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Djibouti in 1977. Hassan Gouled APTIDON installed an authoritarian
one-party state and proceeded to serve as president until 1999.
Unrest among the Afars minority during the 1990s led to a civil war
that ended in 2001 following the conclusion of a peace accord
between Afar rebels and the Issa-dominated government. Djibouti's
first multi-party presidential elections in 1999 resulted in the
election of Ismail Omar GUELLEH. Djibouti occupies a very strategic
geographic location at the mouth of the Red Sea and serves as an
important transshipment location for goods entering and leaving the
east African highlands. The present leadership favors close ties to
France, which maintains a significant military presence in the
country, but has also developed increasingly stronger ties with the
United States in recent years. Djibouti currently hosts the only
United States military base in sub-Saharan Africa and is a
front-line state in the global war on terrorism.
Dominica
Dominica was the last of the Caribbean islands to be
colonized by Europeans, due chiefly to the fierce resistance of the
native Caribs. France ceded possession to Great Britain in 1763,
which made the island a colony in 1805. In 1980, two years after
independence, Dominica's fortunes improved when a corrupt and
tyrannical administration was replaced by that of Mary Eugenia
CHARLES, the first female prime minister in the Caribbean, who
remained in office for 15 years. Some 3,000 Carib Indians still
living on Dominica are the only pre-Columbian population remaining
in the eastern Caribbean.
Dominican Republic
Explored and claimed by Columbus on his first
voyage in 1492, the island of Hispaniola became a springboard for
Spanish conquest of the Caribbean and the American mainland. In
1697, Spain recognized French dominion over the western third of the
island, which in 1804 became Haiti. The remainder of the island, by
then known as Santo Domingo, sought to gain its own independence in
1821, but was conquered and ruled by the Haitians for 22 years; it
finally attained independence as the Dominican Republic in 1844. In
1861, the Dominicans voluntarily returned to the Spanish Empire, but
two years later they launched a war that restored independence in
1865. A legacy of unsettled, mostly non-representative, rule for
much of its subsequent history was brought to an end in 1966 when
Joaqui
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