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Kinshasa

Kinshasa (/kɪnˈʃɑːsə/; French: [kinʃasa]; Lingala: Kinsásá), formerly Léopoldville (Dutch: Leopoldstad), is the capital and largest city of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Once a site of fishing and trading villages situated along the Congo River, Kinshasa is now one of the world's fastest growing megacities.

Kinshasa
Ville de Kinshasa
From top, left to right: downtown Kinshasa, the People's Palace, the University of Kinshasa, and the statue of Patrice Lumumba by the Limete Tower (in background).
Nickname(s): 
Kin la belle
(lit.'Kin the beautiful')
Kinshasa on map of DR Congo provinces
Kinshasa
Kinshasa on map of DR Congo
Kinshasa
Kinshasa (Africa)
Kinshasa
Kinshasa (Earth)
Coordinates: 4°19′30″S 15°19′20″E / 4.32500°S 15.32222°E / -4.32500; 15.32222
Country Democratic Republic of the Congo
Founded1881
City hallLa Gombe
Communes
Government
 • TypeProvincial assembly
 • BodyProvincial Assembly of Kinshasa
 • GovernorGentiny Ngobila Mbala
 • Vice-governorNéron Mbungu
Area
 • City-province9,965 km2 (3,848 sq mi)
 • Urban600 km2 (200 sq mi)
Elevation
240 m (790 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • City-province17,071,000[1]
 • Density1,462/km2 (3,790/sq mi)
 • Urban15,628,000
 • Urban density26,000/km2 (67,000/sq mi)
 • Metro
17,239,463
 • Language
French and Lingala
Time zoneUTC+1 (West Africa Time)
Area code243 + 9
License Plate Code CGO / 01
HDI (2019)0.577[5]
medium1st

The city of Kinshasa is also one of the DRC's 26 provinces. Because the administrative boundaries of the city-province cover a vast area, over 90 percent of the city-province's land is rural in nature, and the urban area occupies a small but expanding section on the western side.[6]

Kinshasa is Africa's third-largest metropolitan area after Cairo and Lagos.[7][3] It is also the world's largest nominally Francophone urban area, with French being the language of government, education, media, public services and high-end commerce in the city, while Lingala is used as a lingua franca in the street.[8] Kinshasa hosted the 14th Francophonie Summit in October 2012.[9]

Residents of Kinshasa are known as Kinois (in French and sometimes in English) or Kinshasans (English). The indigenous people of the area include the Humbu [fr] and Teke. The city faces Brazzaville, the capital of the neighbouring Republic of the Congo. Although the river span is 7 km wide at this point, the two cities are the world's second-closest pair of capital cities (after Vatican City and Rome).

History

 
View of Léopoldville station and port (1884)
 
Kinshassa village (1912)

The city was established as a trading post by Henry Morton Stanley in 1881.[10] It was named Léopoldville in honour of King Leopold II of the Belgians, who controlled the Congo Free State, the vast territory that is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, not as a colony but as a private property. The post flourished as the first navigable port on the Congo River above Livingstone Falls, a series of rapids over 300 kilometres (190 miles) below Leopoldville. At first, all goods arriving by sea or being sent by sea had to be carried by porters between Léopoldville and Matadi, the port below the rapids and 150 km (93 mi) from the coast. The completion of the Matadi-Kinshasa portage railway, in 1898, provided an alternative route around the rapids and sparked the rapid development of Léopoldville. In 1914, a pipeline was installed so that crude oil could be transported from Matadi to the upriver steamers in Leopoldville.[11] By 1923, the city was elevated to capital of the Belgian Congo, replacing the town of Boma in the Congo estuary.[11] The town, nicknamed "Léo" or "Leopold", became a commercial centre and grew rapidly during the colonial period.

After gaining its independence on 30 June 1960, following riots in 1959, the Republic of the Congo elected its first prime minister, Patrice Lumumba. Lumumba's perceived pro-Soviet leanings were viewed as a threat by Western interests. This being the height of the Cold War, the U.S. and Belgium did not want to lose control of the strategic wealth of the Congo, in particular its uranium. Less than a year after Lumumba's election, the Belgians and the U.S. bought the support of his Congolese rivals and set in motion the events that culminated in Lumumba's assassination.[12] In 1964, Moïse Tshombe decreed the expulsion of all nationals of Republic of the Congo, Burundi and Mali, as well as all political refugees from Rwanda.[13][14][15][16] In 1965, with the help of the U.S. and Belgium, Joseph-Désiré Mobutu seized power in the Congo. He initiated a policy of "Authenticity," attempting to renativize the names of people and places in the country. In 1966, Léopoldville was renamed Kinshasa, for a village named Kinshasa that once stood near the site, today Kinshasa (commune). The city grew rapidly under Mobutu, drawing people from across the country who came in search of their fortunes or to escape ethnic strife elsewhere, thus adding to the many ethnicities and languages already found there.

In 1991 the city had to fend off rioting soldiers, who were protesting the government's failure to pay them. Subsequently a rebel uprising began, which by 1997 had brought down the regime of Mobutu.[11] Kinshasa suffered greatly from Mobutu's excesses, mass corruption, nepotism and the civil war that led to his downfall. Nevertheless, it is still a major cultural and intellectual center for Central Africa, with a flourishing community of musicians and artists. It is also the country's major industrial centre, processing many of the natural products brought from the interior.

Joseph Kabila, president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 2001 to 2019, was not overly popular in Kinshasa.[17] Violence broke out following the announcement of Kabila's victory in the contested election of 2006; the European Union deployed troops (EUFOR RD Congo) to join the UN force in the city. The announcement in 2016 that a new election would be delayed two years led to large protests in September and December which involved barricades in the streets and left dozens of people dead. Schools and businesses were closed down.[18][19]

Geography

 
Down at the banks of the Congo River in Ngaliema commune

Kinshasa is a city of sharp contrasts, with affluent residential and commercial areas and three universities alongside sprawling slums. It is located along the south bank of the Congo River, downstream on the Pool Malebo[20] and directly opposite the city of Brazzaville, capital of the Republic of the Congo. The Congo River is the second longest river in Africa after the Nile and has the continent's greatest discharge. As a waterway it provides a means of transport for much of the Congo Basin; it is navigable for river barges between Kinshasa and Kisangani; many of its tributaries are also navigable. The river is an important source of hydroelectric power, and downstream from Kinshasa it has the potential to generate power equivalent to the usage of roughly half of Africa's population.[21]

The older and wealthier part of the city (ville basse) is located on a flat area of alluvial sand and clay near the river, while many newer areas are found on the eroding red soil of surrounding hills.[2][17] Older parts of the city were laid out on a geometric pattern, with de facto racial segregation becoming de jure in 1929 as the European and African neighborhoods grew closer together. City plans of the 1920s–1950s featured a cordon sanitaire or buffer between the white and black neighborhoods, which included the central market as well as parks and gardens for Europeans.[22]

Urban planning in post-independence Kinshasa has been limited. The Mission Française d'Urbanisme drew up some plans in the 1960s which envisioned a greater role for automobile transportation but did not predict the city's significant population growth. Thus much of the urban structure has developed without guidance from a master plan. According to UN-Habitat, the city is expanding by eight square kilometers per year. It describes many of the new neighborhoods as slums, built in unsafe conditions with inadequate infrastructure.[23] Nevertheless, spontaneously developed areas have in many cases extended the grid street plan of the original city.[20]

Administrative divisions

Kinshasa is both a city (ville in French) and a province, one of the 26 provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Nevertheless, it has city subdivisions and is divided into 24 communes (municipalities), which in turn are divided into 369 quarters and 21 embedded groupings.[24] Maluku, the rural commune to the east of the urban area, accounts for 79% of the 9.965 km2 (3.848 sq mi) total land area of the city-province,[6] with a population of 200,000–300,000.[20] The communes are grouped into four districts which are not in themselves administrative divisions.

Abbreviations : Kal. (Kalamu), Kin. (Kinshasa), K.-V. (Kasa-Vubu), Ling. (Lingwala), Ng.-Ng. (Ngiri-Ngiri)

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Kinshasa has a tropical wet and dry climate (Aw). Its lengthy rainy season spans from October through May, with a relatively short dry season, between June and September. Kinshasa lies south of the equator, so its dry season begins around its winter solstice, which is in June. This is in contrast to African cities further north featuring this climate where the dry season typically begins around December. Kinshasa's dry season is slightly cooler than its wet season, though temperatures remain relatively constant throughout the year.

