Ghana 2004
Yearbook 2004 Ghana. President John Kufuor was re-elected by a large majority already in the first round of elections in December. He got close to […]
Yearbook 2004 Ghana. President John Kufuor was re-elected by a large majority already in the first round of elections in December. He got close to […]
Germany is a country located in Central Europe. It is bordered by nine other countries and has a population of over 82 million people. Germany […]
Yearbook 2004 Georgia. The total population in Georgia is 3,989,178 people in 2020. The re-election to the presidential post in January was won as expected […]
Yearbook 2004 The Gambia. The total population in Gambia is 2,416,679 people in 2020. The Free Trade Union International (FFI) condemned restrictions on trade union […]
Yearbook 2004 Gabon. Following a beginning border dispute with Equatorial Guinea in 2003, Gabon and the neighboring country agreed in January to resolve the dispute […]
France is a country located in Western Europe. It has a population of over 66 million people and is the world’s 20th largest country by […]
Yearbook 2004 Finland. At the beginning of the year, a debate was held on Finland’s role in the Second World War. Historians proposed a commission […]
Yearbook 2004 Faroe Islands. The total population in Faeroe Islands is 48,874 people in 2020. After the Self-Government government split up before the New Year, […]
Yearbook 2004 Ethiopia. The total population in Ethiopia is 114,963,599 people in 2020. Riots in the state of Gambela in western Ethiopia in January officially […]
Yearbook 2004 Swaziland. After several years of drought, a quarter of the population needed food assistance. However, that did not prevent King Mswati from asking […]
Yearbook 2004 Estonia. The total population in Estonia is 1,326,546 people in 2020. Estonia’s relationship with Russia deteriorated during the year. In March, two Russian […]
Yearbook 2004 The total population in Eritrea is 3,546,432 people in 2020. Eritrea became increasingly politically isolated during the year. The government refused to accept […]
Yearbook 2004 Equatorial Guinea. Following a beginning border dispute with Gabon in 2003, Equatorial Guinea and the neighboring country agreed in January to resolve the […]
Yearbook 2004 El Salvador. The party’s candidate Antonio Saca already won in the first round of the presidential election March 21 with 58% of the […]
Egypt is a transcontinental country located in the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia, making it the only country in the world […]
Yearbook 2004 Ecuador. After almost a year of intense political debate, on November 4, a request was made for the initiation of a judicial process […]
Yearbook 2004 Timor. Five years after the Indonesian army’s bloody assault on East Timor in connection with the country’s referendum on independence, it seemed unlikely […]
Yearbook 2004 Dominican Republic. The total population in Dominican Republic is 10,847,921 people in 2020. The 50-year-old lawyer Leonel Fernández, who was president of the […]
Yearbook 2004 Dominica. The total population in Dominica is 71,997 people in 2020. Prime Minister Pierre Charles died in January of a heart attack at […]
Yearbook 2004 Djibouti. At least 30 people in the capital Djibouti were killed when the Ambouli River flooded its boards after heavy rains in mid-April. […]
Denmark is a small Scandinavian country located in Northern Europe. It is bordered by the North Sea, the Baltic Sea, and Germany. Denmark has a […]
Yearbook 2004 Congo. A series of serious incidents during the year showed that the cooperation between the government and the former rebel movements was very […]
Yearbook 2004 Czech Republic. The total population in Czech Republic is 10,708,992 people in 2020. The Czech Republic, already admitted as a NATO member, achieved […]
Yearbook 2004 Cyprus. The total population in Cyprus is 1,207,370 people in 2020. Cyprus, with the exception of the self-proclaimed Turkish-supported republic in the northern […]
Croatia is a country located in Central and Southeastern Europe, bordering Hungary to the northeast, Serbia to the east, Bosnia and Herzegovina to the southeast, […]
Yearbook 2004 Costa Rica. In early October, a series of corruption scandals shook Costa Rica, which is otherwise considered one of Latin America’s least corrupt […]
Yearbook 2004 Comoros. In March, parliamentary elections were held on the three semi-autonomous islands of Ngazidja (Grande Comore), Mwali (Mohéli) and Nzwani (Anjouan). In all […]
Yearbook 2004 Colombia. Carlos Castaño, leader of the AUC (Autodefensas Unidas de Colombia) umbrella organization of the paramilitary forces, disappeared without trace on April 16, […]
Yearbook 2004 China. The biggest of all in China during the year was that the population no longer needed UN assistance with food. That’s what […]
Yearbook 2004 The total population in Chile is 19,116,212 people in 2020. The municipal elections on October 31 became a clear success for the government […]
Yearbook 2004 Central African Republic. In July, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a US $ 8.2 million loan intended to support restructuring of state […]
Yearbook 2004 Canada. The total population in Canada is 37,742,165 people in 2020. Many expected Prime Minister Paul Martin to announce new elections at the […]
Yearbook 2004 Cameroon. The total population in Cameroon is 26,545,874 people in 2020. President Paul Biya was re-elected in October with almost 71% of the […]
Yearbook 2004 Cambodia. In January, union leader Chea Vichea was murdered on an open street in K’s capital Phnom Penh. Chea Vichea had close contacts […]
Yearbook 2004 Cape Verde. Since unusually severe drought devastated a large part of the harvest, Cabo Verde was affected by grasshopper swarms from the African […]
Yearbook 2004 Burundi. At a donor conference in January, the outside world pledged US $ 1.32 billion for the reconstruction of Burundi and the restoration […]
Yearbook 2004 Burkina Faso. In January, President Blaise Compaoré dismissed the country’s defense minister, General Kouamé Lougué, and replaced him with a civilian. No explanation […]