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Enugu

Enugu (/ˈnɡ/ (listen) ay-NOO-goo;[8] Igbo: Énugwú)[9][10] is the capital city of Enugu State in Nigeria. It is located in southeastern part of Nigeria. The city had a population of 820,000 according to the last Nigerian census. The name Enugu is derived from the two Igbo words Énú Ụ́gwụ́, meaning "hill top", denoting the city's hilly geography. Enugu acquired township status in 1917 and was called Enugwu-Ngwo, but because of the rapid expansion towards areas owned by other indigenous communities, the city was renamed Enugu in 1928.

Enugu
Énugwú
City
August 2006 view of Enugu from the hills on the west side of the city
Nicknames: 
Coal City,[1]
Capital of Igboland[2]
Enugu
Enugu in Nigeria
Coordinates: 6°27′10″N 7°30′40″E / 6.45278°N 7.51111°E / 6.45278; 7.51111
CountryNigeria
StateEnugu
LGAEnugu East, Enugu North, Enugu South
Incorporatedin 1909
Founded byEnugwu-Ngwo and Ogui Nike people
Named forits hilly geography
Government
 • TypeExecutive Chairman-Council
 • Governing bodyLocal Government Council
 • PartyPDP
 • ChairmanAzike Brian (Enugu North);
Paul Ogbe (Enugu South Urban);
Theresa Egbo (Enugu South Rural);
Christopher Ugwu (Enugu East)
Area
 • Total556 km2 (215 sq mi)
Elevation180 m (590 ft)
Population
 (2006 census)[5]
 • Total722,664
 • Rank9th
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,400/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (WAT)
Postcode
400...[6]
Area code042[7]
ClimateAw
Websitewww.enugustate.gov.ng

Since the 17th century the location of present-day Enugu has been inhabited by the Enugwu-Ngwo and Nike (/nˈk/ nee-KAY) subgroup of the Igbo people; . In 1900, the Southern Nigeria Protectorate was established by the colonial administration of the British Empire. The discovery of coal by the colonists led to the creation of what was then known as the Enugu Coal Camp, named after the nearby village of Enugu Ngwo, under which coal was first found. The nearby city of Port Harcourt was created for the purpose of shipping this coal abroad, being located 243 kilometres (151 mi) south of the camp.[11] Coal mining opportunities in Enugu attracted people from throughout the region; this marked the core of the first urban settlement of what is today known as simply Enugu. Enugu developed as one of the few cities in West Africa created entirely from European contact. By 1958 Enugu had over 8,000 coal miners. As of 2005 there are no significant coal mining activities left in the city.

Enugu became the capital of the Eastern Region after Nigeria's independence in 1960; a succession of territorial adjustments in 1967, 1976 and 1991 led to Enugu becoming the capital of what is now Enugu State. On 30 May 1967 Enugu was declared the capital of the short-lived Republic of Biafra; for this Enugu is known as the "capital of Igboland." After Enugu was captured by the Nigerian armed forces, the Biafran capital was moved to Umuahia.

Industries in the city include the urban market and bottling industries. Enugu is also one of the primary filming locations for directors of the Nigerian movie industry, dubbed "Nollywood". Enugu's main airport is the Akanu Ibiam International Airport.

The 2006 national census in Nigeria estimated the population of Enugu state at 3,267.837,[12] While the males constitute 48.84%, the female population constitute 51.16%[13] (1,596,042-males and 1,671,795- females). Demographers have however indicated that the actual population of Enugu state is around 6 million.[14] Enugu state has three senatorial zones namely; Enugu north, Enugu East and Enugu West[15]

History

Early history

The first settlement in the Enugu area was the small Nike village of Ogui, which was present since the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade.[1] Nike in the Igbo language means "with strength or power."[2] It was through slave raiding that the Nike people acquired most of their lands, which were mostly unsettled. The Nike used slaves for a defence strategy, placing Slave camps at the edge of their territories so that it was harder for an enemy to access the free born.[16] The Nike people were allied to the Aro people who formed the Aro Confederacy (1690–1901)[17] which was an Igbo Organisation that controlled slave trading in the Enugu area.[18] Along with the Aro people who came to trade from Arochukwu in the south were the Hausa people who came to trade from the north. The Hausa traders provided horses to the Nike which were used for rituals by the Igbo. Both the Aro and Hausa migrated back and forth to what is now the city of Enugu and were considered foreigners to the area.[19]

Industrialisation

 
The Iva Valley coal mine

A British campaign to invade Arochukwu and open up the hinterland for British military and political rule was carried out in 1901. A war between the British and Aro officially started on 1 December 1901 lasting till 24 March 1902 when the Aro were defeated.[20] The Aro Confederacy ended and the rest of Aro dominated areas was added to The Colony and Protectorate of Southern Nigeria, declared in 1900.[21][22] Europeans first arrived in the Enugu area in 1903 when the British/Australian geologist Albert Ernest Kitson led an exploration of the Southern Nigeria Protectorate to search for especially valued mineral resources under the supervision of the Imperial Institute, London. By 1909 coal was found under the village of Enugwu Ngwo[2] in the Udi and Okoga areas, and by 1913 the coal was confirmed to be in quantities that would be viable commercially.[19] By 1914 the colonial government had already merged the Northern and Southern Nigeria Protectorate to form the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria.[23]

In 1915 the British began talks with the indigenous people of the land that would become Enugu about its acquisition in order to lay the Eastern Line railway and to build a colliery. The first houses built in the area were in a temporary settlement consisting of Igbo traditional mud housing inhabited by a W. J. Leck and some other Europeans on Hill-top, the only plain on the escarpment rolling before the jungled Milliken Hill. Antiques of the old residence of the colonialists called the "Europeans quarters" still abound on the Hill-top, an outskirt of Enugwu-Ngwo town. Another settlement known as Ugwu Alfred (Igbo: Alfred's Hill) or "Alfred's Camp", inhabited by an Alfred Inoma (a leader of indigenous labourers from Onitsha) and his labourers, was located on a hillside.[19][24] After the land acquisition by the British, Frederick Lugard, the Governor-General of Nigeria at the time, named the colliery built at the bottom of the Udi Hills Enugu Coal Camp to distinguish it from Enugwu Ngwo[2] which overlooks the city from atop a scarp on Enugu's west.[25] The first coal mine in the Enugu area was the Udi mine opened in 1915 which was shut down two years later and replaced with the Iva Valley mine.[26][27] Enugu became a major coal mining area and the only significant one in West Africa.[19] The Eastern Line railway connecting Enugu with Port Harcourt was completed in 1916 in order to export the coal through its seaport[11][26] of which the city was created for this purpose.[28] Enugu became one of the few cities in West Africa created out of contact with Europeans.[1] By 1916 parts of Enugu reserved for Europeans were set up by the colonial government. The area now known as the Government Reserved Area (GRA) became the European Quarters located north of the Ogbete River; alongside this was a section developed for African residents located south of the river. The built-up area of Enugu comprised these two areas, and by 1917 the city officially gained township status. On the African side of the city a rapid influx of migrant workers sparked the development of squatter camps on the Udi Hills near the coal mines and the Iva Valley.[24]

In 1938 Enugu became the administrative capital of the Eastern Region. The number of employed coal miners in Enugu grew from 6,000 (of mostly Udi men) in 1948 to 8,000 in 1958. Enugu's population rose sharply with its industrialisation; the population of the city reached 62,000 in 1952.[27] Mining in Enugu was sometimes turbulent, as demonstrated by the events of 18 November 1949 when 21 striking miners were shot and killed and 51 wounded by police under British governance. The massacre that came to be known as "The Iva Valley Shooting"[29] fueled nationalist or "Zikist" sentiments among most Nigerians, and especially amongst Eastern Nigerians.[2][27][30] "Zikisim" was a post World War II movement that was created out of admiration for Nnamdi Azikiwe who was a prominent nationalist of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC). The shooting was right after a period of unrest when miners were angered by the belief that their full pay was being held back by the colliery management, a belief that was pushed by the nationalist press. Many of the Zikists tried to use the Iva Valley shooting to fuel their nationalistic agenda and push the British imperial administration, out of Nigeria.[30] A detailed account of the incident was also published in the memoirs of the British Resident of Enugu at the time, James Stewart Smith.[31]

Independence, war, and after

Enugu became a municipality in 1956 with Umaru Altine its first mayor.[27] After four years passed, Nigeria gained its independence in 1960. On 27 May 1967 the Nigerian government divided the Western, Northern and Eastern Region into 12 states[32] and Enugu was made the capital of the new East Central State.[1] On 30 May 1967 Enugu was declared the capital of the short-lived Republic of Biafra, the latter created out of the eastern Nigerian states of East Central, Cross River and Rivers.[33][34] Biafra was declared by Ojukwu because of Eastern Nigeria after their members were attacked injured and killed in a series of ethnic attacks launched by some other ethnic groups in other parts of the country following the first military coup executed by mostly Igbo Officers, in which top northern Nigerian leaders among others were assassinated. The main rivals of the mostly Igbo Eastern Nigerians were the Hausa/Fulani people of Northern Nigeria.[35] A northern headed war on the secession (1967—1970) and continuous attacks on the Igbos in other part of Nigeria lead[2] Igbos from northern and western Nigeria to return to their "native" areas in eastern Nigeria and Enugu became a destination. Radio Biafra, alternatively the Voice of Biafra (formerly the Eastern Nigerian Broadcasting Service), was based in Enugu;[36] it was from here that the Biafran leader, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, broadcast speeches and propaganda to Biafrans and Nigeria.[37][38] Because of the war, Enugu witnessed a decrease in the number of non-Igbo, specifically non-eastern Nigerian residents.[19] On 4 October 1967 the Nigerian military bombarded Enugu with artillery just outside its boundaries before capturing it a week later, shortly after this Umuahia became the new capital of the republic.[39] Years after the Republic of Biafra reverted to Nigeria, Enugu is still regarded as the "Capital of Igboland."[2][40]

Enugu resumed in 1970 as the capital of the East Central State after the republic was dissolved. On 3 February 1976 the East Central State was made into two new states, Imo and Anambra; there were then 19 states in Nigeria;[41] Enugu was the capital of Anambra. On 27 August 1991 the military dictatorship of Ibrahim Babangida divided the old Anambra State into two new states, Enugu State and Anambra State.[42] Enugu remained as the capital of the newly created Enugu State, while Awka became the capital of the new Anambra State.[43]

Geography

Topography

 
Satellite image of Enugu and other communities neighbouring it. The Enugu escarpment can be seen on the left where it has a lighter colour; the Nyaba River can be seen on the bottom.

