Introduction
Somalia, country on the Horn of Africa. It
occupies an important geopolitical position between sub-Saharan
Africa and the countries of Arabia and southwestern Asia. With an
area of about 246,000 square miles (637,000 square kilometres),
it is bounded on the north by the Gulf of Aden and on the east by
the Indian Ocean; from its southern point, its western border is
bounded by Kenya and Ethiopia and, to the northwest, by Djibouti.
The capital is Mogadishu (in Somali, Muqdisho or Xamar; in the colonial
Italian rendering, Mogadiscio).
Living in a country of geographic extremes,
with a dry and hot climate and a landscape of thornbush savanna
and semidesert, the inhabitants of Somalia have developed equally
demanding economic survival strategies.
The Somali are Muslim, and about half follow a mobile way of life,
pursuing nomadic pastoralism or agropastoralism. As a result, the
Somali are an egalitarian, freedom-loving people who are suspicious
of governmental authority.
In colonial times the lands traditionally
occupied by the Somali were divided by a new western boundary for
Somalia, resulting in large Somali communities in Djibouti, Ethiopia,
and Kenya.
This boundary is still
in dispute.
The Somali Peninsula consists mainly of a tableland of young limestone
and sandstone formations. Apart from a mountainous coastal zone
in the north and several pronounced river valleys, most of the country
is extremely flat, with few natural barriers to restrict the mobility
of the nomads and their livestock.
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