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| Cote d'Ivoire | Plants and Animal | Back to Top |
In 1987 the staple food crops made up about 38 % of the value of agricultural production. The principal food crops in Côte d'Ivoire were the féculents, or starches (yams, plantains, cassava, and taro), which made up 76 % of the value and 60 % of the bulk of staples output. Gross production per annum amounted to around 4.5 million tons. Gross production of cereals (paddy rice, maize, sorghum, and millet) amounted to about 1 million tons per year; cereals, which occupied a larger cultivated area than did the féculents, had a higher of value total protein. Food crop production increased by around 3.5 % per annum between 1965 and 1984, with cereals having a slightly higher rate of growth. At the same time, food crop productivity per rural family increased by about 1 % per year, well under the rate of population growth. Cereal imports dropped to 150,000 tons in 1985 after prices for imported foodstuffs had increased, good rains had ended the drought, and the government had inaugurated a food self-sufficiency campaign. In 1987 imported cereals amounted to about 14 % of the national diet, as compared with 20 % earlier in the decade.
In 1987 the farm animal area contributed about 6 % of agricultural output. About half of that total came from poultry and egg production, about one-quarter came from cattle, and the remainder came from sheep and goats. Although virtually all poultry consumed in Côte d'Ivoire was produced locally, domestic beef production met only about 40 % of demand. The remainder entered as live cattle from Mali and Burkina Faso or as slaughtered meat from Western Europe, Argentina, or southern Africa. In the 1980s, the government sought to strengthen farm animal production by providing education and training in modern animal husbandry and by introducing large-scale cattle fattening centers near Bouaké and Abidjan.
| Cote d'Ivoire | Communications | Back to Top |
Well developed by African standards but operating well below capacity
Domestic: open-wire lines and microwave radio relay; 90% digitalized
International: satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat (1 Atlantic Ocean and 1 Indian Ocean); 2 coaxial submarine cables
| Cote d'Ivoire | Culture | Back to Top |
Cultural variety is impressive in Côte d'Ivoire. Urban and agricultural workers, herders, traders, and fishermen; matrilineal and patrilineal organizations; villages and chiefdoms; and progressive and conservative political tendencies contribute to this national mosaic. Added to this indigenous mixture, French, Lebanese, and African immigrants and visitors live and work throughout the nation. This complex nation is changing, and attitudes toward change vary among and within these groups. During the 1980s, the pace of change was affected by the numerous oppositions that characterized Ivoirian society--valuable-poor, urban-rural, modern-orthodox, and south-north. Côte d'Ivoire was developing its own balance of these tensions, with a result far more complex than a simple combination of indigenous cultures and colonial legacies.
Religious systems have changed in ways that reflect other social trends. In this nation of "miraculous" economic development, as it is so often dubbed, with its clearly privileged elite, people have on the whole retained orthodox African religious beliefs. Usually combined with Christian or Muslim precepts, or both, local religions nonetheless permeate views regarding the nature of cause and effect. The syncretisms emerging from these strains of continuity and change are, like the nation itself, unique, contempt similarities with other African states.
Political systems, like religions, reflect elements of modern and indigenous values in their development, and in Côte d'Ivoire these determines were particularly noticeable in the practice of justifying authority in personal terms. The patrimonial style of President Félix Houphouët-Boigny indelibly marked political development through the early decades of freedom. He crafted, although not single-handedly, a nation that exemplified moderation in some respects, resisting political trends and social extremes. Social development was generally steady and gradual rather than abrupt or catastrophic. Efforts to improve educational opportunities were valuable in this changing social environment, both for individual advancement and for social control. The government placed a high priority on schools, adapting the system inherited from France to advance local interests--but still relying heavily on French assistance. In health care service delivery as well, Côte d'Ivoire made substantial improvements in the system it inherited from colonial times, raising material standards of living, at least for some. Like many benefits of development both before and after freedom, these advantages were most readily available to those who were already able to exploit the changing social system to their own advantage.
| Cote d'Ivoire | Defence | Back to Top |
Military branches: Army, Navy, Air Force, paramilitary Gendarmerie, Republican Guard includes Presidential Guard, Sapeur-Pompier -Military Fire Group
Military manpower - military age: 18 years of age
Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 3,851,432 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service: males age 15-49: 2,010,862 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - reaching military age annually: males: 188,411 (2001 est.)