Despite its name meaning hill top in the Igbo language,[1][2] Enugu lies at the foot of an escarpment and not a hill.[26] Enugu is located in the Cross River basin[44] and the Benue trough and has the best developed coal in this area.[45] Precambrian basement rock in this region is overlaid with sediments bearing coal from the Cretaceous and Tertiary age.[46] Coal seams in the Enugu coal district measure between 1 and 2 metres (3.3 and 6.6 ft) in thickness and the reserves have been estimated to be more than 300 million tones.[45] Enugu's hills at the extreme may reach an elevation of 1,000 metres (3,300 ft). Highlands surrounding Enugu for the most part are underlain by sandstone, while lowlands are underlain by shale. Much of the escarpment stretching from Enugu to Orlu has been ravaged by soil and gully erosion.[47] Other geological features in Enugu include the Nike Lake near which the Nike Lake Hotel has been built.[2] The Ekulu, Asata, Ogbete, Aria, Idaw and Nyaba rivers are the six largest rivers located in the city.[48] The Ekulu River is the largest body of water in Enugu urban[49] and its reservoir contributes to part of the city's domestic water supply.[47]

Water

Water is a scarce resource in Enugu. The major way residents get water is by drilling boreholes into the ground but the presence of shale underground makes it difficult to drill through. Another reason for this is the coal formation all through the state. A solution to this will be to harvest surface water from streams.[50]

Climate

Enugu is located in a tropical rain forest zone with a derived savannah.[51][52] The city has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen: Aw). Enugu's climate is humid and this humidity is at its highest between March and November.[52] For the whole of Enugu State the mean daily temperature is 26.7 °C (80.1 °F).[51] As in the rest of West Africa, the rainy season and dry season are the only weather periods that recur in Enugu. The average annual rainfall in Enugu is around 2,000 millimetres (79 in), which arrives intermittently and becomes very heavy during the rainy season.[53] Other weather conditions affecting the city include Harmattan, a dusty trade wind lasting a few weeks of December and January.[54] Like the rest of Nigeria, Enugu is hot all year round.

Climate data for Enugu
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.1
(97.0)
37.8
(100.0)
37.8
(100.0)
36.7
(98.1)
35.0
(95.0)
33.3
(91.9)
35.0
(95.0)
32.8
(91.0)
32.8
(91.0)
34.4
(93.9)
35.0
(95.0)
35.6
(96.1)
37.8
(100.0)
Average high °C (°F) 33.5
(92.3)
34.9
(94.8)
34.7
(94.5)
33.6
(92.5)
32.0
(89.6)
30.5
(86.9)
29.5
(85.1)
29.6
(85.3)
30.2
(86.4)
31.2
(88.2)
32.6
(90.7)
32.9
(91.2)
32.1
(89.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 25.6
(78.1)
27.2
(81.0)
28.3
(82.9)
27.4
(81.3)
26.6
(79.9)
25.5
(77.9)
25.0
(77.0)
24.8
(76.6)
24.8
(76.6)
25.3
(77.5)
26.0
(78.8)
25.6
(78.1)
26.0
(78.8)
Average low °C (°F) 20.3
(68.5)
22.8
(73.0)
23.9
(75.0)
23.9
(75.0)
23.1
(73.6)
22.6
(72.7)
22.3
(72.1)
22.3
(72.1)
22.1
(71.8)
22.3
(72.1)
21.6
(70.9)
20.0
(68.0)
22.3
(72.1)
Record low °C (°F) 12.8
(55.0)
12.8
(55.0)
16.1
(61.0)
19.4
(66.9)
19.4
(66.9)
18.9
(66.0)
19.4
(66.9)
18.9
(66.0)
18.3
(64.9)
18.9
(66.0)
14.4
(57.9)
12.2
(54.0)
12.2
(54.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 18.8
(0.74)
15.4
(0.61)
70.3
(2.77)
130.1
(5.12)
217.2
(8.55)
251.9
(9.92)
241.9
(9.52)
237.1
(9.33)
292.0
(11.50)
200.9
(7.91)
12.1
(0.48)
7.7
(0.30)
1,695.4
(66.75)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 1.4 1.2 3.9 6.8 12.2 13.7 15.6 15.3 17.8 12.2 1.3 0.7 102.1
Average relative humidity (%) (at 15:00 LST) 34.3 37.4 45.6 56.4 63.6 68.5 71.3 70.8 70.3 66.4 50.5 38.7 56.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 186.0 173.6 182.9 183.0 186.0 153.0 117.8 117.8 123.0 173.6 219.0 217.0 2,032.7
Mean daily sunshine hours 6.0 6.2 5.9 6.1 6.0 5.1 3.8 3.8 4.1 5.6 7.3 7.0 5.6
Source 1: NOAA[55]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (extremes)[56]

Cityscape and architecture

The tallest building in Enugu's Central Business District (CBD) is the African Continental Bank (ACB) tower with six stories.[57] The tower was built in the late 50s for the African Continental Bank Limited which was founded by Nnamdi Azikiwe who became the first president of Nigeria after the country's independence from the United Kingdom in October 1960.[58] The opening of the building took place on 30 April 1959.[59] Other tall buildings include the Hotel Presidential opened in August 1963. The seven story building contains 100 rooms and is located in the Independence Layout. Hotel Presidential cost $2.5 million to build and was commissioned by the government of what was then the Eastern Region to serve visiting businessmen, officials and tourists.[60] In the middle of Enugu is the Michael Okpara Square, dedicated to the premier of the former Eastern Region Michael Okpara. Beside the square is located the Enugu State Government House, Enugu State House of Assembly and Enugu State Judiciary Complex.[61]


Enugu's coal mines are dotted around on the outskirts of the city, a majority of which are closed. The Colliery Camp mines are located in the Iva Valley which is near the neighboring town of Ngwo and Hilltop of Enugu.[24] The Iva Valley coal mine is accessed through the Iva Valley road linking Enugu with Ngwo.[62] Other coal mines are located in the Ogbete and Coal Camp layouts; these mines are located on the periphery of the city near the Iva Valley as well.[24]

Architectural design in Enugu's early years was in the hands of the British colonial administration; Enugu's architecture was consequently very European. English cottage housing and Victorian houses were used for housing Europeans and Nigerian colonial civil servants in the early 20th century until Europeans started trying to adapt their architecture to the tropical climate.[63] Some other examples of these European styles are visible in churches of the colonial era, such as the Holy Ghost Cathedral with its Greco-Roman stained glass windows depicting Europeans. Enugu's roads were reflective of its British rule; much of the city's narrow roads in the GRA have been preserved dating back to the incorporation of the city itself.[64] Low rent one bedroom flats in Enugu and other Nigerian cities are known as "face-me-I-face-you" for the way a group of flats face each other and form a square where a compound entrance is led into.[65][66]

Government

Enugu city covers three local government areas: Enugu East, Enugu North and Enugu South.[67] A Local Government Council exists for each of these seats that manages sectors including primary education and health; an elected Executive Chairman and a group of elected Councilors form the Local Government Council that heads each Local Government Area.[68][69] Enugu South is split between its rural and urban parts when electing an Executive Chairman. The Executive Chairmen include Paul Ogbe for Enugu South Urban, Theresa Egbo for Enugu South Rural, Emma Onoh for Enugu North, and Christopher Ugwu for Enugu East; these chairmen represent their LGA's in the Enugu State House of Assembly.[70] The Ministry of Lands, Survey and Town Planning (at the state level) and the Local Planning Authority (at the local government level) are responsible for the administration of urban lands and town planning.[68] Government House, Enugu is where the government of the state is based. On the federal level, the city of Enugu is split between two congressional areas; Enugu North/South represented by Chukwuegbo Ofor and Enugu East represented by Gilbert Nnaji; both representatives are in the People's Democratic Party (PDP) as is Ifeanyichukwu Ugwuanyi (GBURU-GBURU), the governor of Enugu State.[71]

Demographics

Population growth of Enugu
YearPop.
1921 3,170[48][72]
1931 12,959[72]
1953 62,764[48][72]
1963 138,457[48]
1982 349,873[48]
1983 367,567[48]
1984 385,735[48]
1987 446,535[48]
1991 407,756[73]
2002 595,000[40]
2006 722,664[74]

According to the 2006 Nigerian census, the Enugu metropolitan area has an estimated population of 722,664.[74] This estimate along with population estimates of other Nigerian cities have been disputed with accusations of population inflation and deflation in favour of the northern part of the country.[75] The population of Enugu is predominantly Christian,[76] as is the rest of southeastern Nigeria.[77] Like the rest of Nigeria most people in Enugu speak Nigerian English alongside the dominant language in the region.[78] In this case the dominant language is Igbo.[79] Nigerian English, or pidgin (a mix of English and indigenous words) is often used because of ethnic diversity and sometimes because of the diversity of dialects in the Igbo language.[80] In cultural and linguistic terms Enugu is within the Northern cluster of the Igbo region which includes other towns such as Owo, Nike, Agbani, and cities like Awka and Nsukka.[81]

The indigenous people of Enugu include Enugwu-Ngwo people who live on the aged Hill-Top plain towards the Milliken Hills on the west, with their farm lands sprawling all over the valley, the Ogui Nike who live in the areas surrounding Hotel Presidential, Obiagu, Ama-Igbo, Ihewuzi and Onu-Asata. Other groups include the Awkunanaw people, who live mainly in the Achara Layout and Uwani areas. Other Nike people live around the Abakpa, Iji-Nike, and Emene areas of the city.[82][83][84] Most of the non-indigenous people of Enugu are migrants from other parts of the Igbo cultural area. After the majority Igbo, the Yoruba people are another significant ethnic group found present in Enugu; other groups include the Hausa, Kanuri, Ijaw, and Fulani people.[85]

