Guyana
The Co-operative Republic of Guyana is a nation on the northern
coast of South America, just above the Equator and a part of the western
part of the wider region of Guiana. The country is bordered to the
east by Suriname, to the south by Brasil, to the west by Venezuela
and to the north by the Atlantic Ocean. It is the third smallest country
in South America and approximately the size of England or Idaho.
Guyana is an Amerindian word meaning Land of Many Waters, and the
country is mostly characterized by vast unspoiled rain forests dissected
by numerous rivers, creeks and beautiful waterfalls. It is also famous
as the location of the legendary El Dorado, the inspiration for The
Lost World, for its friendly multicultural society, high biodiversity,
prize-winning rum, wooden architecture, and Demerara sugar.
Though physically part of South America, culturally, Guyana is more
Caribbean than Latin American—demonstrated by the fact that
English is the main language.
History of Guyana
At the time the first Europeans arrived in the area around 1500,
Guyana was inhabited by Arawak and Carib tribes of Amerindians. European
settlement began in the early 17th century with the Dutch, who established
three separate colonies; Essequibo (1616), Berbice (1627), and Demerara
(1752). The British assumed control in the late 18th century and the
Dutch formally ceded the area in 1814. The three became a single British
colony known as British Guiana in 1831.
The abolition of slavery in 1834 led to black settlement of urban
areas and the importation of indentured laborers from Madeira (Portugal)(beginning
in 1834), Germany (first in 1835), Ireland (1836), Scotland (1837),
Malta (1839), China and India (beginning in 1838) to work on the sugar
plantations. Guyana achieved independence from the United Kingdom
in 1966 and became a Republic in 1970, remaining a member of the Commonwealth.
Politics of Guyana
Legislative power rests in the unicameral Guyanese parliament, called
the National Assembly, with 53 members chosen on the basis of proportional
representation from national lists named by the political parties.
An additional 12 members are elected by regional councils at the same
time as the National Assembly.
Executive authority is exercised by the president, who appoints and
supervises the prime minister and other ministers. The president is
not directly elected; each party presenting a slate of candidates
for the assembly must designate in advance a leader who will become
president if that party receives the largest number of votes. Any
dissolution of the assembly and election of a new assembly can lead
to a change in the assembly majority and consequently a change in
the presidency. An ethnocultural divide between the two main ethnic
groups has persisted and has on occasion led to turbulent politics.
The highest judicial body is the Court of Appeal, headed by a chancellor
of the judiciary. The second level is the High Court, presided over
by a chief justice. The chancellor and the Chief Justice are appointed
by the president. The Audit Office of Guyana (AOG) is the country's
Supreme Audit Institution (SAI).
Guyana is a full and participating founder-member of the Caribbean
Community (CARICOM), the headquarters of which is located in Georgetown.
The CARICOM Single Market & Economy (CSME) will, by necessity,
bring Caribbean-wide legislation into force and a Carribean Court
of Justice (CCJ).
Geography of Guyana
Guyana can be divided into three regions: a narrow and fertile marshy
plain along the Atlantic coast where most of the population lives,
then a white sand belt more inland consisting of dense rainforests
and containing most of Guyana's mineral deposits, and finally the
larger interior highlands consisting mostly of mountains that gradually
rise to the Brazilian border. Guyana's main mountains are contained
here, including Mount Ayanganna (2042 m) and on Mount Roraima (2,835
m - highest mountain in Guyana) on the Brazil-Guyana-Venezuela tripoint,
part of the Pakaraima range. There are also many steep escarpments
and waterfalls, including the famous Kaieteur Falls. Between the Rupununi
River and the border with Brazil lies the Rupununi savannah, south
of which lie the Kanuku Mountains. There are many rivers in the country,
the main four being (west to east) the Essequibo, the Demerara, the
Berbice and the Corentyne along the border with Suriname. At the mouth
of the Essequibo are several large islands. The 145 km Shell Beach
along the north-west coast of Guyana is a major breeding area for
turtles and other wildlife.
The local climate is tropical and generally hot and humid, though
moderated by northeast trade winds along the coast. There are two
rainy seasons, the first from May to mid-August, the second from mid-November
to mid-January.
Economy of Guyana
The main economic activities in Guyana are agriculture (producing
rice and Demerara sugar), bauxite mining, gold mining, timber, shrimp
and minerals. The sugar industry, which accounts for 28% of all export
earnings, is largely run by Guysuco which employs more people than
any other industry. Many industries have a large foreign investment.
