Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/kasai-occidental

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Kasai-Occidental


FieldValue
nameKasaï-Occidental
native_nameKasai Wa Mubuelu
typeFormer province of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo
image_sealKasai-Occidental logo.png
image_mapKasai-Occidental in Democratic Republic of the Congo.svg
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Kasai region
established_titleEstablished
established_date25 April 1966
extinct_titleDissolved
extinct_date
demographics_type1Languages
demographics1_title1Official
demographics1_info1French
demographics1_title2National
demographics1_info2Tshiluba
parts_typeDistricts
parts_stylepara
p1Lulua District, Kasaï District
seat_typeCapital
seatKananga
seat1_typeLargest city
seat1Kananga
area_total_km2154742
area_rank5th
governing_bodyGovernment of Kasaï-Occidental
leader_titleGovernor
leader_nameAlex Kande Mupompa
leader_title2Legislature
leader_name2Provincial Assembly of Kasai-Occidental
leader_title3Type
leader_name3Unicameral
population_total5366068
population_as_of2010 est.
population_rank8th
population_density_km2auto
population_demonymKasaian
timezone1Congo eastern time
utc_offset1+02:00
websitekasaioccidental.com
blank_name_sec1HDI (2019)
blank_info_sec10.401

Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • 2 Cities: Kananga, Tshikapa
  • 10 Territories

11th

Kasaï-Occidental (French for "Western Kasai"; ) was one of the eleven provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo between 1966 and 2015, when it was split into the Kasaï-Central and the Kasaï provinces.

History

The province of Kasaï-Occidental was established in 1966 by regrouping the provinces of Luluabourg and Unité Kasaïenne which in turn were created 1962 when the historical Kasaï Province was divided in five provinces namely Lomami, Sankuru, Sud-Kasai, Luluabourg, Unité-Kasaïenne. The former provinces of Luluabourg and Unité-Kasaïenne correspond to the current districts of Lulua District and Kasaï District. Since its formation the provincial seat is Kananga (formerly Luluabourg) which was also the seat of the Kasaï Province between 1957 and 1962. The Province of Lusambo precedes the current entity, it was created 1933 by carving out the districts of Kasai and Sankuru from the Province of Congo-Kasaï, one of the four provinces established in 1924. The province of Lusambo changed its name to Kasaï Province in 1947 its provincial seat was still Lusambo until 1957 when it was moved to Luluabourg (now Kananga). The Province of Kasai existed until it was subdivided in 1962 into 5 provinces.

The Province derives its name from the Kasai River which flows through the Kasaï District from south to north. The river is the second longest in DR. Congo and a major tributary of the Congo River. The Kasaï river was variously called Enzzadi, Nsadi, Nzadi, Kassabi, Kasye, Kassaba by the different local tribes (Luba, Tshokwe, Lunda, etc..), latter European explorers came to use the name Kasaï to refer to the river.

Geography

Kasaï-Occidental borders the provinces of Bandundu to the west, Équateur to the north, Kasai-Oriental to the east, and Katanga to the southeast. To the south it borders the country of Angola. The province is crossed by many major rivers: Kasai, Lulua, Loango, Sankuru, Lukeni, etc...

Divisions

The province is divided into the Kasaï and Lulua districts, with their headquarters in the towns of Luebo and Tshimbulu. Cities with independent administrations are Kananga in the Lulua district and Tshikapa in the Kasai district. The Kasai district is divided in five territories:

Kamonia Territory seat Kamonia and is further divided in nine sectors:

  • Bakwa-Nyambi
  • Bapende
  • Kasai-Kabambayi
  • Kasai-Longotshimo
  • Kasai-Lunyeka
  • Kasadisadi
  • Lovua-Longotshimo
  • Lovua-Lushiku
  • Tshikapa The tshikapa sector should not be confused with the city of Tshikapa which is administered independently

Luebo Territory seat Luebo, divided in five sectors:

  • Luebo
  • Luebo-Kabambayi
  • Luebo-Lulengele
  • Luebo-Wedi
  • Ndjoko-Punda

Mweka Territory seat Mweka; the entire territory is covered by one sector that of Bakuba.

