San (Bushmen), who were the region's earliest known inhabitants, were supplanted several centuries prior to colonization by various Bantu-speaking peoples, including those that came to be the Sotho and the Zulu. The Sotho are made up of remnants of ethnic groups that were scattered during the disturbances accompanying the rise of the Zulu (1816–30). They were rallied in 1820 by Moshoeshoe, a commoner who founded a dynasty in what is now
Following wars with the Boer-ruled Orange Free State in 1858 and 1865, Moshoeshoe put the Sotho under British protection (1868), establishing the protectorate of Basutoland. The protectorate was annexed to Cape
On Oct. 4, 1966, Basutoland became independent as
In Jan., 1974, Jonathan accused the BCP of attempting to stage a coup; the party was outlawed and hundreds of its members reportedly killed. Armed clashes between the Lesotho Liberation Army (the militarized segment of the BCP) and the government were common throughout the 1970s and 80s. In the late 1970s, Jonathan exploited growing popular resentment of
Maj. Gen. Justinus Lekhanya led a coup in 1986 that installed King Moshoeshoe II as head of state. After prolonged disputes with Lekhanya over power, the king went into exile. In 1990, Moshoeshe II's son, Letsie III, became king but was reduced to a purely ceremonial role. Lekhanya was overthrown (1991) in a bloodless coup, and Col. Elias Tutsoane Ramaena came to power as chairman of a six-member military council.
A free election in 1993, the first in 23 years, resulted in a BCP landslide, and Ntsu Mokhehle became prime minister. In 1994 fighting between two rival army factions unsettled the young democracy; the king ousted Mokhehle but was pressured by other South African nations to reinstate him. In Jan., 1995, Letsie abdicated in favor of his father, Moshoeshoe II. After Moshoeshoe was killed in an automobile accident in Jan., 1996, Letsie was restored to the throne.
In 1997, Mokhehle remained prime minister as he broke from the BCP and founded the Lesotho Congress for Democracy party (LCD), reducing the BCP to the opposition. Mokhehle died in Jan., 1998; new elections were called in May, and Pakalitha Mosisili of the LCD secured the prime ministership. Demonstrators charging election fraud staged violent protests in
Economy
All land in
The country has some light industries, including food and beverages, textiles, and clothing. Tourism is also important; the country has two national parks bordering on the Drakensberg Mts. Some 60,000 citizens are employed in
Capital and largest city (2003 est.):
Monetary unit: Maluti
Languages: English, Sesotho (both official); Zulu, Xhosa
Ethnicity/race: Sotho 99.7%, Europeans, Asians, and other 0.3%
Religions: Christian 80%, indigenous beliefs 20%
Literacy rate: 85% (2003 est.)
Below is an analysis of
Rank: 99
Score: 3.24
Category: Mostly Unfree
Population: 1792000
Total area: 30, 355 sq. km
GDP: $950 million
GDP growth rate: 2.7%
GDP per capita: $530
Major exports: food and live animals, clothing, footwear, wool
Exports of goods and services: $414 million
Major export trading partners: US 76.4%, SACU 22.9%, EU 0.2% (2002)
Major imports: food, vehicles, machinery, medicine, petroleum products
Imports of goods and services: $925 billion
Major import trading partners: SACU 73.5%, Asia 23.7%, EU 1.1% (2002)
Foreign direct investment (net): $39.5 million
REFERENCES
The 2006 Index of Economic Freedom, The Heritage Foundation Heritage and The Wall Street Journal
www.seelesotho.com/travel/info/history.htm
www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107714.html - 22k
www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0859249.html