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Belarus
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English Dictionary: Belarus by the DICT Development Group
2 results for Belarus
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
Belarus
n
  1. a landlocked republic in eastern Europe; formerly a European soviet
    Synonym(s): Belarus, Republic of Belarus, Byelarus, Byelorussia, Belorussia, White Russia
From The CIA World Factbook (1995) [world95]:
   Belarus
  
   Belarus:Geography
  
   Location: Eastern Europe, east of Poland
  
   Map references: Commonwealth of Independent States - European States
  
   Area:
   total area: 207,600 sq km
   land area: 207,600 sq km
   comparative area: slightly smaller than Kansas
  
   Land boundaries: total 3,098 km, Latvia 141 km, Lithuania 502 km,
   Poland 605 km, Russia 959 km, Ukraine 891 km
  
   Coastline: 0 km (landlocked)
  
   Maritime claims: none; landlocked
  
   International disputes: none
  
   Climate: cold winters, cool and moist summers; transitional between
   continental and maritime
  
   Terrain: generally flat and contains much marshland
  
   Natural resources: forest land, peat deposits, small quantities of oil
   and natural gas
  
   Land use:
   arable land: 29%
   permanent crops: 1%
   meadows and pastures: 15%
   forest and woodland: 0%
   other: 55%
  
   Irrigated land: 1,490 sq km (1990)
  
   Environment:
   current issues: soil pollution from pesticide use; southern part of
   the country contaminated with fallout from 1986 nuclear reactor
   accident at Chornobyl'
   natural hazards: NA
   international agreements: party to - Air Pollution, Air
   Pollution-Nitrogen Oxides, Air Pollution-Sulphur 85, Biodiversity,
   Environmental Modification, Marine Dumping, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone
   Layer Protection; signed, but not ratified - Climate Change, Law of
   the Sea
  
   Note: landlocked
  
   Belarus:People
  
   Population: 10,437,418 (July 1995 est.)
  
   Age structure:
   0-14 years: 22% (female 1,126,062; male 1,166,439)
   15-64 years: 65% (female 3,494,891; male 3,293,196)
   65 years and over: 13% (female 913,508; male 443,322) (July 1995 est.)
  
   Population growth rate: 0.3% (1995 est.)
  
   Birth rate: 12.98 births/1,000 population (1995 est.)
  
   Death rate: 11.23 deaths/1,000 population (1995 est.)
  
   Net migration rate: 1.27 migrant(s)/1,000 population (1995 est.)
  
   Infant mortality rate: 18.6 deaths/1,000 live births (1995 est.)
  
   Life expectancy at birth:
   total population: 71.03 years
   male: 66.36 years
   female: 75.93 years (1995 est.)
  
   Total fertility rate: 1.87 children born/woman (1995 est.)
  
   Nationality:
   noun: Belarusian(s)
   adjective: Belarusian
  
   Ethnic divisions: Byelorussian 77.9%, Russian 13.2%, Polish 4.1%,
   Ukrainian 2.9%, other 1.9%
  
   Religions: Eastern Orthodox, other
  
   Languages: Byelorussian, Russian, other
  
   Literacy: age 15 and over can read and write (1989)
   total population: 97%
   male: 99%
   female: 96%
  
   Labor force: 4.887 million
   by occupation: industry and construction 40%, agriculture and forestry
   21%, other 39% (1992)
  
   Belarus:Government
  
   Names:
   conventional long form: Republic of Belarus
   conventional short form: Belarus
   local long form: Respublika Byelarus'
   local short form: none
   former: Belorussian (Byelorussian) Soviet Socialist Republic
  
   Digraph: BO
  
   Type: republic
  
   Capital: Minsk
  
   Administrative divisions: 6 voblastsi (singular - voblasts') and one
   municipality* (harady, singular - horad); Brestskaya (Brest),
   Homyel'skaya (Homyel'), Horad Minsk*, Hrodzyenskaya (Hrodna),
   Mahilyowskaya (Mahilyow), Minskaya, Vitsyebskaya (Vitsyebsk)
   note: the administrative centers of the voblastsi are included in
   parentheses
  
   Independence: 25 August 1991 (from Soviet Union)
  
   National holiday: Independence Day, 27 July (1990)
  
