Gomma (woreda)

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Gomma is one of the 180 woredas in the Oromia Region of Ethiopia. It is named after the former Kingdom of Gomma, whose territory was roughly the same as the modern woreda.

Part of the Jimma Zone, Gomma is bordered on the south by Seka Chekorsa, on the southwest by Gera, on the northwest by Setema, on the north by the Didessa River which separates it from the Illubabor Zone, on the northeast by Limmu Kosa, and on the east by Mana. Towns in Gomma include Agaro, Beshasha, Choche, Ghembe, Limmu Shaye, and Toba. Coffee is an important cash crop of this woreda. Over 5,000 hectares is planted with this crop.[1]

Industry in the woreda includes 118 grain mills, 35 coffee hulling and 33 coffee pulping mills, one sawmill, an office and furniture factory, and one edible oil mill. There were 45 Farmers Associations with 45,226 members and 21 Farmers Service Cooperatives with 43,088 members. Gomma has 55 kilometers of dry-weather and 89 all-weather road, for an average of road density of 117 kilometers per 1000 square kilometers. About 41% of the urban and 15.9% of the rural population has access to drinking water.[2]

Based on figures published by the Central Statistical Agency in 2005, this woreda has an estimated total population of 350,882, of whom 172,888 were males and 177,994 were females; 71,018 or 20.24% of its population are urban dwellers, which is greater than the Zone average of 12.3%. With an estimated area of 1,230.16 square kilometers, Gomma has an estimated population density of 285.2 people per square kilometer, which is greater than the Zone average of 150.6.[3]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Coffee Production" Oromia Coffee Cooperative Union website
  2. ^ Socio-economic profile of the DJimma (sic) Zone Government of Oromia Region (last accessed 1 August 2006).
  3. ^ CSA 2005 National Statistics, Tables B.3 and B.4