Crime

Enugu's crime rate rose in 2009 as kidnapping and armed robbery rates increased in southeastern Nigeria specifically between September and December.[86] The Enugu State government sought to check the high kidnapping rates by passing a bill in February 2009 that made kidnapping by the use of a weapon a capital offence; the bill was passed by the Enugu House of Assembly unanimously.[87] 1,088 arrests were made in the city between September and December 2009; 270 of these were in September, 303 were in October, 295 in November and 220 were in December. 477 of these detainees were accused of committing capital offences which included kidnapping.[86] The motives of kidnappers in Enugu are primarily financial and some ransoms went into the millions of Naira. The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor of Enugu State, Dan Nwomeh, had his ransom set as high as ₦500 million (3.3 million US Dollars As of 26 June 2010),[88] dropping to ₦200 million and then ₦50 million before he was released without a ransom being paid because of the refusal of the government to negotiate with the kidnappers. Much of the crime in Enugu and the rest of Nigeria has been attributed to unemployment.[89]

Culture

External image
  Enugu's Mmanwu masquerades in full costume[90]

As a Northern Igbo city, Enugu shares cultural traits with its neighbouring towns. Two important Igbo traditional festivals take place in Enugu annually; the Mmanwu festival and the New yam festival. The Mmanwu festival takes place in November and features various types of masquerades that each have a name. This festival is held at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium as a parade of carnival-like masquerades that are accompanied by music and it is supported by the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture.[91][92][93] The second important Igbo festival, the New yam festival known as 'iwa ji', is held between August and October marking the harvesting and feasting of the new yam. The yam is a root vegetable that is the staple crop and a cultural symbol for the Igbo people.[91][92] Recently created festivals include the Enugu Festival of Arts which is managed by the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture. The festival highlights African culture and traditions and it is here that the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture included the Mmanwu parade as part of the events. The Enugu Festival of Arts was started in 1986; it has modernised the Mmanwu festival by transferring it from its traditional village surroundings to the urban setting of Enugu.[93] Diana, Princess of Wales was a notable spectator of Enugu's cultural shows when she visited the city in 1990.[94] visitors to the city can enjoy a wide variety of the cities native delicacies especially its Famous Okpa "Okpa Enugu", Abacha a local delicacy made from cassava "African salad" fiofio and host of other delicacies like Nkwobi, pepper soup.

The tourism industry in Enugu, managed by the Enugu State Tourism Board (ESTB), is small; however, the state government recognises a variety of historic and recreational sites. These sites include places like the Udi Hills, from which the majority of Enugu city can be viewed.The Nike lake Resort in the outskirt of the city, the famous Iva Valley which served as residential quarters for European workers managing the Coal Mining activities. The Polo amusement park is a funfair that is among the first generation of public parks in the city;[91][95] other parks in the city include the Murtala Muhammed Park.[96] Enugu's former coal mines, Onyeama and Okpara, are open to public visits.[91] Some other spots include: The Institute of Management and Technology (IMT) Sculptural Garden and Art Gallery, the Eastern Region Parliamentary Building, the Old Government Lodge,[91] and Enugu Golf course. Enugu Zoo is another attraction in the city. It is divided into the botanical garden and the zoological section.[97] A National Museum is located near Enugu at its north, although it receives few visitors.[2] It is managed by National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM). Other galleries include the Bona Gallery.[98]

Entertainment

Music

 
Flavour N'abania at the 2014 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards

Enugu rose as an important centre for Highlife music in Nigeria in the 1950s. The Igbo dominated version of the genre grew out of earlier "Igbo blues" or "palm wine music" and further spread in popularity to the Southern Cameroons where Enugu had considerable influence in arts and culture in towns such as Limbe, Tiko and Douala.[99] Some prominent musicians with origins in Enugu include Sonny Okosun, an afrobeat musician who was born and raised in Enugu and joined his first band The Postmen that was based in the city in 1965;[100][101] Celestine Ukwu joined Michael Ejeagha's Enugu based Paradise Rhythm Orchestra in 1962 before creating his own band[102] and had a recreational club in the city after the Nigeria Civil War;[103] other musicians include 2Face Idibia; a Hip hop/R&B musician who partly grew up and studied music in the city.[104] Other notable musicians originating from Enugu include rapper Phyno, Slowdog, William Onyeabor, and highlife musician Flavour N'abania.

Media and literature

English-language newspapers published and sold in Enugu include the Daily Star, Evening Star, The Renaissance and New Renaissance.[105] One of the earliest newspapers published in Enugu was the Eastern Sentinel published by Nnamdi Azikiwe's Zik Group in 1955, but failed in 1960.[27][106][107] Among the city's television and radio stations are the Nigerian Television Authority's network affiliate (NTA Enugu) headquarters located at Independence Layout; and the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN) network affiliate station (Radio Enugu) which broadcasts in English, Igbo, Efik, Ijaw and Tiv.[108] Enugu State Broadcasting Service Television (ESBS-TV) is a state owned television broadcasting company which offers 18 hours of continuous broadcasting on weekends.[109] Enugu, after Lagos is the preferred city for shooting films in Nigeria and a film production centre in the East.[110][111] In 2007, Enugu hosted the first-ever film festival in the state, the Enugu International Film Festival. Held at Hotel Presidential, the festival's intent was to highlight Enugu as a "film making hub" in Africa including movie premiers and prizes for different film categories.[112]

Some of Nigeria's well-known writers were born and have lived in the city of Enugu. Chinua Achebe, writer of Things Fall Apart lived in Enugu in 1958, the year the book was published.[113] He again moved to the city during the Nigerian Civil War after escaping Lagos with his family. It was at this time that he met and became friends with Nigerian poet Christopher Okigbo where they started the publishing house Citadel Press, among its titles How the Dog was Domesticated and How the Leopard Got His Claws.[114] Okigbo lived in Enugu during the early months of the Nigerian Civil War. His home in Hilltop contained many of his unpublished writings which were mostly destroyed by bombing early in the war.[115] Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, writer of Half of a Yellow Sun, a winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2007,[116][117] was born in Enugu in 1977 and grew up in Nsukka.[118][119]

Sports

The Enugu Rangers, a first-division professional league association football team, is Enugu's home team that plays in the Nigerian Premier League and are based in the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium. Former Rangers players include Jay-Jay Okocha and Taribo West.[120][121] Enugu's main sports centre is the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium, named after Nnamdi Azikiwe, the first president of Nigeria. The stadium remained the centre of sports for the whole of the Eastern Region until the Nigerian Civil War broke out. At the war's end the stadium was refurbished.[121] Enugu was a host for the 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup games (24 October – 15 November) alongside Calabar and five other Nigerian cities with matches taking place at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium.[120] Its hosting of the FIFA U-17 World Cup benefited Enugu through the renovation of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium, having had such things as a new artificial surface laid.[120] City's Top flight Football Team Enugu Rangers won the Nigerian Professional Football League in 2016.

Economy

Nicknamed the Coal City,[1] Enugu's economy in the early 20th century depended on coal mining in the Udi plateau; this industry was the pushing force towards the city's growth.[122] The Nigerian Coal Corporation has been based in Enugu since its creation in 1950 where it controlled coal mining.[123] With the creation of the Eastern Line, Enugu was connected with the sea via Port Harcourt to its south and later connected to the city of Kaduna to Enugu's north.[124] The Nigerian Civil War brought widespread devastation that forced a decline in coal production from damage or destruction of equipment. As of 2005 coal mining is no longer the major source of income and mines lay unused.[125] Other minerals mined in Enugu include iron ore, limestone, fine clay, marble, and silica sand.[126]

In Enugu most goods are sold in open markets or by street hawkers; a significant number of street hawkers in Nigeria are children. As of 2003, around 44 under-16-year-olds (equally boys and girls) hawk on every street on every hour in Enugu.[127] There are three main urban markets in Enugu: Ogbete Market, Awkunanaw Market and New Market. New Market is a major market for the sale of garri.[128] Ogbete market is patronised by merchants from all over the surrounding area, including merchants from cities like Onitsha, Aguleri, Abakaliki and Aba. In Ogebete market non-food goods are also sold.[129] Brewing and soft-drink bottling are among other industries in the city; there is also a Mercedes assembly plant[96][130] as well as the production and manufacturing of machinery, pottery, tiles, steel, cement, asbestos, petroleum, and pharmaceuticals.[131] For a period of time Sosoliso Airlines had its head office on the grounds of Akanu Ibiam International Airport in Enugu.[132]

The former Eastern Region was once famed for producing half the world's total output of palm kernels.[133] Since the Nigerian Civil War production has markedly declined largely because the plantations and processing equipment were either damaged or destroyed.[134] The production of other important cash crops such as cocoa, groundnut and groundnut oil, rubber, cassava, cotton and cotton seed and timber tumbled after the civil war and the subsequent oil boom years.[135] Consequently, the area called Enugu State as well as the rest of Nigeria, which was once a self-sufficient net exporter in agricultural produce, must import food.[136]

Education

 
Students at a seminar in Enugu

Enugu has three main tertiary institutions: the Enugu State University of Science & Technology (ESUT); the University of Nigeria, Nsukka Campus (UNN)and Enugu Campus (UNEC); and the Institute of Management & Technology (IMT). Another notable tertiary institution in Enugu State is the Federal Cooperative College, Oji River (FCCO). Godfrey Okoye University, Caritas University, Renaissance University, Coal City university, Novena University, Esut Business School. The city is also home to Our Saviour Institute of Science and Technology, a polytechnic, Marist Polytechnic [1] and Bigard Memorial Seminary. Some notable secondary schools in Enugu include the College of the Immaculate Conception (CIC) built in 1940, Holy Rosary College (HRC) built in 1943, Daughters of Divine Love (DDL) [137] Colliery Comprehensive Secondary school, Queen's Secondary School, Federal Government College, Royal Crown Academy, Nsukka and the University of Nigeria Secondary school. University Teaching Hospital (UNTH) Enugu, under the university of Nigeria, is another university located in the city.[138]