Climate data for Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36
(97)
36
(97)
38
(100)
37
(99)
37
(99)
37
(99)
32
(90)
33
(91)
35
(95)
35
(95)
37
(99)
34
(93)
38
(100)
Average high °C (°F) 30.6
(87.1)
31.3
(88.3)
32.0
(89.6)
32.0
(89.6)
31.1
(88.0)
28.8
(83.8)
27.3
(81.1)
28.9
(84.0)
30.6
(87.1)
31.1
(88.0)
30.6
(87.1)
30.1
(86.2)
30.4
(86.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 25.9
(78.6)
26.4
(79.5)
26.8
(80.2)
26.9
(80.4)
26.3
(79.3)
24.0
(75.2)
22.5
(72.5)
23.7
(74.7)
25.4
(77.7)
26.2
(79.2)
26.0
(78.8)
25.6
(78.1)
25.5
(77.9)
Average low °C (°F) 21.2
(70.2)
21.6
(70.9)
21.6
(70.9)
21.8
(71.2)
21.6
(70.9)
19.3
(66.7)
17.7
(63.9)
18.5
(65.3)
20.2
(68.4)
21.3
(70.3)
21.5
(70.7)
21.2
(70.2)
20.6
(69.1)
Record low °C (°F) 18
(64)
20
(68)
18
(64)
20
(68)
18
(64)
15
(59)
10
(50)
12
(54)
16
(61)
17
(63)
18
(64)
16
(61)
10
(50)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 163
(6.4)
165
(6.5)
221
(8.7)
238
(9.4)
142
(5.6)
9
(0.4)
5
(0.2)
2
(0.1)
49
(1.9)
98
(3.9)
247
(9.7)
143
(5.6)
1,482
(58.4)
Average precipitation days 12 12 14 17 12 1 0 1 6 10 16 14 115
Average relative humidity (%) 83 82 81 82 82 81 79 74 74 79 83 83 80
Mean monthly sunshine hours 136 141 164 153 164 144 133 155 138 149 135 127 1,739
Source 1: Climate-Data.org (temperature)[25] Weatherbase (extremes)[26]
Source 2: Danish Meteorological Institute (precipitation, sun, and humidity)[27]

Demographics

 
Kinshasa in 2016

An official census conducted in 1984 counted 2.6 million residents.[28] Since then, all estimates are extrapolations. The estimates for 2005 fell in a range between 5.3 million and 7.3 million.[20] In 2017, the most recent population estimate for the city, it has a population of 11,855,000.[29]

According to UN-Habitat, 390,000 people immigrate to Kinshasa annually, fleeing warfare and seeking economic opportunity.[30]

According to a projection (2016) the population of metropolitan Kinshasa will increase significantly, to 35 million by 2050, 58 million by 2075 and 83 million by 2100,[31] making it one of the largest metropolitan areas in the world.

Language

The official language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, of which Kinshasa is the capital, is French (See: Kinshasa French vocabulary). Kinshasa is the largest officially Francophone city in the world, albeit that the vast majority of people either cannot speak French, or struggle in speaking it. [32][33][34] although Lingala is widely used as a spoken language. French is the language of street signs, posters, newspapers, government documents, schools; it dominates plays, television, and the press, and it is used in vertical relationships among people of different social classes. People of the same class, however, speak the Congolese languages (Kikongo, Lingala, Tshiluba or Swahili) among themselves.[35]

Government and politics

 
Statue of Lumumba, and behind it the Limete Tower

The head of Kinshasa ville-province has the title of Gouverneur. Gentiny Ngobila has been governor since 2019.[36] Each commune has its own Bourgmestre.[20]

Although political power in the DRC is fragmented, Kinshasa as the national capital represents the official center of sovereignty, and thus of access to international organizations and financing, and of political powers such as the right to issue passports.[17] Kinshasa is also the primate city of the DRC with a population several times larger than the next-largest city, Lubumbashi.[37][23]

The United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, known by its French acronym MONUSCO (formerly MONUC) has its headquarters in Kinshasa. In 2016, the UN placed more peacekeepers on active duty in Kinshasa in response to the unrest directed against Kabila, at that time.[38] Critics, including recently[when?] the US ambassador to the UN,[39] have accused the peacekeeping mission of supporting a corrupt government.[40][41]

Other non-governmental organizations play significant roles in local governance.[42] The Belgian development agency (Coopération technique belge; CTB) since 2006 sponsors the Programme d’Appui aux Initiatives de Développement Communautaire (Paideco), a 6-million-euro program aimed at economic development. It began work in Kimbanseke, a hill commune with population verging on one million.[43]

Economy

 
Marsavco
 
Kinshasa in 2013

Big manufacturing companies such as Marsavco S.A., All Pack Industries and Angel Cosmetics are located in the centre of town (Gombe) in Kinshasa.

There are many other industries, such as Trust Merchant Bank, located in the heart of the city. Food processing is a major industry, and construction and other service industries also play a significant role in the economy.[44]

Although home to only 13% of the DRC's population, Kinshasa accounts for 85% of the Congolese economy as measured by gross domestic product.[23] A 2004 investigation found 70% of inhabitants employed informally, 17% in the public sector, 9% in the formal private sector, and 3% other, of a total 976,000 workers. Most new jobs are classified as informal.[20]

The People's Republic of China has been heavily involved in the Congo since the 1970s, when they financed the construction of the Palais du Peuple and backed the government against rebels in the Shaba war. In 2007–2008 China and Congo signed an agreement for an $8.5 billion loan for infrastructure development.[45] Chinese entrepreneurs are gaining an increasing share of local marketplaces in Kinshasa, displacing in the process formerly successful Congolese, West African, Indian, and Lebanese merchants.[46]

Mean household spending in 2005 was the equivalent of US$2,150, amounting to $1 per day per person. The median household spending was $1,555, 66 cents per person per day. Among the poor, more than half of this spending goes to food, especially bread and cereal.[20]

Education

Kinshasa is home to several higher-level education institutes, covering a wide range of specialities, from civil engineering to nursing and journalism. The city is also home to three large universities and an arts school:

  • Académie de Design (AD)
  • Institut Supérieur d'Architecture et Urbanisme
  • Université Panafricaine du Congo (UPC)
  • University of Kinshasa
  • Université Libre de Kinshasa
  • Université catholique du Congo [fr]
  • Congo Protestant University
  • Université Chretienne de Kinshasa
  • National Pedagogy University
  • National Institute of Arts
  • Institut Supérieur de Publicité et Médias
  • Centre for Health Training (CEFA)[47]

Primary and secondary schools:

In 2005, 93% of children over six attended school and 70% of people over 15 were literate in French.[citation needed]

Health and medicine

There are twenty hospitals in Kinshasa, plus various medical centres and polyclinics.[49]

Since 1991, Monkole Hospital is operating as a non-profit health institution collaborating with the Health Department as district hospital in Kinshasa. Directed by Pr Léon Tshilolo, paediatrician and haematologist, Monkole Hospital opened a 150-bed building in 2012 with improved clinical services as laboratory, diagnostic radiology, intensive care, neonatal unit, family medicine, emergencies unit and a larger surgical area.

Culture

Located in Kinshasa are the National Museum and the Kinshasa Fine Arts Academy.[50]

Kinshasa is the home to much of the Congo's intelligentsia, including a political class which developed during the Mobutu era.[51]

Kinshasa has a flourishing music scene which, since the 1960s, has operated under the patronage of the city's elite.[17] The Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste, formed in 1994, began using improved musical instruments and has since grown in means and reputation.[52][Link to precise page]

A pop culture ideal type in Kinshasa is the mikiliste, a fashionable person with money who has traveled to Europe. Adrien Mombele, a.k.a. Stervos Niarcos, and musician Papa Wemba were early exemplars of the mikiliste style.[17] La Sape, a linked cultural trend also described as dandyism, involves wearing flamboyant clothing.[citation needed]

Many Kinois have a negative view of the city, expressing nostalgia for the rural way of life, and a stronger association with the Congolese nation than with Kinshasa.[51]

Places of worship

Among the places of worship, which are predominantly Christian churches and temples: Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kinshasa (Catholic Church), Kimbanguist Church, Baptist Community of Congo (Baptist World Alliance), Baptist Community of the Congo River (Baptist World Alliance), Assemblies of God, Province of the Anglican Church of the Congo (Anglican Communion), The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints which has a temple and over 100 congregations in Kinshasa, Presbyterian Community in Congo (World Communion of Reformed Churches).[53] There are also Muslim mosques. A Baha'i House of Worship is currently under construction.[54]

Media

 
Office of the Agence Congolaise de Presse (ACP)

Kinshasa is home to several media outlets, including radio and television stations, including state-run Radio-Télévision nationale congolaise (RTNC) and privately run Digital Congo and Raga TV. The private channel RTGA is also based in Kinshasa.

