Central African Rep. Travel Tips

 


 

Introduction Facts for the Traveler When to Go
Events Money & Costs Activities
History Culture Environment
Getting There & Away Getting Around .

Introduction 

If you want to get away from the Africa of souvenir sellers and slick willy tour operators, the Central African Republic (CAR) may be the place for you. It has pristine forests and lively cities - but also a lawless countryside and crumbling roads.

If you can manage to get to it, the CAR's national park is one of Africa's best. Pygmies guide you through forest that's home to elephants and rare lowland gorillas. Dense rainforests explode in riots of colourful butterflies, and out on the plains you can spot elephants, lions, leopards and rhinos.

The towns and cities have bustling markets, palm and banana wine for sale by the side of the roads, green hills and giraffes close by, and beer halls to do a Bavarian proud. Unfortunately, muggings, petty theft and police extortion are commonplace.

Warning
: The security situation in the CAR has deteriorated in recent years and sporadic fighting and extensive looting has been reported throughout the country, including the capital, Bangui. Security is unstable throughout the country and events are subject to rapid and sudden change. Foreigners are favourite targets for armed gangs. Check with government travel advisories before any travel.

Full country name: Central African Republic
Area: 622,980 sq km
Population: 3.44 million
Capital City: Bangui (pop 670,000)
People: Baya, Banda, Sara, Mandjia, Mboum, M'Baka, European
Language: French, Sango, Arabic, Swahili
Religion: Catholic (25%), Muslim (9%), indigenous beliefs
Government: republic
Head of State: President François Bozizé
Head of Government: Prime Minister Celestin Gaombalet

GDP: US$5.5 billion
GDP per capital: US$1,600
Annual Growth: 5.5%
Inflation: 2.5%
Major Industries: Agriculture, diamond mining, timber, brewing
Major Trading Partners: France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Cote d'Ivoire, Spain, Cameroon, Eqypt. back to top 

Facts for the Traveler

Visas: Only nationals of Israel and Switzerland do not need visas. There is a CAR embassy in Washington DC, but none in the UK and only a few in Europe. In most African countries where there's no CAR representation the French embassy can arrange CAR visas.
Health risks: malaria, schistosomiasis (bilharzia) (This makes swimming unsafe everywhere), HIV/AIDS (Many adults, particularly prostitutes, are affected in Bangui), meningococcal meningitis, yellow fever
Time Zone: GMT/UTC +1
Dialling Code: 236
Electricity: 220V ,50Hz
Weights & measures: Metric. back to top 

When to Go

Rain is the most important point to consider when planning a trip to the CAR, because a wet season downpour can strand you for days. In most of the CAR the best time to travel is from November to April, but the rains come by late February in the south and around Bangui. Most of the national parks are open year-round, but St Floris in the northeast is open only from 1 December to 15 May.back to top 

Events

The CAR celebrates all the Christian festivals, and in the north, all the Muslim ones. Their dates vary according to the Muslim lunar calendar. Tabaski (Id al Kabir) is also known as the Great Feast, and is the most important celebration in northern central Africa. Muslims kill a sheep to commemorate the moment when Abraham was about to sacrifice his son in obedience to God's command. (God intervened at the last moment and suggested a ram instead.) It also coincides with the end of the pilgrimage to Mecca. New Year's Day is a holiday throughout the country as well. 13 August is Independence Day and on 29 March the anniversary of the death of Barthelemy Boganda is celebrated. back to top

Money & Costs

Currency: Central African Franc

Meals

Budget: US$0.50-3
Mid-range: US$3-5
High: US$5-10
Deluxe: US$10+

Lodging

Budget: US$3-10
Mid-range: US$10-50
High: US$50-80
Deluxe: US$80+

The CAR will put a happy grin on the face of most budget travellers. It's cheap, and if you're careful, eat in the markets or on street stalls and stay in the cheapest accommodation (or camp in the bush for free) you could get by easily on US$15-20 a day. But if you're used to a few more creature comforts and like to splurge occasionally, expect to pay around US$50 a day, which will get you more restaurant meals and more of a choice with accommodation. It would be difficult to spend a lot more than US$100 a day, unless you are mugged often or constantly stay in the best hotels, eat out at the best restaurants and go drinking and dancing every night.