Healthcare

In Enugu, health care services can be obtained at several institutions including the ESUT (Enugu State University of Science and Technology) Teaching Hospital; University of Nigeria, Enugu, Teaching Hospital; Park Lane General Hospital in the GRA; PMC (Peenok Medical Center) located on Ziks Avenue in Uwani; Hansa Clinic on Awolowo Street in Uwani; Niger Foundation Hospital and Diagnostic Centre on Presidential Close in the Independence Layout; and the Ntasi Obi Ndi no n'Afufu Hospital organization located on Enuguabor Street in the Trans-Ekulu layout, among others.[139] Some of the specialist hospitals in Enugu include the Psychiatric Hospital Enugu and the National Orthopaedic Hospital Enugu (NOHE).[140]

Many of the hospitals in Enugu are privately run. The UNTH and the National Orthopaedic Hospital are among some of the government controlled hospitals in the city.[140] The medical equipment for the UNTH was upgraded in 2009 as well as parts of the hospital which were renovated in the same year. Most hospitals in the city suffer from a poor standard of medical facilities available to them;[141] many of the city's citizens travel abroad for medical care.[142] However, hospitals have been aided by foreign organisations and by Enugu's community at home and abroad who have donated medicine and other medical equipment.[143][144] The most developed government hospital in Enugu is the Park Lane Hospital.[140] The governor has said that the state has bought some ambulance service vehicles in March 2010.[145] Enugu State has established free medical care for pregnant women and for all children under 5 years of age in the state. The child healthcare programme, founded under the District Health System (DHS), was added to the states 2008 budget.[146] Enugu State has a HIV/AIDS prevalence of 6.5%, one of the highest in the country.[147]

Transport

Enugu is located on the narrow-gauge Eastern Line railway linked to the city of Port Harcourt; the Enugu train station is by the side of the National Stadium; dating back to its coal-mining origins, it is located on Ogui Street. The main forms of transportation in the city are buses, taxi cabs and buses.,[96] Okada (motorcycles) once served as public transportation in the city until the state government banned them from this use in April 2009.[148] Most transport enters and leaves the city through Enugu's Ogbete Motor Park,[2] Garki Motor Park serves as a transport pick-up point as well.[96] Unregistered taxis are known as Kabu Kabu and are differentiated with registered ones through the lack of yellow paint on the unregistered vehicles.[149]

In 2009, Enugu introduced a taxi job scheme under 'Coal City Cabs' to help in the eradication of poverty in the city.[150][151] 200 registered Nissan Sunny taxis, provided by the state government; and 200 registered Suzuki taxis, provided by the Umuchinemere Pro-Credit Micro Finance Bank, were given out on loan to unemployed citizens in the city who will operate as taxi drivers and will own the vehicles after payments are completed.[152][153] 20 buses with the capacity for 82 passengers seated and standing were introduced as Coal City Shuttle buses on 13 March 2009 to run as public transport for Enugu urban.[148]

The main airport in the state is the Akanu Ibiam International Airport which can be accessed by buses and taxis.[96] Renovations began on 30 November 2009 to upgrade it to accommodate wide-bodied aircraft. These plans include extending the 2,400-metre (7,900 ft) runway by 600 metres (2,000 ft) to make it 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) long; the runway will be widened from 45 to 60 metres (148 to 197 ft). It is estimated that the project will cost ₦4.13bn[154] (27.3 million US Dollars As of 26 June 2010).[155]

The A3, or the Enugu-Port Harcourt highway, was opened in the 1970s and links the two cities together by passing through Aba, a major urban settlement.[156] The A3 goes further on past Enugu's north to link to the city of Jos via Makurdi.[157] Two more highways, the A232 from Benin City, Asaba and Onitsha to Enugu's east[158] and the A343 from Abakaliki to Enugu's west,[159] makes Enugu the site of a major junction.[64]

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Bibliography

  • Udo, Reuben K. (1970). Geographical Regions of Nigeria. University of California Press.
  • Sklar, Richard L. (2004). Nigerian Political Parties: Power in an Emergent African Nation. Africa World Press. ISBN 978-1-59221-209-5.
  • Coleman, James Smoot (1958). Nigeria: background to nationalism. University of California Press.
  • Williams, Lizzie (2008). Nigeria: The Bradt Travel Guide. Bradt Travel Guides. ISBN 978-1-84162-239-2.
  • Hudgens, Jim; Trillo, Richard (2003). The rough guide to West Africa (4 ed.). Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-84353-118-0.
  • Nigeria (1970). Nigeria handbook. Federal Ministry of Information.
  • Ezenwa-Ohaeto (1997). Chinua Achebe: A Biography. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33342-1.

External links

  • – Updates from Enugu and Enugu State
  • Igbo Enugu Guide – A guide to Enugu and Igboland's culture and language
  • "Bigard Memorial Seminary, Enugu – …You Shall Be My Witnesses". Retrieved 20 July 2020.

