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Mar 3, 2010: Afghanistan continues its rapid growth in population.
Oct 28, 2008: A U.S. funded survey in Afghanistan finds that 70 percent of respondents judge the availability of education for children "to be good," and 44 percent say there have been "improvements in access to schools in the last two years." Around 6 million Afghan children, including 2 million girls, are now going to school every year. During the Taliban's regime only 1 million boys went to school.
East of Iran. West of Pakistan. Landlocked. Slightly smaller than Texas. Mostly rugged mountains. Capital: Kabul.
Warlords (regional commanders) dominate most of Afghanistan. President Harmad Karzai rules in Kabul and is supported by European powers and the United States.
The president and two vice presidents are elected by direct vote for a five-year term.
Figures unless otherwise stated are from the CIA Factbook.
Factbook: "Afghanistan's economy is recovering from decades of conflict. The economy has improved significantly since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001 largely because of the infusion of international assistance, the recovery of the agricultural sector, and service sector growth.
2009: $800
2008: $800
2007: $800
2009: 3.4%
2008: 7.5%
2007: 11.5%
2006: 8.2%
80 percent.
Largest export is opium. Fruits and nuts.
CIA Factbook: "Afghanistan's economic outlook has improved significantly since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001 because of the infusion of over $4 billion in international assistance, recovery of the agricultural sector, and the reestablishment of market institutions. "
2008 estimates: deaths 19.56, down from 20.75 in 2005; births 45.82, down from 47.02 in 2005.
Living in an urban area: 24%
July 2009: 28.39 million. Growth rate: 2.575 percent (30th highest in the world)
Births per 1,000 population: 38.7
Deaths per 1,000 populataion: 17.83
2009: 153.14 (rates 2nd worse, behind Angola)
2008: 154.57
2005: 163.07 in 2005
2009: 44.4 years (ranks 219th, just ahead of Liberia)
2008: 44.21
2005: 42.9
Living with HIV/AIDS, ages 15 to 49: 0.01percent (2001)
Estimated for 2004, Afghanistan has 165.96 deaths for each 1,000 live births. (2005) For Iraq this figure is 52.71, for Japan 3.21.
Pashtun 42 percent, Tajik 27 percent, Hazara 9 percent, Uzbek 9 percent, Aimak 4 percent, Turkmen 3 percent, Baloch 2 percent, other 4 percent.
SOURCES:
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook
Copyright © 2010 by Frank E. Smitha. All rights reserved.