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Kinshasa |
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KinshasaCapital (since 1960) of the Democratic Republic of Congo on the Congo River, 400 km/250 mi inland from the port of Matadi; population (2004 est) 7,273,900. Industries include ship-building and repairing, chemicals, textiles, engineering, food processing, and furniture. It was founded by the explorer Henry Morton Stanley in 1881. The National University of Kinshasa is here. HistoryStanley named the city Léopoldville after the Belgian king Leopold II. The city became the capital of the Belgian Congo in 1923 and grew steadily as the focus of the country's trade and administration. At independence in 1960 it had a population of 400,000, but massive immigration encouraged by disturbed political conditions in many rural areas led to a quadrupling within 12 years as suburbs spread away from the river. It was renamed Kinshasa in 1966 after a nearby 19th-century village. During the 1960s employment did not keep pace with population growth, but the early 1970s brought a commercial and industrial boom, helped by power supplies from the vast new Inga hydroelectric scheme. The city experienced economic difficulties in the 1990s because of civil war.
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I wouldn''t host my website in a Kabul, Afghanistan or Kinsasha, Congo based datacenter - these two and many others around the world are politically unstable regions. Cities like Luanda and Kinsasha have doubled even tripled their populations in a very short period of time. On 10 August, the Supreme Court in Kinsasha, on the matter of the motion of judicial misconduct, determined that it could not examine the actions of the judges responsible for the Berardone judgement and the Akam decision as these had taken the form of 'orders' and not 'judgements'. |
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