enugu, this, article, about, capital, state, nigeria, state, state, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, igbo, Énugwú, capital, city, state, nigeria, located, southeastern, part, nigeria, city, population, according, last, nigerian, census, name, derived, from. This article is about the capital of Enugu State in Nigeria For the state see Enugu State For all other uses see Enugu disambiguation Enugu eɪ ˈ n uː ɡ uː listen ay NOO goo 8 Igbo Enugwu 9 10 is the capital city of Enugu State in Nigeria It is located in southeastern part of Nigeria The city had a population of 820 000 according to the last Nigerian census The name Enugu is derived from the two Igbo words Enu Ụ gwụ meaning hill top denoting the city s hilly geography Enugu acquired township status in 1917 and was called Enugwu Ngwo but because of the rapid expansion towards areas owned by other indigenous communities the city was renamed Enugu in 1928 Enugu EnugwuCityAugust 2006 view of Enugu from the hills on the west side of the cityNicknames Coal City 1 Capital of Igboland 2 EnuguEnugu in NigeriaCoordinates 6 27 10 N 7 30 40 E 6 45278 N 7 51111 E 6 45278 7 51111CountryNigeriaStateEnuguLGAEnugu East Enugu North Enugu SouthIncorporatedin 1909Founded byEnugwu Ngwo and Ogui Nike peopleNamed forits hilly geographyGovernment TypeExecutive Chairman Council Governing bodyLocal Government Council PartyPDP ChairmanAzike Brian Enugu North Paul Ogbe Enugu South Urban Theresa Egbo Enugu South Rural Christopher Ugwu Enugu East Area 3 Total556 km2 215 sq mi Elevation 4 180 m 590 ft Population 2006 census 5 Total722 664 Rank9th Density1 300 km2 3 400 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 WAT Postcode400 6 Area code042 7 ClimateAwWebsitewww wbr enugustate wbr gov wbr ngSince the 17th century the location of present day Enugu has been inhabited by the Enugwu Ngwo and Nike n iː ˈ k eɪ nee KAY subgroup of the Igbo people In 1900 the Southern Nigeria Protectorate was established by the colonial administration of the British Empire The discovery of coal by the colonists led to the creation of what was then known as the Enugu Coal Camp named after the nearby village of Enugu Ngwo under which coal was first found The nearby city of Port Harcourt was created for the purpose of shipping this coal abroad being located 243 kilometres 151 mi south of the camp 11 Coal mining opportunities in Enugu attracted people from throughout the region this marked the core of the first urban settlement of what is today known as simply Enugu Enugu developed as one of the few cities in West Africa created entirely from European contact By 1958 Enugu had over 8 000 coal miners As of 2005 update there are no significant coal mining activities left in the city Enugu became the capital of the Eastern Region after Nigeria s independence in 1960 a succession of territorial adjustments in 1967 1976 and 1991 led to Enugu becoming the capital of what is now Enugu State On 30 May 1967 Enugu was declared the capital of the short lived Republic of Biafra for this Enugu is known as the capital of Igboland After Enugu was captured by the Nigerian armed forces the Biafran capital was moved to Umuahia Industries in the city include the urban market and bottling industries Enugu is also one of the primary filming locations for directors of the Nigerian movie industry dubbed Nollywood Enugu s main airport is the Akanu Ibiam International Airport The 2006 national census in Nigeria estimated the population of Enugu state at 3 267 837 12 While the males constitute 48 84 the female population constitute 51 16 13 1 596 042 males and 1 671 795 females Demographers have however indicated that the actual population of Enugu state is around 6 million 14 Enugu state has three senatorial zones namely Enugu north Enugu East and Enugu West 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Industrialisation 1 3 Independence war and after 2 Geography 2 1 Topography 2 2 Water 2 3 Climate 2 4 Cityscape and architecture 3 Government 4 Demographics 4 1 Crime 5 Culture 6 Entertainment 6 1 Music 6 2 Media and literature 6 3 Sports 7 Economy 8 Education 9 Healthcare 10 Transport 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The first settlement in the Enugu area was the small Nike village of Ogui which was present since the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade 1 Nike in the Igbo language means with strength or power 2 It was through slave raiding that the Nike people acquired most of their lands which were mostly unsettled The Nike used slaves for a defence strategy placing Slave camps at the edge of their territories so that it was harder for an enemy to access the free born 16 The Nike people were allied to the Aro people who formed the Aro Confederacy 1690 1901 17 which was an Igbo Organisation that controlled slave trading in the Enugu area 18 Along with the Aro people who came to trade from Arochukwu in the south were the Hausa people who came to trade from the north The Hausa traders provided horses to the Nike which were used for rituals by the Igbo Both the Aro and Hausa migrated back and forth to what is now the city of Enugu and were considered foreigners to the area 19 Industrialisation Edit See also Colonial Nigeria The Iva Valley coal mineA British campaign to invade Arochukwu and open up the hinterland for British military and political rule was carried out in 1901 A war between the British and Aro officially started on 1 December 1901 lasting till 24 March 1902 when the Aro were defeated 20 The Aro Confederacy ended and the rest of Aro dominated areas was added to The Colony and Protectorate of Southern Nigeria declared in 1900 21 22 Europeans first arrived in the Enugu area in 1903 when the British Australian geologist Albert Ernest Kitson led an exploration of the Southern Nigeria Protectorate to search for especially valued mineral resources under the supervision of the Imperial Institute London By 1909 coal was found under the village of Enugwu Ngwo 2 in the Udi and Okoga areas and by 1913 the coal was confirmed to be in quantities that would be viable commercially 19 By 1914 the colonial government had already merged the Northern and Southern Nigeria Protectorate to form the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria 23 In 1915 the British began talks with the indigenous people of the land that would become Enugu about its acquisition in order to lay the Eastern Line railway and to build a colliery The first houses built in the area were in a temporary settlement consisting of Igbo traditional mud housing inhabited by a W J Leck and some other Europeans on Hill top the only plain on the escarpment rolling before the jungled Milliken Hill Antiques of the old residence of the colonialists called the Europeans quarters still abound on the Hill top an outskirt of Enugwu Ngwo town Another settlement known as Ugwu Alfred Igbo Alfred s Hill or Alfred s Camp inhabited by an Alfred Inoma a leader of indigenous labourers from Onitsha and his labourers was located on a hillside 19 24 After the land acquisition by the British Frederick Lugard the Governor General of Nigeria at the time named the colliery built at the bottom of the Udi Hills Enugu Coal Camp to distinguish it from Enugwu Ngwo 2 which overlooks the city from atop a scarp on Enugu s west 25 The first coal mine in the Enugu area was the Udi mine opened in 1915 which was shut down two years later and replaced with the Iva Valley mine 26 27 Enugu became a major coal mining area and the only significant one in West Africa 19 The Eastern Line railway connecting Enugu with Port Harcourt was completed in 1916 in order to export the coal through its seaport 11 26 of which the city was created for this purpose 28 Enugu became one of the few cities in West Africa created out of contact with Europeans 1 By 1916 parts of Enugu reserved for Europeans were set up by the colonial government The area now known as the Government Reserved Area GRA became the European Quarters located north of the Ogbete River alongside this was a section developed for African residents located south of the river The built up area of Enugu comprised these two areas and by 1917 the city officially gained township status On the African side of the city a rapid influx of migrant workers sparked the development of squatter camps on the Udi Hills near the coal mines and the Iva Valley 24 In 1938 Enugu became the administrative capital of the Eastern Region The number of employed coal miners in Enugu grew from 6 000 of mostly Udi men in 1948 to 8 000 in 1958 Enugu s population rose sharply with its industrialisation the population of the city reached 62 000 in 1952 27 Mining in Enugu was sometimes turbulent as demonstrated by the events of 18 November 1949 when 21 striking miners were shot and killed and 51 wounded by police under British governance The massacre that came to be known as The Iva Valley Shooting 29 fueled nationalist or Zikist sentiments among most Nigerians and especially amongst Eastern Nigerians 2 27 30 Zikisim was a post World War II movement that was created out of admiration for Nnamdi Azikiwe who was a prominent nationalist of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons NCNC The shooting was right after a period of unrest when miners were angered by the belief that their full pay was being held back by the colliery management a belief that was pushed by the nationalist press Many of the Zikists tried to use the Iva Valley shooting to fuel their nationalistic agenda and push the British imperial administration out of Nigeria 30 A detailed account of the incident was also published in the memoirs of the British Resident of Enugu at the time James Stewart Smith 31 Independence war and after Edit Further information Decolonization of Africa and Nigerian Civil War Enugu became a municipality in 1956 with Umaru Altine its first mayor 27 After four years passed Nigeria gained its independence in 1960 On 27 May 1967 the Nigerian government divided the Western Northern and Eastern Region into 12 states 32 and Enugu was made the capital of the new East Central State 1 On 30 May 1967 Enugu was declared the capital of the short lived Republic of Biafra the latter created out of the eastern Nigerian states of East Central Cross River and Rivers 33 34 Biafra was declared by Ojukwu because of Eastern Nigeria after their members were attacked injured and killed in a series of ethnic attacks launched by some other ethnic groups in other parts of the country following the first military coup executed by mostly Igbo Officers in which top northern Nigerian leaders among others were assassinated The main rivals of the mostly Igbo Eastern Nigerians were the Hausa Fulani people of Northern Nigeria 35 A northern headed war on the secession 1967 1970 and continuous attacks on the Igbos in other part of Nigeria lead 2 Igbos from northern and western Nigeria to return to their native areas in eastern Nigeria and Enugu became a destination Radio Biafra alternatively the Voice of Biafra formerly the Eastern Nigerian Broadcasting Service was based in Enugu 36 it was from here that the Biafran leader Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu broadcast speeches and propaganda to Biafrans and Nigeria 37 38 Because of the war Enugu witnessed a decrease in the number of non Igbo specifically non eastern Nigerian residents 19 On 4 October 1967 the Nigerian military bombarded Enugu with artillery just outside its boundaries before capturing it a week later shortly after this Umuahia became the new capital of the republic 39 Years after the Republic of Biafra reverted to Nigeria Enugu is still regarded as the Capital of Igboland 2 40 Enugu resumed in 1970 as the capital of the East Central State after the republic was dissolved On 3 February 1976 the East Central State was made into two new states Imo and Anambra there were then 19 states in Nigeria 41 Enugu was the capital of Anambra On 27 August 1991 the military dictatorship of Ibrahim Babangida divided the old Anambra State into two new states Enugu State and Anambra State 42 Enugu remained as the capital of the newly created Enugu State while Awka became the capital of the new Anambra State 43 Geography EditFurther information Geography of Nigeria Topography Edit Satellite image of Enugu and other communities neighbouring it The Enugu escarpment can be seen on the left where it has a lighter colour the Nyaba River can be seen on the bottom Despite its name meaning hill top in the Igbo language 1 2 Enugu lies at the foot of an escarpment and not a hill 26 Enugu is located in the Cross River basin 44 and the Benue trough and has the best developed coal in this area 45 Precambrian basement rock in this region is overlaid with sediments bearing coal from the Cretaceous