Several national radio stations, including La Voix du Congo, which is operated by RTNC, MONUC-backed Radio Okapi and Raga FM are based in Kinshasa, as well as numerous local stations. The BBC is also available in Kinshasa on 92.6 FM.[55]

The state-controlled Agence Congolaise de Presse news agency is based in Kinshasa, as well as several daily and weekly newspapers and news websites, including L'Avenir (daily), La Conscience, LeCongolais (online),L'Observateur (daily), Le Phare, Le Potentiel, and Le Soft.[56]

Most of the media uses French and Lingala to a large extent; very few use the other national languages.

Sports

Sports, especially football and martial arts are popular in Kinshasa. The city is home to the country's national stadium, the Stade des Martyrs (Stadium of the Martyrs). The Vita Club, Daring Club Motema Pembe and AS Dragons frequently draws large crowds, enthusiastic and sometimes rowdy, to the Stade des Martyrs. Dojos are popular and their owners influential.[17]

In 1974, Kinshasa hosted The Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman, in which Ali defeated Foreman, to regain the World Heavyweight title.

Buildings and institutions

 
The People's Palace, seat of the Congolese parliament

Kinshasa is home to the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo including:

The Central Bank of the Congo has its headquarters on Boulevard Colonel Tshatshi, across the street from the Mausoleum of Laurent Kabila and the presidential palace.

The quartier Matonge is known regionally for its nightlife.

Notable features of the city include the Gecamines Commercial Building (formerly SOZACOM) and Hotel Memling skyscrapers; L'ONATRA, the impressive building of the Ministry of Transport; the central market; the Limete Tower. The face of Kinshasa is changing as new buildings are being built on the Boulevard du 30 Juin: Crown Tower (on Batetela) and Congofutur Tower.

Infrastructure and housing

 
Road of Kinshasa City

The city's infrastructure for running water and electricity is generally in bad shape.[57] The electrical network is in disrepair to the extent that prolonged and periodic blackouts are normal, and exposed lines sometimes electrify pools of rainwater.[17][20]

Regideso, the national public company with primary responsibility for water supply in the Congo, serves Kinshasa only incompletely, and not with uniformly perfect quality. Other areas are served by decentralized Associations des Usagers des Réseau d’Eau Potable (ASUREPs).[28] Gombe uses water at a high rate (306 liters per day per inhabitant) compared to other communes (from 71 L/d/i in Kintambo down to 2 L/d/i in Kimbanseke).[20]

The city is estimated to produce 6,300 m3 of trash and 1,300 m3 of industrial waste per day.[20]

The housing market has seen rising prices and rents since the 1980s. Houses and apartments in the central area are expensive, with houses selling for a million dollars and apartments going for $5000 per month. High prices have spread outward from the central area as owners and renters move out of the most expensive part of the city. Gated communities and shopping malls, built with foreign capital and technical expertise, began to appear in 2006. Urban renewal projects have led in some cases to violent conflict and displacement.[17][58] The high prices leave incoming refugees with few options for settlement besides illegal shantytowns such as Pakadjuma.[30]

In 2005, 55% of households had televisions and 43% had mobile phones. 11% had refrigerators and 5% had cars.[20]

Transport

 
The Boulevard du 30 Juin provides an artery to the business district in Gombe, Kinshasa.

The city-province has 5000 km of roadways, 10% of which are paved. The Boulevard du 30 Juin (Boulevard of 30 June) links the main areas of the central district of the city. Other roads also converge on Gombe. The east–west road network linking the more distant neighborhoods is weak and thus transit through much of the city is difficult.[20] The quality of roads has improved somewhat, developed in part with loans from China, since 2000.[17]

The public bus company for Kinshasa, created in 2003, is Transco (Transport au Congo).[59]

Several companies operate registered taxis and taxi-buses, identifiable by their yellow colour.

Air

The city has two airports: N'djili Airport (FIH) is the main airport with connections to other African countries as well as to Istanbul, Brussels, Paris and some other destinations. N'Dolo Airport, located close to the city centre, is used for domestic flights only with small turboprop aircraft. Several international airlines serve Ndjili Airport including Kenya Airways, South African Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, Air France and Turkish Airlines. An average of ten international flights depart each day from N'djili Airport.[60] A small number of airlines provide domestic service from Kinshasa, for example Congo Airways and flyCAA. Both offer scheduled flights from Kinshasa to a limited number of cities inside DR Congo.[61]

Rail

 
A memorial at Kinshasa train station remembering those who died during the construction of the railroad

The Matadi–Kinshasa Railway connects Kinshasa with Matadi, Congo's Atlantic port. The line reopened in September 2015 after around a decade without regular service. There is an intermittent service, with a poor safety record.

According to the Commercial Corporation of Transport and Ports (SCTP), the Matadi-Kinshasa Railway (CFMK) has the highest transport of goods in import, 8 746 tonnes in January, 11,318 tonnes in February 10,032 tonnes in March, 7,244 tonnes in April, 5,024 tonnes in March and 7,745 tonnes in June. The monthly tonnage of exported goods reached only 1,000 tonnes in the month of March 2018. In January some 284 tonnes of goods were exported from the ports of Boma and Matadi, via the railway, and 711 tonnes in February, then 1,058 tonnes in March, 684 tonnes in April, 818 tonnes in May and 853 tonnes in June.

The monthly statistics for passenger traffic are as follows: 2,294 persons in January, 1,836 in February, 2065 in March, 2,660 in April, 1,952 in May and 2,660 in June.

The line connecting the port of Matadi to Kinshasa is 366 km long. Its distance has been since 3111 of 3112 feet or 42 inches (lane capped 1,067 meter): This railway belongs, in fact, to the National Society, Congo Railways (SNCC). It is only exploited by the SCTP, formerly ONATRA, according to an agreement signed by the two companies.

This line lost large shares of the market, following its lamentable state, insecurity on the rails (some trains are attacked), and the rehabilitation of the road along the rails in 2000. According to Congolese sources, an agreement with a Chinese construction company was signed in 2006, according to which this Chinese company will finance the renovation of the track, the rolling stock, the communication channels for the signaling, and the electrical power source. The ex-ONATRA has, in fact, opted for an aggressive commercial policy to revive the rails.

On June 30, 2018, the SCTP received two locomotives and 50 wagons from the African firm ARSS (African-Rolling Stock Solution).

In 2017, some 2.2 million tonnes of cement were produced by the two new start-up companies, PPC Barnet and Kongo Cement Factory (CIMKO). The SCTP did indeed transport part of this production to Kinshasa but the exact quantity was not communicated by the railway department of the company, the former DG Kimbembe Mazunga had communicated an agreed protocol of agreements with the cement manufacturers of Kongo-Central for the transport of their productions.

External transport

Kinshasa is the major river port of the Congo. The port, called 'Le Beach Ngobila' extends for about 7 km (4 mi) along the river, comprising scores of quays and jetties with hundreds of boats and barges tied up. Ferries cross the river to Brazzaville, a distance of about 4 km (2 mi). River transport also connects to dozens of ports upstream, such as Kisangani and Bangui.

There are road and rail links to Matadi, the sea port in the Congo estuary 150 km (93 mi) from the Atlantic Ocean.

There are no rail links from Kinshasa further inland, and road connections to much of the rest of the country are few and in poor condition.

Social issues

Crime and punishment

Since the Second Congo War, the city has been striving to recover from disorder, with many youth gangs hailing from Kinshasa's slums.[62] The U.S. State Department in 2010 informed travelers that Kinshasa and other major Congolese cities are generally safe for daytime travel, but to beware of robbers, especially in traffic jams and in areas near hotels and stores.[63]

Some sources say that Kinshasa is extremely dangerous, with one source giving a homicide rate of 112 per 100,000 people per year.[64] Another source cites a homicide rate of 12.3 per 100,000.[65] By some accounts, crime in Kinshasa is not so rampant, due to relatively good relations among residents and perhaps to the severity with which even petty crime is punished.[17]

While the military and National Police operate their own jails in Kinshasa, the main detention facility under the jurisdiction of the local courts is the Kinshasa Penitentiary and Re-education center in Malaka. This prison houses more than double its nominal capacity of 1,000 inmates. The Congolese military intelligence organization, Détection Militaire des Activités Anti-Patrie (DEMIAP) operates the Ouagadougou prison in Kintambo commune with notorious cruelty.[65][66]

By 2017 the population of Malaka prison was reported at 7,000–8,000. Of these, 3,600–4,600 escaped in a jailbreak in May 2017.[67][68]

Street children

In the 2010s, street children or "Shegués", often orphaned, are subject to abuse by the police and military.[69] Of the estimated 20,000 children living on Kinshasa's streets, almost a quarter are beggars, some are street vendors and about a third have some kind of employment.[70] Some have fled from physically abusive families, notably step-parents, others were expelled from their families as they were believed to be witches,[71] and have become outcasts.[72][73][74] Previously a significant number were civil war orphans.