| Cote dIvoire | International Disputes | Back to Top |
None
| Cote dIvoire | Economy | Back to Top |
The economy of Côte d’Ivoire is primarily agricultural, with 60 % of the total labor force employed in farming and forestry. the government is attempting to diversify the economy to avoid dependence on a small number of export crops. Annual budget figures show around $2.4 billion in revenues and $2.6 billion in expenditures. Côte d'Ivoire has a good financial reputation, which it maintained in the 1980s when the government agreed to reschedule its debt over a time from 1993 to 2002, including sums that had benefited from earlier agreements. Ivoirian policy is fundamentally liberal, and investments are welcomed through tax exemptions and legal protection against nationalization. Increased privatization became government policy in the mid-1980s, mainly owing to the fact that the government had participated in too many specialized undertakings in trying to diversify the economy. Previous plans have been revised with the aim of securing self-sufficiency in food and obtaining equipment in exchange for exports rather than by borrowing. In the long run, success will depend on avoiding luxuries and expanding the local market.
Cote d'Ivoire is among the world's largest producers and exporters of coffee, cocoa beans, and palm oil. accordingly, the economy is highly sensitive to fluctuations in international prices for these products and to weather conditions. contempt government attempts to diversify the economy, it is still largely dependent on agriculture and related activities, which engage roughly 68% of the population. After several years of lagging performance, the Ivorian economy began a comeback in 1994, due to the 50% devaluation of the CFA franc and improved prices for cocoa and coffee, growth in nonorthodox primary exports such as pineapples and rubber, limited trade and banking liberalization, offshore oil and gas discoveries, and generous external financing and debt rescheduling by multilateral lenders and France. Moreover, government attachment to donor-mandated reforms led to a jump in growth to 6% annually in 1996-99. Growth was negative in 2000 because of the difficulty of meeting the conditions of international donors, continued low prices of key exports, and post-coup instability. In 2001-02, a moderate rebound in the cocoa market could boost growth back above 3%; political instability could impede growth again.
| Cote dIvoire | Education | Back to Top |
The Ivoirian education system is an adaptation of the French system, which was introduced at the end of the 19th century to train clerks and interpreters to help administer the colony. The education system was gradually expanded to train teachers, farmers, and artisans, but by 1940, only 200 Africans had been admitted to primary schools. In 1945 the nation had only four university graduates, contempt an official policy, described as "assimilationist," aimed at creating a political elite that would identify with France and French culture. The education system was made into a department of the French national system under the jurisdiction of the minister for education in Paris in the last decade of colonial rule, but by limiting access to a tiny minority of Africans, it generally failed to supplant Ivoirian values with French ones. Education assumed much greater importance as freedom approached, leading some village elders to establish and support village schools. Primary-school enrollments increased eightfold during the 1950s; secondary-school enrollments increased ninefold. Schools began to prepare students for the university, and scholarship programs were implemented to send a select few to Europe or to Dakar, Senegal, for further study.
During the 1980s, education was an valuable national priority; it received nearly one-third of the national budget in 1985. Responsibility for educational development lay with the Ministry of National Education and Scientific Research, which also prescribed curricula, textbooks, and teaching methods; prepared qualifying examinations; and licensed teachers,administrators and private educational institutions. As a result of its emphasis on education, Côte d'Ivoire boasted a 43 % literacy rate overall, 53 % for men and 31 % for women in 1988. About 15 % of the total population was listed in some type of educational institution, but enrollments were still much higher in urban than rural areas.
Education in Côte d’Ivoire is free, and primary education is compulsory. A large television education program was begun in the early 1970s. In 1996 only 71 % of primary-school aged children and 25 % of secondary-school aged children were listed in school. The National University of Côte d’Ivoire (1958), in Abidjan, has a yearly attendance of about 21,000. A substantial number of advanced Côte d’Ivoire students study abroad. An around 66.4 % of the adult population is literate.
| Cote dIvoire | Government | Back to Top |
Government: Constitution of 1960 creates republic with strong, centralized presidential government, independent judiciary, and national legislature. President and 175-member National Assembly (Assemblé Nationale) elected by universal vote for five-year terms. In the late 1980s, all candidates had to belong to Democratic Party of Côte d'Ivoire (Parti Démocratique de Côte d'Ivoire--PDCI), then the nation's only legal party.
