| Population
9.2 million
Capital
Santo Domingo (second largest city is Santiago de los Caballeros)
Area
48,730 sq km/30,279 sq miles; 380km/235 miles long, 265km/165 miles wide
at the extremes
Geography
The Dominican Republic is the second largest country in the Caribbean.
It is divided into 6 regions - North Coast, South Central, Central, East
Coast, North East Coast, & South West Coast with 31 provinces and
one National District. Its terrain is mostly rugged highlands with towering
peaks plunging down into lush valleys; the highest point is Pico Duarte
- 3,175 metres. The country has 1,288 km of coastline of which 300 km
is golden sandy beaches
Time difference
GMT -4 Hours
Language
Official language is Spanish; 1 million people are also fluent in Haitian
Creole
Monetary unit Dominican Peso
Airport
There are 10 international airports in the Dominican Republic. Just 20
minutes from the Two Rivers Beach Resort is the Gregorio Luperon International
Airport at Puerto Plata
Flight times 9.25 hours from London via Miami; 2 hours from Miami; 3.5
hours from New York. BA operates from London via Miami (American Airlines)
Climate
Tropical climate with little seasonal temperature variation averaging
28°c; average daily sunshine is 9 hours; seasonal rainfall between
May and November
Location
The Dominican Republic occupies the eastern two-thirds of the Caribbean
island called Hispaniola; the remaining third of the island to the west
is the Republic of Haiti. Hispaniola is the second largest of the Greater
Antilles islands, and lies between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean
Sea.
Government
Presidential Republic – President - Leonel Fernandez is both the
chief of state and head of government
Economy
Economic reforms launched in late 1994 contributed to exchange rate stabilisation
and reduced inflation. The president instituted austerity measures to
rescue the country from economic crisis, and in the first half of 2006
the economy grew 11.7%
Tourism
In 2004, the Dominican Republic welcomed 3.5 million tourists (29% of
the Caribbean total) who spent in excess of US$ 3.4 billion (5% more than
in 2003). Tourism accounted for 24% of GDP. High season – December
to April
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