Ukraine
Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It borders Russia to the
northeast, Belarus to the north, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary to the
west, Romania and Moldova to the southwest and the Black Sea to the
south. The territory of present-day Ukraine was a key centre of East
Slavic culture in the Middle Ages, before being divided between a
variety of powers, notably Russia, Poland, Lithuania, Austria, Romania
and the Ottoman Empire. A brief period of independence following the
Russian Revolution of 1917 was ended by Ukraine's absorption into
the Soviet Union and the republic's present borders were only established
in 1954. It became independent once more following the fall of the
Soviet Union in 1991.
History of Ukraine
Human settlement in the territory of Ukraine has been documented into
distant prehistory. The late neolithic Trypillian culture flourished
from ca. 4500 BC to 3000 BC.
In antiquity, the southern and eastern parts of modern Ukraine were
populated by Iranian nomads called Scythians. The Scythian Kingdom
existed in Ukraine between 700 BC and 200 BC. In the third century,
the Goths arrived, calling their country Oium, and formed the Chernyakhov
culture before moving on and defeating the Roman empire. In the 7th
century Ukraine was the core of the state of the Bulgars (often referred
to as Great Bulgaria) who had their capital in the city of Phanagoria.
The majority of the Bulgar tribes migrated in several directions
at the end of the seventh century and the remains of their state was
swept by the Khazars, a Turkic semi-nomadic people from Central Asia
which later adopted Judaism. The Khazars founded the independent Khazar
kingdom in the southeastern part of today's Europe, near the Caspian
Sea and the Caucasus. In addition to western Kazakhstan, the Khazar
kingdom also included territory in what is now eastern Ukraine, Azerbaijan,
southern Russia, and Crimea.
During the tenth and eleventh centuries the territory of Ukraine
became the center of important state in Europe— Kievan Rus laying
the foundation for national identity of Ukrainians, as well as other
East Slavic nations, through subsequent centuries. Its capital was
Kiev, the capital of modern Ukraine, ruled by Askold and Dir in the
late 800s. According to the Primary Chronicle the Kievan Rus' elite
initially consisted of Varangians, or Vikings, from present-day Scandinavia.
The Varangians later became ssimilated into the local population of
Rus' and gave the Rus' its first powerful dynasty, the Rurik Dynasty.
Yaroslav I the wise
Vladimir and RognedaFor the etymology of the terms Rus and Russia,
see Etymology of Rus and derivatives. Kiev and Kievian Rus' were the
seat of the Grand Prince of the Rurik Dynasty. The ruler of Kiev was
also in effect the ruler of all the Rus' principalities. Kievan Rus'
was fragmentated after Mstislav the Great's death in 1125.
The term "Rus'" was originally applied to the inhabitants
of all Rus' principalities, today comprising Ukraine, Belarus, and
Russia. After the fall of Kiev, and until the eighteenth century,
the term "Rus" was self-applied by the members of all three
East Slavic nations, but the latinized version, "Ruthenian",
was used to designate inhabitants of Ukraine only; while the ancestors
of modern Russians were usually referred to as Muscovites or Muscovite
Russians by the name of their state that Poland called Muscovy.
Kievan Rus' became weakened by internal quarrels and was destroyed
by Mongol and Tatar invasions. On Ukrainian territory, the state of
Kievan Rus' was succeeded by the principalities of Halych and Volodymyr-Volynskyi,
which were merged into the state of Halych-Volynia. In the mid 14th
century it was subjugated by Kazimierz IV of Poland, and after the
1386 marriage of Lithuania's Grand Duke Jagiello to Poland's Queen
Jadwiga, was ruled by the Lithuanians as part of the Grand Duchy of
Lithuania. After the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was formed in
1569 Union of Lublin, significant part of Ukraine was moved under
the Polish administration, as it was transferred to the Polish Crown.
