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Katima Mulilo : ウィキペディア英語版
Katima Mulilo

Katima Mulilo (SiLozi: ''quenches the fire'', referring to nearby rapids in the Zambezi)〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Namibia 1on1 )〕 is a town situated in the Caprivi strip and is the capital of the Zambezi Region, Namibia's far northeast extension into central Southern Africa. It comprises two electoral constituencies, Katima Mulilo Rural and Katima Mulilo Urban. Katima Mulilo, which is sometimes shortened to just "Katima", had 28,362 inhabitants in 2010,
It is located on the national road B8 on the banks of the Zambezi River in lush riverine vegetation with tropical birds and monkeys.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=The Cardboard Box )〕 The town receives an annual average rainfall of .
The nearest Namibian town to Katima Mulilo is Rundu, about 500 km away. About 40 km east of Katima Mulilo lies the village of Bukalo, where the road to Ngoma branches off that joins Namibia to Botswana.
==History==
On 28 January 1935, the administrative centre of the Caprivi Strip was moved from Schuckmannsburg to Katima Mulilo. This date is assumed as the foundation date of Katima Mulilo. The regional office, the only brick-and-mortar building at Katima Mulilo at this time when the area consisted exclusively of pristine forests, was built under a giant Baobab situated near today's SWAPO Party regional offices. In present times the tree is known as the ''Toilet Tree'' because of a rest room carved into it.
Katima Mulilo was very sparsely populated at that time. It had a missionary school run by the Seventh–day Adventists, and the small settlements were connected only by sleigh tracks. Without any roads nor other infrastructure it was difficult to administer the Caprivi Strip from here. The South African administration therefore decided to shift the regional office again, this time to Pretoria, in 1939. Given its proximity to important transport routes, particularly the railway bridge at Victoria Falls, the location of Katima Mulilo became strategically important in the Second World War which broke out soon afterwards. All military supplies, people, and goods had to be flown in. The town's first car came in 1940 and belonged to the air strip operator.〔
In 1940, William "Bill" Finaughty established the first shop in the Caprivi Strip in Katima Mulilo; the settlement that surrounded the shop was subsequently named for him. In the 1950s, transport on the Zambezi River was established and allowed connection to the train service at Livingstone. The M'pacha Airfield, today Katima Mulilo Airport, was constructed in 1965 at a cost of 65 million Rand, an astronomical amount at that time when 2 Rand roughly equalled 1 Pound sterling. A police station was erected in 1961.
Katima Mulilo became a segregated town in 1965 when the erection of the ''Nghweeze'' township began. The South African administration was unhappy with the ''Mafulo'' informal settlement where members of the Caprivi African National Union (CANU) were staying and conducting political activism. As a response to this development, Nghweeze (drived from totela language:which literally means "stab me") township was established to enable some degree of control over Blacks by only allowing local workers and their families to take up residence. At the same time the central parts of Katima Mulilo were declared the ''Katima Mulilo Proper'' residential area and restricted to Whites. Contract workers from the company ''Lewis Construction'' from Salisbury (today's Harare) in South Rhodesia (today's Zimbabwe) that built Nghweeze camped in an area that for this heritage is named the ''Lewis'' informal settlement. The town had only 575 inhabitants at that time but grew to over 5,000 by 1978.〔
In 1971 the area around Katima Mulilo got involved in the South African Border War. As in World War II, it was a strategically important location, this time due to troop transports into and out of Zambia and Angola.
The settlement also was at the centre of the Caprivi conflict in the 1990s, an armed conflict between the Caprivi Liberation Army (CLA), a rebel group working for the secession of the Caprivi Strip, and the Namibian government.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Caprivi Liberation Front )〕 In the early hours of 2 August 1999, CLA launched an attack occupying the state-run radio station and attacking a police station, the Wanella border post, and an army base. A state of emergency was declared in the province, and the government arrested alleged CLA supporters.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Civil supremacy of the military in Namibia: A retrospective case study )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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