People of Equatorial Guinea

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Also known as: República de Guinea Ecuatorial, Republic of Equatorial Guinea, Spanish Guinea

Ethnic groups

The ethnic composition of the population is complex for a political unit so small in size. The Fang people, who fought their way to the sea in the 19th and early 20th centuries by subjugating other groups in their path, constitute well over half of the population. The Fang are dominant in the continental region; north of the Mbini River are the Ntumu Fang, and to the south of it are the Okak Fang. Holding political power on the mainland, the Fang tend to migrate to Bioko, where their leaders also hold most of the levers of political control. Coastal groups, such as the Kombe, Mabea, Lengi, Benga, and others, have been in contact with European traders much longer, and a limited amount of intermarriage between European and African ethnic groups has taken place, especially on the island of Corisco. Spanish ethnographers refer to these coastal peoples as playeros (“those who live on the beach”). Both the Fang majority and the playero groups are Bantu peoples.

The original inhabitants of Bioko are the Bubi, descendants of Bantu migrants from the mainland. The Bubi, unlike the other ethnic groups of the country, are a matrilineal society, wherein children inherit property from their mother. Early contacts with Europeans decimated the Bubi until only a few thousand remained early in the 20th century. During the colonial era they became the most pro-Spanish element of the African population, as they viewed the end of Spanish rule as a signal for the invasion of their island by the majority Fang. Indeed, significant numbers of mainlanders, most of them Fang, have flocked to Bioko since the mid-1960s. Following independence, Pres. Francisco Macías Nguema (ruled 1968–79), himself a Fang, harshly persecuted the Bubi people. Many Bubi, including accused separatists as well as most Bubi politicians, were killed in a campaign that some observers have called genocide. In 1998 antigovernment attacks on Bioko, allegedly carried out by a Bubi separatist organization, were met with severe reprisals, including the arrest and interrogation of hundreds of Bubi. In the early 21st century the Bubi, who by then made up approximately one-tenth of the country’s population, continued to suffer discrimination at the hands of the Fang-controlled government.

Bioko also is home to Fernandinos, descendants of former slaves liberated by the British during the 19th century who mingled with other emancipated Africans from Sierra Leone and Cuba, as well as with immigrants from other western African countries. Formerly constituting an influential bourgeoisie, they lost much of their status both when the Spanish acquired the island and after independence. Additional communities on the island are formed by crioulos (of mixed Portuguese and African origin) from the islands of São Tomé and Príncipe; there are also some Cameroonians. By about 1970 these different strata together constituted a minority on Bioko; the majority of the people were Nigerian contract labourers, who lived in compact colonies in Malabo or on plantations. Beginning in 1975, however, Nigeria repatriated at least 45,000 workers following reports of repressive conditions in Equatorial Guinea.

The inhabitants of Annobón represent only a tiny fraction of the population of Equatorial Guinea. They are descended from enslaved Africans brought there by the Portuguese when the island was a dependency of Portugal’s São Tomé colony.

Languages

Each ethnic group speaks its own language; among the most prominent of these languages are Fang and Bubi. The official languages of the country, however, are Spanish and French. Spanish is taught in schools and used by the press; it is the primary means of communication common to both Bioko and the mainland. As a result of Equatorial Guinea’s closer economic association with Francophone countries begun in 1983, French became a compulsory subject in schools in 1988 and an official language in 1997. In addition, an English-based creole is used extensively in petty commerce and forms the lingua franca on Bioko, and a Portuguese patois is spoken on both Bioko and Annobón.