Under the cultural pressure of polonization much of the Ukrainian
(or rather Ruthenian) upper class converted to Catholicism as uch
transitions was beneficial for achieving the political influence within
the state, e.g. one of the Wisniowiecki's even became
king of Poland. At the same time the common people (peasants) retained
their old ways (including the Orthodox religion), which led to the
increasing social tensions, visible in such events as the 1596 Union
of Brest, created by Zygmunt III, who attempted to bring the Orthodox
population closer to Catholicism. This move failed to achieve its
goals. The new "intermediate" religion was unnecessary for
the upper class, much of whom turned directly towards Catholicism.
Thus, the Ukrainian commoners were eprived of their native protectors
and turned for the protection to the Cossacks who remained fiercely
Orthodox at all times.
In the mid of the 17th century, a Cossack state, the Zaporizhian
Sich, was established by Ukrainians and others fleeing Polish serfdom
which formally belonged to Poland. Located in central Ukraine, it
was an autonomous military state, initially allied with the Commonwealth.
However the suppression of the Ukrainian free farmers by the Polish
nobility, further imposition of serfdom and the suppression of the
Orthodox church pushed the allegiances of Cossacks away from Poland.
Their aspiration was to have a representation in Polish Seim, recognition
of Orthodox traditions, which was vehemantly denied by Polish kings.
They turned
oward Orthodox Russia, which was one reason for the later downfall
of the Polish-Lithuanian state.
In 1648 Bohdan Khmelnytsky organized the largest of the Cossacks
upprising, against the Commonwealth and the Polish king Jan II Kazimierz.
This uprising finally led to a partition of Ukraine between Poland
and Russia. Left-Bank Ukraine was eventually integrated into Russia
as the Cossack Hetmanate, as a consequence of the Treaty of Pereyaslav
in 1667. After the partitions of Poland by Prussia, Austria, and Russia
at the end of the eighteenth century, Western Ukraine (Galicia) was
taken over by Austria, while the rest of Ukraine was progressively
incorporated into the Russian Empire. The treaty of Pereyaslav was
abolished and Ukrainians never received the freedoms they were hoping
for from Tsarist Russia. Ukrainians played an important role in the
frequent wars between East European monarchies and the Ottoman Empire,
they rised to the highest offices of Russian state (e.g., Aleksey
Razumovsky, Alexander Bezborodko, Ivan Paskevich), and dominated the
Russian Orthodox Church (e.g., Stephen Yavorsky, Feofan Prokopovich,
Dimitry of Rostov).During the first world war austro-hungarian authorities
in territory of Galicia ubject to repression Ukrainians, sympathizing
Russia. Over twenty thousand supporters of Russia are arrested and
placed in the Austrian concentration camp in Talerhof, Stiria, and
in fortress Terezien, Czechia.
Following the Russian Revolution in 1917, Ukraine was briefly independent
in two states, then united by cruel war, in 1920.
In the period when the independent Ukrainian government was headed
nationalist leader Simon Petlura (1919), there were numerous Jewish
pogroms.
By 1922 Ukraine was split between Poland and the Soviet Union. Also
in 1922, most of Central and Eastern Ukraine became a constituent
republic of the USSR as the Ukrainian SSR.
In 20s years the communist leaders realized a policy of Ukrainization,
introduction of the Ukrainian language and culture in Russian-speaking
Ukrainian cities.To satisfy the state's need for increased food supplies,
the Soviet industrialization program called for the collectivization
of agriculture, which had a profound effect on Ukraine, the nation's
breadbasket (see Collectivization in the USSR). In the late 1920s
and early 1930s the state compounded the peasants' lands and animals
into collective farms and state farms. Although the program was designed
to affect all peasants, the plan met particularly heavy resistance
from the wealthiest peasants, the kulaks, and a desperate struggle
of the peasantry against the authorities ensued. The idea of collective
farming was foreign to Ukrainian farmers where emphasis was always
made on individual achievements. Peasants slaughtered their cows and
pigs rather than turn them over to the collective farms, especially
in Ukraine, with the result that livestock resources remained below
the 1929 level for years afterward. The state in turn forcibly collectivized
reluctant peasants and deported kulaks and active rebels to Siberia.