and Tertiary age 46 Coal seams in the Enugu coal district measure between 1 and 2 metres 3 3 and 6 6 ft in thickness and the reserves have been estimated to be more than 300 million tones 45 Enugu s hills at the extreme may reach an elevation of 1 000 metres 3 300 ft Highlands surrounding Enugu for the most part are underlain by sandstone while lowlands are underlain by shale Much of the escarpment stretching from Enugu to Orlu has been ravaged by soil and gully erosion 47 Other geological features in Enugu include the Nike Lake near which the Nike Lake Hotel has been built 2 The Ekulu Asata Ogbete Aria Idaw and Nyaba rivers are the six largest rivers located in the city 48 The Ekulu River is the largest body of water in Enugu urban 49 and its reservoir contributes to part of the city s domestic water supply 47 Water Edit Water is a scarce resource in Enugu The major way residents get water is by drilling boreholes into the ground but the presence of shale underground makes it difficult to drill through Another reason for this is the coal formation all through the state A solution to this will be to harvest surface water from streams 50 Climate Edit Enugu is located in a tropical rain forest zone with a derived savannah 51 52 The city has a tropical savanna climate Koppen Aw Enugu s climate is humid and this humidity is at its highest between March and November 52 For the whole of Enugu State the mean daily temperature is 26 7 C 80 1 F 51 As in the rest of West Africa the rainy season and dry season are the only weather periods that recur in Enugu The average annual rainfall in Enugu is around 2 000 millimetres 79 in which arrives intermittently and becomes very heavy during the rainy season 53 Other weather conditions affecting the city include Harmattan a dusty trade wind lasting a few weeks of December and January 54 Like the rest of Nigeria Enugu is hot all year round Climate data for EnuguMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 1 97 0 37 8 100 0 37 8 100 0 36 7 98 1 35 0 95 0 33 3 91 9 35 0 95 0 32 8 91 0 32 8 91 0 34 4 93 9 35 0 95 0 35 6 96 1 37 8 100 0 Average high C F 33 5 92 3 34 9 94 8 34 7 94 5 33 6 92 5 32 0 89 6 30 5 86 9 29 5 85 1 29 6 85 3 30 2 86 4 31 2 88 2 32 6 90 7 32 9 91 2 32 1 89 8 Daily mean C F 25 6 78 1 27 2 81 0 28 3 82 9 27 4 81 3 26 6 79 9 25 5 77 9 25 0 77 0 24 8 76 6 24 8 76 6 25 3 77 5 26 0 78 8 25 6 78 1 26 0 78 8 Average low C F 20 3 68 5 22 8 73 0 23 9 75 0 23 9 75 0 23 1 73 6 22 6 72 7 22 3 72 1 22 3 72 1 22 1 71 8 22 3 72 1 21 6 70 9 20 0 68 0 22 3 72 1 Record low C F 12 8 55 0 12 8 55 0 16 1 61 0 19 4 66 9 19 4 66 9 18 9 66 0 19 4 66 9 18 9 66 0 18 3 64 9 18 9 66 0 14 4 57 9 12 2 54 0 12 2 54 0 Average precipitation mm inches 18 8 0 74 15 4 0 61 70 3 2 77 130 1 5 12 217 2 8 55 251 9 9 92 241 9 9 52 237 1 9 33 292 0 11 50 200 9 7 91 12 1 0 48 7 7 0 30 1 695 4 66 75 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 1 4 1 2 3 9 6 8 12 2 13 7 15 6 15 3 17 8 12 2 1 3 0 7 102 1Average relative humidity at 15 00 LST 34 3 37 4 45 6 56 4 63 6 68 5 71 3 70 8 70 3 66 4 50 5 38 7 56 1Mean monthly sunshine hours 186 0 173 6 182 9 183 0 186 0 153 0 117 8 117 8 123 0 173 6 219 0 217 0 2 032 7Mean daily sunshine hours 6 0 6 2 5 9 6 1 6 0 5 1 3 8 3 8 4 1 5 6 7 3 7 0 5 6Source 1 NOAA 55 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst extremes 56 Cityscape and architecture Edit The tallest building in Enugu s Central Business District CBD is the African Continental Bank ACB tower with six stories 57 The tower was built in the late 50s for the African Continental Bank Limited which was founded by Nnamdi Azikiwe who became the first president of Nigeria after the country s independence from the United Kingdom in October 1960 58 The opening of the building took place on 30 April 1959 59 Other tall buildings include the Hotel Presidential opened in August 1963 The seven story building contains 100 rooms and is located in the Independence Layout Hotel Presidential cost 2 5 million to build and was commissioned by the government of what was then the Eastern Region to serve visiting businessmen officials and tourists 60 In the middle of Enugu is the Michael Okpara Square dedicated to the premier of the former Eastern Region Michael Okpara Beside the square is located the Enugu State Government House Enugu State House of Assembly and Enugu State Judiciary Complex 61 Enugu s coal mines are dotted around on the outskirts of the city a majority of which are closed The Colliery Camp mines are located in the Iva Valley which is near the neighboring town of Ngwo and Hilltop of Enugu 24 The Iva Valley coal mine is accessed through the Iva Valley road linking Enugu with Ngwo 62 Other coal mines are located in the Ogbete and Coal Camp layouts these mines are located on the periphery of the city near the Iva Valley as well 24 Architectural design in Enugu s early years was in the hands of the British colonial administration Enugu s architecture was consequently very European English cottage housing and Victorian houses were used for housing Europeans and Nigerian colonial civil servants in the early 20th century until Europeans started trying to adapt their architecture to the tropical climate 63 Some other examples of these European styles are visible in churches of the colonial era such as the Holy Ghost Cathedral with its Greco Roman stained glass windows depicting Europeans Enugu s roads were reflective of its British rule much of the city s narrow roads in the GRA have been preserved dating back to the incorporation of the city itself 64 Low rent one bedroom flats in Enugu and other Nigerian cities are known as face me I face you for the way a group of flats face each other and form a square where a compound entrance is led into 65 66 Government EditFurther information Politics of Nigeria Enugu city covers three local government areas Enugu East Enugu North and Enugu South 67 A Local Government Council exists for each of these seats that manages sectors including primary education and health an elected Executive Chairman and a group of elected Councilors form the Local Government Council that heads each Local Government Area 68 69 Enugu South is split between its rural and urban parts when electing an Executive Chairman The Executive Chairmen include Paul Ogbe for Enugu South Urban Theresa Egbo for Enugu South Rural Emma Onoh for Enugu North and Christopher Ugwu for Enugu East these chairmen represent their LGA s in the Enugu State House of Assembly 70 The Ministry of Lands Survey and Town Planning at the state level and the Local Planning Authority at the local government level are responsible for the administration of urban lands and town planning 68 Government House Enugu is where the government of the state is based On the federal level the city of Enugu is split between two congressional areas Enugu North South represented by Chukwuegbo Ofor and Enugu East represented by Gilbert Nnaji both representatives are in the People s Democratic Party PDP as is Ifeanyichukwu Ugwuanyi GBURU GBURU the governor of Enugu State 71 Demographics EditSee also Demographics of Nigeria Population growth of EnuguYearPop 19213 170 48 72 193112 959 72 195362 764 48 72 1963138 457 48 1982349 873 48 1983367 567 48 1984385 735 48 1987446 535 48 1991407 756 73 2002595 000 40 2006722 664 74 According to the 2006 Nigerian census the Enugu metropolitan area has an estimated population of 722 664 74 This estimate along with population estimates of other Nigerian cities have been disputed with accusations of population inflation and deflation in favour of the northern part of the country 75 The population of Enugu is predominantly Christian 76 as is the rest of southeastern Nigeria 77 Like the rest of Nigeria most people in Enugu speak Nigerian English alongside the dominant language in the region 78 In this case the dominant language is Igbo 79 Nigerian English or pidgin a mix of English and indigenous words is often used because of ethnic diversity and sometimes because of the diversity of dialects in the Igbo language 80 In cultural and linguistic terms Enugu is within the Northern cluster of the Igbo region which includes other towns such as Owo Nike Agbani and cities like Awka and Nsukka 81 The indigenous people of Enugu include Enugwu Ngwo people who live on the aged Hill Top plain towards the Milliken Hills on the west with their farm lands sprawling all over the valley the Ogui Nike who live in the areas surrounding Hotel Presidential Obiagu Ama Igbo Ihewuzi and Onu Asata Other groups include the Awkunanaw people who live mainly in the Achara Layout and Uwani areas Other Nike people live around the Abakpa Iji Nike and Emene areas of the city 82 83 84 Most of the non indigenous people of Enugu are migrants from other parts of the Igbo cultural area After the majority Igbo the Yoruba people are another significant ethnic group found present in Enugu other groups include the Hausa Kanuri Ijaw and Fulani people 85 Crime Edit Enugu s crime rate rose in 2009 as kidnapping and armed robbery rates increased in southeastern Nigeria specifically between September and December 86 The Enugu State government sought to check the high kidnapping rates by passing a bill in February 2009 that made kidnapping by the use of a weapon a capital offence the bill was passed by the Enugu House of Assembly unanimously 87 1 088 arrests were made in the city between September and December 2009 270 of these were in September 303 were in October 295 in November and 220 were in December 477 of these detainees were accused of committing capital offences which included kidnapping 86 The motives of kidnappers in Enugu are primarily financial and some ransoms went into the millions of Naira The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor of Enugu State Dan Nwomeh had his ransom set as high as 500 million 3 3 million US Dollars As of 26 June 2010 update 88 dropping to 200 million and then 50 million before he was released without a ransom being paid because of the refusal of the government to negotiate with the kidnappers Much of the crime in Enugu and the rest of Nigeria has been attributed to unemployment 89 Culture EditSee also Culture of Nigeria and Igbo culture External image Enugu s Mmanwu masquerades in full costume 90 As a Northern Igbo city Enugu shares cultural traits with its neighbouring towns Two important Igbo traditional festivals take place in Enugu annually the Mmanwu festival and the New yam festival The Mmanwu festival takes place in November and features various types of masquerades that each have a name This festival is held at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium as a parade of carnival like masquerades that are accompanied by music and it is supported by the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture 91 92 93 The second important Igbo festival the New yam festival known as iwa ji is held between August and October marking the harvesting and feasting of the new yam The yam is a root vegetable that is the staple crop and a cultural symbol for the Igbo people 91 92 Recently created festivals include the Enugu Festival of Arts which is managed by the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture The festival highlights African culture and traditions and it is here that the Enugu Council of Arts and Culture included the Mmanwu parade as part of the events The Enugu Festival of Arts was started in 1986 it has modernised the Mmanwu festival by transferring it from its traditional village surroundings to the urban setting of Enugu 93 Diana Princess of Wales was a notable spectator of Enugu s cultural shows when she visited the city in 1990 94 visitors to the city can enjoy a wide variety of the cities native delicacies especially its Famous Okpa Okpa Enugu Abacha a local delicacy made from cassava African salad fiofio and host of other delicacies like Nkwobi pepper soup The tourism industry in Enugu managed by the Enugu State Tourism Board ESTB is small however the state government recognises a variety of historic and recreational sites These sites include places like the Udi Hills from which the majority of Enugu city can be viewed The Nike lake Resort in the outskirt of the city the famous Iva Valley which served as residential quarters for European workers managing the Coal Mining activities The Polo amusement park is a funfair that is among the first generation of public parks in the city 91 95 other parks in the city include the Murtala Muhammed Park 96 Enugu s former coal mines Onyeama and Okpara are open to public visits 91 Some other spots include The Institute of Management and Technology IMT Sculptural Garden and Art Gallery the Eastern Region Parliamentary Building the Old Government Lodge 91 and Enugu Golf course Enugu Zoo is another attraction