The exchange rate for cash is much lower than for travellers cheques, but the two banks that change cheques charge commissions. The Banque Internationale pour l'Afrique Occidental (BIAO) charges a small set rate whatever the size of the transaction, and the Union Bancaire en Afrique Centrale charges a 1% commission. Bangui and Berbérati are the only places where you can change money, so you'll have to organise your trip and your finances around the banks there.

Tipping is a problem because there are few clear rules that can be applied to everyone. Travellers at expensive hotels would be expected to tip, but not those at cheaper hostels. Expect to tip 10% of the bill at better restaurants, but at African restaurants with all-African customers no one is expected to tip, nor would you tip at street stalls. Where there are few other travellers, try and follow local custom as closely as possible.

Bargaining, on the other hand, is normal. Most travellers should expect the initial price to be three or more times the 'real' price. This is not always true; with African cloth sold by the metre and with gold and silver, don't expect to bargain. If you try, the seller is likely to refuse to deal with you any more. back to top


Activities

There are plenty of opportunities for hiking and bushwhacking through rainforest, as well as mountain climbing and rock climbing if you look hard enough around the Bongo and the Yadé Massifs. You can cycle in the CAR, and it is a great way to make contact with locals. If you bring a football or soccer ball you'll make a splash with locals keen for a kick, and after soccer, basketball is Africa's most popular sport. Taking a wildlife safari is the best way to see the wildlife in some of the more remote parts of the country. back to top

History

Archaeological remains indicate that a civilisation existed in the region of modern day CAR before the rise of Egypt. Little is known of that, however, and of the CAR's present inhabitants, pygmies were the first to arrive. More than 1000 years ago people began migrating from Sudan in the east and Cameroon in the west. By 1600, the region was probably part of the Gaoga empire; slavery was the rage and villages were continually raided by Arab conquerors from Chad and Sudan, and via the coast by European slavers. Whole villages in the north were depopulated, and people were still being sold in Cairo slave markets until the late 19th century. The CAR today is one of the most lightly populated countries in Africa.

When the European powers carved up Africa, France was awarded most of the central area. In 1889, a French post was set up in Bangui, although complete control wasn't secured for another 12 years. The French government soon realised it did not have the savoir-faire to exploit the region to the full, so the government broke it down into 17 concessions and dished them out to European companies in exchange for around 15% of profits and a fixed annual payment. The companies weren't particularly enlightened employers; they conscripted the local population into slave-like servitude. Those who refused or deserted were killed or tortured, and thousands died.

During WWII, cotton and diamond exports reached record levels, and the colony had become a favourite ground for big-game hunters. Resistance to French rule faded in the late 1920s under the combined weight of repression, famine and smallpox epidemics, but the practice of corvée, or forced labour, provoked a further series of rebellions during the 1930s. But the region was proving too profitable for France to let go of it easily, and a nationalist movement in anything more than name re-emerged only after WWII.

In 1949 the charismatic leader Barthelemy Boganda founded the first political party, the Mouvement d'Evolution Sociale de l'Afrique Noire, calling for independence. Boganda died in a mysterious plane crash in 1959, however, and his successor, David Dacko, became the country's first president. Dacko's rule quickly became highly repressive and dictatorial, and in 1966, when the country was virtually on its knees, Jean-Bédel Bokassa, the army's commander in chief, led a successful coup.

Bokassa was a leader poured into virtually the same mould as Idi Amin of Uganda. He personally supervised and sometimes participated in the public clubbing to death of prisoners, took over the most important government portfolios, and attempted to wipe out all opposition. France, coveting the uranium deposits at Bakouma and the exclusive big-game hunting grounds near the Sudanese border (patronised by former French president Giscard d'Estaing) continued to indulge Bokassa and bail out his economy. Bokassa squandered foreign loans on prestige projects, and his most outrageous fantasy was to have himself crowned emperor in a renamed Central African Empire. The French picked up most of the tab for the 1977 event, about 20000000.00, or nearly the equivalent of the CAR's annual GDP.