Within the collective farms, the authorities in many instances exacted
such high levels of procurements that starvation was widespread. In
some places, famine was allowed to run its course; and millions of
peasants in Ukraine starved to death in a amine, called the Holodomor
in Ukrainian. An estimated 3-6 million people died in this horrible
manmade famine ([1]) similar to the Russian famine of 1921. The disaster
also has captured many regions of southern Russia; overall, Ukrainian
famine was a whole one third of total starvation victims in USSR at
the time.
During World War II, some elements of the Ukrainian nationalist underground
fought both Nazi and Soviet forces, while others collaborated with
the Nazis. In 1941 the German invaders and their Axis allies initially
advanced against desperate but unsuccessful efforts of the Red Army.
In the encirclement battle of Kiev, the city was acclaimed by the
Soviets as a "Hero City", for the fierce resistance of the
Red Army and of the local population. More than 660,000 Soviet troops
were taken captive.Initially, the Germans were received as "liberators"
by many werstern Ukrainians. However, German rule in the occupied
territories eventually aided the Soviet cause. Nazi administrators
of conquered Soviet territories made little attempt to exploit the
opulation of western Unkrainian territories' dissatisfaction with
Soviet political and economic policies. Instead, the Nazis
preserved the collective-farm system, systematically carried out
genocidal policies against Jews, and deported others (mainly Ukrainians)
to work in Germany. Under these circumstances, the great majority
of the Soviet people fought and worked on their country's behalf,
thus ensuring the regime's survival. Total civilian losses during
the war and German occupation in Ukraine are estimated between five
and eight million, including over half a million Jews shot and killed
by the Einsatzgruppen, often with the help of Ukrainian collaborators.
Of the estimated eleven million Soviet troops who fell in battle against
the Nazis, about a quarter (2.7 million) were ethnic Ukrainians. Ukraine
is distinguished as one of the first nations to fight the Axis powers
in Carpatho-Ukraine, and one that saw some of the greatest bloodshed
during the war.After the Second World War, the borders of then-Soviet
Ukraine were extended to the West (as stipulated in the Molotov-Ribbentrop
Pact, see also Curzon line), uniting most Ukrainians under one political
state. The expellation of the Poles began in 1942-1943 with the massacres
of Wolynia, where more than 40.000 people where killed by Ukrainian
Insurgent Army. Over one llion Poles were expelled from Ukraine. In
1954, Crimea was transferred from the RSFSR to Ukraine. This decision
of Nikita Khrushchev, intended to commemorate the 300th anniversary
of the Treaty of Pereyaslav, seen in Soviet historiography as the
'union of two fraternal peoples', led to tensions between Russia and
Ukraine after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Independence was achieved in 1991 with the collapse of the Soviet
Union, and Ukraine was a founding member of the Commonwealth of Independent
States.
Geography of Ukraine
Map of UkraineThe Ukrainian landscape consists mostly of fertile plains,
or steppes, and plateaus, crossed by rivers such as the Dnieper, Seversky
Donets, Dniester and the Southern Buh as they flow south into the
Black Sea and the smaller Sea of Azov. To the southwest the delta
of the Danube forms the border with Romania. The country's only mountains
are the Carpathian Mountains in the west, of which the highest is
the Hora Hoverla at 2,061 m, and those in the Crimean peninsula, in
the extreme south along the coast.
Ukraine has a mostly temperate continental climate, though a more
mediterranean climate is found on the southern Crimean coast. Precipitation
is disproportionately distributed; it is highest in the west and north
and lesser in the east and southeast. Winters vary from cool along
the Black Sea to cold farther inland. Summers are warm across the
greater part of the country, but generally hot in the south.
