Obanacia

Obanacia (Hajorian: Obunesiya [oːbuːnɛsiʲaː]; Baritoa: Taihowonisia), officially the Republic of Obanacia (Hajorian:  Tahanjai Obunesiya) is a country in the Nesionytan Islands bordered by Hangala via Jari, and is located south of Dajankagru, Adrian Islands, and the French overseas department of New Gallia, and west of Sittapini and the Kanuzunda Islands. Demographically, it is the most diverse country in the archipelago, comprising about 104 ethnic groups, and has a population of 12,119,584 as of 2021.

The Kagrash people, descending from the Nýtan people of Dajankagru, settled in Obanacia in the 6th century. Several ethnic groups coexisted in the island and numerous kingdoms thrived over the years. In 1558, the Hajor kingdom unified the island with brutal force, but still retained ethnic harmony. In 1889, British colonialists attempted to conquer the island, but were defeated by the Obanacian forces. A year later, the Obanacian king, Rasa Tahamirjadasa, made peace with the British and converted his kingdom to a republic. Due to his severe Hajor nationalism, he wanted dominance over the archipelago and further spread the Hajor culture, so in 1909, he annexed the predominantly-Hajor state of Hangala. Neighboring Nesionytan states recognized this annexation as illegal, but the Hangalan Hajors accepted it since they wanted to be unified with the Obanacians for a long time. Later, Tahamirjadasa conquered the Kanuzunda Islands and Sittapini and established the Obanacian Empire in 1913. The empire grew strong overtime and has become a regional power in Nesionyta. In 1920, Tahamirjadasa renamed Obanacia to the Mahbartha Empire, named after. During the, Mahbartha joined the Axis powers. In 1942, Tahamirjadasa was assassinated by an anti-fascist. The country pulled out of war after his death and renamed it back to Obanacia. It withdrew from Kanuzunda Islands and Sittapini a year later, but Hangala remained part of Obanacia until 1950. The country adopted its current constitution in 1952, and has been ruled by the social democratic Obanacian Labor Force since the 1960s.

Obanacia has the fastest growing economy in the Nesionytan Islands, and is a. It is a member of the, , and is a founding member of the Federation of Nesionytan Islands and the Committee of Development of Kagrash Economies. The headquarters of CDKE is also located in Jokani.

Media
Main article: Mass media in Obanacia

Obanacia has many newspaper publishers in different languages, the largest three of which are the Hajorian Fahantalih, the Baritoa Waqtan Barit, and the English Obanacian Week. The Obanacian Week was banned several times due to its controversial news reports. It was also accused of supporting the opposition parties, which the Obanacian Week declined doing so. In 2008, Obanacian Week acquired the magazine publisher, Sastava Soul, which almost went bankrupt.

The country began radio broadcasts in 1939, with the launch of OB8K, Obanacia's oldest radio station, which later evolved into Voice of Obanacia and Obanacian Educational Radio in 1953. OER is the country's largest radio broadcaster, offering educational and public affairs programming. OER broadcasts in Hajorian, English, French, Baritoa, Ulakisonian, and many others. The network operates twenty AM stations and seventeen FM stations all over Obanacia. The government-owned Voice of Obanacia operates nineteen AM stations and twelve FM stations, and, unlike OER, broadcasts 24 hours a day.

OER helped bringing television to Obanacia in 1962, and launched OET. It was used for educational purposes only, until a local telecommunications company, DasabCom, came up with a non-educational television station. OER's brief monopoly on television ended when Sastava Television was launched in 1969. Sastava Television offered quality programs and movies, which led to the channel being the most watched in the country in the mid-1970s. Several rival television stations rose in the early 1980s, with We Are One in 1981, NTN in 1984, and OTV in 1985. Obanacia was the first Nesionytan country to cease analog broadcasts in 2008, thus officially transitioning to digital broadcasts that year.