The mineral industry, for example, is heavily invested in by the American
company Reynolds Metals and the Canadian Alcan and the Korean/Malaysian
Barama Company has a large stake in the logging industry.
The Guyanese economy has exhibited moderate economic growth since
1999, based on an expansion in the agricultural and mining sectors,
a more favorable atmosphere for business initiatives, a more realistic
exchange rate, fairly low inflation, and the continued support of
international organizations. Chronic problems include a shortage of
skilled labor and a deficient infrastructure. The government is juggling
a sizable external debt against the urgent need for expanded public
investment. Low prices for key mining and agricultural commodities
combined with troubles in the bauxite and sugar industries threaten
the government's already tenuous fiscal position and dim prospects
for the future.
Major private sector organizations include the Private Sector Commission
(PSC) and the Georgetown Chamber of Commerce & Industry (GCCI);
see a list of companies in Guyana.
Demographics of Guyana
Guyana's population of 751,223 (Statistics Bureau, 2002) is diverse:
the three major groups are the Indians or Indo-Guyanese (around 50%)
who have remained predominantly rural, the Africans or Afro-Guyanese
(about 36%-43%) who constitute the majority urban population, and
the Amerindians (around 7%, some estimates say as low as 4%) who live
in the country's interior. They are divided into a number of different
groups, the main ones being the Akawaio, Arawak, Carib, Macushi, Makuxi,
Pemon and Wapishana. Chinese and Europeans (mostly Portuguese and
British) and those of mixed origins make up the remainder (roughly
2%). The overwhelming majority of the population - around 90% - live
along the coastal strip, where population density is more than 115
persons per km². There is much racial tension between the Indian
and African communities, and the two main parties are largely mono-racial.
Religion in Guyana runs mainly along racial lines. Christianity (50%)
predominantly Anglicanism, is the main religion practiced by Afro-Guyanese,
though some are Black Muslim or other Christian denominations. The
Indo-Guyanese community mainly follow Hinduism (35%), though there
is a sizable minority who practice Islam (10%). Guyana is the country
with the largest percentage of Bahá'ís (7%).
Emigration has been a large and persistent problem in Guyana, with
an estimated 500,000 Guyanese living abroad. Since independence, as
many as 10,000 Guyanese have left and settled permanently in the United
States alone per year and demand to emigrate remains very high. Canada,
Britain and English-speaking Caribbean islands are the other main
countries people choose to emigrate to. At the same time, the birth
rate has fallen sharply, and because of the emigration, can no longer
sustain the country's population level. Many in the government worry
that the country may become depopulated, but few concrete steps have
been taken to stem the outflow.
Guyana's culture is very similar to that of the English-speaking
Caribbean. It is so similar that Guyana is included and accepted as
a Caribbean Nation. Only its geographical location differentiates
it from the rest of the English speaking Caribbean countries. Guyana
shares similar interests with the islands in the West Indies, such
as food, festive events, music, sports, etc. Guyana plays international
cricket as a part of the West Indies cricket team, and the Guyana
team plays first class cricket against other nations of the Caribbean.
Sports in Guyana
he major sports in Guyana are cricket, Softball cricket (beach cricket)
and football. The minor sports in Guyana are netball, rounders, lawn
tennis, basketball, table tennis, boxing, and a few others.
Ecology and World Heritage Site status
Countries interested in the conservation and protection of natural
and cultural heritage sites of the world accede to the Convention
Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
that was adopted by UNESCO in 1972. Guyana is no exception, and signed
the treaty in 1977. In fact, Guyana was the first Caribbean State
Party to sign the treaty. Sometime in the latter half of the mid-1990s
Guyana seriously began the process of selecting sites for World Heritage
nomination and three sites were considered: Kaieteur National Park,
Shell Beach and Historic Georgetown. By 1997, work on Kaieteur National
Park was started and in 1998 work on Historic Georgetown was begun.
To date, however, Guyana has not made a successful nomination.
In 2000 Guyana submitted the Kaieteur National Park, including the
Kaieteur Falls, to UNESCO as its first World Heritage Site nomination.