Economy
20 Hryvnia
10 Hryvnia
Donetsk industry Economy of Ukraine
Formerly an important agricultural and industrial region of the Soviet
Union, Ukraine now depends on Russia for most energy supplies, especially
natural gas, although lately it has been trying to diversify its sources.
The lack of significant structural reform has made the Ukrainian economy
vulnerable to external shocks. After 1991 the government liberalised
most prices and erected a legal framework for privatisation, but widespread
resistance to reform within the government soon stalled reform efforts
and led to some backtracking. Output by 1999 had fallen to less than
40% of the 1991 level. Loose monetary policies pushed inflation to
hyperinflationary levels in late 1993.
The current government has pledged to reduce the number of government
agencies, streamline the regulatory process, create a legal environment
to encourage entrepreneurs, and enact a comprehensive tax overhaul.
Reforms in the more politically sensitive areas of structural reform
and land privatisation are still lagging. Outside institutions—particularly
the IMF—have encouraged Ukraine to quicken the pace and scope
of reforms and have threatened to withdraw financial support.
The GDP in 2000 showed strong export-based growth of 6%—the
first growth since independence—and industrial production grew
12.9%. The economy continued to expand in 2001, as real GDP rose 9%
and industrial output grew by over 14%. Growth was undergirded by
strong domestic demand and growing consumer and investor confidence.
Rapid economic growth in 2002 - 2004 is largely attributed to a surge
in steel exports to China.
Demographics
Main square of Kiev
Shopping in Odessa. Demographics of Ukraine
Ethnic Ukrainians make up 77.8% of the population. The minorities
include significant groups of ethnic Russians (17.3%), Belarusians
(0.6%), Moldavians (0.5%), Crimean Tatars (0.5%), Bulgarians (0.4%),
Hungarians (0.3%), Romanians (0.3%), Poles (0.3%), Jews (0.2%), Armenians
(0.2%), Greeks (0.2%) and Tatars (0.2%) [2].
The industrial regions in the east and south-east are the most heavily
populated, and about 67.2% of the population lives in urban areas.
Ukrainian is the only official state language. Russian, which was
the official language in the Soviet Union, is still used by many people,
especially in eastern Ukraine. Ukrainian is considered to be a native
language by 67.5% of the population and Russian by 29.6% (according
to the 2001 census). It is sometimes difficult to determine the extent
of the two language, since many people use a mixed language (Surzhyk)
containing elements of both, while thinking they speak Russian or
Ukrainian. Standard literary Ukrainian is mainly spoken in western
and central Ukraine. In western Ukraine, Ukrainian is also the dominant
language in cities (e.g. Lviv). In central Ukraine, Ukrainian and
Russian are both equally used in cities (including Kiev), while Ukrainian
is the dominant language in rural communities. In eastern Ukraine
mainly Russian and Surzhyk are used. In the Autonomous Republic of
Crimea practically all of the population speaks Russian and Ukrainain
is virtually unused. Both languages are official within the autonomous
republic.
The share of students receiving their education in Russian has significantly
declined from 41% in 1995 to 24% in 2004, in favour of Ukrainian-language
education. Still, many urban Ukrainian schools are de facto Russian-speaking,
especially in the east and south. Russian continues to be the language
of international communication for many Ukrainians and is generally
understood throughout the country.
Religion
South facade of Mary's Nativity Church, executed in the Ukrainian
Baroque style. History of Christianity in Ukraine
Muslims in Ukraine
The dominant religion in Ukraine is Eastern Orthodox Christianity,
which is currently split between three Church bodies. The distant
second is the Eastern Rite Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, which
practices similar Liturgical rite to Eastern Orthodoxy, but is in
communion with the Catholic see and recognizes the primacy of the
Roman Pope as head of the Church. There are also smaller Roman Catholic,
Protestant, Jewish and Muslim communities.
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
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