in the city It is divided into the botanical garden and the zoological section 97 A National Museum is located near Enugu at its north although it receives few visitors 2 It is managed by National Commission for Museums and Monuments NCMM Other galleries include the Bona Gallery 98 Entertainment EditMusic Edit Further information Music of Nigeria Flavour N abania at the 2014 Africa Magic Viewers Choice AwardsEnugu rose as an important centre for Highlife music in Nigeria in the 1950s The Igbo dominated version of the genre grew out of earlier Igbo blues or palm wine music and further spread in popularity to the Southern Cameroons where Enugu had considerable influence in arts and culture in towns such as Limbe Tiko and Douala 99 Some prominent musicians with origins in Enugu include Sonny Okosun an afrobeat musician who was born and raised in Enugu and joined his first band The Postmen that was based in the city in 1965 100 101 Celestine Ukwu joined Michael Ejeagha s Enugu based Paradise Rhythm Orchestra in 1962 before creating his own band 102 and had a recreational club in the city after the Nigeria Civil War 103 other musicians include 2Face Idibia a Hip hop R amp B musician who partly grew up and studied music in the city 104 Other notable musicians originating from Enugu include rapper Phyno Slowdog William Onyeabor and highlife musician Flavour N abania Media and literature Edit See also Media of Nigeria and Nigerian literature English language newspapers published and sold in Enugu include the Daily Star Evening Star The Renaissance and New Renaissance 105 One of the earliest newspapers published in Enugu was the Eastern Sentinel published by Nnamdi Azikiwe s Zik Group in 1955 but failed in 1960 27 106 107 Among the city s television and radio stations are the Nigerian Television Authority s network affiliate NTA Enugu headquarters located at Independence Layout and the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria FRCN network affiliate station Radio Enugu which broadcasts in English Igbo Efik Ijaw and Tiv 108 Enugu State Broadcasting Service Television ESBS TV is a state owned television broadcasting company which offers 18 hours of continuous broadcasting on weekends 109 Enugu after Lagos is the preferred city for shooting films in Nigeria and a film production centre in the East 110 111 In 2007 Enugu hosted the first ever film festival in the state the Enugu International Film Festival Held at Hotel Presidential the festival s intent was to highlight Enugu as a film making hub in Africa including movie premiers and prizes for different film categories 112 Some of Nigeria s well known writers were born and have lived in the city of Enugu Chinua Achebe writer of Things Fall Apart lived in Enugu in 1958 the year the book was published 113 He again moved to the city during the Nigerian Civil War after escaping Lagos with his family It was at this time that he met and became friends with Nigerian poet Christopher Okigbo where they started the publishing house Citadel Press among its titles How the Dog was Domesticated and How the Leopard Got His Claws 114 Okigbo lived in Enugu during the early months of the Nigerian Civil War His home in Hilltop contained many of his unpublished writings which were mostly destroyed by bombing early in the war 115 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie writer of Half of a Yellow Sun a winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2007 116 117 was born in Enugu in 1977 and grew up in Nsukka 118 119 Sports Edit The Enugu Rangers a first division professional league association football team is Enugu s home team that plays in the Nigerian Premier League and are based in the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium Former Rangers players include Jay Jay Okocha and Taribo West 120 121 Enugu s main sports centre is the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium named after Nnamdi Azikiwe the first president of Nigeria The stadium remained the centre of sports for the whole of the Eastern Region until the Nigerian Civil War broke out At the war s end the stadium was refurbished 121 Enugu was a host for the 2009 FIFA U 17 World Cup games 24 October 15 November alongside Calabar and five other Nigerian cities with matches taking place at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium 120 Its hosting of the FIFA U 17 World Cup benefited Enugu through the renovation of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium having had such things as a new artificial surface laid 120 City s Top flight Football Team Enugu Rangers won the Nigerian Professional Football League in 2016 Economy EditSee also Economy of Nigeria Nicknamed the Coal City 1 Enugu s economy in the early 20th century depended on coal mining in the Udi plateau this industry was the pushing force towards the city s growth 122 The Nigerian Coal Corporation has been based in Enugu since its creation in 1950 where it controlled coal mining 123 With the creation of the Eastern Line Enugu was connected with the sea via Port Harcourt to its south and later connected to the city of Kaduna to Enugu s north 124 The Nigerian Civil War brought widespread devastation that forced a decline in coal production from damage or destruction of equipment As of 2005 update coal mining is no longer the major source of income and mines lay unused 125 Other minerals mined in Enugu include iron ore limestone fine clay marble and silica sand 126 In Enugu most goods are sold in open markets or by street hawkers a significant number of street hawkers in Nigeria are children As of 2003 update around 44 under 16 year olds equally boys and girls hawk on every street on every hour in Enugu 127 There are three main urban markets in Enugu Ogbete Market Awkunanaw Market and New Market New Market is a major market for the sale of garri 128 Ogbete market is patronised by merchants from all over the surrounding area including merchants from cities like Onitsha Aguleri Abakaliki and Aba In Ogebete market non food goods are also sold 129 Brewing and soft drink bottling are among other industries in the city there is also a Mercedes assembly plant 96 130 as well as the production and manufacturing of machinery pottery tiles steel cement asbestos petroleum and pharmaceuticals 131 For a period of time Sosoliso Airlines had its head office on the grounds of Akanu Ibiam International Airport in Enugu 132 The former Eastern Region was once famed for producing half the world s total output of palm kernels 133 Since the Nigerian Civil War production has markedly declined largely because the plantations and processing equipment were either damaged or destroyed 134 The production of other important cash crops such as cocoa groundnut and groundnut oil rubber cassava cotton and cotton seed and timber tumbled after the civil war and the subsequent oil boom years 135 Consequently the area called Enugu State as well as the rest of Nigeria which was once a self sufficient net exporter in agricultural produce must import food 136 Education EditFurther information Education in Nigeria Students at a seminar in EnuguEnugu has three main tertiary institutions the Enugu State University of Science amp Technology ESUT the University of Nigeria Nsukka Campus UNN and Enugu Campus UNEC and the Institute of Management amp Technology IMT Another notable tertiary institution in Enugu State is the Federal Cooperative College Oji River FCCO Godfrey Okoye University Caritas University Renaissance University Coal City university Novena University Esut Business School The city is also home to Our Saviour Institute of Science and Technology a polytechnic Marist Polytechnic 1 and Bigard Memorial Seminary Some notable secondary schools in Enugu include the College of the Immaculate Conception CIC built in 1940 Holy Rosary College HRC built in 1943 Daughters of Divine Love DDL 137 Colliery Comprehensive Secondary school Queen s Secondary School Federal Government College Royal Crown Academy Nsukka and the University of Nigeria Secondary school University Teaching Hospital UNTH Enugu under the university of Nigeria is another university located in the city 138 Healthcare EditSee also Health care in Nigeria In Enugu health care services can be obtained at several institutions including the ESUT Enugu State University of Science and Technology Teaching Hospital University of Nigeria Enugu Teaching Hospital Park Lane General Hospital in the GRA PMC Peenok Medical Center located on Ziks Avenue in Uwani Hansa Clinic on Awolowo Street in Uwani Niger Foundation Hospital and Diagnostic Centre on Presidential Close in the Independence Layout and the Ntasi Obi Ndi no n Afufu Hospital organization located on Enuguabor Street in the Trans Ekulu layout among others 139 Some of the specialist hospitals in Enugu include the Psychiatric Hospital Enugu and the National Orthopaedic Hospital Enugu NOHE 140 Many of the hospitals in Enugu are privately run The UNTH and the National Orthopaedic Hospital are among some of the government controlled hospitals in the city 140 The medical equipment for the UNTH was upgraded in 2009 as well as parts of the hospital which were renovated in the same year Most hospitals in the city suffer from a poor standard of medical facilities available to them 141 many of the city s citizens travel abroad for medical care 142 However hospitals have been aided by foreign organisations and by Enugu s community at home and abroad who have donated medicine and other medical equipment 143 144 The most developed government hospital in Enugu is the Park Lane Hospital 140 The governor has said that the state has bought some ambulance service vehicles in March 2010 145 Enugu State has established free medical care for pregnant women and for all children under 5 years of age in the state The child healthcare programme founded under the District Health System DHS was added to the states 2008 budget 146 Enugu State has a HIV AIDS prevalence of 6 5 one of the highest in the country 147 Transport EditFurther information Transport in Nigeria Enugu is located on the narrow gauge Eastern Line railway linked to the city of Port Harcourt the Enugu train station is by the side of the National Stadium dating back to its coal mining origins it is located on Ogui Street The main forms of transportation in the city are buses taxi cabs and buses 96 Okada motorcycles once served as public transportation in the city until the state government banned them from this use in April 2009 148 Most transport enters and leaves the city through Enugu s Ogbete Motor Park 2 Garki Motor Park serves as a transport pick up point as well 96 Unregistered taxis are known as Kabu Kabu and are differentiated with registered ones through the lack of yellow paint on the unregistered vehicles 149 In 2009 Enugu introduced a taxi job scheme under Coal City Cabs to help in the eradication of poverty in the city 150 151 200 registered Nissan Sunny taxis provided by the state government and 200 registered Suzuki taxis provided by the Umuchinemere Pro Credit Micro Finance Bank were given out on loan to unemployed citizens in the city who will operate as taxi drivers and will own the vehicles after payments are completed 152 153 20 buses with the capacity for 82 passengers seated and standing were introduced as Coal City Shuttle buses on 13 March 2009 to run as public transport for Enugu urban 148 The main airport in the state is the Akanu Ibiam International Airport which can be accessed by buses and taxis 96 Renovations began on 30 November 2009 to upgrade it to accommodate wide bodied aircraft These plans include extending the 2 400 metre 7 900 ft runway by 600 metres 2 000 ft to make it 3 kilometres 1 9 mi long the runway will be widened from 45 to 60 metres 148 to 197 ft It is estimated that the project will cost 4 13bn 154 27 3 million US Dollars As of 26 June 2010 update 155 The A3 or the Enugu Port Harcourt highway was opened in the 1970s and links the two cities together by passing through Aba a major urban settlement 156 The A3 goes further on past Enugu s north to link to the city of Jos via Makurdi 157 Two more highways the A232 from Benin City Asaba and Onitsha to Enugu s east 158 and the A343 from Abakaliki to Enugu s west 159 makes Enugu the site of a major junction 64 See also Edit Nigeria portalCinema of Nigeria People from Enugu Railway stations in Nigeria Waawa people of Enugu State OwoReferences Edit a b c d e f Udo p 88 a b c d e f g h i j k Williams p 196 Enugu State Population CityPopulation Duckworth Edward Harland 1961 Enugu Coal Town Nigeria Magazine Nigeria Federal Ministry of Information Cultural Division 70 251 FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA 2006 Population Census PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 