Kaédi

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Kaédi
كيهيدي
Commune and town
A major axis of Kaédi, in front of the hospital
A major axis of Kaédi, in front of the hospital
Kaédi is located in Mauritania
Kaédi
Kaédi
Location in Mauritania
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country Flag of Mauritania.svg Mauritania
Region Gorgol
Government
 • Mayor Moussa Sow, dit Tchombe (2007)
Elevation 23 m (75 ft)
Population (2013 census)[1]
 • Commune and town 49,152
 • Metro 121,726

Kaédi (Arabic: كيهيدي‎‎) is the largest city and administrative center of the Gorgol region of Southern Mauritania. It is approximately 435 km from Mauritania's capital, Nouakchott.

Overview

The city sits within the "Chemama" Riverine zone along the north bank of the River Senegal where it connects with the Gorgol River. This region is one of the few areas of settled agriculture in the country. Culturally, the city is among the most diverse in Mauritania, consisting of ethnic "White Moors" (Arabic: البيضان) and "Black Moors" (Arabic: السودان), as well as Pulaar, and Soninke communities.

It is known as a market town, a medical centre, and a centre for local farmers. The market is considered as one of the more interesting in Mauritania, but reflects the sub-saharan culture of neighboring Senegal somewhat more than the Moorish/Arabic culture found further north in the country.

Most of the architecture consists of brown, flat-roofed buildings, undistinguished except for the fact that most are surrounded by "dutch brick" enclosures. The one exception is the unusual architecture of the Kaédi Regional Hospital, which was constructed in 1989 and features multiple beehive-style domes. The award-winning architecture was designed by the Association for the Development of Traditional African Urbanism and Architecture (ADAUA), which aims to develop indigenous African urban architectural designs using local materials and technologies.

Kaédi, like many cities along the Senegal River, was deeply affected by ethnic strife in 1989, and has yet to fully recover economically.

Transport

In 2008, a deal was signed with Chinese interests to build a railway line from Kaédi to the capital, primarily to carry phosphate. Another 200 km line would have been needed to connect with the Dakar–Niger Railway at Linguère, Senegal, but the spur connecting that town to the main railway is no longer in service.[2] A 250 km line would be needed to connect Kaédi to the Dakar–Niger Railway at Bala, Senegal.

See also

References

External links