Countless of the world's poorest fields are not planted for gold, and there is nowhere to return home
How poor is the world's poorest country?The average person's thinking is calculated according to GDP per capita. However, in a country of 620,000 square kilometers and a population of 4.6 million, it is all too rare to have not even a university or a hospital.
The Central African Republic, as its name suggests, sits in the heart of Africa, and while it may sound "casual", it has more than just a French colony. Although Central Africa seceded from France in 1960, its name and borders were determined by France, which for decades remained under French rule with little freedom.
According to the statistics of the World Bank, Central Africa has rich mineral resources such as oil, gold and uranium, but in the 2015 population development index, Africa is at the bottom of all countries.
The main reason why Central Africa has fallen to this point today is because of the internal war, which is intermittent, and is called "the most difficult wound in history" by scholars in the United Nations reconstruction community, so Central Africa has only one national university and one national medical institution, and it was not until the civil war subsided a little that charities from other countries began to pour in to help establish a new international educational institution. As a result, the current situation in Central Africa can only be described as dire and dire, with more than 35 percent of the population being homeless.
In the list of the 25 poorest countries released by the Global Finance Journal in July 2017, Afghanistan, Kiribati, the Solomon Islands, and the ocean are four Africans that are not located in Africa, of which Central Africa ranks first among the 25 poorest countries, with an average of only $639 per person.
That is to say, the per capita annual income of Central Africa is less than 4,200 yuan, which also includes food, clothing, clothing, use, learning, learning, use, use, communication and other aspects. According to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), there are no less than 550,000 uneducated children in Central Africa, the highest ratio in the world, and at 4,500:1, the highest in the world.
Central Africa has a large amount of minerals, and the rate of employing children without the use of machinery is also one of the highest in the world, so they will not hesitate to hire children, whether it is illegal mining or official mining. With only one fifth of adults, the child mortality rate is among the highest in the world. This series of "firsts" shocked many news organizations in just a few days, while France, the former suzerainty of Central Africa, completely denied the so-called "firsts".
Since more than 3,000 years ago, Central Africa has relied on agriculture for its livelihood, and later the French discovered many mineral deposits in Africa and increased their mining efforts, and they began to follow suit, and many people chose to "get rich overnight". Figures for the agricultural sector in Central Africa show that about 39 per cent of the country's arable land is fertile, compared to less than 2 per cent today. Interestingly, most of the Central Africans have become vagabonds, but those who are still farming will be able to live a good life when the situation settles down.
Even more frighteningly, in the Central African Malaria Mortality Report, there is a serious risk of death in Central Africa due to mosquito bites caused by public facilities, as well as contaminated drinking water. The prevalence of HIV is as high as 11% among people aged 15-49, while in some areas in the north where female mutilation is still retained, the number of HIV infections is as high as 39%.
In this war, it is the human race that is most injured, and some European and American countries have launched a great war for their own selfishness, but their people are suffering from the flames of war.