Bokassa's downfall came in 1979 when he flew to Libya with a request for aid. The French engineered a little musical chairs and flew former president Dacko back into the country. But he proved unpopular and General André Kolingba, head of the army, seized power in 1981. He promised to return to civilian rule, but progress toward that was excruciatingly slow. That year Bokassa flew back to the CAR, believing that Kolingba wouldn't dare impeach him. He was convicted of treason, murder and cannibalism and sentenced to death, which was later commuted to life imprisonment. His death in 1996 passed almost without comment from the local press.

Kolingba dragged his heels and postponed the elections until 1993, when he was finally defeated by civilian Ange-Félix Patassé in October. A new age could have been ushered in, but the light of the new dawn turned out to be cold and blue, as Patassé stacked the government with his fellow tribesmen. The harsh realities of a nation with its finances and much of its infrastructure in a shambles hit hard, and in 1996 dissident elements of the armed forces came out shooting no fewer than four times. Violence between the government and rebel military and civilian groups continued over pay issues, living conditions, and lack of political representation. This state of unrest depleted government coffers, destroyed many local enterprises and partly unwound the CAR's social fabric. The government's expulsion of a journalist in January 1999 indicated that it was still struggling with the concept of a free press.

In May 2001, there was a coup attempt in Bangui. While the situation was diffused, and the alleged ringleader, General Bozize, was granted an amnesty, tensions within the country persisted. The situation was particularly volatile near the border with Chad, where many of Bozize's supporters remained and sporadic fighting continued. In addition to this, many state employees went unpaid, poverty was rife and naditry in the coutryside was widespread.

In January 2002, the UN Security Council expressed deep concern over the mounting problems in the CAR. The Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, criticised the CAR government's human rights record, focusing in particular on the behaviour of the country's armed forces.

On October 25, 2002, the renegade former army chief-of-staff, General Francois Bozize, led ex-soldiers in an unsuccessful coup attempt. Civil war resumed. Bozize soon gained control of areas in the north and south. People were forced to flee their homes, villages and even the country. Tens of thousands fled over CAR's five borders as life became unbearable: women and young girls were raped by fighters allied to the government from neighbouring Congo (Zaïre), and towns that were held captive by government or rebel forces were cut off from outside supplies. In March 2003, Bozize finally toppled Patassé, though this has brought little respite from years of chaos.back to top

Culture


You're likely to hear modern African music on the radio, most of which comes from the two Congos. Some of its exponents have become world famous, and while traditional African music influenced the music of the USA, the Caribbean and Latin America, modern African music has in turn been influenced by jazz, rock and Latin rhythms. Traditional African music is not generally particularly accessible to the Western ear, and although it's full of complex rhythms and harmonies, it is not melodic and may sound as if very little is going on. The log xylophone is one of the most common instruments, and it consists of two long banana tree trunks supporting about five logs that are struck with sticks. The tiny sanza or thumb piano consists of a soundbox of wood with bamboo or metal keys played with the thumbs. If you encounter any pygmies you will probably hear some of their music, because they accompany all of their daily activities with music.

Africans generally place great emphasis on clothing, and a trip to the CAR is a treat to see the quality of people's dress. Women often wear a loose top and a length of cloth (pagne) around the waist as a skirt. Men's casual clothes - which look like pyjamas - are in the same distinctively 'African' designs, but most of the cloth is imported from the Netherlands. The most authentic cloths are the handmade, designed fabrics, such as woodblock prints and batiks and tie-dyed cloths. Dress is normally conservative and shorts are frowned upon, and the standards are usually tougher for women than men.

French is the official language, but Sango is the national language and is widely used on radio and in official situations. Sango is related to Lingala, one of the Democratic Republic of the Congo's main languages. There are pockets of Islam in the north, and Christians and animists are in roughly equal numbers throughout the country. Many Christians still maintain at least some animist practices, and because every ethnic group has its own religion there are hundreds of religions in the country. Good and bad magic and spirits play a significant role in local religions, and religious men can read fortunes, give advice on avoiding danger and hand out charms. Much of the life in CAR centres around special events like baptisms, weddings, village celebrations (fêtes), funerals and holidays. There will usually be dancing at all of them except funerals.