The proposed area and surrounds have some of Guyana’s most diversified
life zones with one of the highest levels of endemic species found
anywhere in South America. The Kaieteur Falls is the most spectacular
feature of the park falling a distance of 226 m and exceeding the
height of Niagara Falls (USA/Canada) five times. Unfortunately, the
nomination of Kaieteur Park as a World Heritage Site was not successful,
primarily because the area was seen by the evaluators as being too
small, especially when compared with the Central Suriname Nature Reserve
that had just been nominated as a World Heritage Site (2000). The
dossier was thus returned to Guyana for revision.
Guyana continues in its bid for a World Heritage Site. Work continues,
after a period of hiatus, on the nomination dossier for Historic Georgetown
– a Tentative List indicating Historic Georgetown as being put
forward for nomination was submitted to UNESCO in December 2004. There
is now a small committee put together by the Guyana National Commission
for UNESCO to complete the nomination dossier and the management plan
for the site. Recently, in April 2005, two Dutch experts in Conservation
spent two weeks in Georgetown supervising Architecture staff and students
of the University of Guyana in a historic building survey of the selected
area. This is part of the data collection for the nomination dossier.
It is expected that the completed nomination document will be submitted
in 2006.
Meanwhile, as a result of the Kaieteur National Park being considered
too small, there is a proposal to prepare a nomination for a Cluster
Site that will include the Kaieteur National Park, the Iwokrama Rain
Forest and the Kanuku Mountains. The Iwokrama Forest, an area rich
in biological diversity, has been described by Major General (Rtd)
Joseph Singh as “a flagship project for conservation.”
The Kanuku Mountains area is in a pristine state, and is home to more
than 400 birds and animals. These three sites together, we feel, more
than adequately meet the requirements of exceptional natural beauty
and biological diversity, as well as the requirements of size and
integrity, for a successful nomination.
There is much work to be done for the successful nomination of these
sites to the World Heritage List. The State, the private sector and
the ordinary Guyanese each have a role to play in this process and
in the later protection of the sites. Inscription on the UNESCO World
Heritage will open Guyana to more serious tourists thereby assisting
in its economic development.
Guyana exhibits two of the WWF's Global 200 ecoregions most crucial
to the conservation of global biodiversity, Guianan moist forests
and Guyana Highlands moist forests and is home to several endemic
species including the tropical hardwood Greenheart (Chlorocardium
rodiei).
Military
Military branches: Guyana Defence Force (GDF; includes Ground Forces,
Coast Guard, and Air Corps), Guyana People's Militia (GPM), Guyana
National Service (GNS), Guyana Police Force
Military manpower - availability:
males age 15-49: 206,199 (2002 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service:
males age 15-49: 155,058 (2002 est.)
Military expenditures - dollar figure: $7 million (FY94)
Military expenditures - percent of GDP: 1.7% (FY94)
Trivia
The 1856 British Guiana 1c magenta stamp is considered the rarest
in the world, with only one copy known to exist.
The 1959 film Green Mansions, starring Audrey Hepburn and Anthony
Perkins, was filmed in Guyana (then British Guiana).
Guyana is the only South American country where the death penalty
is still in use for serious crimes and where homosexuality remains
illegal.
On November 18, 1978, the Jonestown Massacre took place in the jungle
of Northwest Guyana; 912 members of the cult died in a mass suicide.
