Tiwura
Republic Of Tiwura | |
---|---|
Motto: "Unity, Strength, and Prosperity" | |
Anthem: Stand and Sing of Tiwura | |
Capital | Omamiri |
Official languages | Estmerish |
Recognised national languages | Mwo Gundaya Zamga |
Recognised regional languages | Over 100 regional languages. |
Ethnic groups | 25.3% Mwo 21.4% Gundaya 17.8% Zamga 35.5% Other ethnicities. |
Demonym(s) | Tiwuran |
Government | Unitary Presidential Republic |
• President | Reginald Akinlabi |
Legislature | Congress Of The People |
Senate | |
Assembly | |
Establishment | |
• Independence from Estmere | April 3, 1950 |
Population | |
• 2022 census | 59,123,024 |
GDP (PPP) | 2022 estimate |
• Total | 168,145,880,256 |
GDP (nominal) | 2022 estimate |
• Total | 58,472,670,736 |
• Per capita | 989 |
Gini | 48.3 high |
HDI (2020) | 0.524 low |
Currency | Tiwuran Standard (TWS) |
Date format | mm/dd/yyyy |
Driving side | left |
ISO 3166 code | TW |
Internet TLD | .tw |
Tiwura, officially the Republic Of Tiwura , is a sovreign state located in norhern Bahia and northern Coius. It is bordered to the south by Yemet and to the west by TBD. It has a population of 59,123,024 and is the third most populous nation within Bahia. Tiwura is home to over 100 ethnic groups and over 100 languages, most predominant of which are Mwo, Gundaya, and Zamga. Its capital and largest city is Omamiri.
Tiwura was once home to several houregic kingdoms throughout its long history, notable ones being the Rukimi and Obo kingdoms. These kingdoms would bring about wealth across Tiwura and make this wealth from participation in selling slaves from conquered villiages into the transvehemens slave trade. Tiwura would eventually fall to the colonial empire of Estmere in the late 19th century. Estmere would establish the Colony of the Royal Coast and have its mineral and plant resources extracted until it gained independence in 1950. Since independence Tiwura would become a nation of turmoil, experiencing multiple coups and civil wars. In 1953 Obie Chinwe would take over control of the government. His policies would lead to the (war with Yemet) with Yemet in 1964, which would end in Tiwuran defeat. Chinwe himself would be assassinated in 1966 which led to a power vacuum that would spiral into the First Tiwuran Civil War. The war would end with the rise of Reese Okparro Ndulu, another military leader, who would retake the country from rebels. The Tiwura after the civil war was ridden with ethnic tensions that would arise in 1986 when Ndulu's successor, Alichie Uchey, initiated elections. These elections were extremely troubled as troops would intimidate political rivals