Street children are mainly boys,[75] but the percentage of girls is increasing according to UNICEF. Ndako ya Biso provides support for street children, including overnight accommodation for girls.[76] There are also second generation street children:[77] "they referred to their sub-culture of violence as kindoubill".[78]

These children have been the object of considerable outside study.[79]

 
Downtown Kinshasa at night

Notable people

International relations

Kinshasa is twinned with:

In popular culture

  • WWE wrestler Shinsuke Nakamura uses a running knee strike, called the Kinshasa, as his finisher. This is, obviously, a reference to the eponymous city. However, the move was previously named as Bomaye (which translated to "kill him") during his time in New Japan Pro Wrestling but was renamed in 2016 when he was signed with the WWE for trademark reasons.[81]

See also

Films about Kinshasa

References

  1. ^ Institut National De La Statistique. "Projections demographiques 2019-25 (in French)". Retrieved 23 September 2020.
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Bibliography

  • Nzuzi, Francis Lelo (2008). Kinshasa: Ville et Environnement. Paris: L'Harmattan, September 2008. ISBN 978-2-296-06080-7.
  • Pain, Marc (1984). Kinshasa: la ville et la cité. Paris: Orstom, Institut Français de Recherche Scientifique pour le Développement en Coopération.

External links

  •   Kinshasa travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Map of the Belgian Congo from 1896 includes a map of Kinshasa
  • Slideshow of 21 photos of Kinshasa from 2013 to 2015 on Open Society Foundations website
  • Kinshasa: a travers le centre ville, May 2015 – footage from streets of Kinshasa