Wanderings in South America Charles Waterton
Zoo Quest to Guiana David Attenborough, 1956 (Lutterworth Press, London)
For books specifically about the Jonestown massacre, see Further Reading
on the Jonestown page
A
Abkhazia - Republic of Abkhazia (de
facto independent state inside Georgia)
Afghanistan - Islamic Republic of
Afghanistan
Akrotiri - Akrotiri Sovereign Base
Area (overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Åland - Åland Islands
(autonomous province of Finland recognized by international treaty)
Albania - Republic of Albania
Algeria - People's Democratic Republic
of Algeria
American Samoa - Territory
of American Samoa (unincorporated unorganized territory of the United States)
Andorra - Principality of Andorra (co-principality
with the President of the French Republic and the Bishop of Urgell, Spain as ex
officio heads of state)
Angola - Republic of Angola
Anguilla (overseas territory of the
United Kingdom)
Antigua and Barbuda (Commonwealth
Realm)
Argentina - Argentine Republic (federal
state, also named Argentine Nation for purposes of legislation)
Armenia - Republic of Armenia
Aruba (overseas country in the Kingdom
of the Netherlands)
Ascension Island (dependency
of Saint Helena, an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Australia - Commonwealth of Australia
(federal state, Commonwealth Realm)
Austria - Republic of Austria (federal
state)
Azerbaijan - Republic of Azerbaijan
(see also Nagorno-Karabakh)
B
Bahamas, The - Commonwealth of The Bahamas
(Commonwealth Realm)
Bahrain - Kingdom of Bahrain
Bangladesh - People's Republic of
Bangladesh
Barbados (Commonwealth Realm)
Belarus - Republic of Belarus
Belgium - Kingdom of Belgium (federal
state)
Belize (Commonwealth Realm)
Benin - Republic of Benin
Bermuda (overseas territory of the United
Kingdom)
Bhutan - Kingdom of Bhutan
Bolivia - Republic of Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina (federal
state)
Botswana - Republic of Botswana
Brazil - Federative Republic of Brazil
(federal state)
Brunei - Negara Brunei Darussalam
Bulgaria - Republic of Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
See Myanmar for Burma
Burundi - Republic of Burundi
C
Cambodia - Kingdom of Cambodia
Cameroon - Republic of Cameroon
Canada (federal state, Commonwealth Realm,
officially also (but infrequently) referred to as Dominion of Canada)
Cape Verde - Republic of Cape Verde
Cayman Islands (overseas territory
of the United Kingdom)
Central African Republic (sometimes
also rendered as Central Africa)
Chad - Republic of Chad
Chile - Republic of Chile
China (PRC) - People's Republic of China
See Taiwan (ROC) for the Republic of China (see also One-China policy and dispute
over UN representation between PRC and ROC)
Christmas Island - Territory
of Christmas Island (overseas territory of Australia)
Cocos (Keeling) Islands
- Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands (overseas territory of Australia)
Colombia - Republic of Colombia
Comoros - Union of the Comoros (federal
state)
Congo (Brazzaville) - Republic
of the Congo
Congo (Kinshasa) - Democratic
Republic of the Congo (formerly and popularly known as Zaire)
Cook Islands (self-governing state
in free association with New Zealand)
Costa Rica - Republic of Costa
Rica
Côte d'Ivoire - Republic of
Côte d'Ivoire (formerly and popularly known as Ivory Coast)
Croatia - Republic of Croatia
Cuba - Republic of Cuba
Cyprus - Republic of Cyprus (see also
Northern Cyprus)
Czech Republic (sometimes also
rendered as Czechia)
D
Denmark - Kingdom of Denmark
Dhekelia - Dhekelia Sovereign Base
Area (overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Djibouti - Republic of Djibouti
Dominica - Commonwealth of Dominica
Dominican Republic (sometimes
also rendered as The Dominican)
E
See Timor -Leste for East Timor
Ecuador - Republic of Ecuador
Egypt - Arab Republic of Egypt
El Salvador - Republic of El
Salvador
Equatorial Guinea - Republic
of Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea - State of Eritrea
Estonia - Republic of Estonia
Ethiopia - Federal Democratic Republic
of Ethiopia (federal state)
F
Falkland Islands (overseas
territory of the United Kingdom, also claimed by, and a former possession of
Argentina named Islas Malvinas)
Faroe Islands (self-governing
overseas administrative division of Denmark)
Fiji - Republic of the Fiji Islands
Finland - Republic of Finland
France - French Republic
French Polynesia (overseas
country of France)
G
Gabon - Gabonese Republic
Gambia, The - Republic of The Gambia
Georgia (see also Abkhazia and
South Ossetia)
Germany - Federal Republic of Germany
(federal state)
Ghana - Republic of Ghana
Gibraltar (overseas territory of
the United Kingdom)
Greece - Hellenic Republic
Greenland (self-governing overseas
administrative division of Denmark)
Grenada (Commonwealth Realm)
Guam - Territory of Guam (unincorporated
