Mohéli
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Ile Autonome de Mohéli[citation needed] Mwali Autonomous Island of Mohéli[citation needed]
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Capital (and largest city) |
Fomboni | |||
Official languages | Comorian (Shimwali dialect), Arabic, French | |||
Government | Autonomous Island | |||
- | President | Mohamed Ali Said | ||
Area | ||||
- | Total | 290 km² 112 sq mi |
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- | Water (%) | negligible | ||
Population | ||||
- | 2006 estimate | 38,000 | ||
- | 2003 census | 35,400 | ||
Currency | Comorian franc (KMF ) |
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Time zone | EAT (UTC+3) | |||
- | Summer (DST) | not observed (UTC+3) | ||
Internet TLD | .km | |||
Calling code | +269 |
Mohéli, also known as Mwali, is one of the three islands which make up the nation of Comoros. Mohéli is located in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Africa. It is by far the smallest of the Comoros islands. Its population, as of 2006, is about 38,000. Its capital city is Fomboni. Its main ethnic group, as on the other Comoros islands Grande Comore and Anjouan as well as the French territory Mayotte, is the Comorian ethnic group, a synthesis of Bantu, Arab, Malay and Malagasy culture, and the main religion is Sunni Islam.
[edit] History
Until 1830 Mohéli was part of the Ndzuwenie Sultanate which also controlled Anjouan, a neighbouring island. In 1830 migrants from Madagascar led by Ramanetaka, who later changed his name to Abderemane, took over the island and established the sultanate of Mwali. In 1886 France made the island a protectorate. Until 1889 Mwali had its own French resident, but the island was then subjugated to the residency of Anjouan. The sultanate was crushed in 1909 when the French annexed the island.
In 1975, Mohéli agreed to join the Comoros nation, along with Grande Comore and Anjouan. Political, economic and social turmoil affected Mohéli and the Comoros in general. On 11 August 1997, Mohéli seceded from the Comoros, just a week after Anjouan had done so. Mohéli's secessionist leaders were Said Mohamed Soefu who became President, and Soidri Ahmed, who became Prime Minister. Mohéli quietly rejoined Comoros in 1998. In 2002, Mohéli ratified the new Comorian constitution, which provided for a less centralized federal government and more power to the island governments. It helped settle continuing political turmoil on Comoros and continuing secessionism on Anjouan. Also in 2002, Mohamed Said Fazul was elected President. His supporters won most seats in Mohéli's delegation to Parliament in the legislative elections of 2004.
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