Pwantenwa ezalí engumba ya míbalé ya Kongó-Brazzaville, nsima ya mbóka-mokonzi Brazzaville, mpé étuka ya Kongó-Brazzaville kino 2004. libosó ya mbula oyo ezalaki étuka-mokonzi ya Kouilou. Ésîka nayé ézalí lombú Atlantíki. Pwantenwa ezali mbóka-mokonzi ékonomiki ya esé na yé mpé ezali na bato 715 334 (2007),[1]

Loyéngé kokoma

Loyéngé ya Pwantenwa ezali tropically hot and humid. September and October experience somewhat less rainfall than the rest of the year.

Ekonzeli kokoma

Pointe-Noire is a commune divided into six urban districts (arrondissements):

Lisolo kokoma

Pointe Noire's (Black Point) name originated from Portuguese navigators who saw a block of black rocks on the headland in 1484. From then on, Pointe Noire, called Ponta Negra, became a maritime reference, and then a small fishing village from 1883, after the French signed a treaty with local people, the Loangos.

In 1910, French Equatorial Africa (Afrique équatoriale française, AEF) was created, and French companies were allowed to exploit the Middle Congo (modern-day Congo Brazzaville). It soon became necessary to build a railroad that would connect Brazzaville, the terminus of the river navigation on the Congo River and the Ubangui River, with the Atlantic coast. As rapids make it impossible to navigate on the Congo River past Brazzaville, and the coastal railroad terminus site had to allow for the construction of a deep-sea port, authorities chose the site of Ponta Negra instead of Libreville as originally envisaged. Construction of the Congo-Ocean Railway began in 1921, and led to the foundation of Pointe-Noire on 22 May 1922.

In 1927, drinking water became available in the city, which had about 3,000 inhabitants. The airport was built in 1932. In 1934, Governor Raphael Antonetti inaugurated the Congo-Ocean Railway. The first hospital was built in 1936. That same year, Bank of West Africa (BAO) opened its first branch in the city. In 1942, the Pointe-Noire Harbour welcomed the first ship, and made the city the AEF's seaport.

In 1950, Pointe-Noire had 20,000 inhabitants, and became the capital of the Middle Congo, while Brazzaville was the capital city of the AEF. In 1957, the Middle-Congo became the Republic of Congo, although it was still not independent. Incidents which occurred during 1958 legislative elections led the leaders of the Democratic Union for the Defence of African Interests (Union démocratique pour la défense des interets africains, UDDIA) to transfer the capital to Brazzaville, since Pointe-Noire was under the influence of political opposition.

Pointe-Noire continued growing, and was the most modern city in 1960, when Congo gained independence. Then, the oil discovery around 1980 re-attracted people and factories (Elf Aquitaine). The population doubled by 1982, and reached 360,000 in 1994.

Civil wars in 1997 and 1999 caused an influx of refugees from the surrounding provinces (Lékoumou, Niari, Bouenza, Pool) towards Pointe-Noire, causing the population to climb to over 1 million inhabitants.

Recently the Government has proposed the development of a new bulk resource port to be constructed at Point Indienne, 30 km to the north of the Port of Pointe-Noire . A meeting was held on 18 December 2012 with a collective of 10 Congo government ministries and invited mining companies to discuss the future development opportunities.

Ekonomi kokoma

Pointe-Noire is the essential centre of the oil industry of the Republic of Congo, one of the main oil producers in Central Africa. Congolese oil has been largely exploited by the French company Elf Aquitaine since its discovery around 1980.

Pointe-Noire is also known for its fishing industry, which is often at odds with the oil development.[2]

Formerly, Pointe-Noire was home to a potash exploitation which led to the construction of a wharf, currently closed to the public.

Kelasi kokoma

Lycée Français Charlemagne, a French international school for primary and secondary school children, is in Pointe-Noire.