kinshasa, ɑː, french, kinʃasa, lingala, kinsásá, formerly, léopoldville, dutch, leopoldstad, capital, largest, city, democratic, republic, congo, once, site, fishing, trading, villages, situated, along, congo, river, world, fastest, growing, megacities, capita. Kinshasa k ɪ n ˈ ʃ ɑː s e French kinʃasa Lingala Kinsasa formerly Leopoldville Dutch Leopoldstad is the capital and largest city of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Once a site of fishing and trading villages situated along the Congo River Kinshasa is now one of the world s fastest growing megacities KinshasaCapital city and ProvinceVille de KinshasaFrom top left to right downtown Kinshasa the People s Palace the University of Kinshasa and the statue of Patrice Lumumba by the Limete Tower in background FlagSealNickname s Kin la belle lit Kin the beautiful Kinshasa on map of DR Congo provincesKinshasaKinshasa on map of DR CongoShow map of Democratic Republic of the CongoKinshasaKinshasa Africa Show map of AfricaKinshasaKinshasa Earth Show map of EarthCoordinates 4 19 30 S 15 19 20 E 4 32500 S 15 32222 E 4 32500 15 32222Country Democratic Republic of the CongoFounded1881City hallLa GombeCommunesList BandalungwaBarumbuBumbuGombe formerly Kalina KalamuKasa VubuKimbansekeKinshasaKintamboKisensoLembaLimeteLingwalaMakalaMalukuMasinaMateteMont NgafulaNdjiliNgabaNgaliemaNgiri NgiriNseleSelembaoGovernment TypeProvincial assembly BodyProvincial Assembly of Kinshasa GovernorGentiny Ngobila Mbala Vice governorNeron MbunguArea 2 City province9 965 km2 3 848 sq mi Urban 3 600 km2 200 sq mi Elevation240 m 790 ft Population 2021 City province17 071 000 1 Density1 462 km2 3 790 sq mi Urban 4 15 628 000 Urban density26 000 km2 67 000 sq mi Metro17 239 463 LanguageFrench and LingalaTime zoneUTC 1 West Africa Time Area code243 9License Plate CodeCGO 01HDI 2019 0 577 5 medium 1stThe city of Kinshasa is also one of the DRC s 26 provinces Because the administrative boundaries of the city province cover a vast area over 90 percent of the city province s land is rural in nature and the urban area occupies a small but expanding section on the western side 6 Kinshasa is Africa s third largest metropolitan area after Cairo and Lagos 7 3 It is also the world s largest nominally Francophone urban area with French being the language of government education media public services and high end commerce in the city while Lingala is used as a lingua franca in the street 8 Kinshasa hosted the 14th Francophonie Summit in October 2012 9 Residents of Kinshasa are known as Kinois in French and sometimes in English or Kinshasans English The indigenous people of the area include the Humbu fr and Teke The city faces Brazzaville the capital of the neighbouring Republic of the Congo Although the river span is 7 km wide at this point the two cities are the world s second closest pair of capital cities after Vatican City and Rome Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 Administrative divisions 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Language 4 Government and politics 5 Economy 6 Education 7 Health and medicine 8 Culture 9 Places of worship 10 Media 11 Sports 12 Buildings and institutions 13 Infrastructure and housing 14 Transport 14 1 Air 14 2 Rail 14 3 External transport 15 Social issues 15 1 Crime and punishment 15 2 Street children 16 Notable people 17 International relations 18 In popular culture 19 See also 19 1 Films about Kinshasa 20 References 20 1 Bibliography 21 External linksHistory EditMain articles History of Kinshasa Timeline of Kinshasa and Kinshasa commune History View of Leopoldville station and port 1884 Kinshassa village 1912 The city was established as a trading post by Henry Morton Stanley in 1881 10 It was named Leopoldville in honour of King Leopold II of the Belgians who controlled the Congo Free State the vast territory that is now the Democratic Republic of the Congo not as a colony but as a private property The post flourished as the first navigable port on the Congo River above Livingstone Falls a series of rapids over 300 kilometres 190 miles below Leopoldville At first all goods arriving by sea or being sent by sea had to be carried by porters between Leopoldville and Matadi the port below the rapids and 150 km 93 mi from the coast The completion of the Matadi Kinshasa portage railway in 1898 provided an alternative route around the rapids and sparked the rapid development of Leopoldville In 1914 a pipeline was installed so that crude oil could be transported from Matadi to the upriver steamers in Leopoldville 11 By 1923 the city was elevated to capital of the Belgian Congo replacing the town of Boma in the Congo estuary 11 The town nicknamed Leo or Leopold became a commercial centre and grew rapidly during the colonial period After gaining its independence on 30 June 1960 following riots in 1959 the Republic of the Congo elected its first prime minister Patrice Lumumba Lumumba s perceived pro Soviet leanings were viewed as a threat by Western interests This being the height of the Cold War the U S and Belgium did not want to lose control of the strategic wealth of the Congo in particular its uranium Less than a year after Lumumba s election the Belgians and the U S bought the support of his Congolese rivals and set in motion the events that culminated in Lumumba s assassination 12 In 1964 Moise Tshombe decreed the expulsion of all nationals of Republic of the Congo Burundi and Mali as well as all political refugees from Rwanda 13 14 15 16 In 1965 with the help of the U S and Belgium Joseph Desire Mobutu seized power in the Congo He initiated a policy of Authenticity attempting to renativize the names of people and places in the country In 1966 Leopoldville was renamed Kinshasa for a village named Kinshasa that once stood near the site today Kinshasa commune The city grew rapidly under Mobutu drawing people from across the country who came in search of their fortunes or to escape ethnic strife elsewhere thus adding to the many ethnicities and languages already found there In 1991 the city had to fend off rioting soldiers who were protesting the government s failure to pay them Subsequently a rebel uprising began which by 1997 had brought down the regime of Mobutu 11 Kinshasa suffered greatly from Mobutu s excesses mass corruption nepotism and the civil war that led to his downfall Nevertheless it is still a major cultural and intellectual center for Central Africa with a flourishing community of musicians and artists It is also the country s major industrial centre processing many of the natural products brought from the interior Joseph Kabila president of the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 2001 to 2019 was not overly popular in Kinshasa 17 Violence broke out following the announcement of Kabila s victory in the contested election of 2006 the European Union deployed troops EUFOR RD Congo to join the UN force in the city The announcement in 2016 that a new election would be delayed two years led to large protests in September and December which involved barricades in the streets and left dozens of people dead Schools and businesses were closed down 18 19 Geography Edit Down at the banks of the Congo River in Ngaliema commune Kinshasa is a city of sharp contrasts with affluent residential and commercial areas and three universities alongside sprawling slums It is located along the south bank of the Congo River downstream on the Pool Malebo 20 and directly opposite the city of Brazzaville capital of the Republic of the Congo The Congo River is the second longest river in Africa after the Nile and has the continent s greatest discharge As a waterway it provides a means of transport for much of the Congo Basin it is navigable for river barges between Kinshasa and Kisangani many of its tributaries are also navigable The river is an important source of hydroelectric power and downstream from Kinshasa it has the potential to generate power equivalent to the usage of roughly half of Africa s population 21 The older and wealthier part of the city ville basse is located on a flat area of alluvial sand and clay near the river while many newer areas are found on the eroding red soil of surrounding hills 2 17 Older parts of the city were laid out on a geometric pattern with de facto racial segregation becoming de jure in 1929 as the European and African neighborhoods grew closer together City plans of the 1920s 1950s featured a cordon sanitaire or buffer between the white and black neighborhoods which included the central market as well as parks and gardens for Europeans 22 Urban planning in post independence Kinshasa has been limited The Mission Francaise d Urbanisme drew up some plans in the 1960s which envisioned a greater role for automobile transportation but did not predict the city s significant population growth Thus much of the urban structure has developed without guidance from a master plan According to UN Habitat the city is expanding by eight square kilometers per year It describes many of the new neighborhoods as slums built in unsafe conditions with inadequate infrastructure 23 Nevertheless spontaneously developed areas have in many cases extended the grid street plan of the original city 20 Administrative divisions Edit Main article Communes of Kinshasa See also Subdivisions of the DR Congo Territorial organization Kinshasa is both a city ville in French and a province one of the 26 provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Nevertheless it has city subdivisions and is divided into 24 communes municipalities which in turn are divided into 369 quarters and 21 embedded groupings 24 Maluku the rural commune to the east of the urban area accounts for 79 of the 9 965 km2 3 848 sq mi total land area of the city province 6 with a population of 200 000 300 000 20 The communes are grouped into four districts which are not in themselves administrative divisions Funa District Bandalungwa Bumbu Kalamu Kasa Vubu Makala Ngiri Ngiri Selembao Lukunga District Barumbu Gombe Kinshasa Kintambo Lingwala Mont Ngafula Ngaliema Mont Amba District Kisenso Lemba Limete Matete Ngaba Tshangu District Kimbanseke Maluku Masina Ndjili N Djili Nsele N Sele The 24 communes of Kinshasa Brazzaville Congo River Pool Malebo NgaliemaBay Gombe Barumbu Kin Ling K V Ng Ng Kal Banda lungwa Kintambo Ngaliema Selembao Bumbu Makala Ngaba Lemba Limete Matete Kisenso Masina Ndjili Kimbanseke Nsele Mont Ngafula Nsele MalukuAbbreviations Kal Kalamu Kin Kinshasa K V Kasa Vubu Ling Lingwala Ng Ng Ngiri Ngiri Climate Edit Under the Koppen climate classification Kinshasa has a tropical wet and dry climate Aw Its lengthy rainy season spans from October through May with a relatively short dry season between June and September Kinshasa lies south of the equator so its dry season begins around its winter solstice which is in June This is in contrast to African cities further north featuring this climate where the dry season typically begins around December Kinshasa s dry season is slightly cooler than its wet season though temperatures remain relatively constant throughout the year Climate data for Kinshasa Democratic Republic of the CongoMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 97 36 97 38 100 37 99 37 99 37 99 32 90 33 91 35 95 35 95 37 99 34 93 38 100 Average high C F 30 6 87 1 31 3 88 3 32 0 89 6 32 0 89 6 31 1 88 0 28 8 83 8 27 3 81 1 28 9 84 0 30 6 87 1 31 1 88 0 30 6 87 1 30 1 86 2 30 4 86 7 Daily mean C F 25 9 78 6 26 4 79 5 26 8 80 2 26 9 80 4 26 3 79 3 24 0 75 2 22 5 72 5 23 7 74 7 25 4 77 7 26 2 79 2 26 0 78 8 25 6 78 1 25 5 77 9 Average low C F 21 2 70 2 21 6 70 9 21 6 70 9 21 8 71 2 21 6 70 9 19 3 66 7 17 