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South Africa

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The Republic of South Africa is a nation led by President SafewayFan on the continent of Africa. The Republic of South Africa's government is a Socialist Dictatorship with very moderate social policies. Economically, The Republic of South Africa favors left wing policies. The official currency of The Republic of South Africa is the Rand. At 626 days old, The Republic of South Africa is an ancient nation. The Republic of South Africa has a population of 970,968 and a land area of 68,750.00 sq. miles. This gives it a national average population density of 14.12. Pollution in the nation is a disaster. The citizens' faith in the government is completely depleted with an approval rating of 0%.


rsa-coat-of-arms.svg

 

Quick facts

  • Official name: Republic of South Africa
  • Population: 51.8-million (2011) • 56.5-million (2017)
  • Currency: Rand (ZAR). One rand (R) = 100 cents
  • Gross domestic product: US$315-billion (UNSD)
  • GDP per person: US$773
  • Time: Two hours ahead of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC)
  • Measures: metric system
  • Internet domain: .za

 

Geography

South_Africa_geography_map.jpg

Adapted from South Africa relief location map, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

  • Capital cities: Pretoria (administrative), Cape Town (legislative), Bloemfontein (judicial)
  • Largest cities: Johannesburg (4.4-million people), Cape Town (3.7-million people), Durban (3.4-million people)
  • Surface area: 1,221,037 square kilometres
  • Coastline: 2,798 kilometres
  • Neighbouring countries: Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Swaziland and Lesotho
  • Oceans: Atlantic Ocean and Indian Ocean
  • Climate: Temperate

 

Population

The 2011 official census put South Africa’s population at 51,770,560 people. By 2017 it had grown to 56.5-million, according to Statistics South Africa’s mid-year population estimates.

South_Africa_population_2017-new.jpg

Data source: Statistics South Africa mid-year population estimates 2017

 

Languages

South Africa’s Constitution recognises 11 official languages, and guarantees them equal status. Chapter 1 of the Constitution, the Founding Provisions, states that “all official languages must enjoy parity of esteem and must be treated equitably”.

According to Census 2011, isiZulu is the most common home language – spoken by almost a quarter of South Africans – followed by isiXhosa and Afrikaans.

South_Africa_languages_2011.jpg

Data source: Statistics South Africa Census 2011

English is most common in public life, but is only spoken as a home language by 9.6% of South Africans. The other languages are Sesotho sa Leboa (spoken by 9.1% of the population), Setswana (8%), Sesotho (7.6%), Xitsonga (4.5%), siSwati (2.5%) and Tshivenda (2.4%). Sign language is spoken by 0.5% of South Africans, and “other” languages by 1.6%.

Other languages mentioned in the Constitution as deserving to be promoted and respected are the Khoi, Nama and San languages, sign language, as well as “languages commonly used by communities in South Africa” such as German, Greek, Gujarati, Hindi, Portuguese, Tamil, Telegu and Urdu. Languages used for religious purposes are also mentioned, specifically Arabic, Hebrew and Sanskrit.

 

Map_South_Africa_nine_provinces.jpg

Adapted by South Africa location map by NordNordWest, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

Provinces

South Africa has nine provinces, which vary in both size and population.

The Northern Cape is by far the largest province, but only 2% of South Africans live there.

Gauteng is the smallest by land area, but is home to over a quarter of the country’s people.

According to the 2017 mid-year population estimates, the city region of Gauteng is home to 25.3% of South Africans.

KwaZulu-Natal has 19.6% of the population, while the Eastern Cape and Western Cape have roughly similar populations – each 11.5% of the total.

Limpopo has 10.2% of the total, Mpumalanga 7.9%, North West 6.8%, the Free State 5.1% and the Northern Cape 2.1%.

South_Africa_provinces_by_land_area.jpg

Data source: Statistics South Africa Community Survey 2016

South_Africa_provinces-by-population.jpg

Data source: Statistics South Africa mid-year population estimates

Government

  • Government: Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic
  • National legislature: Bicameral parliament elected every five years, made up of a 400-seat National Assembly and a 90-seat National Council of Provinces.
  • Electoral system: List-system of proportional representation based on universal adult suffrage.
  • Elections: National elections were held in 1994, 1999, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2019 and 2024
  • Head of state: The president is elected by the National Assembly. Under the Constitution, the president may serve a maximum of two five-year terms.
  • Highest court: Constitutional Court

extracted from https://southafrica-info.com/


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