Sunday, February 27, 2011

Kuwait



Kuwait
AREA
17,818 sq km (6880 sq miles).
POPULATION
1,866,104 (1998).
POPULATION DENSITY
104.7 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Kuwait City.
CAPITAL POPULATION
28,859 (1995).
GEOGRAPHY
Kuwait shares borders with Iraq and Saudi Arabia. To the southeast lies the Persian Gulf, where Kuwait has sovereignty over nine small islands (the largest is Bubiyan and the most populous is Failaka). The landscape is predominantly desert plateau with a lower, more fertile coastal belt.
GOVERNMENT
Traditional Arab monarchy. Head of State: Emir Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmed as-Sabah since 1978. Head of Government: Crown Prince Sheikh Saad al-Abdullah as-Salim as-Sabah since 1978. Gained full independence from the UK in 1961.
LANGUAGE
Arabic, but English is widely understood, especially in commerce and industry.
RELIGION
95% Muslim (mostly of the Sunni sect), with Christian and Hindu minorities.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 3.
ELECTRICITY
240 volts AC, 50Hz; single phase. UK-type flat 3-pin plugs are used.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: Full IDD is available. Country code: 965. Outgoing international code: 00. Fax: Most hotels have facilities. Telegram: 24-hour telegram services are available at the Ministry of Post and Telegraph Offices, Abdullah Al Salem Square, Kuwait City, but must be handed to the post office (opening hours: 0700-1400 Saturday to Wednesday; 0700-1200 Thursday). Post: Airmail to Western Europe takes about five days. Press: The English-language newspapers are the Arab Times and the Kuwait Times. Although remaining loyal to the Royal family, the press enjoys a fair degree of freedom.

Kiribati



Kiribati
AREA
810.5 sq km (312.9 sq miles).
POPULATION
77,853 (1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
96.1 per sq km.
CAPITAL
South Tarawa.
CAPITAL POPULATION
29,028 (1990).
GEOGRAPHY
Kiribati (pronounced 'Kiribass', formerly the Gilbert Islands) consists of three groups in the central Pacific: Kiribati (including Banaba, formerly Ocean Island), the Line Islands and the Phoenix Islands. The 33 islands, scattered across two million square miles of the central Pacific, are low-lying coral atolls with coastal lagoons. The exception is Banaba, which is a coral formation rising to 80m (265ft). The soil is generally poor, apart from Banaba, and rainfall is variable. Coconut palms and pandanus trees comprise the main vegetation. There are no hills or streams throughout the group. Water is obtained from storage tanks or wells.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. Gained independence from the UK in 1979. Head of State and Government: President Teburoro Tito since 1994.
LANGUAGE
Kiribati and English.
RELIGION
Christianity (50% Roman Catholic), the Bahai Faith and Islam.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 12, except as follows: Canton Island, Enderbury Island: GMT +13; Christmas Island: GMT +14.
ELECTRICITY
240 volts AC, 50Hz.