7 63 9 18 5 65 3 20 2 68 4 21 3 70 3 21 5 70 7 21 2 70 2 20 6 69 1 Record low C F 18 64 20 68 18 64 20 68 18 64 15 59 10 50 12 54 16 61 17 63 18 64 16 61 10 50 Average precipitation mm inches 163 6 4 165 6 5 221 8 7 238 9 4 142 5 6 9 0 4 5 0 2 2 0 1 49 1 9 98 3 9 247 9 7 143 5 6 1 482 58 4 Average precipitation days 12 12 14 17 12 1 0 1 6 10 16 14 115Average relative humidity 83 82 81 82 82 81 79 74 74 79 83 83 80Mean monthly sunshine hours 136 141 164 153 164 144 133 155 138 149 135 127 1 739Source 1 Climate Data org temperature 25 Weatherbase extremes 26 Source 2 Danish Meteorological Institute precipitation sun and humidity 27 Demographics Edit Kinshasa in 2016 An official census conducted in 1984 counted 2 6 million residents 28 Since then all estimates are extrapolations The estimates for 2005 fell in a range between 5 3 million and 7 3 million 20 In 2017 the most recent population estimate for the city it has a population of 11 855 000 29 According to UN Habitat 390 000 people immigrate to Kinshasa annually fleeing warfare and seeking economic opportunity 30 According to a projection 2016 the population of metropolitan Kinshasa will increase significantly to 35 million by 2050 58 million by 2075 and 83 million by 2100 31 making it one of the largest metropolitan areas in the world Language Edit The official language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo of which Kinshasa is the capital is French See Kinshasa French vocabulary Kinshasa is the largest officially Francophone city in the world albeit that the vast majority of people either cannot speak French or struggle in speaking it 32 33 34 although Lingala is widely used as a spoken language French is the language of street signs posters newspapers government documents schools it dominates plays television and the press and it is used in vertical relationships among people of different social classes People of the same class however speak the Congolese languages Kikongo Lingala Tshiluba or Swahili among themselves 35 Government and politics Edit Statue of Lumumba and behind it the Limete Tower The head of Kinshasa ville province has the title of Gouverneur Gentiny Ngobila has been governor since 2019 36 Each commune has its own Bourgmestre 20 Although political power in the DRC is fragmented Kinshasa as the national capital represents the official center of sovereignty and thus of access to international organizations and financing and of political powers such as the right to issue passports 17 Kinshasa is also the primate city of the DRC with a population several times larger than the next largest city Lubumbashi 37 23 The United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo known by its French acronym MONUSCO formerly MONUC has its headquarters in Kinshasa In 2016 the UN placed more peacekeepers on active duty in Kinshasa in response to the unrest directed against Kabila at that time 38 Critics including recently when the US ambassador to the UN 39 have accused the peacekeeping mission of supporting a corrupt government 40 41 Other non governmental organizations play significant roles in local governance 42 The Belgian development agency Cooperation technique belge CTB since 2006 sponsors the Programme d Appui aux Initiatives de Developpement Communautaire Paideco a 6 million euro program aimed at economic development It began work in Kimbanseke a hill commune with population verging on one million 43 Economy Edit Marsavco Kinshasa in 2013 Big manufacturing companies such as Marsavco S A All Pack Industries and Angel Cosmetics are located in the centre of town Gombe in Kinshasa There are many other industries such as Trust Merchant Bank located in the heart of the city Food processing is a major industry and construction and other service industries also play a significant role in the economy 44 Although home to only 13 of the DRC s population Kinshasa accounts for 85 of the Congolese economy as measured by gross domestic product 23 A 2004 investigation found 70 of inhabitants employed informally 17 in the public sector 9 in the formal private sector and 3 other of a total 976 000 workers Most new jobs are classified as informal 20 The People s Republic of China has been heavily involved in the Congo since the 1970s when they financed the construction of the Palais du Peuple and backed the government against rebels in the Shaba war In 2007 2008 China and Congo signed an agreement for an 8 5 billion loan for infrastructure development 45 Chinese entrepreneurs are gaining an increasing share of local marketplaces in Kinshasa displacing in the process formerly successful Congolese West African Indian and Lebanese merchants 46 Mean household spending in 2005 was the equivalent of US 2 150 amounting to 1 per day per person The median household spending was 1 555 66 cents per person per day Among the poor more than half of this spending goes to food especially bread and cereal 20 Education Edit The University of Kinshasa Kinshasa is home to several higher level education institutes covering a wide range of specialities from civil engineering to nursing and journalism The city is also home to three large universities and an arts school Academie de Design AD Institut Superieur d Architecture et Urbanisme Universite Panafricaine du Congo UPC University of Kinshasa Universite Libre de Kinshasa Universite catholique du Congo fr Congo Protestant University Universite Chretienne de Kinshasa National Pedagogy University National Institute of Arts Institut Superieur de Publicite et Medias Centre for Health Training CEFA 47 Primary and secondary schools Lycee Prince de Liege primary and secondary education French Community of Belgium curriculum Prins van Luikschool Kinshasa primary education Flanders curriculum 48 Lycee Francais Rene Descartes primary and secondary education French curriculum The American School of Kinshasa Allhadeff School citation needed In 2005 93 of children over six attended school and 70 of people over 15 were literate in French citation needed Health and medicine EditThere are twenty hospitals in Kinshasa plus various medical centres and polyclinics 49 Since 1991 Monkole Hospital is operating as a non profit health institution collaborating with the Health Department as district hospital in Kinshasa Directed by Pr Leon Tshilolo paediatrician and haematologist Monkole Hospital opened a 150 bed building in 2012 with improved clinical services as laboratory diagnostic radiology intensive care neonatal unit family medicine emergencies unit and a larger surgical area Culture EditLocated in Kinshasa are the National Museum and the Kinshasa Fine Arts Academy 50 Kinshasa is the home to much of the Congo s intelligentsia including a political class which developed during the Mobutu era 51 Kinshasa has a flourishing music scene which since the 1960s has operated under the patronage of the city s elite 17 The Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste formed in 1994 began using improved musical instruments and has since grown in means and reputation 52 Link to precise page A pop culture ideal type in Kinshasa is the mikiliste a fashionable person with money who has traveled to Europe Adrien Mombele a k a Stervos Niarcos and musician Papa Wemba were early exemplars of the mikiliste style 17 La Sape a linked cultural trend also described as dandyism involves wearing flamboyant clothing citation needed Many Kinois have a negative view of the city expressing nostalgia for the rural way of life and a stronger association with the Congolese nation than with Kinshasa 51 Places of worship Edit Eglise Sainte Anne de Kinshasa Catholic Church in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Eglise Francophone CBCO Kintambo Baptist Community of Congo Among the places of worship which are predominantly Christian churches and temples Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kinshasa Catholic Church Kimbanguist Church Baptist Community of Congo Baptist World Alliance Baptist Community of the Congo River Baptist World Alliance Assemblies of God Province of the Anglican Church of the Congo Anglican Communion The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints which has a temple and over 100 congregations in Kinshasa Presbyterian Community in Congo World Communion of Reformed Churches 53 There are also Muslim mosques A Baha i House of Worship is currently under construction 54 Media EditSee also List of television stations in Kinshasa Office of the Agence Congolaise de Presse ACP Kinshasa is home to several media outlets including radio and television stations including state run Radio Television nationale congolaise RTNC and privately run Digital Congo and Raga TV The private channel RTGA is also based in Kinshasa Several national radio stations including La Voix du Congo which is operated by RTNC MONUC backed Radio Okapi and Raga FM are based in Kinshasa as well as numerous local stations The BBC is also available in Kinshasa on 92 6 FM 55 The state controlled Agence Congolaise de Presse news agency is based in Kinshasa as well as several daily and weekly newspapers and news websites including L Avenir daily La Conscience LeCongolais online L Observateur daily Le Phare Le Potentiel and Le Soft 56 Most of the media uses French and Lingala to a large extent very few use the other national languages Sports Edit Stadium of the Martyrs Sports especially football and martial arts are popular in Kinshasa The city is home to the country s national stadium the Stade des Martyrs Stadium of the Martyrs The Vita Club Daring Club Motema Pembe and AS Dragons frequently draws large crowds enthusiastic and sometimes rowdy to the Stade des Martyrs Dojos are popular and their owners influential 17 In 1974 Kinshasa hosted The Rumble in the Jungle boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in which Ali defeated Foreman to regain the World Heavyweight title Buildings and institutions Edit The People s Palace seat of the Congolese parliament Kinshasa is home to the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo including the Palais de la Nation home of the President in Gombe the Palais du Peuple meeting place of both houses of Parliament Senate and National Assembly in Lingwala the Palais de Justice in Gombe the Cite de l OUA built for the Organization of African Unity in the 1970s and now serving government functions in Ngaliema The Central Bank of the Congo has its headquarters on Boulevard Colonel Tshatshi across the street from the Mausoleum of Laurent Kabila and the presidential palace The quartier Matonge is known regionally for its nightlife Notable features of the city include the Gecamines Commercial Building formerly SOZACOM and Hotel Memling skyscrapers L ONATRA the impressive building of the Ministry of Transport the central market the Limete Tower The face of Kinshasa is changing as new buildings are being built on the Boulevard du 30 Juin Crown Tower on Batetela and Congofutur Tower Infrastructure and housing Edit Road of Kinshasa City The city s infrastructure for running water and electricity is generally in bad shape 57 The electrical network is in disrepair to the extent that prolonged and periodic blackouts are normal and exposed lines sometimes electrify pools of rainwater 17 20 Regideso the national public company with primary responsibility for water supply in the Congo serves Kinshasa only incompletely and not with uniformly perfect quality Other areas are served by decentralized Associations des Usagers des Reseau d Eau Potable ASUREPs 28 Gombe uses water at a high rate 306 liters per day per inhabitant compared to other communes from 71 L d i in Kintambo down to 2 L d i in