Overview
island country, Pacific Ocean
Island country, southeastern Micronesia, western South
Pacific Ocean.
Area: 8 sq mi (21 sq km). Population (2005): 10,200. Capital:
Yaren (district). About two-thirds of the population are
indigenous Nauruans. Languages: Nauruan, English. Religion:
Christianity (mostly Protestant; also Roman Catholic). Currency:
Australian dollar. Nauru is a coral island with a central
plateau 100–200 ft (30–60 m) high. A thin strip of fertile land
encircling the island is the major zone of human settlement. It
lacks harbours; ships must anchor to buoys beyond a reef. Nauru
once had the world’s largest concentration of phosphate, and its
economy was based on phosphate mining and processing; however,
the deposits have been depleted, and the economy has been
converting to fishing and other ventures. Nauru is a republic
with one legislative house; its head of state and government is
the president. It was inhabited by Pacific Islanders when the
first British explorers arrived in 1798 and named it Pleasant
Island because of their friendly welcome. Annexed by Germany in
1888, it was occupied by Australia at the start of World War I,
and in 1919 it was placed under a joint mandate of Britain,
Australia, and New Zealand. During World War II it was occupied
by the Japanese. Made a UN trust territory under Australian
administration in 1947, Nauru gained complete independence in
1968 and became a full member of the Commonwealth and the UN in
1999.
Profile
Official name Naoero (Nauruan1) (Republic of Nauru)
Form of government republic with one legislative house
(Parliament [18])
Head of state and government President
Capital 2
Official language none1
Official religion none
Monetary unit Australian dollar ($A)
Population estimate (2008) 10,200
Total area (sq mi) 8.2
Total area (sq km) 21.2
1Nauruan is the national language; English is the language of
business and government.
2No official capital; government offices are located in Yaren
district.
Main
island country, Pacific Ocean
island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It consists
of a raised coral island located in southeastern Micronesia, 25
miles (40 km) south of the Equator. The island is about 800
miles (1,300 km) northeast of the Solomon Islands; its closest
neighbour is the island of Banaba, in Kiribati, some 200 miles
(300 km) to the east. Nauru has no official capital, but
government offices are located in the district of Yaren.
Land
Most of Nauru rises somewhat abruptly from the ocean, and
there are no harbours or protected anchorages. A fairly fertile
but relatively narrow belt encircles the island and surrounds
the shallow inland Buada Lagoon. Farther inland, coral cliffs
rise to a plateau 100 feet (30 metres) above sea level, with the
highest point at about 213 feet (65 metres). The plateau is
largely composed of rock phosphate, leached from guano, or bird
droppings. The mineral deposit covers more than two-thirds of
the island, and its extraction has left irregular,
pinnacle-shaped outcrops of limestone that give the landscape a
forbidding, otherworldly appearance.
Nauru’s climate is tropical, with daytime temperatures in the
low 80s F (about 28° C), tempered by ocean breezes. Rainfall,
averaging about 80 inches (2,000 mm) annually, is extremely
variable, and prolonged droughts occur. The only locally
available water is collected from roof catchment systems, and
water is imported as ballast on ships returning to Nauru for
loads of phosphate. There are no rivers or streams.
Soils are generally poor and highly porous, and the irregular
rainfall limits cultivation to the coastal belt and the lagoon’s
fringe. Phosphate mining has ravaged the interior of the island,
leaving about four-fifths of it uninhabitable and uncultivable.
Subsistence crops, consisting mainly of coconut palms, pandanus,
bananas, pineapple, and some vegetables, are not adequate to
support the population; the land does yield a great variety of
plants and trees, however. Nauru is a favourite stopover point
for migratory birds, and chickens have been introduced. There
was an absence of mammals until rats, mice, cats, dogs, and pigs
were also imported.
People
Most of the island’s residents are indigenous Nauruans.
There are small numbers of I-Kiribati (Gilbertese), Australians,
New Zealanders, Chinese, and Tuvaluans; many members of the
latter two groups were recruited as workers by the phosphate
industry.
Nauruan is the national language. No adequate written grammar
of the language has been compiled, and its relationships to
other Micronesian languages are not well understood. English is
widely spoken. Nauru is considered one of the most Westernized
countries in the South Pacific.