Kenya



Kenya
AREA
580,367 sq km (224,081 sq miles).
POPULATION
31,806,000 (1995).
POPULATION DENSITY
54.8 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Nairobi.
CAPITAL POPULATION
1,346,000 (1989).
GEOGRAPHY
Kenya shares borders with Ethiopia in the north, Sudan in the northwest, Uganda in the west, Tanzania in the south, and Somalia in the northeast. To the east lies the Indian Ocean. The country is divided into four regions: the arid deserts of the north, the savannah lands of the south, the fertile lowlands along the coast and around the shores of Lake Victoria, and highlands in the west, where the capital Nairobi is situated. Northwest of Nairobi runs the Rift Valley, containing the town of Nakuru and Aberdare National Park, overlooked by Mount Kenya (5200m/17,000ft), which also has a national park. In the far northwest is Lake Turkana (formerly Lake Rudolph). Kenya is a multi-cultural society; in the north live Somalis and the nomadic Hamitic peoples (Turkana, Rendille and Samburu), in the south and eastern lowlands are Kamba and Masai and the Luo live around Lake Victoria. The largest group is the Kikuyu who live in the central highlands and have traditionally been dominant in commerce and politics, although this is now changing. There are many other smaller groups and although Kenya emphasises nationalism, tribal and cultural identity is a factor. A small European settler population remains in the highlands, involved in farming and commerce.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. Gained independence from the UK in 1963. Head of State and Government: President Daniel arap Moi since 1978; last re-elected in 1997.
LANGUAGE
Swahili is the official language and English is widely spoken. Many local languages are also spoken including Kikuyu and Luo.
RELIGION
Mostly traditional but there is a sizeable Christian population and a small Muslim community.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 3.
ELECTRICITY
220/240 volts AC, 50Hz. Plugs are UK-type round 2-pin or flat 3-pin. Bayonet-type light sockets exist in Kenya.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: IDD service is available to the main cities. Country code: 254 (followed by 2 for Nairobi, 11 for Mombasa and 37 for Nakuru). Outgoing international code: 000. International calls can sometimes be made direct or operator-assisted by dialling 0196. Public telephones work with coins or with phone cards (which may be purchased from post offices or from international call services in major towns); coin-operated phone booths are painted red, card-operated booths are painted blue. Major hotels also offer a phone service, but they usually charge up to 100% more. For local calls, it is useful to have plenty of small change available. Fax: This service is available to the public at the Main Post Office and the Kenyatta International Conference Centre in Nairobi, and at major hotels. Telegram: Overseas telegrams can be sent from all post and telegraphic offices and private telephones. Nairobi GPO is open 24 hours. Post: Post Offices are identified by the letters KP&TC (Kenya Posts & Telecommunications Corporation). Post boxes are red. Stamps can usually be bought at post offices, stationers, souvenir shops and hotels. Airmail to Western Europe takes up to four days, and the service is generally reliable. Post offices are open 0800-1700 Monday to Friday; 0900-1200 Saturday (main post offices). Press: The main dailies (all published in English) include Daily Nation, Kenya Times and The Standard. Nairobi is the main publishing centre.

Kazalhstan



Kazalhstan
AREA
2,717,300 sq km (1,049,150 sq miles).
POPULATION
15,921,00 (1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
5.9 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Astana (formerly called Akmola).
CAPITAL POPULATION
287,000 (1993).
GEOGRAPHY
Five times the size of France and half the size of the United States, Kazakhstan is the second largest state in the Commonwealth of Independent States, and is bordered by the Russian Federation to the north and west, the Caspian Sea, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan to the southwest, Kyrgyzstan to the south and China to the southeast. 90% of the country is made up of steppe, the sand massives of the Kara Kum and the vast desert of Kizilkum, while in the southeast of the country the mountains of the Tien Shan and the Altai form a great natural frontier with tens of thousands of lakes and rivers. The Aral Sea and Lake Balkhash are the country's largest expanses of water.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. Head of State: President Nursultan A Nasarbajev since 1990. Head of Government: Prime Minister Nurlan Balgymbayev since 1997.
LANGUAGE
The official language is Kazakh, a Turkic language closely related to Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Turkmen and Turkish. The Government has undertaken to replace the Russian Cyrillic alphabet with the Turkish version of the Roman alphabet. Meanwhile the Cyrillic alphabet is in general use and most people in the cities can speak Russian, whereas country people tend to only speak Kazakh. English is usually spoken by those involved in tourism. Uygur and other regional languages and dialects are also spoken.
RELIGION
Mainly Sunni Muslim. There are Russian Orthodox and Jewish minorities. There are ten independent denominations of Christianity. The Kazakhs do not express their religious feelings fervently – Kazakhstan is an outlying district of the Muslim world and a meeting point of Russian, Chinese and Central Asian civilisations. Islam plays a minor role in policy and there are no significant Islamic political organisations in the country.
STANDARD TIME
Kazakhstan is divided into three time zones: Eastern/Main Zone: GMT + 6 (GMT + 7 from March 28 to October 26). Central Zone: GMT + 5 (GMT + 6 from March 28 to October 26). Western Zone: GMT + 4 (GMT + 5 from March 28 to October 26).
ELECTRICITY
220 volts AC, 50Hz. Round 2-pin continental plugs are standard.