Administrative Divisions: Forty-nine prefectures separated into subprefectures; thirty-seven municipalities enjoyed autonomous status.
Judicial System: Laws based on French and, to lesser extent, customary law. Upper-level courts included Supreme Court, High Court of Justice, and State Security Court; lower courts included courts of appeal, courts of first instance, courts of assize, and justice of peace courts.
Politics: As of late 1988, Félix Houphouët-Boigny had served as president since freedom. He had not named a successor, encouraging rivalry between National Assembly president Henri Konan Bedié and Economic and Social Council president Philippe Yacé. Economic austerity, calls for multiparty system, and increasing crime were potential threats to stability.
Foreign Affairs: Leading member of Council of the Entente and West African Economic Community; pragmatic foreign policy; staunch ally of France and other Western nations on which Côte d'Ivoire relied for development aid. Supported United States agenda on South Africa and Chad.
| Cote d'Ivoire | History | Back to Top |
Since the 1950s, CÔTE D'IVOIRE has been one of the few sub-Saharan African countries to enjoy political stability and a comparatively sound economy. Much of the credit for Côte d'Ivoire's success goes to Félix Houphouët-Boigny, the nation's most prominent politician since 1944, who methodically shaped personal and institutional controls and carefully cultivated and maintained close ties with Western industrialized countries.
The most remarkable features of modern Ivoirian history have been the development of the one-party state, which Houphouët-Boigny accomplished to assure his own autocratic rule, and economic growth. When Côte d'Ivoire gained freedom in 1960 under the leadership of Houphouët-Boigny, the new president immediately assumed strong powers as head of state, head of government, and leader of the ruling Democratic Party of Côte d'Ivoire. Houphouët-Boigny's political strength derived from the nation's economic prosperity. Until the late 1970s, Côte d'Ivoire experienced enormous economic growth, based largely on agricultural exports. The benefits of economic prosperity were not equally distributed, however. Benefiting most was a bourgeoisie made up of wealthy politicians, who were often also business people and owners of prosperous coffee and cocoa plantations.
| Cote d'Ivoire | Introduction | Back to Top |
Côte d'Ivoire republic in western Africa, bordered on the north by Mali and Burkina Faso, on the east by Ghana, on the south by the Gulf of Guinea, and on the west by Liberia and Guinea. A former French colony, Côte d'Ivoire became independent on August 7, 1960. The nation was initially officially known as either Côte d'Ivoire or Ivory Coast; from January 1, 1986, Côte d'Ivoire became the sole official name. The nation has an area of 322,464 sq km. The capital of Côte d'Ivoire is Yamoussoukro.
Official Name -Republic of Cote d'Ivoire formerly the Ivory Coast| Cote d'Ivoire | Land | Back to Top |
N/A
| Cote d'Ivoire | Languages | Back to Top |
An around 35 % of Côte d’Ivoire’s people follow orthodox religions; 39 % are Muslim, and 26 % are Christian, mainly Roman Catholic. French is the official national language; numerous African languages are also spoken.
| Cote d'Ivoire | Life | Back to Top |
Houphouët-Boigny's political style and longevity shaped Ivoirian elites into a wealthy, male, educated social stratum. By the late 1980s, women were beginning to emerge within this group, as education and acculturation enabled them to challenge the accomplished order. Official attitudes toward the status of women were pragmatic, like most official attitudes in Côte d'Ivoire. Beliefs about the role of women in society were partly the result of ethnic conditioning, and the cultural bias against equality between the sexes was embodied in customary law, where ethnic variety and cultural conservatism slowed the pace of modernization of regulations regarding women.
Role expectations for women changed, altered by colonial legislation, which liberated captives throughout francophone Africa in 1903, and then by the Mandel Decree of 1939, which fixed the minimum age of marriage at fourteen and made mutual consent a formal necessity for marriage. The Jacquinot Decree of 1951 invoked the power of the state to protect women from claims to their services--by their own or their husband's family--after marriage. Moreover, it enabled women to obtain a divorce more easily and invalidated in-laws' claims to any bride-price that had been paid to a woman's family to legitimize the marriage. This decree also recognized monogamy as the only legal form of marriage and allowed couples to marry without parental consent. These changes altered popular perceptions of marriage and accomplished the colonial government as the authority on most aspects of the status of women.
