East African Federation

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East African Federation
  • Jumuiya ya Afrika Mashariki  (Swahili)
Nine horizontal strips coloured (from top to bottom): blue, white, black, green, yellow, green, red, white, then blue. The logo of the EAC is placed in the centre.
Flag Logo
Motto: "One People One Destiny"
Anthem: EAC Anthem
An orthographic projection of the world, highlighting the proposed East African Federation's territory (green).
An orthographic projection of the world, highlighting the proposed East African Federation's territory (green).
Capital Arusha
Largest city Dar es Salaam
Official languages English
Lingua Franca Swahili
Type Proposed Federation
States
Legislature EALA
Establishment
 •  East African Community 7 July 2000 
 •  East African Federation (established)  
Area
 •  Total 2,440,409 km2 (10th)
942,247 sq mi
 •  Water (%) 5.6
Population
 •  2015 estimate 169,519,847[1] (9th)
 •  Density 69.5/km2
180/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2015 estimate
 •  Total US$ 411.813 billion[2] (45th)
 •  Per capita US$ 2,429
GDP (nominal) 2015 estimate
 •  Total US$ 158.568 billion (58th)
 •  Per capita US$ 935
Currency East African shilling
Time zone CAT / EAT (UTC+2 / +3)
Website
www.eac.int

The East African Federation (Swahili: Shirikisho la Afrika Mashariki) is a proposed political union of the six sovereign states of the East African Community – Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda – as a single federated sovereign state.[3] As of 2014, the members have expressed support for the union, but negotiations continue concerning issues such as the extent of members' sovereignty and timing of implementation.[4]

Features

At 2,440,409 square kilometres (942,247 sq mi), the East African Federation would be the largest nation in Africa and 10th largest in the world. With a population of 169,519,847,[when?] it would also be the second most populous nation in Africa (after Nigeria) and 9th in the world.[1] Its population would be greater than that of Russia, Japan, and Mexico, and half that of the United States.[1] a The population density would be 69.5 people/km².[citation needed]

Swahili would be the lingua franca and the official languages would be English and French. The proposed capital is the Tanzanian city of Arusha, which is close to the Kenyan border. Arusha is the current headquarters of the East African Community.[3]

The union's proposed currency would be the East African shilling, already slated to become the common currency of the six countries in 2018 or later. The GDP (PPP) by (CIA World Factbook) estimate would be US$ 411.813 billion and be the fifth largest in Africa and 45th[2] largest in the world. The GDP per capita would be US$ 2,429.[citation needed]

Timeline

The federation of the current East African Community into a single state has been discussed, with early estimates of the founding of the federation in 2013.[5] In 2010, the EAC launched its own common market for goods, labour and capital within the region, with the goal of a common currency by 2013 and full political federation in 2015.[6]

It is unclear how the accession of South Sudan to the EAC may affect the timeline for federation or the scope thereof, but given the infrastructure problems that persist in the fledgling country since President Salva Kiir Mayardit cut off oil commerce with Sudan, the South has decided to invest in constructing pipelines that circumvent Sudan's, which they had been using hitherto. These new pipelines would extend through Ethiopia to the ports of Djibouti, as well as to the southeast to the coast of Kenya.[7]

On 14 October 2013, the leaders of Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and Burundi began a meeting in Kampala intending to draft a constitution for the East African Federation.[8]

As of December 2014, efforts for a full political federation have been pushed back to 2016 or later.[9]

South Sudan joined the EAC in March 2016, making it the 6th member and new entrant for the East African Federation.[10]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 CIA World Factbook - Country Comparison :: Population
  2. 2.0 2.1 [1]
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  10. "South Sudan admitted into EAC", Daily Nation, 2 March 2016, reprinted at nation.co.ke, accessed 4 March 2016