N'Djamena

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N'Djamena
نجامينا
Niǧāmīnā
A main road in N'Djamena
A main road in N'Djamena
Official seal of N'Djamena
Seal
Country Chad
Population (2005)
 - Total 721,000

N'Djamena (pronounced /ənʤəˈmeɪnə/, Arabic Niǧāmīnā نجامينا), population 721,000 (2005), is the capital of Chad, and also by far the country's largest city. A port on the Chari River, near the confluence with the Logone River, it directly faces the Cameroonian town of Kousséri, to which the city is connected by a bridge. It is also a special statute region, divided in 10 arondissements. It is a regional market for livestock, salt, dates, and grains. Meat processing is the chief industry.

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N'Djamena was founded as Fort-Lamy by French commander Émile Gentil on May 29, 1900, and named after Amédée-François Lamy, an army officer who had been killed in the Battle of Kousséri a few days earlier. Its name was changed to N'Djamena (taken from the Arab name of a nearby village, Niǧāmīnā, meaning "place of rest") by the President François Tombalbaye on April 6, 1973, as part of his authenticité program of Africanization.

The city was partly destroyed during the Chadian Civil War, in 1979 and again in 1980. Many southern, Chadian inhabitants fled at the time, but the population has since regrown strongly. The city had only 9,976 inhabitants in 1937, but a decade later, in 1947, the population had almost doubled at 18,435. After independence in 1968 the population reached 126,483. In 1993 it surpassed half a million with 529,555.

On April 13, 2006, a rebel United Front for Democratic Change attack on the city was defeated. [1] (See Battle of N'Djamena.)

The population growth is shown below:-

  • 1937 : 9,976
  • 1940 : 12,552
  • 1947 : 18,375
  • 1968 : 126,483
  • 1993 : 529,555
  • 2005 : 721,000

The city has a variety of religions, but with a clear Islamic predominance. The main ethnic groups are Chadian Arabs (11.08%), Ngambaye (16.41%), Hadjerai (9.15%), Daza (6.97%), Bilala (5.83%), Kanembu (5.80%), Maba (4.84%), Kanuri (4.39%), Gor (3.32%), Kuka (3.20%), Sara (2.24%), and Barma (2.10%).

N'Djamena is located at 12°6'47" N, 15°2'57" E.

While primarily an administrative center, the city includes the Nassara Strip commercial centre and residential areas such as Mbololo, Chagoua, Paris Congo and Moursal.

Attractions in the city include the Chad National Museum, a cathedral and several mosques. Views of sunset across the Chari River can also be spectacular.

N'Djamena has a university, schools of administration and veterinary medicine, a number of secondary schools (including the long established Lycée Félix Éboué and Lycée technique commercial), and the American International School of N'Djamena.

Ndjamena is linked by road bridge to Kousseri in Cameroon.

N'Djamena International Airport (IATA code NDJ) is located on the outskirts of the city.

Historically, N'Djamena's main link to the exterior was by river boat up the Chari and Logone rivers but these now carry little trade. The city has no railway links.

Flag of France Toulouse, France, since 1980.

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