Katanga Province
Encyclopedia : K : KA : KAT : Katanga Province
- For other meanings of Katanga see Katanga (disambiguation)
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| Country | Democratic Republic of the Congo | ||||
| Capital | Lubumbashi | ||||
| Largest city | Lubumbashi | ||||
| National language | Swahili, Tshiluba | ||||
| Land area¹ | 496.871 km² | ||||
| List of Provincial Governors of the Democratic Republic of the Congo>Governor | Urbain Kisula Ngoy | ||||
| Population Density | 4.125.000 (est. 1998) 8.30/km² | ||||
| Districts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo>Districts | 5 | ||||
| List of cities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo>Cities | 3 | ||||
| Demonym | Katangan | ||||
| Official Website | [ Province du Katanga] | ||||
| Territorial Organisation - Cities | |||||
Katanga is the southern province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, regional capital Lubumbashi (formerly Elizabethville in French, Elisabethstad in Dutch). 518,000 km² with a population of around 4.1 million. Farming and ranching are carried out on the Katanga Plateau. In the eastern part of the province is a rich mining region, which supplies cobalt, copper, tin, radium, uranium, and diamonds.
Early and colonial history
Beginning in the 17th century, the province was controlled by the Luba and Lunda.In the late 19th century, a trader from Tanzania called M'Siri founded a short-lived kingdom that lasted until he was killed by the Belgians in 1891.
Though on 15 April, 1891, the administration of the Katangese areas conquered by the Congo Free State was entrusted to the Compagnie du Katanga, no effective administration was set up until 19 June, 1900, when all Katanga was entrusted to the Comité Spécial du Katanga, an administration totally separate from that of the Congo. On 1 September, 1910, Katanga was integrated into the Belgian Congo but it retained a large measure of autonomy until 1 October, 1933, when part of its Lomami-district was also transferred to the province of Kasaï. On 1 October, 1933, it was renamed the province of Elisabethville (in French; Elisabethstad in Dutch), after its capital (now Lubumbashi).
Under Belgian control, from around 1884, the mineral resources were heavily exploited by Belgian firms (notably Union Minière du Haut Katanga) and the province was developed much more than the rest of the country. The Belgian mining cartel employed a mixture of contract mercenaries and hired guards in order to subdue the local population and to ensure the proper transport of minerals and other goods out of the country. The Luba people often interfered with their mining operations in the province, and many were killed in raids on mining operations.
With the high demand of mining workforce in the region many people were brought from neighbouring regions, mostly Luba people from the Kasai area and even workers from Zambia.
Secession
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| Capital | Lubumbashi | ||
| Created | June 1960 | ||
| Dissolved | January 1963 | ||
| Demonym | Katangan | ||
| Currency | Katanga franc | ||
In January 1961 northern Katanga was invaded by the Congolese government, and in response the UN sent in 'peacekeeping' forces, authorised in February 1961 by the Security Council to use force in self-defence. Under pressure due to the continued unrest in the Congo, the UN launched a controversial attack on Katangan forces in September. In spite of superior fire power, the attack proved unsuccessful. Peace negotiations ensued, in the course of which, UN secretary-general Dag Hammarskjöld was killed in uncertain circumstances in a plane crash near Ndola, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia). A ceasefire was agreed, but broken in December 1961 when UN forces launched a second unsuccessful attack on the Katangan forces of Tshombe. Again, multiple allegations were made, most notably '46 Angry Men', a statement signed by 46 civilian doctors of Elizabethville testifying to numerous atrocities by UN forces.
In January 1962, Katanga created its own air force of 10 Harvard T-6 bombers and two Vampire jets under the commanded of Jan Zumbach. Under UN pressure, Tshombe later agreed to a 3-stage plan from the acting Secretary General, U Thant that would have reunited Katanga with Congo. However, this remained an agreement on paper only. Urged on by Congo leader Cyrille Adola, UN forces launched a decisive attack on Katanga in December 1962. The capital, Elisabethville (now Lubumbashi), fell in January 1963, and Tshombe fled to Kolwezi, where he surrendered on January 15, 1963. The Katangan secession was formally terminated by the National Conciliation Plan.
Post-Reunification
In 1966 the central government nationalized the Union Minière du Haut Katanga, as Gécamines. In 1971 Katanga was renamed Shaba. Throughout the 1970s further insurrections were put down by the government with help from foreign nations. In 1978 for example, on 12 May, rebels occupied the city of Kolwezi, the mining centre of the province. Zaire asked the United States, France, and Belgium to restore order. This resulted in 700 African and 170 European victims.The province became Katanga again in 1997 after Mobutu Sésé Seko was exiled, as part of the reverting of much of his 'zairisation' of colonial names.
Sources and External links
- [The United Nations and the Congo]
- [Katanga; The Untold Story (of U.N. betrayal)] 1960s Video about UN Involvement
- [Meaning of flag]
- [WorldStatesmen- Congo (Kinshasa)]
- [The Bank Notes of Katanga]
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| Provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo |
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|---|---|
| Bandundu | Bas-Congo | Équateur | Kasai-Occidental | Kasai-Oriental | Katanga | Kinshasa | Maniema | Nord-Kivu | Orientale | Sud-Kivu | |
| New provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo ([Constitution 2006]) |
|
|---|---|
| Bas-Uele | Équateur | Haut-Lomami | Haut-Katanga | Haut-Uele | Ituri | Kasaï | Kasaï oriental | Kongo central | Kwango | Kwilu | Lomami | Lualaba | Lulua | Mai-Ndombe | Maniema | Mongala | Nord-Kivu | Nord-Ubangi | Sankuru | Sud-Kivu | Sud-Ubangi | Tanganyika | Tshopo | Tshuapa | Kinshasa | |
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