Jordan



Jordan
AREA
97,740 sq km (37,738 sq miles).
POPULATION
5,774,000 (1997). An estimated 4,368,000 people live on the East Bank of the River Jordan; the remainder live on the West Bank, which is now administered by the Palestinian National Authority. Nearly half a million people in East Jordan are classified as Palestinian refugees and are maintained by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency. Another quarter of a million people are reckoned to have been displaced by the events of the 1967 Middle East war.
POPULATION DENSITY
55.6 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Amman
CAPITAL POPULATION
1,696,300 (1996).
GEOGRAPHY
Jordan shares borders with Israel, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. The Dead Sea is to the northwest and the Red Sea to the southwest. A high plateau extends 324km (201 miles) from Syria to Ras en Naqab in the south with the capital of Amman at a height of 800m (2625ft). Northwest of the capital are undulating hills, some forested, others cultivated. The Dead Sea depression, 400m (1300ft) below sea level in the west, is the lowest point on earth. The River Jordan connects the Dead Sea with Lake Tiberias (Israel). To the west of Jordan is the Palestinian National Authority Region. The east of the country is mainly desert. Jordan has a tiny stretch of Red Sea coast, centred on Aqaba.
GOVERNMENT
Constitutional Monarchy since 1952. Head of State: King Abdullah Ibn Hussein since 1999. Head of Government: Prime Minister Abdul Rauf al-Rawabdeh since 1999.
LANGUAGE
Arabic is the official language. English is also spoken, predominantly in the cities. French, German, Italian and Spanish are also spoken.
RELIGION
Over 90% Sunni Muslim, with Christian and Shi'ite Muslim minorities.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 2 (GMT + 3 from April to September).
ELECTRICITY
220 volts AC, 50Hz. Lamp sockets are screw-type, and there is a wide range of wall sockets.

Jamaica



Jamaica
AREA
10,991 sq km (4244 sq miles).
POPULATION
2,530,000 (1995).
POPULATION DENSITY
230.2 er sq km.
CAPITAL
Kingston
CAPITAL POPULATION
643,801 (1991).
GEOGRAPHY
Jamaica is the third-largest island in the West Indies, a narrow outcrop of a submerged mountain range. The island is crossed by a range of mountains reaching 2256m (7402ft) at the Blue Mountain Peak in the east and descending towards the west with a series of spurs and forested gullies running north and south. Most of the best beaches are on the north and west coasts. The island's luxuriant tropical and subtropical vegetation is probably unsurpassed anywhere in the Caribbean.
GOVERNMENT
Constitutional monarchy. Gained independence from the UK in 1962. Head of State: HM Queen Elizabeth II, represented locally by Governor General Sir Howard Hanlon since 1991. Head of Government: Prime Minister P J Patterson since 1992.
LANGUAGE
The official language is English. Local patois is also spoken.
RELIGION
Protestant majority (Church of God, Anglican, Baptist and Methodist) with Roman Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu and Bahai communities. Rastafarianism, a religion based on belief in the divinity of the late Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie (Ras Tafari), is also widely practised.
STANDARD TIME
GMT - 5.
ELECTRICITY
110 volts AC, 50Hz, single phase. American 2-pin plugs are standard, but many hotels offer, in addition, 220 volts AC, 50Hz, single phase, from 3-pin sockets.