Missionization came later to Nauru than to many other Pacific
islands. The first Protestant evangelist arrived in 1899 and was
followed three years later by the first Roman Catholic
missionary. Today more than four-fifths of Nauruans are
Christians; more than half the total population is Protestant
(mostly members of the Nauru Congregational Church), and about
one-fourth is Roman Catholic.
The settlement pattern on the island is dispersed. People are
scattered along the coastal zone, and there is one small
village, Buada, inland near the lagoon.
Economy
Agriculture (with the exception of coffee and copra
plantations along the coastal and lagoon perimeters), fishing,
manufacturing, and tourism are of minor value to the overall
economy. However, Nauru has an exclusive economic zone extending
200 miles (320 km) offshore. The sale of commercial fishing
licenses began to bring in a steady revenue during the 1990s.
Phosphate has been mined on Nauru since 1907. For decades it
was Nauru’s main resource and sole export, dominating the
island’s economy, and its quality was the highest in the world.
The phosphate industry and government services together provided
almost all of the island’s salaried employment. For much of the
20th century the phosphate industry was owned and operated by a
corporation jointly managed by the British, Australian, and New
Zealand governments. The government of independent Nauru gained
control of phosphate operations in 1970, and in the 1980s Nauru
was for a time one of the wealthiest countries in the world in
terms of gross domestic product per capita. Landowners received
royalties from the phosphate earnings, and many Nauruans were
unemployed by choice. By the late 20th century, however, the
phosphate deposits were quickly becoming exhausted, and Nauru
experienced a severe drop-off in earnings, leading to the
country’s near bankruptcy by the early years of the 21st
century. Thereafter Nauru struggled to develop other resources
and find alternative sources of income.
Beginning in 2001, Nauru agreed to temporarily house hundreds
of Australia-bound asylum seekers (who at first came mostly from
Iraq and Afghanistan and later from Sri Lanka) while they
awaited the processing of their applications. In exchange, the
Australian government provided millions of dollars in aid to
Nauru over the next several years.
Virtually all food, water, and manufactured goods are
imported. Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom
together supply more than three-fourths of Nauru’s imports. With
the exception of those levied on alcohol and tobacco, there are
no import duties, and there is no income tax.
Nauru has its own banking system; the Bank of Nauru is wholly
owned and operated by the government. The financial sector grew
in importance after the 1980s as the island became known as an
offshore banking centre and tax haven. Beginning in 1999, amid
allegations that it was a money-laundering conduit for organized
crime and terrorist organizations, the financial sector
underwent a series of reforms to increase its transparency. As
one consequence of its colonial history, Nauru is within the
Australian monetary system, and Australian currency is the
country’s legal tender.
Transportation on the island is good. A paved road system
links all villages. Surface transportation to other destinations
is difficult. Because there are no wharves or natural harbours,
passengers and cargo are shuttled by barge between oceangoing
vessels and a small artificial anchorage. Most regional and
international travel is by air. Nauru’s sole airport is located
in Yaren district. In 1970 the country launched its national
airline, control of which was transferred in 1996 to a
government-owned corporation.
Government and society
Nauru’s constitution, implemented with independence in 1968,
calls for broadly phrased fundamental rights and freedoms for
individuals and a government that combines parliamentary and
presidential systems. The parliament, whose members are elected
by Nauruan citizens age 20 and older, has a tenure of three
years unless dissolved by a vote of no confidence. It elects the
president, who is both head of state and head of government. The
president appoints a cabinet from the parliament. In 1999 Nauru
became a full member of both the Commonwealth and the United
Nations.
The tripartite judicial system comprises a Supreme Court, a
District Court, and a Family Court. The Supreme Court, presided
over by a chief justice, has both original and appellate
jurisdiction. At Nauru’s request, final appeals may be taken to
the High Court of Australia.
Basic services in education and health are provided free to
all citizens, though services have been reduced as a result of
the country’s changing economic fortunes. There is no government
social security system. Education is compulsory between ages 6
and 16. The government provides several kindergartens and
elementary and secondary schools. The Roman Catholic mission has
its own school system at the same three levels. Traditionally,
students have gone abroad, mainly to Australia, for higher
education.