   Constitution: adopted 15 March 1994; replaces constitution of April
   1978
  
   Legal system: based on civil law system
  
   Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal
  
   Executive branch:
   chief of state: President Aleksandr LUKASHENKO (since 20 July 1994);
   election held June 24 and 10 July 1994 (next to be held NA 1999);
   Aleksandr LUKASHENKO 80%, Vyacheslav KEBICH 14%
   head of government: Prime Minister Mikhail CHIGIR (since July 1994);
   Deputy Prime Ministers Vladimir GARKUN, Viktor GONCHAR, Sergey LING,
   Mikhail MYASNIKOVICH, Valeriy KOKAREV (since NA)
   cabinet: Council of Ministers
   note: first presidential elections took place in June-July 1994
  
   Legislative branch: unicameral
   Supreme Soviet: elections last held 4 April 1990 (next to be held 14
   May 1995); results - Communists 87%; seats - (360 total) number of
   seats by party NA; note - 50 seats are for public bodies; the
   Communist Party obtained an overwhelming majority
  
   Judicial branch: Supreme Court
  
   Political parties and leaders: Belarusian Popular Front (BPF), Zenon
   POZNYAK, chairman; Party of Popular Accord, Gennadiy KARPENKO; Union
   of Belarusian Entreprenuers, V. N. KARYAGIN; Belarusian Party of
   Communists, Vasiliy NOVIKOV, Viktor CHIKIN, chairmen; Belarus Peasant
   Party, Yevgeniy LUGIN, chairman; Belarusian Socialist Party,
   Vyacheslav KUZNETSOV, chairman; Belarusian Social Democrat Party
   (SDBP), Oleg TRUSOV, Stanislav SHUSHKEVICH, chairmen; Agrarian Party
   of Belarus, Aleksandr DUBKO; United Democratic Party of Belarus
   (UDPB), Aleksandr DOBROVOLSKIY, chairman; Independent Trade Unions,
   Sergey ANTONCHIK, chairman
  
   Member of: CCC, CE (guest), CEI (associate members), CIS, EBRD, ECE,
   IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IFC, ILO, IMF, INMARSAT, INTELSAT (nonsignatory
   user), INTERPOL, IOC, ISO, ITU, NACC, OSCE, PCA, PFP, UN, UNCTAD,
   UNESCO, UNIDO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO
  
   Diplomatic representation in US:
   chief of mission: Ambassador Sergey Nikolayevich MARTYNOV
   chancery: 1619 New Hampshire Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20009
   telephone: [1] (202) 986-1604
   FAX: [1] (202) 986-1805
   consulate(s) general: New York
  
   US diplomatic representation:
   chief of mission: Ambassador Kenneth Spencer YALOWITZ
   embassy: Starovilenskaya #46, Minsk
   mailing address: use embassy street address
   telephone: [7] (0172) 34-65-37
  
   Flag: three horizontal bands of white (top), red, and white
  
   Economy
  
   Overview: Belarus ranks among the most developed of the former Soviet
   states, with a relatively modern - by Soviet standards - and diverse
   machine building sector and a robust agriculture sector. It also
   serves as a transport link for Russian oil exports to the Baltic
   states and Eastern and Western Europe. The breakup of the Soviet Union
   and its command economy has resulted in a sharp economic contraction
   as traditional trade ties have collapsed. The Belarusian government
   has lagged behind the governments of most other former Soviet states
   in economic reform, with privatization almost nonexistent. The system
   of state orders and distribution persists. In mid-1994, the Belarusian
   government embarked on an austerity program with IMF support to slash
   state credits and consumer subsidies in order to bring down the budget
   deficit and reduce inflation. However, despite its promising start,
   the regime's drive to reinvigorate the economy has fallen short, and
   the IMF has criticized its failure to implement the reforms that the
   Fund had negotiated. As a result, the IMF has suspended talks on
   introducing a stand-by arrangement. Economic relations with Russia,
   which will have an important bearing on the future course of the
   economy, will be strengthened if Minsk adopts the necessary
   legislation to implement a customs union agreed to in January 1995.
  
   National product: GDP - purchasing power parity - $53.4 billion (1994
   estimate as extrapolated from World Bank estimate for 1992)
  
   National product real growth rate: -20% (1994)
  
   National product per capita: $5,130 (1994 est.)
  
   Inflation rate (consumer prices): 29% per month (1994)
  
   Unemployment rate: 1.4% officially registered unemployed (December
   1993); large numbers of underemployed workers
  
   Budget:
   revenues: $NA
   expenditures: $NA, including capital expenditures of $NA
  
   Exports: $968 million to outside of the FSU countries (f.o.b., 1994)
   commodities: machinery and transport equipment, chemicals, foodstuffs
   partners: Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Bulgaria
  
   Imports: $534 million from outside the FSU countries (c.i.f., 1994)
   commodities: fuel, natural gas, industrial raw materials, textiles,
   sugar
   partners: Russia, Ukraine, Poland
  
   External debt: $1.5 billion (July 1994 est.)
  
