Aguie

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Aguié
Aguie, Agyé, Agye
Aguié is located in Niger
Aguié
Aguié
Location of Aguié
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Country  Niger
Region Maradi
Department Aguié
Elevation 434 m (1,427 ft)
Population (2007 estimate)
 • Total 270,000
  Aguié Department
File:Maradi arrondissements.png
Departments of Maradi Region, Aguié Arrondissement in pink.

Aguie (var. Aguié, Agyé) is a town and capital of the Aguie Department in southern Niger, 69 kilometres (43 miles)[1] east of the nation's second largest city, Maradi.

Administrative structure

Aguié Commune is the seat of the Department of the same name, one of five second level administrative subdivisions of the Maradi Region. Among the Commune subdivisions within the Department are the "Rural Communes" of Saé Saboua, Arnagou and Giratawa. Nearby villages include Dan Kiri, Dan Gao, Gamji Karama, Dan Rago, Doromawa, Guidan Tonio, and Guidan Kodao.

Population

A primarily Hausa populated region, it is bordered to the south by Katsina State, Nigeria. The 2007 estimated population of Aguié Department was 270,000.[2] The Maradi Region is one of the most densely populated areas of Niger, home to 20 per cent of the country’s population, mostly small farmers in rural settlements.[3]

Transport

Aguié lies on the main east-west highway between Maradi and Zinder.[4] It is also Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). north of the city of Katsina, Nigeria, in an area of much cross-border trade and population movement.[5]

2005-06 Niger food crisis

Aguié Department was particularly hard hit in the 2005-06 Niger food crisis, and the town became a center for aid efforts. International rural health and development projects have continued to be based there.[6]

References

  1. Photo essay on Niger Food Crisis:Help at hospital. London Guardian, 2005-07-24. Photo by: Schalk van Zuydam/AP.
  2. See below: "Assisted regeneration programme", IFAD/United Nations, November 2007.
    This is following a partial UN funded development census of the region from 2005. See: Villagers and aid workers alike benefit from census project in Niger, IFAD/United Nations, August 2007.
  3. See "Villagers and aid workers alike benefit from census project in Niger", IFAD/United Nations, August 2007.
  4. Friends of Niger, March 2002 newsletter.
  5. For history of the Hausa border regions, see:
    • James Decalo. Historical Dictionary of Niger. Scarecrow Press/ Metuchen. NJ - London (1979) ISBN 0-8108-1229-0
    • Finn Fuglestad. A History of Niger: 1850-1960. Cambridge University Press (1983) ISBN 0-521-25268-7
  6. Barely Open, Already Full: Feeding Centers in Niger, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). July 27, 2005.
    Projects Funded, Virginia Gildersleeve International Fund, (nd).
    Niger: Therapeutic milk is saving children’s lives, UNICEF, Kent Page, AGUIE, Niger, 10 August 2005.
    Assisted regeneration programme helps trees grow in Niger, IFAD/United Nations, November 2007.
    Projet de promotion de l’initiative locale pour le développement à Aguié (PPILDA), IFAD/United Nations Project I-597-NE. 2007.
    Projet de développement rural de la région d’Aguié (PDRAA), IFAD/United Nations Project I-292-NE. 1991.
    Establishment and evolution of partnership in PAIIP, Aguié Project, Niger, Guéro Chaibou, Adam Toudou and Alessandro Meschinelli: “Project to Support Farmer Initiatives and Innovations”, Prolinnova. March 2002.

External links