The islands were populated by successive waves of
immigrants from Africa, Indonesia, Madagascar, and Arabia. They were
long under Arab influence, especially Shiragi Arabs from Persia who
first arrived in A.D. 933. Portugal, France,
and England staked claims in the Comoros in the 16th cent., but the
islands remained under Arab domination. All of the islands were ceded to
the French between 1841 and 1909. Occupied by the British during World
War II, the islands were granted administrative autonomy within the
French Union in 1946 and internal self-government in 1968. In 1975 three
of the islands voted to become independent, while Mayotte chose to remain a French dependency.
Ahmed
Abdallah Abderrahman was Comoros's first president. He was ousted in a
1976 coup, returned to power in a second coup in 1978, survived a coup
attempt in 1983, and was assassinated in 1989. The nation's first
democratic elections were held in 1990, and Saïd Mohamed Djohar was
elected president. In 1991, Djohar was impeached and replaced by an
interim president, but he returned to power with French backing.
Multiparty elections in 1992 resulted in a legislative majority for the
president and the creation of the office of prime minister.
Comoros
joined the Arab League in 1993. A coup attempt in 1995 was suppressed
by French troops. In 1996, Mohamed Taki Abdulkarim was elected
president. In 1997, following years of economic decline, rebels took
control of the islands of Nzwani and Mwali, declaring their secession
and desire to return to French rule. The islands were granted greater
autonomy in 1999, but voters on Nzwani endorsed independence in Jan.,
2000, and rebels continue to control the island. Taki died in 1998 and
was succeeded by Tadjiddine Ben Said Massounde. As violence spread to
the main island, the Comoran military staged a coup in Apr., 1999, and
Col. Azali Assoumani became president of the Comoros. An attempted coup
in Mar., 2000, was foiled by the army.
Forces
favoring reuniting with the Comoros seized power in Nzwani in 2001, and
in December Comoran voters approved giving the three islands additional
autonomy (and their own presidents) within a Comoran federation. Under
the new constitution, the presidency of the Comoros Union rotates among
the islands. In Jan., 2002, Azali resigned, and Prime Minister Hamada
Madi became also interim president in the transitional government
preparing for new elections. After two disputed elections (March and
April), a commission declared Azali national president in May, 2002.
An
accord in Dec., 2003, concerning the division of powers between the
federal and island governments paved the way for legislative elections
in 2004, in which parties favoring autonomy for the individual islands
won a majority of the seats. The 2006 presidential election was won by
Ahmed Abdallah Mohamed Sambi, a Sunni cleric regarded as a moderate
Islamist.
In Apr., 2007, the president of Nzwani,
Mohamed Bacar, refused to resign as required by the constitutional
courts and used his police forces to retain power, holding an illegal
election in June, after which he was declared the winner. The moves were
denounced by the central government and the African Union, but the
central government lacked the forces to dislodge Bacar. In Nov., 2007,
the African Union began a naval blockade of Nzwani and imposed a travel
ban on its government's officials. With support from African Union
forces, Comoran troops landed on Mzwani in Mar., 2008, and reestablished
federal control over the island. Bacar fled to neighboring Mayotte,
then was taken to Réunion; in July he was flown to Benin.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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