Nola, Central African Republic

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Place in Sangha-Mbaéré, Central African Republic
3°32′N 16°04′E / 3.533°N 16.067°E / 3.533; 16.067CountryCentral African RepublicPrefectureSangha-MbaéréGovernment
 • Sub-PrefectJanvier Seledonon[1]Elevation
442 m (1,450 ft)Population
 (2012)
 • Total41,462

Nola is the capital of Sangha-Mbaéré, an economic prefecture of the Central African Republic. It is located at the confluence of the Kadéï and the Mambere river. The Sangha River is formed here due to the aforementioned rivers.

History

In 1911, the area around Bouar was ceded by France to Germany under the terms of the Morocco-Congo Treaty, becoming part of the German colony of Neukamerun until it was reconquered by the French during World War I. During the war, local Gbaya chief Daddio provided many canoes to French Lieutenant Colonel Nicolas Hutin to help the French retake Nola from the Germans. Another local chief, Ngoukou I, also helped fight against the Germans.[2]

Sleeping sickness had long been an issue in the areas around Nola. During the colonial period, French authorities embarked on a risky and now-disproven prophylactic campaign called 'lomidinisation'. Nola and Yokadouma in the French Congo were the centre of this misguided immunisation campaign.[3]

On 28 March 2013 Nola was captured by Séléka forces.[4] On 12 February 2014 the town was captured by Anti-balaka militias.[5] 17 Muslims were killed in Nola in February 2014 by Anti-balakas while survivors fled to Cameroon.[6] In September 2016 Nola was declared to be free from rebel groups.[7]

References

  1. ^ Oubangui Medias, Oubangui Medias. "Centrafrique : Décrets portant nomination des Gouverneurs, des Préfets et des Sous-Préfets". oubanguimedias.com. Oubangui Medias. Retrieved 5 June 2024.
  2. ^ Bradshaw, Richard; Fandos-Rius, Juan (2016). Historical Dictionary of the Central African Republic (New ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 200. ISBN 9780810879911.
  3. ^ Lachenal, Guillaume (2017). The Lomidine Files: The untold story of a medical disaster in colonial Africa. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9781421423241.
  4. ^ "Central African Republic Situation Report No. 9 (as of 28 March 2013)". 28 March 2013.
  5. ^ IPIS Map CAR V3
  6. ^ Les Peuhls Mbororo de Centrafrique une communauté qui souffre, page 38
  7. ^ KIMBERLEY PROCESS DECLARES THREE MORE ZONES IN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC (CAR) AS ‘COMPLIANT ZONES’, 27 September 2016

3°32′N 16°04′E / 3.533°N 16.067°E / 3.533; 16.067

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Capital: Nola
BambioBayangaNola
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Equateur Region
Mambéré Prefecture
Mambéré-Kadéï Prefecture
Nana-Mambéré Prefecture
Sangha-Mbaéré Economic Prefecture
Fertit Region
Bamingui-Bangoran Prefecture
Haute-Kotto Prefecture
Vakaga Prefecture
Haut-Oubangui Region
Basse-Kotto Prefecture
Haut-Mbomou Prefecture
Mbomou Prefecture
Kagas Region
Kémo Prefecture
Nana-Grébizi Economic Prefecture
Ouaka Prefecture
Plateaux Region
Lobaye Prefecture
Ombella-M'Poko Prefecture
Bangui Prefecture
  • Bangui-Centre
  • Bangui-Fleuve
  • Bangui-Kagas
  • Bangui-Rapides
Yade Region
Lim-Pendé Prefecture
Ouham Prefecture
Ouham-Fafa Prefecture
Ouham-Pendé Prefecture
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