The city is home to the Ecole supérieure de Technologie du Littoral (technology) the Ecole supérieure de commerce et de gestion (business), Institut UCAC-ICAM (engineering) and the Centre d’éducation, de formation et d’apprentissage en mécanique auto (automotive engineering).[3] The Higher Institute of Technology of Central Africa has a campus in the city. There are also several other institutions of higher education in the city.[4]

Transport kokoma

 
Public transport in Point-Noire

Pointe-Noire is home to Agostinho Neto Airport which as of May 2015 had direct flights to Abidjan, Addis Ababa, Brazzaville, Casablanca, Cotonou, Douala, Kinshasa–N'Djili, Libreville, Lomé, Malabo, Paris–Charles de Gaulle, Port-Gentil, and Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo and was second busiest airport in the country. Pointe-Noire is also the terminus of the Congo-Ocean Railway, the railway station being a notable building. As of 2014 the railway was operating the La Gazelle train service every other day to Brazzaville and intermediate destinations.[5]

Thanks to its rapid growth, the city now includes Tié-Tié Railway Station and Ngondji Railway Station, the next railway stations after the Pointe Noire terminus.[citation needed]

Pointe-Noire has a taxi-bus network that runs throughout the entire city.

On 22 June 2010 a train departing from Pointe-Noire derailed resulting in the deaths of at least 50 passengers.[6] The railway was built by the French between 1921 and 1934 during the French colonial rule in Congo, thousands of people died while building the railway.[6]

Rankings kokoma

In the Mercer (consulting firm) Quality of Living Survey of 215 cities; Pointe Noire is ranked 209 in 2009. The rank for 2008 was 210.

International relations kokoma

Bagumba mapasa kokoma

Pointe-Noire eza mapasa na:

See also kokoma

References kokoma

Modèle:Reflist

External links kokoma

Coordinates: 04°48′S 11°51′E / 4.800°S 11.850°E / -4.800; 11.8504° 48′ S 11° 51′ M / -4.8, 11.85


  Óyo ezalí ndámbo. Okoki kosálisa mpé kosungǎ.
  1. Official INSEC figures
  2. (en) Tati, Gabriel, Reconsidering informality: perspectives from urban Africa, Nordic Africa Institute, 2004,‎ , 235 p. (ISBN 91-7106-518-0), « Sharing Public Space in Pointe-Noire, Congo-Brazzaville: Immigrant Fishermen and a Multinational Oil Company »
  3. News of Bolloré Africa Logistics, Partnering schools in Congo Brazzaville: Congo Terminal commits to sandwich course education schemes.,Congo Brazzaville. 07 August 2014 , https://web.archive.org/web/20150923193434/http://www.bollore-africa-logistics.com/en/media/news/partenariats-entreprise-ecoles-congo-brazzaville.html
  4. "Kopi ya archive". Archived from the original on 2015-05-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20150530001940/http://www.pagesclaires.com/eng/Activities/Higher-education-universities-institutes-campuses/%28v%29/Pointe-Noire-311/%28c%29/Pointe-Noire-520. 
  5. 2014 Timetable, Lonely Planet, https://www.lonelyplanet.com/thorntree/forums/africa/congo/la-gazelle-train-brazzaville-to-pointe-noire
  6. 6,0 et 6,1 Al Jazeera - Scores dead in Congo train crash
  7. Florence, Jeanne. "Le Havre - Les villes jumelées [Le Havre - Twin towns]" (in French). Archived from the original on 2013-08-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20130807181850/http://archives.lehavre.fr/delia-CMS/guichet_virtuel/rubrique/article_id-1626/topic_id-707/les-villes-jumelees.html. Retrieved 2013-08-07. 
  8. "Le Havre - Les villes jumelées [Le Havre - Twin towns]" (in French). City of Le Havre. Archived from the original on 2013-07-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20130729215238/http://lehavre.fr/dossier/le-havre-ville-partenaire. Retrieved 2013-08-07.