Afder na daya daga cikin gundumomi a yankin Somaliya na kasar Habasha . Wani yanki na shiyyar Afder, Afder yana iyaka da kudu da Dolobay, a yamma da Chereti, a arewa kuma da Elkere, a yamma da shiyyar Gode, daga kudu maso gabas kuma da Bare . Garuruwan Afder sun hada da Guda Asbo da Hargele .

Afder

Wuri
Map
 5°15′N 42°30′E / 5.25°N 42.5°E / 5.25; 42.5
Ƴantacciyar ƙasaHabasha
Region of Ethiopia (en) FassaraSomali Region (en) Fassara
Zone of Ethiopia (en) FassaraAfder Zone (en) Fassara

Yawan jama'ar Afder ya kai kusan 1,521,100. Ita ce farkon tawayen Bale . Gebru Tareke ya fara aikinsa ne a watan Yuni 1963, lokacin da Kahin Abdi, ɗan fashi da aka sani da ɗaukar ra'ayin kishin ƙasa na Somaliya, ya fito fili ya bijirewa gwamnati ta hanyar "zama haramtaccen nau'in Robin Hood." A watan Satumba, makadansa masu dauke da makamai sun kona karamar ma’adanin gishirin da ke gundumar, sannan bayan wata biyu suka yi wa Hargele kawanya na tsawon kwanaki biyu. [1]

An bayar da rahoton a cikin 1994 cewa hakar gishiri zai samar da hanyar samun kudin shiga ga Afder; Hukumar da ke gundumar tana karbar Naira 200 akan kowace babbar mota ta tashi da gishirin Negele Boran da Gode . [2]

Bisa kidayar jama'a a shekarar 2007 da hukumar kididdiga ta kasar Habasha (CSA) ta gudanar, wannan gundumar tana da jimillar jama'a 79,135, wadanda 45,227 maza ne da mata 33,908. Yayin da 6,941 ko 8.77% mazauna birni ne, sai kuma 56,827 ko 71.81% makiyaya ne. 99.48% na yawan jama'a sun ce su musulmi ne . Wannan gundumar tana da kabilun Dir irinsu kabilar Gaadsan, Guure, Guro Dhamoole da Ogadeen na kabilar Daarood a arewa, da kuma kabilar Baadicade na Hawiye a kudu.

Kididdiga ta kasa a shekarar 1997 ta bayar da rahoton jimillar yawan jama'a na wannan gundumar mai mutane 65,609, daga cikinsu 38,499 maza ne, 27,110 kuma mata; 6,527 ko 9.95% na yawan jama'arta mazauna birni ne. Kabila mafi girma da aka ruwaito a Afder ita ce mutanen Somaliya (99.89%).

Bayanan kula

gyara sashe
  1. Gebru Tareke, Ethiopia: Power and Protest: Peasant Revolts in the Twentieth Century (Lawrenceville: Red Sea, 1996), p. 140.
  2. South West Ogaden Situation Report, February 1994 (accessed 24 December 2008)