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N'Djamena
・ N'Djamena Hebdo
・ N'Djamena International Airport
・ N'djili Airport
・ N'Dodjiga
・ N'Dolo Airport
・ N'Dolondougou
・ N'dorola Department
・ N'Dounga
・ N'Dour
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・ N'Délé Airport
・ N'Déma
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・ N'Faly Kouyate


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N'Djamena : ウィキペディア英語版
N'Djamena

N’Djamena (; (フランス語:Ndjamena); (アラビア語: نجامينا) ''Nijāmīnā'') is the capital and largest city of Chad. 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 into 10 ''arrondissements''. It is a regional market for livestock, salt, dates, and grains. Meat, fish and cotton processing are the chief industries, and the city continues to serve as the center of economic activity in Chad.
== History ==

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. It was a major trading city and became the capital of the region and nation.
During the Second World War, the French relied heavily upon the city's airport to move troops and supplies. On 21 January 1942, a lone German He 111 of the ''Sonderkommando Blaich'' successfully bombed the airfield at Fort Lamy, destroying oil supplies and ten aircraft.〔(MESSERSCHMITT Bf 108 – 'TAIFUN' ) accessed: 29 April 2011〕 Fort Lamy received its first bank branch in 1950, when the Bank of West Africa (BAO) opened a branch there.
On April 6, 1973, the President François Tombalbaye〔 changed its name to N’Djamena (taken from the Arab name of a nearby village, ''Niǧāmīnā'', meaning “place of rest”) as part of his ''authenticité'' program of Africanization. The city was occupied by Libya during the 1980–81 Libyan intervention as part of the Chadian–Libyan conflict, and the associated Transitional Government of National Unity.
The city was partly destroyed during the Chadian Civil War, in 1979 and again in 1980. In these years, almost all of the population fled the town, searching for refuge on the opposite bank of the Chari River in Cameroon, next to the city of Kousseri. The residents did not return until 1981–82, after the end of the clashes. Until 1984, facilities and services were subject to strict rationing, and schools remained closed.〔Samuel Decalo, ''Historical Dictionary of Chad'', Scarecrow, 1987, pp. 229–230〕
The period of turmoil in the city was started by the abortive coup attempted by the northerner Prime Minister Hissène Habré against the southerner Pres Félix Malloum: while Malloum and the national army loyal to him were defeated, the intervention in the battle of other northern factions rival to that of Habré complicated the situation. A temporary truce was reached in 1979 through international mediation, establishing the warlord Goukouni Oueddei as head of a government of national unity with his rival Habré as Defense Minister. The intense rivalry between Goukouni and Habré caused the eruption of new clashes in the city in 1980; N’Djamena found itself divided into sectors controlled by the various warlords. The tug-of-war reached a conclusion after many months only when Goukouni asked for the intervention of the Libyans, whose tanks overwhelmed Habré’s defenses in the capital.〔Robert Buijtenhuijs, ''Le Frolinat et les guerres civiles du Tchad'', Karthala, 1987, pp. 67–175〕
Following differences between Goukouni and Muammar Gaddafi and international disapproval of Libyan intervention, the Libyan troops left the capital and Chad in 1981. This opened the door to Habré, who marched on N’Djamena, occupying the city with little resistance in 1982 and installing himself as the new president.〔R. Buijtenhuijs, ''Le Frolinat et les guerres civiles du Tchad'', pp. 177–225〕 He was eventually dislodged in a similar fashion in 1990 by a former general of his, Idriss Déby, as of 2012 the head of state of Chad.
The city had only 9,976 inhabitants in 1937, but a decade later, in 1947, the population had almost doubled to 18,435. In 1968, after independence, the population reached 126,483. In 1993, it surpassed half a million with 529,555. A good deal of this growth has been due to refugees fleeing into N’Djamena for security, although many people fled N’Djamena also, depending on the political situation.〔
On April 13, 2006, a rebel United Front for Democratic Change attack on the city was defeated〔BBC: (UN condemns rebel attack in Chad )〕 in the Battle of N’Djamena. The city was once again attacked on February 2, 2008, by UFDD and RFC rebels.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Rebels clash with Chadian forces inside capital )〕 (''See Battle of N'Djamena (2008)'')

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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