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Bulawayo |
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BulawayoIndustrial city and railway junction in Zimbabwe; population of urban area (1992 est) 620,900. The country's second-largest city after Harare, it lies at an altitude of 1,355 m/4,450 ft on the Matsheumlope River, a tributary of the Zambezi. Industries include cement, clothing, tyres, brewing, printing, and agricultural and electrical equipment. The former capital of Matabeleland, Bulawayo developed with the exploitation of gold mines in the vicinity. Bulawayo developed from a mining settlement which was founded by the British in 1893 on the site of the kraal (enclosed village) of the defeated Matabele chief Lobengula in his village GuBulawayo. The kraal was burned down, but the indaba, or judgment tree, was left standing.
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Pius Ncube, Archbishop of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, is a leading Catholic cleric and a frequent critic of the government. Moyo is a member of Black Umfolozi, an internationally known group of singers and dancers from Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. |
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