25 July 2016 Nipost Postcode Map Nigerian Postal Service Archived from the original on 7 October 2009 Retrieved 8 May 2010 Williams p 87 Enugu Dictionary com Unabridged ed Random House Inc retrieved 12 June 2010 Garry Jane Rubino Carl R Galvez 2001 Facts about the world s languages an encyclopedia of the world s major languages past and present H W Wilson p 328 ISBN 978 0 8242 0970 4 Egbokhare Francis O Oyetade S Oluwole 2002 Harmonization and standardization of Nigerian languages CASAS p 106 ISBN 978 1 919799 70 4 a b Nigeria Chief Secretary s Office 1933 The Nigeria handbook 10 ed Eastern Line Government Printer Lagos p 83 Nigeria Population Census State Population 2006 Frances Okolo Nigerian population by State and Sex 2006 Census GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION DEMOGRAPHY List of Senatorial Zones in Enugu State Udo p 92 Nwauwa Apollos 1995 The Evolution of the Aro Confederacy in Southeastern Nigeria 1690 1720 A Theoretical Synthesis of State Formation Process in Africa Anthropos Anthropos Institute 90 4 6 353 364 ISSN 0257 9774 Horton W R G 1954 The Ohu System of Slavery in a Northern Ibo Village Group Africa Edinburgh University Press 24 4 311 336 doi 10 2307 1156711 JSTOR 1156711 S2CID 144896811 a b c d e Odoemene Akachi Cornelius Explaining Inter Ethnic Coexistence and Harmony in Enugu city Southeastern Nigeria University of Ibadan 6 8 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Ekechi Felix K 1972 Missionary enterprise and rivalry in Igboland 1857 1914 Routledge pp 123 125 ISBN 978 0 7146 2778 6 Omenka Nicholas Ibeawuchi 1989 The school in the service of evangelization the Catholic educational impact in eastern Nigeria 1886 1950 BRILL 1989 pp 112 115 ISBN 978 90 04 08632 6 Ikein Augustine A Alamieyeseigha Diepreye S P Azaiki Steve S 2008 Oil democracy and the promise of true federalism in Nigeria University Press of America p 353 ISBN 978 0 7618 3928 6 Coleman James S 1971 Nigeria background to nationalism University of California Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 520 02070 2 a b c d Mba H Chike 2004 Management of environmental problems and hazards in Nigeria Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 291 ISBN 978 0 7546 1394 7 Floyd Barry 1969 Eastern Nigeria a geographical review Praeger p 282 a b c Udo pp 196 197 a b c d e Sklar pp 207 210 Williams p 200 Berger Stefan Croll Andy Laporte Norman 2005 Towards a comparative history of coalfield societies Studies in labour history Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 142 ISBN 978 0 7546 3777 6 a b Coleman pp 296 302 The Last Time ebook pages pp216 226 by James Stewart Smith Privately Published 2019 Hardback ISBN 978 1 9164951 7 3 Ebook ISBN 978 1 9164951 8 0 DeRouen Karl R Heo Uk 2007 Civil wars of the world major conflicts since World War II Volume 2 27 May 1967 ABC CLIO p 582 ISBN 978 1 85109 919 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Shillington Kevin 2005 Encyclopedia of African history Volume 1 Encyclopedia of African History CRC Press p 1115 ISBN 978 1 57958 453 5 Arrous Michel Ben Ki Zerbo Lazare 2009 African Studies in Geography from Below African Books Collective p 98 ISBN 978 2 86978 231 0 Su John J 2005 Ethics and nostalgia in the contemporary novel Cambridge University Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 521 85440 5 Berg Jerome S 2008 Broadcasting on the Short Waves 1945 to Today McFarland p 177 ISBN 978 0 7864 3674 3 Phillips Barnaby 29 January 2000 Biafran leader looks back BBC News Retrieved 13 June 2010 Nigeria Drums of Defeat Time Inc 6 October 1967 Archived from the original on 15 December 2008 Retrieved 13 June 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Clayton Anthony 1999 Frontiersmen warfare in Africa since 1950 Taylor amp Francis p 94 ISBN 978 1 85728 525 3 a b Minahan James 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Greenwood Publishing Group p 762 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Osaghae Eghosa E 1998 Crippled giant Nigeria since independence C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 85 ISBN 978 1 85065 350 9 Alapiki H December 2005 State Creation in Nigeria Failed Approaches to National Integration and Local Autonomy African Studies Review African Studies Association 48 3 49 65 doi 10 1353 arw 2006 0003 S2CID 146571948 Green Richard 2006 The Commonwealth Yearbook 2006 Nexus Strategic Partnerships Ltd p 54 ISBN 978 0 9549629 4 4 Udo p 89 a b Wright J B 1985 Geology and mineral resources of West Africa Coal Springer p 116 ISBN 978 0 04 556001 1 Thomas Larry 2002 Coal geology reprint ed Nigeria John Wiley and Sons p 64 ISBN 978 0 471 48531 5 a b Egboka B C E 1985 Water resources problems in the Enugu area of Anambra State Nigeria Water Resources and Environmental Pollution Unit WREPU Department of Geological Anambra State University of Technology 95 97 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e f g h Ofomata G E K Umeuduji Joel Ekwutosi April 1994 Topographic constraints to urban land uses in Enugu Nigeria Landscape and Urban Planning Elsevier B V 28 2 3 133 doi 10 1016 0169 2046 94 90003 5 Adaikpoh E O Nwajei G E Ogala J E Heavy Metals Concentrations in Coal and Sediments from River Ekulu in Enugu Coal City of Nigeria Delta State University a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help ENUGU Where water is gold Vanguard News 16 January 2021 Retrieved 2 August 2022 a b Sanni L O 2007 Cassava post harvest needs assessment survey in Nigeria IITA p 165 ISBN 978 978 131 265 6 a b Reifsnyder William E Darnhofer Till 1989 Meteorology and agroforestry World Agroforestry Centre p 544 ISBN 978 92 9059 059 0 Egboka B C E 1985 Water resources problems in the Enugu area of Anambra State Nigeria Water Resources and Environmental Pollution Unit WREPU Department of Geological Anambra State University of Technology 98 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Udo p 67 Enugu Climate Normals 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 22 July 2016 Klimatafel von Enugu Nigeria PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Retrieved 22 July 2016 Sada Pius O Oguntoyinbo J S 1981 Urbanization processes and problems in Nigeria Ibadan University Press University of Ibadan p 87 ISBN 978 978 121 101 0 Sklar p 165 Azikiwe Nnamdi 1961 Zik a selection from the speeches of Nnamdi Azikiwe Cambridge University Press p 234 The African Scene Black World Negro Digest Johnson Publishing Company 12 12 32 October 1963 Adepegba Adelani 5 February 2008 When Okpara Square turns to gymnasium The Punch Retrieved 18 October 2010 dead link The Iva Faults Bulletin Geological Survey of Nigeria 6 53 1924 Elleh Nnamdi 1997 African architecture evolution and transformation McGraw Hill p 331 ISBN 978 0 07 021506 1 a b Enugu FIFA Archived from the original on 23 October 2009 Retrieved 15 June 2010 Newswatch Vol 14 Newswatch Communications Ltd 1991 p 10 Habila Helon 2000 Prison stories a collection of short storie s Epik Books p 65 ISBN 978 978 30397 2 8 Bostic Raphael 2009 The Impact of Large Landowners on Land Markets Lincoln Institute of Land Policy 2009 p 46 ISBN 978 1 55844 189 7 a b Ikejiofor U Nwogu K C Nwanunobi C O 2004 Informal Land Delivery Processes and Access to Land for the Poor in Enugu Nigeria University of Birmingham ISBN 978 0 7044 2243 8 Nigeria Ebony Johnson Publishing Company 37 4 67 February 1982 ISSN 0012 9011 Members of the Enugu State House of Assembly Enugu State Government Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 28 June 2010 Federal Constituencies Enugu State Bottom House of Representatives Nigeria Archived from the original on 30 June 2010 Retrieved 8 October 2010 a b c Coleman James S Coleman James Smoot 1971 Nigeria background to nationalism University of California Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 520 02070 2 Europa Publications 2004 Africa South of the Sahara 2004 33rd ed Routledge p 838 ISBN 978 1 85743 183 4 a b Summing the 3 LGAs Enugu East North South as per Federal Republic of Nigeria Official Gazette 15 May 2007 Legal Notice on Publication of the Details of the Breakdown of the National and State Provisional Totals 2006 Census PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 19 May 2007 Ahemba Tume 6 February 2007 Lagos rejects Nigeria census says has 17 5 million Reuters Retrieved 11 June 2010 Ike Obiora F 1998 Freedom is more than a word towards a theology of empowerment Catholic Institute for Development Justice and Peace CIDJAP p 259 ISBN 978 978 34677 0 5 Hansen Valerie Curtis Kenneth 2008 Voyages in World History Volume 2 Cengage Learning p 833 ISBN 978 0 618 07725 0 The Report Nigeria 2010 Oxford Business Group 2010 p 14 ISBN 978 1 907065 14 9 Ramirez Faria Carlos 2007 Concise Encyclopaedia of World History Nigeria Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors p 519 ISBN 978 81 269 0775 5 Okeke Ihejirika Philomina Ezeagbor 2004 Negotiating power and privilege Igbo career women in contemporary Nigeria Ohio University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 89680 241 4 Ilogu Edmund 1974 Christianity and Ibo culture Brill Archive p 2 ISBN 978 90 04 04021 2 Lieber J W 1971 Ibo village communities Institute of Education University of Ibadan pp 65 71 Duckworth Edward Harland 1961 Nigeria magazine 68 71 Cultural Division of the Federal Ministry of Information Nigeria 241 242 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Nnamani Jude Onuchukwu Nike chieftaincy 1919 1985 Enugu Government Printer Odoemene Akachi Cornelius Explaining Inter Ethnic Coexistence and Harmony in Enugu city Southeastern Nigeria University of Ibadan 9 13 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Edike Tony 25 February 2010 Police arrest 1 088 in Enugu Vanguard 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January 2006 DFID Donates 156m Euros Medical Equipment to Enugu Vanguard Abugu Uwakwe 30 March 2010 Enugu moves to check disasters plans emergency committees Nigerian Compass Retrieved 29 June 2010 Ugwoke Francis 23 December 2007 Why We Introduced Free Health Services Thisday Retrieved 29 June 2010 Lohor Josephine 18 July 2006 Benue Akwa Ibom Most HIV Endemic States Archived from the original on 8 June 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2010 a b Nwachukwu Alphonsus An Assessment of the Quality of Intra Urban Bus Services in The city of Enugu Enugu State Nigeria PDF Department of Geography University of Nigeria Nsukka 76 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Nigeria 09 Enugu stops Okada Kabu kabu The Punch 22 October 2009 Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Retrieved 18 October 2010 Obi Petrus 15 March 2009 Enugu okays okada introduces 400 taxi cabs The Daily Sun Sun News Retrieved 18 October 2010 dead link Enugu taxi initiative drives home messages on child survival UNICEF 28 April 2010 Retrieved 23 June 2010 Akaigwe Moses 17 April 2009 Nissan s profile soars The Daily Sun Sun News Archived from the original on 19 April 2009 Retrieved 18 October 2010 Nnadi Chidi 18 March 2009 Coal City cabs Chime happy as firm storm state to spin money for operators The Daily Sun Sun News p 6 Eze Chinedu 30 November 2009 Enugu Airport Closed for Repairs Thisday Retrieved 8 June 2010 Nigeria Nairas NGN to United States Dollars USD rate XE com 26 June 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Forrest Tom 1994 The advance of African capital the growth of Nigerian private enterprise Edinburgh University Press p 171 ISBN 978 0 7486 0492 0 Nigeria p 187 Hudgens p 1067 Friedrich Ebert Foundation 1986 Towards an African economic community Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research p 207 Bibliography EditUdo Reuben K 1970 Geographical Regions of Nigeria University of California Press Sklar Richard L 2004 Nigerian Political Parties Power in an Emergent African Nation Africa World Press ISBN 978 1 59221 209 5 Coleman James Smoot 1958 Nigeria background to nationalism University of California Press Williams Lizzie 2008 Nigeria The Bradt Travel Guide Bradt Travel Guides ISBN 978 1 84162 239 2 Hudgens Jim Trillo Richard 2003 The rough guide to West Africa 4 ed Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 118 0 Nigeria 1970 Nigeria handbook Federal Ministry of Information Ezenwa Ohaeto 1997 Chinua Achebe A Biography Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33342 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Enugu The Coal City Updates from Enugu and Enugu State Igbo Enugu Guide A guide to Enugu and Igboland s culture and language Bigard Memorial Seminary Enugu You Shall Be My Witnesses Retrieved 20 July 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enugu amp oldid 1160233228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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