Iitaly



Iitaly
AREA
301,323 sq km (116,341 sq miles).
POPULATION
57,380,000 (official estimate 1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
190.4 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Rome.
CAPITAL POPULATION
2,645,322 (1996).
GEOGRAPHY
Italy is situated in Europe and attached in the north to the European mainland. To the north the Alps separate Italy from France, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia. Northern Italy: The Alpine regions, the Po Plain and the Ligurian-Etruscan Appennines. Piedmont and Val d'Aosta contain some of the highest mountains in Europe and are good areas for winter sports. Many rivers flow down from the mountains towards the Po Basin, passing through the beautiful Italian Lake District (Maggiore, Como, Garda). The Po Basin, which extends as far south as the bare slopes of the Appennines, is covered with gravel terraces and rich alluvial soil and has long been one of Italy's most prosperous regions. To the east, where the River Po flows into the Adriatic Sea, the plains are little higher than the river itself; artificial (and occasionally natural) embankments prevent flooding. Central Italy: The northern part of the Italian peninsula. Tuscany (Toscana) has a diverse landscape with snow-capped mountains (the Tuscan Appennines), lush countryside, hills and a long sandy coastline with offshore islands. Le Marche, lying between the Appennines and the Adriatic coast, is a region of mountains, rivers and small fertile plains. The even more mountainous regioni (administrative districts) of Abruzzo and Molise are bordered by Marche to the north and Puglia to the south, and are separated from the Tyrrhenian Sea and to the west by Lazio and Campania. Umbria is known as the 'green heart of Italy', hilly with broad plains, olive groves and pines. Further south lies Rome, Italy's capital and largest city. Within its precincts is the Vatican City. Southern Italy: Campania consists of flat coastal plains and low mountains, stretching from Baia Domizia to the Bay of Naples and along a rocky coast to the Calabria border. Inland, the Appennines are lower, mellowing into the rolling countryside around Sorrento. The islands of Capri, Ischia and Procida in the Tyrrhenian Sea are also part of Campania. The south is wilder than the north, with mile upon mile of olive trees, cool forests and rolling hills. Puglia, the 'heel of the boot', is a landscape of volcanic hills and isolated marshes. Calabria, the 'toe', is heavily forested and thinly populated. The Calabrian hills are home to bears and wolves. The Islands: Sicily (Sicilia), visible across a 3km (2-mile) strait from mainland Italy, is fertile but mountainous with volcanoes (including the famous landmark of Mount Etna) and lava fields, and several offshore islands. Sardinia (Sardegna) has a mountainous landscape, fine sandy beaches and rocky offshore islands. For more information on each region, see the Resorts & Excursions section below.
GOVERNMENT
Republic since 1861. Head of State: President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi since 1999. Head of Government: Prime Minister Massimi d'Alema since 1998.
LANGUAGE
Italian is the official language. Dialects are spoken in different regions. German and Ladin are spoken in the South Tyrol region (bordering Austria). French is spoken in all the border areas from the Riviera to the area north of Milan (border with France and Switzerland). German is spoken around the Austrian border. English, German and French are also spoken in the biggest cities and in tourism and business circles.
RELIGION
Roman Catholic with Protestant minorities.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 1 (GMT + 2 from last Sunday in March to Saturday before last Sunday in September).
ELECTRICITY
220 volts AC, 50Hz.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: Full IDD service. Country code: 972. Outgoing international code: 00. Local telephone directories are in Hebrew, but there is a special English-language version for tourists. Fax: This service is widely available. Telegram: Facilities are available to guests in most deluxe hotels in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and in main post offices. Post: Airmail to Europe takes up to a week. There are Poste Restante facilities in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Post office hours may vary but are generally: 0800-1230 and 1530-1830 Sunday to Thursday, 0800-1330 Wednesday and 0800-1200 Friday. All post offices are closed on Shabbat (Saturday) and holy days, although central telegraph offices are open throughout the year. Press: The main dailies are Ha'aretz, Yedioth Aharonoth and Ma'ariv. Newspapers are printed in a variety of languages, including English. Political and religious affiliations are common. The English-language daily is the Jerusalem Post, and the Jerusalem Post International Edition is published weekly and goes out to 95 countries.

Israel



Israel
AREA
22,145 sq km (8550 sq miles).
POPULATION
5,836,000 (1997).
POPULATION DENSITY
263.5 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Jerusalem.
CAPITAL POPULATION
613,600 (1996, including East Jerusalem).
GEOGRAPHY
Israel is on the eastern Mediterranean, bordered by Lebanon and Syria to the north, Jordan to the east, and Egypt to the south. The country stretches southwards through the Negev Desert to Eilat, a resort town on the Red Sea. The fertile Plain of Sharon runs along the coast, while inland, parallel to the coast, is a range of hills and uplands with fertile valleys to the west and arid desert to the east. The Great Rift Valley begins beyond the sources of the River Jordan and extends south through the Dead Sea (the lowest point in the world), into the Red Sea, continuing on into Eastern Africa.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. The state of Israel was founded in 1948. Head of State: Ezer Weizman since 1993. Head of Government: Prime Minister Ehud Barak since 1999.
LANGUAGE
Hebrew is the official language. Arabic is spoken by around 15% of the population. English is spoken in most places and other languages, including Russian, Romanian, French, Spanish, German, Yiddish, Polish and Hungarian are widely used.
RELIGION
Hebrew is the official language. Arabic is spoken by around 15% of the population. English is spoken in most places and other languages, including Russian, Romanian, French, Spanish, German, Yiddish, Polish and Hungarian are widely used.
STANDARD TIME
GMT + 2 (GMT + 3 from March to September).
ELECTRICITY
220 volts AC, 50Hz. 3-pin plugs are standard; if needed, adaptors can be purchased in Israel.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: Full IDD service. Country code: 972. Outgoing international code: 00. Local telephone directories are in Hebrew, but there is a special English-language version for tourists. Fax: This service is widely available. Telegram: Facilities are available to guests in most deluxe hotels in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and in main post offices. Post: Airmail to Europe takes up to a week. There are Poste Restante facilities in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. Post office hours may vary but are generally: 0800-1230 and 1530-1830 Sunday to Thursday, 0800-1330 Wednesday and 0800-1200 Friday. All post offices are closed on Shabbat (Saturday) and holy days, although central telegraph offices are open throughout the year. Press: The main dailies are Ha'aretz, Yedioth Aharonoth and Ma'ariv. Newspapers are printed in a variety of languages, including English. Political and religious affiliations are common. The English-language daily is the Jerusalem Post, and the Jerusalem Post International Edition is published weekly and goes out to 95 countries.

