Ituri Province Explained

Ituri
Native Name:Province du l'Ituri (French)
Mkoa wa Ituri (Swahili)
Type:Province
Coordinates:1.8333°N 59°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Established Title:Established
Established Date:2015
Seat Type:Capital
Seat:Bunia
Blank Name Sec1:Official language
Blank Info Sec1:French
Blank1 Name Sec1:National language
Blank1 Info Sec1:Swahili
Area Total Km2:65658
Area Rank:16th
Leader Title:Governor
Leader Name:Johnny Luboya Nkashama (military)[1]
Population Total:4,392,200
Population As Of:2020
Population Rank:7th
Population Density Km2:auto
Named For:Ituri River
Timezone1:CAT
Utc Offset1:+2
Website: archive
Registration Plate Type:License Plate Code
Registration Plate: CGO / 07

Ituri Province (Swahili: Jimbo la Ituri in Swahili) is one of the 21 provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo created in the 2015 repartitioning. Ituri, Bas-Uele, Haut-Uele, and Tshopo provinces are the result of the subdividing of the former Orientale province.[2] Ituri was formed from the Ituri district whose town of Bunia was elevated to capital city of the new province.[3]

Geography

The Ituri Rainforest is in this area. It is located northeast of the Ituri River and on the western side of Lake Albert. It has borders with Uganda and South Sudan.

Territories

Its five administrative territories are:

Geography

Ituri is a region of high plateau (2000–5000 meters) that has a large tropical forest but also the landscape of savannah. The province has rare fauna, including the okapi, the national animal of the Congo. As for flora, an important species is Mangongo, whose leaves are used by the Mbuti to build their homes.

Economy

The Kilo-Moto gold mines are partly located in Ituri. In the beginning of the 21st century, petroleum reserves have been found by Heritage Oil and Tullow Oil on the shores of Lake Albert.

History

See also: Ituri conflict. Ituri, as Kibali-Ituri, was a province of the DRC from 1962 to 1966. Prior to the adoption of the 2006 Constitution of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the legal status of Ituri was a topic of some dispute. From the beginning of the Second Congo War in 1998, it was held by soldiers of the Uganda People's Defense Force (UPDF) and the Ugandan-backed Movement for Liberation faction of the Rally for Congolese Democracy (RCD-ML). In June 1999, the commander of UPDF forces in the DRC, Brig. Gen. James Kazini, ignored the protests of RCD-ML leaders and re-created the province of Kibali-Ituri out of the eastern section of the northeastern Orientale province.[4] It is almost always referred to simply as Ituri. The creation of the new province under the political rivalry contributed to the start of the current Ituri conflict, which has caused thousands of deaths. Most official cartographers did not include the new province, and those referring to it as a "province" rather than a "region" were sometimes viewed as having a pro-Uganda bias. With the new constitution, Ituri's status as a province was finally settled.

Approximate correspondence between historical and current province

Belgian Congo! colspan=2
Republic of the CongoZaireDemocratic Republic of the Congo
1908 1919 1932 1947 1963 1966 1971 1988 1997 2015
22 districts 4 provinces 6 provinces 6 provinces 21 provinces + capital 8 provinces + capital 8 provinces + capital 11 provinces 11 provinces 26 provinces
Bas-UeleOrientaleStanleyvilleOrientaleUeleOrientaleHaut-ZaïreOrientaleBas-Uele
Haut-UeleHaut-Uele
IturiKibali-IturiIturi
StanleyvilleHaut-CongoTshopo
Aruwimi
ManiemaCostermansvilleKivuManiemaKivuManiema
Lowa
KivuNord-KivuNord-Kivu
Kivu-CentralSud-Kivu

Government

An Ituri Interim Administration was formed through the efforts of the Ituri Pacification Commission, a commission sponsored by the United Nations Organization Mission in Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC, abbreviation of the French name "Mission de l'Organisation des Nations Unies en République Démocratique du Congo") that was set up, after much initial delay, in 2003 after the pull-out of Ugandan troops from the district. It led to the creation of the Ituri Interim Assembly, which elected an administrator and an assembly chairperson; the current assembly chairperson is Petronille Vaweka, who is also the sole deputy for the district to the National Assembly in Kinshasa.

The Interim Assembly will be reconstituted or replaced by a provincial assembly under the 2006 constitution. An election for the governor and vice-governor will also be held, and the district will be re-created as a province of the DRC.

Presidents, later governors, of Kibali-Ituri from 1962–1966

Governors of Ituri since 1999

Demographics

The population is composed primarily of Alur, Hema, Lendu, Ngiti, Bira and Ndo-Okebo, with differing figures on which one of the groups constitutes the largest percentage of the population in the province. The Mbuti, a pygmy ethnic group, reside primarily in the Ituri forest near the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, although some Mbuti have been forced into urban areas by deforestation, over-hunting and violence.

The 2020 population was estimated to be 4,392,200.[5]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Mokonzi . Azarias . Ituri : le Lieutenant-Général Johnny Nkashama Luboya nouveau gouverneur dit venir pour imposer la paix . 25 July 2022 . Infocongo . 10 May 2021 . fr.
  2. News: Découpage territorial : procédures d'installation de nouvelles provinces . 5 June 2020 . . 13 July 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150719082607/http://radiookapi.net/actualite/2015/07/13/decoupage-territorial-procedures-dinstallation-de-nouvelles-provinces/ . 19 July 2015 . live . fr.
  3. Web site: Provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo . Statiods.com .
  4. Web site: Background to the Hema-Lendu Conflict in Uganda-Controlled Congo (Human Rights Watch Press release,) . 2022-12-18 . www.hrw.org.
  5. Web site: Congo (Dem. Rep.): Provinces, Major Cities & Towns – Population Statistics, Maps, Charts, Weather and Web Information . 2024-02-11 . www.citypopulation.de.