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Nigeria Area Codes Country Code

Nigeria Country Code & Nigeria Area Codes
COUNTRY EXIT CODE + 234 + CITY AREA CODE + NUMBER For specific COUNTRY EXIT CODE & CITY AREA CODE

To call Nigeria, you have to dial: + 234 + City Area Code + Number you wish to call. To call using a Prepaid Phone Card (with savings up to 95%!), follow the dialing instructions below:
Dial the Access Number
Enter your PIN Number
Enter the number you wish to dial:
Country exit code (00 or 011) + 234 + Area Code + Number you wish to call
Example: For calling New York from the UK: Dial 00 + 1 + 212 + phone number

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007


Country profile: Nigeria

After lurching from one military coup to another, Nigeria now has an elected leadership. But it faces the growing challenge of preventing Africa's most populous country from breaking apart along ethnic and religious lines. Political liberalisation ushered in by the return to civilian rule in 1999 has allowed militants from religious and ethnic groups to express their frustrations more freely, and with increasing violence.

Thousands of people have died over the past few years in communal rivalry. Separatist aspirations have been growing, prompting reminders of the bitter civil war over the breakaway Biafran republic in the late 1960s.


Politics: Parliament blocked moves to allow President Obasanjo to stand for third term in 2007. The army was the dominant political player until 1999 Economy: Nigeria is Africa's leading oil producer; more than half of its people live in poverty International: Nigeria plays a prominent role in African affairs; has withdrawn troops from oil-rich Bakassi peninsula to settle border dispute with Cameroon

Timeline
The imposition of Islamic law in several states has embedded divisions and caused thousands of Christians to flee. Inter-faith violence is said to be rooted in poverty, unemployment and the competition for land.



The government is striving to boost the economy, which experienced an oil boom in the 1970s and is once again benefiting from high prices on the world market. But progress has been undermined by corruption and mismanagement.

The former British colony is one of the world's largest oil producers, but the industry has produced unwanted side effects.

The trade in stolen oil has fuelled violence and corruption in the Niger delta - the home of the industry. Few Nigerians, including those in oil-producing areas, have benefited from the oil wealth.

Nigeria is keen to attract foreign investment but is hindered in this quest by security concerns as well as by a shaky infrastructure troubled by power cuts.

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