Kimbanseke 20 The city is estimated to produce 6 300 m3 of trash and 1 300 m3 of industrial waste per day 20 The housing market has seen rising prices and rents since the 1980s Houses and apartments in the central area are expensive with houses selling for a million dollars and apartments going for 5000 per month High prices have spread outward from the central area as owners and renters move out of the most expensive part of the city Gated communities and shopping malls built with foreign capital and technical expertise began to appear in 2006 Urban renewal projects have led in some cases to violent conflict and displacement 17 58 The high prices leave incoming refugees with few options for settlement besides illegal shantytowns such as Pakadjuma 30 In 2005 55 of households had televisions and 43 had mobile phones 11 had refrigerators and 5 had cars 20 Transport EditSee also fr Liste des rues de Kinshasa The Boulevard du 30 Juin provides an artery to the business district in Gombe Kinshasa The city province has 5000 km of roadways 10 of which are paved The Boulevard du 30 Juin Boulevard of 30 June links the main areas of the central district of the city Other roads also converge on Gombe The east west road network linking the more distant neighborhoods is weak and thus transit through much of the city is difficult 20 The quality of roads has improved somewhat developed in part with loans from China since 2000 17 The public bus company for Kinshasa created in 2003 is Transco Transport au Congo 59 Several companies operate registered taxis and taxi buses identifiable by their yellow colour Air Edit The city has two airports N djili Airport FIH is the main airport with connections to other African countries as well as to Istanbul Brussels Paris and some other destinations N Dolo Airport located close to the city centre is used for domestic flights only with small turboprop aircraft Several international airlines serve Ndjili Airport including Kenya Airways South African Airways Ethiopian Airlines Brussels Airlines Air France and Turkish Airlines An average of ten international flights depart each day from N djili Airport 60 A small number of airlines provide domestic service from Kinshasa for example Congo Airways and flyCAA Both offer scheduled flights from Kinshasa to a limited number of cities inside DR Congo 61 Rail Edit A memorial at Kinshasa train station remembering those who died during the construction of the railroad This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kinshasa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information November 2022 The Matadi Kinshasa Railway connects Kinshasa with Matadi Congo s Atlantic port The line reopened in September 2015 after around a decade without regular service There is an intermittent service with a poor safety record According to the Commercial Corporation of Transport and Ports SCTP the Matadi Kinshasa Railway CFMK has the highest transport of goods in import 8 746 tonnes in January 11 318 tonnes in February 10 032 tonnes in March 7 244 tonnes in April 5 024 tonnes in March and 7 745 tonnes in June The monthly tonnage of exported goods reached only 1 000 tonnes in the month of March 2018 In January some 284 tonnes of goods were exported from the ports of Boma and Matadi via the railway and 711 tonnes in February then 1 058 tonnes in March 684 tonnes in April 818 tonnes in May and 853 tonnes in June The monthly statistics for passenger traffic are as follows 2 294 persons in January 1 836 in February 2065 in March 2 660 in April 1 952 in May and 2 660 in June The line connecting the port of Matadi to Kinshasa is 366 km long Its distance has been since 3111 of 3112 feet or 42 inches lane capped 1 067 meter This railway belongs in fact to the National Society Congo Railways SNCC It is only exploited by the SCTP formerly ONATRA according to an agreement signed by the two companies This line lost large shares of the market following its lamentable state insecurity on the rails some trains are attacked and the rehabilitation of the road along the rails in 2000 According to Congolese sources an agreement with a Chinese construction company was signed in 2006 according to which this Chinese company will finance the renovation of the track the rolling stock the communication channels for the signaling and the electrical power source The ex ONATRA has in fact opted for an aggressive commercial policy to revive the rails On June 30 2018 the SCTP received two locomotives and 50 wagons from the African firm ARSS African Rolling Stock Solution In 2017 some 2 2 million tonnes of cement were produced by the two new start up companies PPC Barnet and Kongo Cement Factory CIMKO The SCTP did indeed transport part of this production to Kinshasa but the exact quantity was not communicated by the railway department of the company the former DG Kimbembe Mazunga had communicated an agreed protocol of agreements with the cement manufacturers of Kongo Central for the transport of their productions External transport Edit Kinshasa is the major river port of the Congo The port called Le Beach Ngobila extends for about 7 km 4 mi along the river comprising scores of quays and jetties with hundreds of boats and barges tied up Ferries cross the river to Brazzaville a distance of about 4 km 2 mi River transport also connects to dozens of ports upstream such as Kisangani and Bangui There are road and rail links to Matadi the sea port in the Congo estuary 150 km 93 mi from the Atlantic Ocean There are no rail links from Kinshasa further inland and road connections to much of the rest of the country are few and in poor condition Social issues EditCrime and punishment Edit Since the Second Congo War the city has been striving to recover from disorder with many youth gangs hailing from Kinshasa s slums 62 The U S State Department in 2010 informed travelers that Kinshasa and other major Congolese cities are generally safe for daytime travel but to beware of robbers especially in traffic jams and in areas near hotels and stores 63 Some sources say that Kinshasa is extremely dangerous with one source giving a homicide rate of 112 per 100 000 people per year 64 Another source cites a homicide rate of 12 3 per 100 000 65 By some accounts crime in Kinshasa is not so rampant due to relatively good relations among residents and perhaps to the severity with which even petty crime is punished 17 While the military and National Police operate their own jails in Kinshasa the main detention facility under the jurisdiction of the local courts is the Kinshasa Penitentiary and Re education center in Malaka This prison houses more than double its nominal capacity of 1 000 inmates The Congolese military intelligence organization Detection Militaire des Activites Anti Patrie DEMIAP operates the Ouagadougou prison in Kintambo commune with notorious cruelty 65 66 By 2017 the population of Malaka prison was reported at 7 000 8 000 Of these 3 600 4 600 escaped in a jailbreak in May 2017 67 68 Street children Edit In the 2010s street children or Shegues often orphaned are subject to abuse by the police and military 69 Of the estimated 20 000 children living on Kinshasa s streets almost a quarter are beggars some are street vendors and about a third have some kind of employment 70 Some have fled from physically abusive families notably step parents others were expelled from their families as they were believed to be witches 71 and have become outcasts 72 73 74 Previously a significant number were civil war orphans Street children are mainly boys 75 but the percentage of girls is increasing according to UNICEF Ndako ya Biso provides support for street children including overnight accommodation for girls 76 There are also second generation street children 77 they referred to their sub culture of violence as kindoubill 78 These children have been the object of considerable outside study 79 Downtown Kinshasa at nightNotable people EditMain article List of people from KinshasaInternational relations EditKinshasa is twinned with Brazzaville Republic of the Congo Johannesburg South Africa Ubon Ratchathani Thailand Ankara Turkey since 2005 80 In popular culture EditWWE wrestler Shinsuke Nakamura uses a running knee strike called the Kinshasa as his finisher This is obviously a reference to the eponymous city However the move was previously named as Bomaye which translated to kill him during his time in New Japan Pro Wrestling but was renamed in 2016 when he was signed with the WWE for trademark reasons 81 See also EditTraffic robots in Kinshasa Lake Chad replenishment projectFilms about Kinshasa Edit Kinshasa Kids Kinshasa palace Kinshasa SymphonyReferences Edit Institut National De La Statistique Projections demographiques 2019 25 in French Retrieved 23 September 2020 a b Matthieu Kayembe Wa Kayembe Mathieu De Maeyer et Eleonore Wolff Cartographie de la croissance urbaine de Kinshasa R D Congo entre 1995 et 2005 par teledetection satellitaire a haute resolution Archived 17 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Belgeo 3 4 2009 doi 10 4000 belgeo 7349 a b DemographiaWorld Urban Areas 13th Annual Edition PDF Demographia April 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 3 May 2018 Retrieved 8 July 2017 PopulationStat com Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Archived from the original on 23 September 2018 Retrieved 27 July 2021 a b Geographie de Kinshasa Ville de Kinshasa Archived from the original on 23 July 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2012 Cities In The World With The Most Francophone Population WorldAtlas 3 July 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2022 Cecile B Vigouroux amp Salikoko S Mufwene 2008 Globalization and Language Vitality Perspectives from Africa pp 103 amp 109 ISBN 9780826495150 Archived from the original on 5 October 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2012 XIVe Sommet de la Francophonie OIF Archived from the original on 19 June 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2012 Roman Adrian Cybriwsky Capital Cities around the World An Encyclopedia of Geography History and Culture ABC CLIO USA 2013 p 144 a b c Kinshasa national capital Democratic Republic of the Congo britannica com Archived from the original on 18 October 2014 Retrieved 25 September 2014 Georges Nzongola Ntalaja 17 January 2011 Patrice Lumumba the most important assassination of the 20th century The Guardian Retrieved 9 February 2020 Jules Gerard Libois and Benoit Verhaegen Congo 1964 Political Documents of a Developing Nation Princeton University Press 2015 p 450 Congo Starts Expulsions The New York Times Retrieved 19 May 2021 Daouda Gary Tounkara 1964 le Mali reinsere ses ressortissants expulses In Plein droit 2016 1 n 108 GISTI 2016 p 35 38 United States Central Intelligence Agency Daily Report Foreign Radio Broadcasts Issues 11 15 1967 a b c d e f g h i j Joe Trapido Kinshasa s Theater of Power Archived 17 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine New Left Review 98 March April 2016 DR Congo election 17 dead in anti Kabila protests Archived 16 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine BBC 19 September 2016 Merritt Kennedy Congo A Powder Keg As Security Forces Crack Down On Whistling Demonstrators Archived 17 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine NPR 21 December 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jean Flouriot Kinshasa 2005 Trente ans apres la publication de l Atlas de Kinshasa Archived 17 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Les Cahiers d Outre Mer 261 January March 2013 doi 10 4000 com 6770 Wachter Sarah J 19 June 2007 Giant dam