In the villages and in African-style homes in the larger towns, people eat with their hands, although visitors will normally be offered a spoon. Always use your right hand, as the left is reserved for the toilet; you will cause significant offence if you do not observe this rule. The best African food you'll find will be in someone's home, but the second best is often on the streets. Generally, the more varied the ingredients the better, and variety is part of what makes the food so interesting. Many dishes are made with okra (gombo) which is very slimy, and because it's commonly used on the streets it's easy to get the impression that there's little else. Meals typically consist of a staple (rice, fermented cassava - another very sticky sensation - or bananas) with some kind of sauce.

Beer halls are everywhere, and beer is generally very good, although you may have to get used to drinking early in the day. Locals enjoy a drink, and alcoholism is a rising problem. Home brew is popular, and two of the most common drinks are palm wine and banana wine, usually sold in jugs along the roadside. Ginger beer is also widespread, as it is throughout most of Africa, although you should be wary of it as the water it is made with is often contaminated. back to top


Environment

Roughly the size of France, the CAR is surrounded on all sides by other nations, which, in a clockwise direction from the south, read: Democratic Republic of the Congo (formerly Zaïre, capital: Kinshasa), Republic of the Congo (capital: Brazzaville), Cameroon, Chad and Sudan. The country is mostly undulating land or flat plateau at around 600m (1968ft) above sea level. Dense tropical forests grow in the south, but that gradually thins as you move north and withers into Sahelian scrub in the northeast corner. The Bongo Massif near the border with Sudan rises to 1330m (4362ft) and the Yadé Massif along the Cameroon border rises to 1420m (4576ft). The Oubangui River forms the southern boundary with the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Those with the big bucks get to shoot the big bucks. Hunting safaris are still a huge business in the CAR, and have been ever since the French arrived a century ago and began parcelling up the land into hunting estates. If you've got US$30,000 to spare you can get your kicks shooting giant elands and bongos (types of spiral-horned antelopes), lions and leopards dead in their tracks. Until recently you could even contribute to the destruction of the elephant population. If you don't have the cash, or have a more live-and-let-live attitude to wildlife, there's always your camera, and the photo opportunities are dauntingly large. The CAR is renowned for its population of forest elephants, slightly smaller and with straighter tusks than their plains cousins. Parks include the Bamingui-Bangoran National Park in the northeast, the smaller St Floris National Park farther east and the recently created Dzanga-Ndoki Park and the surrounding Dzanga-Sangha Reserve in the south.

The rainy season lasts six months in the south of the country (May to October), diminishing progressively to four months (June to September) as you head north. The mercury can climb to 40°C (104°F) in the north between February and May, and the humidity can be oppressive.back to top

Getting There & Away

There are direct flights to Bangui from Paris and New York and from other cities in Africa. The following are the usual routes for getting to countries bordering CAR; they are well-worn paths, but check with embassies and other reliable sources about the status of border crossings before you go, as all are very prone to opening and closing. At the time of writing, the borders with Cameroon, Congo and Congo (Zaïre) were open. The border with Sudan was also open, but the Sudanese embassy said that this frequently changes. The border with Chad was closed, but its embassy indicated that this could change at short notice. back to top

Getting Around
The only place with regular flights scheduled to Bangui is Berbérati, but you can charter five-seater passenger planes in Bangui. Roads are poor throughout the country, and the only sealed ones lead out from Bangui, 157km (97mi) northwest to Bossembélé, 188km (116.5mi) northeast to Sibut and 107km (66mi) southwest to M'Baïki. Dirt roads can be closed for hours or days during the wet season. Buses, trucks and minibuses are the normal means of getting around, but you can do some trips by dugout canoe, such as downriver from Bangassou to Bangui on the Oubangui River. back to top
 

 
Central African Rep. Hotels and Beach Resorts ! ! !
Hotels by Destinations
Central African Rep. Travel Guide
  1. Weather
  2. Holidays
  3. ToursTravel Tips
  4. Car Rental
  5. Transfers

About Us | Currency Exchange | Air Ticketing | Testimonials | Disclaimer | FAQS | Contact Us
Thawte Secured Site - Click Here to Verify