Ireland



Ireland
AREA
70,285 sq km (27,137 sq miles).
POPULATION
3,626,087 (1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
51.6 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Dublin.
CAPITAL POPULATION
952,700 (1996).
GEOGRAPHY
The Republic of Ireland lies in the north Atlantic Ocean and is separated from Britain by the Irish Sea to the east. The northeastern part of the island (Northern Ireland) is part of the United Kingdom. The country has a central plain surrounded by a rim of mountains and hills offering some of the most varied and unspoilt scenery in Europe – quiet sandy beaches, semi-tropical bays warmed by the Gulf Stream, and rugged cliffs make up the 5600km (3500 miles) of coastline.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. Head of State: President Mary McAleese since 1997. Head of Government: Prime Minister Bertie Ahern.
LANGUAGE
Irish (Gaelic) is the official language, spoken as a first language by about 55,000 people (mostly in the west). The majority speak English.
RELIGION
Roman Catholic 95%, Protestant 5%.
STANDARD TIME
GMT (GMT + 1 from last Sunday in March to Saturday before the last Sunday in October)
ELECTRICITY
220 volts AC, 50Hz. 3-pin plugs are in use.
COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone: IDD is available. Country code: 353 followed by the area code, omitting the initial zero. Outgoing international code: 00. Fax: Facilities are widely available. Post: Post office hours: 0900-1730/1800 Monday to Friday; 0900-1300 Saturday. Sub-post offices close at 1300 one day of the week. The Central Post Office is in O'Connell Street, Dublin. Press: There are several daily newspapers published in Dublin including The Irish Times, Evening Herald and the Irish Independent; and two in Cork. British dailies and Sunday papers are available.

Indonesia



Indonesia
AREA
1,919,317 sq km (741,053 sq miles).
POPULATION
198,342,900 (1996).
POPULATION DENSITY
103.3 per sq km.
CAPITAL
Jakarta (Java).
CAPITAL POPULATION
9,341,400 (1996).
GEOGRAPHY
Indonesia lies between the mainland of South-East Asia and Australia in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. It is the world's largest archipelago state. Indonesia is made up of six main islands – Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi, Bali, Kalimantan (part of the island of Borneo) and Irian Jaya (the western half of New Guinea) – and 30 smaller archipelagos. In total, the Indonesian archipelago consists of more than 17,000 islands. 6000 of these are inhabited and stretch over 4828km (3000 miles), most lying in a volcanic belt with more than 300 volcanoes, the great majority of which are extinct. The landscape varies from island to island, ranging from high mountains and plateaux to coastal lowlands and alluvial belts.
GOVERNMENT
Republic. Gained independence from the Netherlands in 1949. Head of State and Government: President Bacharuddin Jusuf Habibie since 1998.
LANGUAGE
Bahasa Indonesian is the official national language. It is similar to Malay and written in the Roman alphabet. In addition, there are over 250 recognised languages spoken by as many distinct ethnic groups. Many local languages are further divided by special forms of address depending on social status, and all languages are spoken in a variety of local dialects. English is the most widely used foreign language for business and tourism, and many people in the more remote areas have a basic command of English. The older generation still speak Dutch as a second language.
RELIGION
There is a Muslim majority of approximately 88%, with Christian (10%), Hindu (mainly in Bali) and Buddhist minorities. Animist beliefs are held in remote areas.
STANDARD TIME
Indonesia spans three time zones: Bangka, Billiton, Java, West and Central Kalimantan, Madura and Sumatra: GMT + 7 (West), GMT + 8 (Central), GMT + 9 (East). Bali, Flores, South and East Kalimantan, Lombok, Sulawesi, Sumba, Sumbawa and Timor: GMT + 8. Aru, Irian Jaya, Kai, Moluccas and Tanimbar: GMT + 9.
ELECTRICITY
Generally 220 volts AC, 50Hz, but 110 volts AC, 50Hz, in some rural areas.