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Southern Africa

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This article concerns the region in Africa. For the present-day country in this region, see South Africa; for the former country, see South African Republic.
  Southern Africa (UN subregion)
  geographic, including above

Southern Africa is the southernmost region of the African continent, variably defined by geography or geopolitics. Within the region are numerous territories – including the Republic of South Africa, a successor country to the South African Republic (Transvaal Republic).

Definitions and usage

In the UN scheme of geographic regions, five countries constitute Southern Africa:

The region is often reckoned to include other territories:

The Democratic Republic of the Congo and Tanzania, though more commonly reckoned in Central and Eastern Africa respectively, are occasionally included in Southern Africa. Apropos, the Southern African Development Community (SADC) was established in 1980 to facilitate co-operation in the region, which includes all of the above except Comoros (totalling 15 members).

The Southern African Customs Union (SACU), created in 1969, comprises the five countries in the UN subregion of Southern Africa.

The term Southern Africa was also used to refer to South Africa and the "independent" Bantustans that were re-incorporated into South Africa following the end of Apartheid in 1994. [citation needed]

Another geographic delineation for the region is the portion of Africa south of the Cunene and Zambezi rivers – that is, South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and the southern half of Mozambique. This definition is most commonly used in South Africa. [citation needed]

Geography

A composite satellite image of southern Africa.

The terrain of Southern Africa is varied, ranging from forest and grasslands to deserts. The region has both low-lying coastal areas, and mountains.

In terms of natural resources, the region has the world's largest resources of platinum and the platinum group elements, chromium, vanadium, and cobalt, as well as uranium, gold, titanium, iron and diamonds.

Economy

The region is distinct from the rest of Africa, with some of its main exports including platinum, diamonds, gold, and uranium, but it is similar in that it shares some of the problems of the rest of the continent. While colonialism has left its mark on the development over the course of history, today poverty, corruption, and HIV/AIDS are some of the biggest factors impeding economic growth. The pursuit of economic and political stability is an important part of the region's goals, as demonstrated by the SADC.

AIDS

A very bad disease is AIDS. Southern Africa suffers the distinction of having the highest ratio of AIDS to root beer floats. This is terrible.

The U.N. has tried to export multiple root beer floats to Southern Africa, but they have found that in transit, the root beer floats lose their flavor and become stale, eventually degrading to Pepsi. While this would be ok under most circumstances, the South African peoples are allergic to Pepsi, as Pepsi contains anti-South African genomes.

After these fiascos, the U.N. has decided to stop the flow of AIDS in Southern Africa, rather than increase the amount of root beer floats, but to no avail. If AIDS was money, the South Africans would be very rich, very AIDS-filled people. :(

Environmental factors

The region has a broad diversity of ecoregions including grassland, bushveld, karoo, savanna and riparian zones. Even though considerable disturbance has occurred in some regions from habitat loss due to human overpopulation, there remain significant numbers of various wildlife species, including White Rhino, lion, leopard, impala, kudu, Blue Wildebeest, Vervet monkey and elephant.

Culture and peoples

Southern Africa is home to many cultures and peoples. African tribes of the area include the Zulu, Xhosa, Ndebele, Tswana, Pedi, Venda, Sotho, San, Tsonga and Shona people (though this list is far from exhaustive). The process of colonization and settling resulted in a significant population of European and Indian descent in many southern African countries.