organized territory of the United States)
Guatemala - Republic of Guatemala
Guernsey - Bailiwick of Guernsey
(British Crown dependency, including its self-governing dependencies Alderney,
Herm and Sark)
Guinea - Republic of Guinea
Guinea-Bissau - Republic of
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana - Co-operative Republic of Guyana
H
Haiti - Republic of Haiti
Honduras - Republic of Honduras
Hong Kong - Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China (diplomatically known
as Hong Kong, China)
Hungary - Republic of Hungary
I
Iceland - Republic of Iceland
India - Republic of India (federal state)
Indonesia - Republic of Indonesia
Iran - Islamic Republic of Iran
Iraq - Republic of Iraq
Ireland (also commonly referred to
as the Republic of Ireland as the official "description" of the state
in order to distinguish it from the island of Ireland as a whole)
Israel - State of Israel
Italy - Italian Republic
See Côte d'Ivoire for Ivory Coast
J
Jamaica (Commonwealth Realm)
Japan
Jersey - Bailiwick of Jersey (British
Crown dependency)
Jordan - Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
K
Kazakhstan - Republic of Kazakhstan
Kenya - Republic of Kenya
Kiribati - Republic of Kiribati
Korea (North) - Democratic People's
Republic of Korea (popularly known as North Korea)
Korea (South) - Republic of
Korea (popularly known as South Korea)
Kosovo - Autonomous Province of Kosovo
and Metohia (autonomous province of Serbia and Montenegro under UN interim civilian
administration)
Kuwait - State of Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan - Kyrgyz Republic (sometimes
also rendered as Kirghizia)
L
Laos - Lao People's Democratic Republic
Latvia - Republic of Latvia
Lebanon - Republic of Lebanon
Lesotho - Kingdom of Lesotho
Liberia - Republic of Liberia
Libya - Great Socialist People's
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Liechtenstein - Principality
of Liechtenstein
Lithuania - Republic of Lithuania
Luxembourg - Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
M
Macau - Macau Special Administrative
Region of the People's Republic of China (diplomatically known as Macau, China)
Macedonia - Republic of Macedonia
(referred to by UN and a number of countries and international organizations
as The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia)
Madagascar - Republic of Madagascar
Malawi - Republic of Malawi
Malaysia (federal state)
Maldives - Republic of Maldives
Mali - Republic of Mali
Malta - Republic of Malta
Mann, Isle of - Isle of Man (British
Crown dependency, also known as Mann)
Marshall Islands - Republic
of the Marshall Islands (US associated state)
Mauritania - Islamic Republic of
Mauritania
Mauritius - Republic of Mauritius
Mayotte (overseas collectivity of
France)
Mexico - United Mexican States (federal
state)
Micronesia - Federated States of
Micronesia (federal state, US associated state)
Moldova - Republic of Moldova (see
also Pridnestrovie)
Monaco - Principality of Monaco
Mongolia (sometimes also rendered
as Outer Mongolia (together with Tuva) in order to distinguish it from Inner
Mongolia of the People's Republic of China)
Montserrat (overseas territory
of the United Kingdom)
Morocco - Kingdom of Morocco (see
also Western Sahara)
Mozambique - Republic of Mozambique
Myanmar - Union of Myanmar (formerly
and popularly known as Burma)
N
Nagorno-Karabakh
- Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (de facto independent state inside Azerbaijan)
Namibia - Republic of Namibia
Nauru - Republic of Nauru
Nepal - Kingdom of Nepal
Netherlands, the - Kingdom of
the Netherlands (legally the Netherlands refers to the mainland European part
of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, with the latter consisting of the Netherlands
and two overseas countries, namely Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles)
Netherlands Antilles
(overseas country in the Kingdom of the Netherlands)
New Caledonia (sui generis
collectivity of France)
New Zealand (Commonwealth Realm)
Nicaragua - Republic of Nicaragua
Niger - Republic of Niger
Nigeria - Federal Republic of Nigeria
(federal state)
Niue (self-governing state in free association
with New Zealand)
Norfolk Island - Territory
of Norfolk Island (overseas territory of Australia)
Northern Cyprus - Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus (de facto independent state inside Cyprus, recognized
only by Turkey)
Northern Mariana Islands
- Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (unincorporated organized territory
(commonwealth) in political union with the United States)
Norway - Kingdom of Norway
O
Oman - Sultanate of Oman
P
Pakistan - Islamic Republic of Pakistan
Palau - Republic of Palau (US associated
state)
Palestine - State of Palestine (currently
recognized by over 90 countries and further supported by other countries according