Ilebo Territory seat Ilebo, divided in four sectors:

  • Basongo
  • Malu-Malu
  • Mapangu
  • Sud-Banga

Dekese territory seat Dekese, divided in two sectors:

  • Ndengese-ikolombe
  • Yaelima

Cities and towns, with their 2010 populations, are:

Nameurl=http://world-gazetteer.com/wg.php?x=1263071407&men=gcis&lng=en&des=gamelan&geo=-46&srt=npan&col=abcdefghinoq&msz=1500&pt=c&va=&geo=-854title=Kasai-Occidental: largest cities and towns and statistics of their populationpublisher=World Gazetteerarchive-url=https://archive.today/20130210041822/http://world-gazetteer.com/wg.php?x=1263071407&men=gcis&lng=en&des=gamelan&geo=-46&srt=npan&col=abcdefghinoq&msz=1500&pt=c&va=&geo=-854archive-date=10 February 2013url-status=dead }}Coordinates
Dekese3,241
Demba21,019
Dibaya3,857
Dimbelenge3,815
Ilebo72,059
Kabeya-Kamwanga30,027
Kananga967,007
Kazumba4,109
Luebo29,167
Luiza15,259
Mankanza18,134
Mweka55,155
Tshikapa524,293
Tshimbulu19,384

Under the 2006 constitution, Kasaï-Occidental was to have been divided into two provinces by 18 February 2009. Kasai District and the city of Tshikapa were to combine and become a new Kasai Province, and Lulua District would be combined with the city of Kananga to form the new Lulua Province. As of 24 May 2014, this had not taken place.

Demographic

Languages

French is the official language. Tshiluba also known as the Luba-Kasai language is spoken by about 6.3 million people in the Kasai region. It is the primary spoken language in the province and it is natively spoken in the cities of Kananga and Tshikapa, also in the Demba territory, dimbelenge territory (Except the Lukibu sector), Dibaya territory (except the Tshishilu sector), Kazumba territory (except the Kavula, Bashi-mboyi, and Tshitadi sectors) in Kamonia territory (Except the Bapende, Lovua-Lushiku, lovua-longatshimo, and Kasai-Longatshimo sectors), and in the Luebo territory (except some area in the northwest on the town of lwebo). Tshiluba is used as a first or second language in many towns outside its native area notably in the towns of Luebo, mweka, Ilebo, Kakenge, Luiza, Kamonia, etc...

Others natively spoken languages are:

  • Lele (Cishilele/Ushilele) is spoken in the Territory of Ilebo except in the south part precisely in the south part of the Sud-Banga Sector.
  • Kuba (Bushong, Cikuba) is spoken throughout the Mweka Territory.
  • Pende (Gipende) is spoken in the Bapende sector in the Kamonia Territory.
  • Wongo in the southern part of the Sud-Banga sector in the Ilebo Territory.
  • Lwalwa is spoken in the Kabalekese sector in the Luiza Territory.
  • Kete Nord (Cikete) is spoken in the northwest of Luebo territory including the town of luebo (historically, though the current language is Ciluba); in some parts of the sectors of Luebo-Wedi and Ndjoko-Punda.
  • Kete Sud (Cikete) is spoken in the Dibaya Territory exclusively in the Tshishilu sector; also in the Luiza territory in the Bambayi, bushimayi, and Kalunga Sectors.
  • Salampasu (Cisalampasu)in the Luiza territory in the sectors of: Lueta, Loatshi, Lusanza, and some part of Kalunga.
  • Bindji sud (Mbangani) in the sectors of Kavula, Bashi-Mboyi, and Tshitadi in the Kazumba territory.
  • Bindi nord (Cibindji) is spoken in the sector of Lukibu in the Dimbelenge Territory.
  • Ngongo in some part of the ndegese-ikolombe sector in the Dekese territory.
  • Songomeno is spoken in the southern part of the Dekese territory between the Lukeni and Sankuru rivers.
  • Dengese is spoken in the dekese territory in the north beyond the Lukeni river.

Religion

The major religion is Christianity, with Catholicism being the largest faith.

References

References

  1. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab".
  2. (18 July 2015). "RDC : le Kasaï-Occidental démembré". [[Radio Okapi]].
  3. "Kasai-Occidental: largest cities and towns and statistics of their population". World Gazetteer.
  4. "Constitution de la République démocratique du Congo: Article 226". [[Wikisource]].
  5. (12 October 2010). "The AMP conclave: Another step towards 2011 elections". Congo Siasa.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Kasai-Occidental — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report