship with
the United States. The Government of Senegal is
known and respected for its able diplomats and
has often supported the U.S. in the United
Nations, including with troop contributions for
peacekeeping activities. The United States
maintains friendly relations with Senegal and
provides considerable economic and technical
assistance. About 300 Senegalese students come
to the United States each year for study.
President Diouf paid his first official visit to
Washington, DC, in August 1983 and traveled
several times to the U.S. thereafter. Senegal
was President George W. Bush’s first stop in his
July 2003 visit to Africa. In June 2001,
President Wade met President Bush at the White
House. Senegal hosted the Second African-African
American Summit in 1995. First Lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton began her trip to Africa in March
1997 with a visit to Senegal, and President Bill
Clinton visited Senegal in 1998. Assistant
Secretary for African Affairs Walter Kansteiner
visited Senegal in August 2001. Foreign Minister
Gadio met Secretary of State Colin Powell in
September and November 2001. Senegal took a
strong position against terrorism in the wake of
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against
the U.S., and in October 2001 hosted a
conference establishing the African Pact Against
Terrorism. On July 20, 2005, Secretary Rice
attended the fourth annual African Growth and
Opportunity Act (AGOA) Forum held in Dakar,
Senegal. That year’s Forum focused on increasing
investment initiatives and facilitating economic
and political development in Africa. In June
2007, First Lady Laura Bush made Senegal her
first stop during a four country Africa tour in
support of the President’s Malaria Initiative
(PMI) and the President Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR).
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
implements the U.S. Government's development
assistance program. USAID's strategy focuses on
promoting economic growth/private sector
development by expanding microfinance and
business development services and
commercializing natural and non-traditional
products; improving local delivery of services
and sustainable use of resources; increasing use
of decentralized health services; and improving
middle school education, especially for girls.
In addition, there is a conflict resolution and
rehabilitation program to improve conditions for
peace in Senegal's two southern regions known as
the "Casamance". USAID provided $29.9 million in
development assistance to Senegal in fiscal year
2005.
The Peace Corps program in Senegal has
approximately 150 volunteers serving in
agriculture, forestry, health, and small
business development. The U.S. Embassy's
Cultural Affairs Section administers the
Fulbright, Humphrey, and International Visitor
exchange programs. The Fulbright teacher,
researcher, and lecturer programs are two-way
exchanges; hence the section also supports
American grantees in Senegal during their stay.
In addition to exchanges, the section organizes
numerous programs for the Senegalese public
including U.S. speaker programs, fine arts
programs, film festivals, and a book club.
Finally, the section organizes an annual
regional colloquium for American Studies
professionals, journalists, and civic leaders
from over 15 countries in Africa.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Marcia
S. Bernicat
Deputy Chief of Mission--Jay Smith
USAID Director--Kevin Mullaly
Peace Corps Director--Christopher Hendrick
Defense Attaché--COL Darryl E. Dennis, USAR
Office of Defense Cooperation -- COL Ross
Clemmons
Political Counselor--David Mosby
Economic Counselor--Wallace Bain
Public Affairs Officer--Robin Diallo
Consular Officer--James David Loveland
Management Officer--Salvatore Piazza
The local address of the U.S.
Embassy in
Senegal is U.S. Embassy, B.P. 49, Ave. Jean
XXIII, Dakar, Senegal.