projects aim to transform African power supplies The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 November 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Luce Beeckmans amp Liora Bigon The making of the central markets of Dakar and Kinshasa from colonial origins to the post colonial period Urban History 43 3 2016 doi 10 1017 S0963926815000188 a b c Innocent Chirisa Abraham Rajab Matamanda amp Liaison Mukarwi Desired and Achieved Urbanisation in Africa In Search of Appropriate Tooling for a Sustainable Transformation in Umar Benna amp Indo Benna eds Urbanization and Its Impact on Socio Economic Growth in Developing Regions IGI Global 2017 ISBN 9781522526605 pp 101 102 Commission Electorale Nationale Independante La Cartographie Electorale des 26 Provinces Kinshasa www ceni cd in French Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 18 April 2020 Climate Kinshasa AmbiWeb GmbH Archived from the original on 9 May 2016 Retrieved 7 June 2016 KINSHASA DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO Weatherbase Archived from the original on 7 August 2016 Retrieved 7 June 2016 STATIONSNUMMER 64210 PDF Danish Meteorological Institute Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 7 June 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b Bedecarrats Florent Lafuente Sampietro Oriane Lemenager Martin Lukono Sowa Dominique 2019 Building commons to cope with chaotic urbanization Performance and sustainability of decentralized water services in the outskirts of Kinshasa Journal of Hydrology 573 1096 1108 doi 10 1016 j jhydrol 2016 07 023 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 May 2018 Retrieved 26 June 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Gianluca Iazzolino Kinshasa megalopolis of 12 million souls expanding furiously on super charged growth Archived 9 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Mail amp Guardian Africa 2 April 2016 Hoornweg Daniel Pope Kevin 2017 Population predictions for the world s largest cities in the 21st century Environment and Urbanization 29 195 216 doi 10 1177 0956247816663557 Populations of 150 Largest Cities in the World World Atlas 7 March 2016 Archived from the original on 28 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2016 Nadeau Jean Benoit 2006 The Story of French St Martin s Press p 301 483 ISBN 9780312341831 Trefon Theodore 2004 Reinventing Order in the Congo How People Respond to State Failure in Kinshasa London and New York Zed Books p 7 ISBN 9781842774915 Retrieved 31 May 2009 A third factor is simply a demographic one At least one in ten Congolese live in Kinshasa With its population exceeding eleven million it is the second largest city in sub Saharan Africa after Lagos It is also the second largest French speaking city in the world according to Paris even though only a small percentage of Kinois speak French correctly Manning Patrick 1998 Francophone sub Saharan Africa Democracy and Dependence 1985 1995 London and New York Cambridge University Press p 189 ISBN 9780521645195 Retrieved 31 May 2009 While the culture is dominated by the Francophonie a complex multilingualism is present in Kinshasa Many in the francophonie of the 1980s labelled Zaire as the second largest francophone country and Kinshasa as the second largest francophone city Yet Zaire seemed unlikely to escape a complex multilingualism Lingala was the language of music of presidential addresses of daily life in government and in Kinshasa But if Lingala was the spoken language of Kinshasa it made little progress as a written language French was the written language of the city as seen in street signs posters newspapers and in government documents French dominated plays and television as well as the press French was the language of the national anthem and even for the doctrine of authenticity Zairian researchers found French to be used in vertical relationships among people of uneven rank people of equal rank no matter how high tended to speak Zairian languages among themselves Given these limits French might have lost its place to another of the leading languages of Zaire Lingala Tshiluba or Swahili except that teaching of these languages also suffered from limitations on its growth Kinshasa la lutte contre l insecurite et l insalubrite priorites de Gentiny Ngobila Radio Okapi ACP 5 May 2019 Archived from the original on 11 May 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2019 Pain 1984 p 56 UN beefs up peacekeeping force in DR Congo capital Archived 13 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine East African AFP 19 October 2016 US Ambassador UN Aiding Corrupt Government in Congo Archived 31 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine VOA News 29 March 2017 Terry M Mays Historical Dictionary of Multinational Peacekeeping Third Edition Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2011 p 330 UN troops open fire in Kinshasa Archived 10 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine BBC 3 June 2004 Inge Wagemakers Oracle Makangu Diki amp Tom De Herdt Lutte Fonciere dans la Ville Gouvernance de la terre agricole urbaine a Kinshasa Archived 18 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine L Afrique des grands lacs Annuaire 2009 2010 Inge Wagemakers amp Jean Nicholas BCH Les Defis de l Intervention Programme d aide internationale et dynamiques de gouvernance locale dans le Kinshasa periurbain Archived 18 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Politique africaine 2013 1 no 129 doi 10 3917 polaf 129 0113 Kinshasa national capital Democratic Republic of the Congo britannica com Archived from the original on 12 October 2014 Retrieved 25 September 2014 Emizet Francois Kisangani Scott F Bobb China People s Republic of Relations with Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2010 pp 74 75 Nuah M Makungo Is the Democratic Republic of Congo being Globalized by China The Case of Small Commerce at Kinshasa Central Market Archived 17 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Quarterly Journal of Chinese Studies 2 1 2012 Cefacongo org Cefacongo org Archived from the original on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2011 Onze school Prins van Luikschool Kinshasa Retrieved 16 May 2020 Provincial Health Division of Kinshasa Archived 14 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine African Development Information Services Cybriwsky Roman Adrian 23 May 2013 Capital Cities around the World An Encyclopedia of Geography History and Culture An Encyclopedia of Geography History and Culture ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 248 9 a b Bill Freund City and Nation in an African Context National Identity in Kinshasa Journal of Urban History 38 5 2012 doi 10 1177 0096144212449141 Andy Morgan The scratch orchestra of Kinshasa The Guardian 9 May 2013 J Gordon Melton Martin Baumann Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices ABC CLIO USA 2010 p 777 Les travaux de construction de la Maison d Adoration Nationale en bonne progression 20 May 2021 Democratic Republic of Congo country profile Media BBC News Archived from the original on 24 February 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Countries Democatric Republic of the Congo News Archive sic Stanford University Libraries amp Academic Information Resources Retrieved on 28 April 2014 Nzuzi 2008 p 14 Aurelie Fontaine Housing Kinshasa is for the rich Africa Report 5 May 2015 Trans urbain kinshasa Archived from the original on 19 August 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2019 Flightera net 21 August 2022 N djili Airport website Jonny Hong Gang crime threatens the future of Congo s capital Reuters 19 June 2013 U S Dept of State Congo Democratic Republic of the Country Specific Information United States Department of State Archived from the original on 19 December 2010 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Bruce Baker Nonstate Policing Expanding the Scope for Tackling Africa s Urban Violence PDF Africacenter org Archived PDF from the original on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 17 August 2018 a b O Oko Elechi and Angela R Morris Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo Kinshasa in Mahesh K Nalla amp Graeme R Newman eds Crime and Punishment around the World Volume 1 Africa and the Middle East Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO 2010 pp 53 56 Prisons in the Democratic Republic of Congo Archived 18 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine ed Ryan Nelson Refugee Documentation Center Ireland May 2002 Laurent Larcher Des milliers de detenus s evadent de la prison de Kinshasa en RD Congo Archived 4 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine La Croix 18 May 2017 Evasion a la prison de Makala en RDC plus de 4600 detenus seraient en fuite Archived 5 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine RFI 18 May 2017 Manson Katrina 22 July 2010 Congo s children battle witchcraft accusations Reuters Retrieved 14 March 2011 Street Children in Kinshasa Africa Action 8 July 2009 Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2011 A night on the streets with Kinshasa s child witches War Child UK Warchild org uk Archived from the original on 12 February 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2011 Danballuff Children of Congo From War to Witches video Gvnet com Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2011 Africa Feature Around 20 000 street children wander in Kinshasa English people com cn 1 June 2007 Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2011 Prevalence Abuse amp Exploitation of Street Children Gvnet com Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 14 March 2011 At the centre Street Childrens streetchildrenofkinshasa com Archived from the original on 2 April 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2016 Ross Aaron 13 March 2016 Beaten and discarded Congo street children are strangers to mining boom reuters com Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2016 What Future Street Children in the Democratic Republic of Congo IV Background hrw org Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2016 Charles Didier Gondola Tropical Cowboys Westerns Violence and Masculinity among the Young Bills of Kinshasa Afrique amp histoire 2009 1 vol 7 p 77 Camille Dugrand Subvertir l ordre Les ambivalences de l expression politique des Shegues de Kinshasa Revue Tiers Monde 4 228 2016 doi 10 3917 rtm 228 0045 Figures incontournables de l urbanite kinoise les Shegues ont fait l objet de plusieurs travaux scientifiques Biaya 1997 2000 De Boeck 2000 2005 Geenen 2009 Sister Cities of Ankara Ankara bel tr Archived from the original on 9 June 2016 Retrieved 17 August 2018 The story behind Shinsuke Nakamura s Bomaye becoming Kinshasa in WWE Bibliography Edit Nzuzi Francis Lelo 2008 Kinshasa Ville et Environnement Paris L Harmattan September 2008 ISBN 978 2 296 06080 7 Pain Marc 1984 Kinshasa la ville et la cite Paris Orstom Institut Francais de Recherche Scientifique pour le Developpement en Cooperation External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kinshasa Kinshasa travel guide from Wikivoyage Official website of the city of Kinshasa Map of the Belgian Congo from 1896 includes a map of Kinshasa Slideshow of 21 photos of Kinshasa from 2013 to 2015 on Open Society Foundations website Kinshasa a travers le centre ville May 2015 footage from streets of Kinshasa Portals Democratic Republic of the Congo Cities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kinshasa amp oldid 1127342826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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