BIOKO


Meaning of BIOKO in English

also called Fernando Po, or Fernando Po, formerly (197379) Macias Nguema Biyogo, island in the Bight of Biafra (Gulf of Guinea), lying about 60 miles (100 km) off the coast of southern Nigeria and 100 miles (160 km) northwest of continental Equatorial Guinea, western Africa. The island was named after the first president of the country in 1973, but Bioko became the local official name after he was deposed in 1979. Volcanic in origin, it is parallelogram-shaped with a northsouth axis, embracing 779 square miles (2,017 square km), and rises sharply from the sea with its highest point being Santa Isabel Peak (9,869 feet ). Malabo, the republic's capital and chief port, stands near a crater breached by the sea. The island was first sighted by the Portuguese explorer Ferno do P, probably in 1472, and was originally named Formosa (Beautiful). It was claimed by Spain after 1778, although the first attempt at firm Spanish control came only in 1858. For a short time (182734) Britain used the island as an antislavery base. The original inhabitants, the Bubi, are descendants of Bantu-speaking migrants from the mainland. The so-called Fernandinos are of a later origin, being descendants of liberated slaves, mixed with settlers from former British West Africa. Both these groups have declined in status, as the Fang, who have flocked to the island from continental Equatorial Guinea, came to occupy most of the civil service posts. There was formerly a large transient population of contract plantation workers from Nigeria; most of these returned to Nigeria, however, following repressive acts by the government of Equatorial Guinea in the mid-1970s. Bioko was one of the first African territories to grow cocoa. Timber and coffee are other important products. Pop. (1983) 57,190.

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