   Industrial production: growth rate -19% (1994); accounts for about 40%
   of GDP (1992)
  
   Electricity:
   capacity: 7,010,000 kW
   production: 31.4 billion kWh
   consumption per capita: 3,010 kWh (1994)
  
   Industries: employ about 40% of labor force and produced a wide
   variety of products including (in percent share of total output of
   former Soviet Union): tractors (12%); metal-cutting machine tools
   (11%); off-highway dump trucks up to 110-metric-ton load capacity
   (100%); wheel-type earthmovers for construction and mining (100%);
   eight-wheel-drive, high-flotation trucks with cargo capacity of 25
   metric tons for use in tundra and roadless areas (100%); equipment for
   animal husbandry and livestock feeding (25%); motorcycles (21.3%);
   television sets (11%); chemical fibers (28%); fertilizer (18%); linen
   fabric (11%); wool fabric (7%); radios; refrigerators; and other
   consumer goods
  
   Agriculture: accounts for almost 25% of GDP and 5.7% of total
   agricultural output of former Soviet Union; employs 21% of the labor
   force; in 1988 produced the following (in percent of total Soviet
   production): grain (3.6%), potatoes (12.2%), vegetables (3.0%), meat
   (6.0%), milk (7.0%); net exporter of meat, milk, eggs, flour, potatoes
  
   Illicit drugs: illicit cultivator of opium poppy and cannabis; mostly
   for the domestic market; transshipment point for illicit drugs to
   Western Europe
  
   Economic aid: $NA
  
   Currency: Belarusian rubel (BR)
  
   Exchange rates: Belarusian rubels per US$1 - 10,600 (end December
   1994)
  
   Fiscal year: calendar year
  
   Belarus:Transportation
  
   Railroads:
   total: 5,570 km in common carrier service; does not include industrial
   lines
   broad gauge: 5,570 km 1.520-m gauge (1990)
  
   Highways:
   total: 98,200 km
   paved: 66,100 km
   unpaved: earth 32,100 km (1990)
  
   Inland waterways: NA km
  
   Pipelines: crude oil 1,470 km; refined products 1,100 km; natural gas
   1,980 km (1992)
  
   Ports: Mazyr
  
   Merchant marine:
   note: claims 5% of former Soviet fleet
  
   Airports:
   total: 118
   with paved runways over 3,047 m: 2
   with paved runways 2,438 to 3,047 m: 18
   with paved runways 1,524 to 2,437 m: 5
   with paved runways under 914 m: 11
   with unpaved runways over 3,047 m: 1
   with unpaved runways 2,438 to 3,047 m: 6
   with unpaved runways 1,524 to 2,438 m: 4
   with unpaved runways 914 to 1,523 m: 9
   with unpaved runways under 914 m: 62
  
   Belarus:Communications
  
   Telephone system: 1,849,000 telephones (December 1991); 18
   telephones/100 persons; telephone service inadequate for the purposes
   of either business or the population; about 70% of the telephones are
   in homes; over 750,000 applications from households for telephones
   remain unsatisfied (1992); new investment centers on international
   connections and business needs; the new BelCel NMT 450 cellular system
   (a joint venture) is now operating in Minsk
   local: NA
   intercity: NA
   international: international traffic is carried by the Moscow
   international gateway switch and also by 2 satellite earth stations
   near Minsk - INTELSAT (through Canada) and EUTELSAT (through the UK)
  
   Radio:
   broadcast stations: AM NA, FM NA, shortwave 0
   radios: 3.14 million (5,615,000 with multiple speaker systems for
   program diffusion)
  
   Television:
   broadcast stations: NA
   televisions: 3.538 million
  
   Belarus:Defense Forces
  
   Branches: Army, Air Force, Air Defense Force, Republic Security Forces
   (internal and border troops)
  
   Manpower availability: males age 15-49 2,550,500; males fit for
   military service 1,999,138; males reach military age (18) annually
   71,808 (1995 est.)
  
   Defense expenditures: 56.5 billion rubles, NA% of GDP (1993 est.);
   note - conversion of the military budget into US dollars using the
   current exchange rate could produce misleading results
  
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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