In 1963 women reacted to the extent and direction of government control by forming the Association of Ivoirian Women (Association des Femmes Ivoiriennes--AFI). They also persuaded the president to establish the Ministry of Women's Affairs in 1976 and to appoint AFI leader Jeanne Gervais as minister. Gervais's goals were to obtain better educational and employment opportunities for women and to establish judicial equality for women. Legislation was enacted in 1983 to allow a woman to control some of her property after marriage and to appeal to the courts for redress of a husband's actions. The status of women, in practice and in the law, was still well below that of men through most of the 1980s, but educational opportunities for women were improving at all levels. In 1987 about one-sixth of the students at the National University of Côted d'Ivoire were women, and the number of women in the salaried work force had also increased. Women made up almost one-fourth of the civil service and held positions previously closed to them, in medicine, law, business, and university teaching.
| Cote d'Ivoire | organization | Back to Top |
ACP, AfDB, CCC, ECA, ECOWAS, Entente, FAO, FZ, G-24, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICFTU, ICRM, IDA, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, IMO, Intelsat, Interpol, IOC, IOM, ISO (correspondent), ITU, NAM, OAU, OIC (observer), OPCW, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, UPU, WADB, WADB (regional), WAEMU, WCL, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO.
| Cote d'Ivoire | People | Back to Top |
Côte d'Ivoire's first national census in 1975 counted 6.7 million inhabitants, allowing 1987 estimates of 10.6 million. The 1987 annual growth rate was 4.1 %. Regional variations were marked, with annual growth of only 1 % in the far north, but throughout the nation, population growth rates, which included high net immigration rates, were increasing. In the late 1980s, population projections for the year 2000 exceeded 20 million people.
Nation-wide, life expectancy rose from thirty-nine to fiftyone years between 1960 and 1988, and during the same time, the average annual birth rate also increased steadily to 45.9 per 1,000 population. Fertility rates were about average for West Africa at 6.6 births per adult female. Fertility rates were lowest in Abidjan and highest in rural areas, where infant mortality also remained comparatively high. Mortality rates overall declined sharply after 1960, when onethird of all infants died before the age of five. Infant mortality in the first year of life declined to 110 deaths per 1,000 births in the late 1980s. The crude death rate was just over 14 per 1,000 population.
There are more than 60 tribes, traditionally independent from each other, though larger groups among them may be recognized on the basis of cultural unity. Each one of these groups has tribal affiliations with larger groups living outside the borders of the republic. Thus the Baule, as well as other peoples living east of the Bandama River, are affiliated with the Akan group of Ghana. The lagoon fishermen farther south also have tribal brothers belonging to the same Akan group. The forest people west of the Bandama belong to the same group as the Kru boatmen of Liberia. In the interior, the Kru group is subseparated into tribes tiny in number but scattered over large areas of the forest and kept together by secret societies. The population of Côte d’Ivoire is various, comprising more than 60 ethnic groups. The principal groups include the Akan-speaking peoples of the southeast, the Kru of the southwest, the Voltaic groups of the northeast, and the Mandinka known as Mandingo or Malinke and southern Mande peoples found in the northwest. A remarkable Lebanese community also exists.
