Malabo

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Location of Malabo in Equatorial Guinea
Location of Malabo in Equatorial Guinea

Malabo is the capital city of Equatorial Guinea, located on the northern coast of Bioko Island (formerly Fernando Póo). Its population has grown rapidly over the past ten years to about 100,000. Malabo is located at 3°45' North, 8°45' East (3.75, 8.75). The city was first founded by the British in 1827, who leased the island from Spain during the colonial period. Named Port Clarence, it was used as a naval station in the effort to suppress the slave trade. Many newly freed slaves were also settled there, prior to the establishment of Sierra Leone as a colony for freed slaves. While many of them later relocated to Sierra Leone, some of their descendants, called Fernandinos, can still be found in Malabo and the surrounding area, where they constitute a distinct ethnic group, speaking their own Afro-Portuguese pidgin dialect.

When the island reverted to complete Spanish control, Malabo was renamed Santa Isabel. It was chosen to replace the mainland town of Bata as the capital of the country in 1969, and was renamed Malabo in 1973 as part of President Francisco Macías Nguema's campaign to replace European place names with "authentic" African ones.

During his "reign of terror," Macías Nguema led a near-genocide of the country's Bubi minority, which formed the majority on Bioko Island, and brought many of his own tribespeople, the Fang to Malabo. In the final years of his rule, when Equatorial Guinea was sometimes known as the "Auschwitz of Africa," much of the city's population fled as, indeed, about one-third of the country's population. Malabo has yet to recover from the scars of that period.

Despite its status as the capital of Equatorial Guinea for several decades, Malabo's street network remains poorly developed. Malabo itself has few paved roads leading into it, and less than one hundred paved and developed streets. Many of the street names reflect an African nationalist or anti-colonial theme, with names such as "Independence Avenue" or "Patrice Lumumba road" being main roads. The few large roads not named for an african nationalist ideal or person are named for cities in Equatorial Guinea or other places or countries in Africa, as well the road leading to the presidential palace. The palace and grounds consume a substantial part of the eastern side of Malabo, and it is off-limits. The heart of the city is the colonial cathedral at independence place.

The south of Malabo is bordered by the rio consul, across this lies the hospital to the south east. To the west is the recently renovated airport. The coastal northern region of the city is pierced by headlands and bays. The largest headland is the crescent-shaped Tip of African Unity behind the presidential palace. Encompassing the entire eastern side of the Malabo bay, it is almost as long as Malabo is tall. Malabo is part of a wider bay that represents most of the northern coast of Bioko; it stretches from Europe Point in the west (home to the airport), to barren lands in the east..

Malabo has been significantly affected by Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo's growing cooperation with the oil industry. The country's production has reached 360,000 barrels/day as of 2004, an increase which had led to a doubling of the city's population [1].], but for the vast majority here, very little of that wealth has trickled down, instead most has been stashed in overseas accounts accessible only by the president who treats the national treasury as his own personal account..(which de facto it is) Malabo and Equatorial Guinea continue to be plagued with corruption and nepotism. The current president (who claims to speak to god) has grossly mismanaged the current wealth flowing into the country and continues to squander the opputunities that petroleum resources could bring. Hospitals sit without medications or doctors, schools languish in disrepair with no money for books or resources, electrical supply is sporaidic at best, the vast majority of citizens still have no access to clean water or sanitation and HIV and host of other STD's have become rampant with the burgeoning prostitution trade while infant mortality rates are among the highest in Africa. All this while the president continues to indulge himself and family members with luxury goods of all sorts...including 5 luxury business jets alone worth over $120m. By living much of their time in luxurious overseas estates, the Nguema family manages to evade much of the squallor that pervades all of Equatorial Guinea. As Obiang's wealth increases, his health continues to fail and much tension exist over who will succeed him. The two likely candidates are his sons Teodorino or Gabriel. Being of the first wife, Teodorino has a leg up over his far more capable brother, Gabriel, but fear over what this cocaine snorting, wanna-be rap star, playboy would do with Equatorial Guinea's wealth has many people on edge.

Air Travel

Malabo is well served by several international carriers including Iberia, Swiss, Spanair, Air France, KLM, Jetair (charter to Gatwick) as well as a few regional airlines offering service to surrounding counties as well as to the mainland (Bata) Travel on these internal carriers should be duly considered as there is no capability of enforcing airworthiness standards in Equatorial Guinea and air traffic control is marginal at best.


Notable buildings in Malabo include Malabo Cathedral and the Malabo Court Building. The city is served by Malabo International Airport, while ferries sail from its port to Douala and Bata.

Coordinates: 3°45′N, 8°47′E

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