the Palestinian National Authority a pivotal role in the process that may involve
their eventually recognizing the State as sovereign)
Panama - Republic of Panama
Papua New Guinea - Independent
State of Papua New Guinea (Commonwealth Realm)
Paraguay - Republic of Paraguay
Peru - Republic of Peru
Philippines, the - Republic of
the Philippines
Pitcairn Islands - Pitcairn,
Henderson, Ducie, and Oeno Islands (overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
See Transnistria for Pridnestrovie
Poland - Republic of Poland
Portuguese - Republic
Puerto Rico - Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico (unincorporated organized territory (commonwealth) associated with
the United States)
Q
Qatar - State of Qatar
R
Romania
Russia - Russian Federation (federal
state)
Rwanda - Republic of Rwanda
S
Saint Helena (overseas territory
of the United Kingdom)
Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis (federal state, Commonwealth Realm)
Saint Lucia (Commonwealth Realm)
Saint Pierre and Miquelon
(overseas collectivity of France)
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines (Commonwealth Realm)
Samoa - Independent State of Samoa
San Marino - Most Serene Republic
of San Marino
São Tomé
and Príncipe - Democratic Republic of São Tomé and
Príncipe
Saudi Arabia - Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia
Senegal - Republic of Senegal
Serbia and Montenegro
- State Union of Serbia and Montenegro (federal state, its province of Kosovo
is under UN interim civilian administration)
Seychelles - Republic of Seychelles
Sierra Leone - Republic of Sierra
Leone
Singapore - Republic of Singapore
Slovakia - Slovak Republic
Slovenia - Republic of Slovenia
Solomon Islands (Commonwealth
Realm)
Somalia (the whole country is presently
fragmented with its Transitional National Government in exile, see also Somaliland)
Somaliland - Republic of Somaliland
(de facto independent state inside Somalia)
South Africa - Republic of South
Africa
South Ossetia - Republic of
South Ossetia (de facto independent state inside Georgia)
Spain - Kingdom of Spain
Sri Lanka - Democratic Socialist
Republic of Sri Lanka
Sudan - Republic of the Sudan
Suriname - Republic of Suriname
Svalbard (overseas territory of Norway
recognized by international treaty)
Swaziland - Kingdom of Swaziland
Sweden - Kingdom of Sweden
Switzerland - Swiss Confederation
(federal state)
Syria - Syrian Arab Republic
T
Taiwan (ROC) - Republic of China (diplomatically
sometimes known as Chinese Taipei (or other names), regarded by UN as "Taiwan,
Province of China", the political status of the ROC and the legal status
of the Taiwan Island (and its outlying islands) are in dispute)
Tajikistan - Republic of Tajikistan
Tanzania - United Republic of Tanzania
(federal state)
Thailand - Kingdom of Thailand
Timor-Leste - Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (popularly known as East Timor)
Togo - Togolese Republic
Tokelau (overseas territory of New
Zealand)
Tonga - Kingdom of Tonga
Transnistria - Transnistrian
or Pridnestrovian Moldovan Republic (the Transnistrian government uses as translation
Pridnestrovie, de facto independent state inside Moldova)
Trinidad and Tobago -
Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
Tristan da Cunha (dependency
of Saint Helena, an overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Tunisia - Tunisian Republic
Turkey - Republic of Turkey
Turkmenistan
Turks and Caicos Islands
(overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Tuvalu (Commonwealth Realm)
U
Uganda - Republic of Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
(federal state)
United Kingdom - United Kingdom
of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Commonwealth Realm)
United States - United States
of America (federal state)
Uruguay - Oriental Republic of Uruguay
Uzbekistan - Republic of Uzbekistan
V
Vanuatu - Republic of Vanuatu
Vatican City - State of the Vatican
City (administered by a Pontifical Commission appointed by the Pope who is concurrently
the head of the Holy See and that of the Vatican City)
Venezuela - Bolivarian Republic
of Venezuela (federal state)
Vietnam - Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Virgin Islands (British) -
British Virgin Islands (overseas territory of the United Kingdom)
Virgin Islands
(U.S.) - United States Virgin Islands (unincorporated organized territory of
the United States, popularly known in its abbreviated terms as U.S. Virgin Islands)
W
Wallis and Futuna (overseas
collectivity of France)
Western Sahara - Saharawi Arab
Democratic Republic (currently recognized by over 40 countries, the SADR only
exercises effective control over the territory east of Moroccan Wall, whereas
large portion of the territory is occupied by and integrated in Morocco)
Y
Yemen - Republic of Yemen
Z
Zambia - Republic of Zambia
Zimbabwe - Republic of Zimbabwe
|