| Cote d'Ivoire | Politics | Back to Top |
Democratic Party of Cote d'Ivoire-African Democratic Rally or PDCI-RDA [Aime Henri Konan BEDIE]; Ivorian Popular Front or FPI [Laurent GBAGBO]; Ivorian Worker's Party or PIT [Francis WODIE]; Rally of the Republicans or RDR [Henriette DAGRI-DIABATE]; Union for Democracy and Peace [Gen. Robert GUEI]; over 20 smaller parties
| Cote d'Ivoire | Provinces | Back to Top |
58 departments; Abengourou, Abidjan, Aboisso, Adiake, Adzope, Agboville, Agnibilekrou, Alepe, Bocanda, Bangolo, Beoumi, Biankouma, Bondoukou, Bongouanou, Bouafle, Bouake, Bouna, Boundiali, Dabakala, Dabou, Daloa, Danane, Daoukro, Dimbokro, Divo, Duekoue, Ferkessedougou, Gagnoa, Grand-Bassam, Grand-Lahou, Guiglo, Issia, Jacqueville, Katiola, Korhogo, Lakota, Man, Mankono, Mbahiakro, Odienne, Oume, Sakassou, San-Pedro, Sassandra, Seguela, Sinfra, Soubre, Tabou, Tanda, Tiebissou, Tingrela, Tiassale, Touba, Toulepleu, Toumodi, Vavoua, Yamoussoukro, Zuenoula . Cote d'Ivoire may have a new administrative structure consisting of 58 departments; the following additional departments have been reported but not yet confirmed by the US Board on Geographic Names, Adiake', Ale'pe', Dabon, Grand Bassam, Jacqueville, Tiebissou, Toulepleu, Bocanda.
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| Cote dIvoire | Time | Back to Top |
| Cote d'Ivoire | Currency and General Information | Back to Top |
| Africaine Francs BCEAO | United States Dollars |
| 1.00 XOF | 0.00132837 USD |
| 752.801 XOF | 1 USD |
| Countries Currency Unit | USD/Unit | Units/USD | |
| DZD | Algeria Dinars | 0.0129554 | 77.1877 |
| USD | United States Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| ARS | Argentina Pesos | 0.341293 | 2.93004 |
| AUD | Australia Dollars | 0.533413 | 1.87472 |
| ATS | Austria Schillings ** | 0.0632609 | 15.8076 |
| BSD | Bahamas Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BBD | Barbados Dollars | 0.502513 | 1.99000 |
| BEF | Belgium Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| BMD | Bermuda Dollars | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| BRL | Brazil Reals | 0.430318 | 2.32386 |
| GBP | United Kingdom Pounds | 1.42399 | 0.702251 |
| BGL | Bulgaria Leva | 0.447293 | 2.23567 |
| CAD | Canada Dollars | 0.627606 | 1.59336 |
| CLP | Chile Pesos | 0.00152392 | 656.202 |
| CNY | China Yuan Renminbi | 0.120813 | 8.27726 |
| CYP | Cyprus Pounds | 1.49883 | 0.667186 |
| CZK | Czech Republic Koruny | 0.0281883 | 35.4758 |
| DKK | Denmark Kroner | 0.117155 | 8.53568 |
| XCD | East Caribbean Dollars | 0.370370 | 2.70000 |
| EGP | Egypt Pounds | 0.217271 | 4.60255 |
| EUR | Euro | 0.870489 | 1.14878 |
| FJD | Fiji Dollars | 0.447227 | 2.23600 |
| FIM | Finland Markkaa ** | 0.146406 | 6.83034 |
| FRF | France Francs ** | 0.132705 | 7.53550 |
| DEM | Germany Deutsche Marks ** | 0.445074 | 2.24682 |
| XAU | Gold Ounces | 301.977 | 0.00331151 |
| GRD | Greece Drachmae ** | 0.00255463 | 391.447 |
| HKD | Hong Kong Dollars | 0.128215 | 7.79939 |
| HUF | Hungary Forint | 0.00358416 | 279.006 |
| ISK | Iceland Kronur | 0.00999868 | 100.013 |
| INR | India Rupees | 0.0205205 | 48.7319 |
| IDR | Indonesia Rupiahs | 0.000102055 | 9,798.61 |
| IEP | Ireland Pounds ** | 1.10529 | 0.904738 |
| ILS | Israel New Shekels | 0.212386 | 4.70841 |
| ITL | Italy Lire ** | 0.000449570 | 2,224.35 |
| JMD | Jamaica Dollars | 0.0210041 | 47.6099 |