History
The origin of the first inhabitants of Nauru and when
they reached the island remain unknown. A long period of
relative isolation is believed to account for the
distinctiveness of the indigenous language. By the time of the
arrival of Europeans in the early 18th century, Nauruan society
consisted of 12 matrilineal kinship groups, each having a chief.
An English sailing vessel sighted the island in 1798, but
extensive contact with Europeans did not begin until the 1830s,
when the whaling industry penetrated eastern Micronesia, and
Nauru became a port of call for vessels in search of food and
water supplies. Shortly thereafter a small number of European
beachcombers settled on the island, bringing with them alcohol,
firearms, and foreign diseases. Intraisland warfare among
competing districts escalated, becoming particularly intense in
the 1880s. Encouraged by a few German traders concerned about
their own interests on the island, Germany incorporated Nauru
into its Marshall Islands protectorate in late 1888. The German
administration and the arrival of the missionaries shortly
thereafter brought an end to armed hostilities. In 1906 the
Pacific Phosphate Company, a British concern, negotiated an
agreement with the German administration to begin the mining of
Nauru’s phosphate deposits, and the operation began the
following year.
With the onset of World War I, a small Australian force
occupied Nauru and removed most German nationals. In 1920 Nauru
became a mandated territory within the framework of the League
of Nations. Australia, Britain, and New Zealand were named as
the responsible authorities, but in actual practice the
administration remained in Australian hands. The phosphate
industry was taken over by the newly formed British Phosphate
Commission, a joint Australian, British, and New Zealand
enterprise.
World War II brought another occupier when Japanese forces
arrived in August 1942. In the following year, 1,200 Nauruans
were taken to Truk (now Chuuk) to serve as forced labourers on
Japanese military installations there. A Japanese airstrip on
Nauru became the target of American bombers, and the island
suffered air attacks for the next two years. In September 1945,
Australian troops again took possession of Nauru. On Jan. 31,
1946, with their numbers depleted by almost 500, 737 Nauruans
were returned home.
In November 1947, Nauru became a United Nations trust
territory, an arrangement paralleling the former League of
Nations mandate. The same three metropolitan powers were the
responsible authorities, but Australia continued to provide the
actual administration.
A series of developments in the 1950s and particularly in the
early 1960s led to self-government and eventually political
independence and ownership of the phosphate industry. In October
1967 an agreement granting Nauruan independence was concluded.
Jan. 31, 1968, the 22nd anniversary of the return of Nauruans
from Truk, was chosen as Independence Day for the Republic of
Nauru.
Political parties are of lesser importance than personalities
in Nauruan politics. Hammer DeRoburt dominated the political
scene for the first two decades of the republic; he served as
president for most of the postindependence period until being
voted out of office in 1989. Thereafter, national politics was
marked by a series of weak, short-lived governments; the
presidency tended to be traded among a small number of
politicians.
As the phosphate market faltered and costs increased,
national accounts began to dwindle. It was projected that
Nauru’s primary deposits would be exhausted by the early years
of the 21st century, and Nauru began to make preparations for
the post-phosphate-mining era. A major portion of the earnings
from phosphate mining was invested abroad. The future economic
well-being of Nauruans depended in part on the success of the
investment program, but it lost much of its value to risky
investments and fraud, leaving the country hovering on the edge
of bankruptcy. The development of new techniques for mining
secondary deposits and the discovery of new primary deposits in
2005 ameliorated the situation somewhat. Nonetheless, austerity
measures were instituted, including cuts in public services. In
early 2003 the country was cut off from the rest of the world
for nearly two months when its telecommunications network
collapsed.
In late 2001 Nauru agreed to accept up to 1,200 asylum
seekers, mostly Afghani or Iraqi, who had been intercepted in
the Indian Ocean by the Australian navy. Australia paid some $10
million (Australian) in exchange for Nauru’s holding the
migrants while their asylum applications were being processed.
Detention for periods of up to several years, along with
reportedly poor conditions at the camp, raised international
concern over human rights violations on the part of Australia.
In December 2002 the agreement was extended to cover another
1,500 people for an additional $14 million. Over the following
years the number of refugees slowly dwindled as their
applications were processed. In late 2007 Australia announced
plans to close the Nauru detention centre, and the last refugees
left the island in February of the following year. Australia
pledged to assist Nauru in addressing the economic loss
resulting from the centre’s closure.
Robert C. Kiste
Sophie Foster