| JPY | Japan Yen | 0.00754183 | 132.594 |
| JOD | Jordan Dinars | 1.41057 | 0.708931 |
| LBP | Lebanon Pounds | 0.000660937 | 1,513.00 |
| LUF | Luxembourg Francs ** | 0.0215788 | 46.3417 |
| MYR | Malaysia Ringgits | 0.263330 | 3.79751 |
| MXN | Mexico Pesos | 0.111007 | 9.00848 |
| NZD | New Zealand Dollars | 0.440474 | 2.27028 |
| NOK | Norway Kroner | 0.113022 | 8.84780 |
| NLG | Netherlands Guilders ** | 0.395011 | 2.53158 |
| PKR | Pakistan Rupees | 0.0166945 | 59.9000 |
| PHP | Philippines Pesos | 0.0196386 | 50.9202 |
| XPT | Platinum Ounces | 510.962 | 0.00195709 |
| PLN | Poland Zlotych | 0.243488 | 4.10699 |
| PTE | Portugal Escudos ** | 0.00434198 | 230.310 |
| ROL | Romania Lei | 0.0000303433 | 32,956.21 |
| RUR | Russia Rubles | 0.0321342 | 31.1195 |
| SAR | Saudi Arabia Riyals | 0.266668 | 3.74998 |
| XAG | Silver Ounces | 4.65692 | 0.214734 |
| SGD | Singapore Dollars | 0.542540 | 1.84318 |
| SKK | Slovakia Koruny | 0.0208441 | 47.9751 |
| ZAR | South Africa Rand | 0.0883340 | 11.3207 |
| KRW | South Korea Won | 0.000759354 | 1,316.91 |
| ESP | Spain Pesetas ** | 0.00523174 | 191.141 |
| XDR | IMF Special Drawing Rights | 1.24862 | 0.800882 |
| SDD | Sudan Dinars | 0.00384615 | 260.000 |
| SEK | Sweden Kronor | 0.0964189 | 10.3714 |
| CHF | Switzerland Francs | 0.593789 | 1.68410 |
| TWD | Taiwan New Dollars | 0.0286531 | 34.9002 |
| THB | Thailand Baht | 0.0230087 | 43.4619 |
| TTD | Trinidad and Tobago Dollars | 0.163399 | 6.12000 |
| TRL | Turkey Liras | 0.000000763622 | 1,309,549.07 |
| VEB | Venezuela Bolivares | 0.00108696 | 920.000 |
| ZMK | Zambia Kwacha | 0.000239866 | 4,169.00 |
| Cotedivoire : Geographic coordinates | 8 00 N, 5 00 W |
| Cotedivoire : Population growth rate | 2.51% |
| Cotedivoire : Birth rate | 40.38 births/1,000 population |
| Cotedivoire : Death rate | 16.65 deaths/1,000 population |
| Cotedivoire : People living with HIV/AIDS | 760,000 |
| Cotedivoire : Independence | 7 August 1960 |
| Cotedivoire : National holiday | Independence Day, 7 August |
| Cotedivoire : Constitution | 3 November 1960 |
| Cotedivoire : GDP | purchasing power parity - $26.2 billion |
| Cotedivoire : GDP - per capita | purchasing power parity - $1,600 |
| Cotedivoire : Electricity - consumption | 3.183 billion kWh |
| Cotedivoire : Exports | $3.8 billion cocoa, coffee, tropical woods, petroleum, cotton, bananas |
| Cotedivoire : Imports | $2.5 billion food, consumer goods; capital goods, fuel, transport equipment |
| Cotedivoire : Telephones | 219,283 |
| Cotedivoire : Mobile cellular | 322,500 |
| Cotedivoire : Radio broadcast stations | AM 2, FM 8, shortwave 3 |
| Cotedivoire : Radios | 2.26 million |
| Cotedivoire : Television broadcast stations | 14 |
| Cotedivoire : Televisions | 900,000 |
| Cotedivoire : Internet country code | .ci |
| Cotedivoire : Internet Service Providers (ISPs) | 5 |
| Cotedivoire : Internet users | 20,000 |
| Cotedivoire : Railways | 660 km |
| Cotedivoire : Highways | 50,400 km |
| Cotedivoire : Waterways | 980 km |
| Cotedivoire : Pipelines | N/A |
| Cotedivoire : Ports and harbors | Abidjan, Aboisso, Dabou, San-Pedro |
| Cotedivoire : Merchant marine | 1 ship |
| Cotedivoire : Airports | 36 |
| Cotedivoire : Heliports | N/A |
| Cotedivoire : Military branches | Army, Navy, Air Force, paramilitary Gendarmerie, Republican Guard |
| Cotedivoire : Military expenditures | $94 million |