Gbadolite
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Ville de Gbadolite | |
Location in the Congo | |
Coordinates: | |
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Province | Equateur |
Government | |
- Mayor | Crispin Ngbabesi |
Area | |
- Total | 3,807.76 km² (1,470.2 sq mi) |
- Land | 3,807.76 km² (1,470.2 sq mi) |
Population (2004) | |
- Total | 42,647 |
- Density | 1,525/km² (3,949.7/sq mi) |
Time zone | DRC1 (UTC+1) |
Gbadolite (pronounced [ɡ͡badolite], sometimes [ɡbadolaɪt] in English) is a town in northern Equateur province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Gbadolite was the ancestral home of the president and dictator of Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo) Mobutu Sese Seko. Mobutu ensured that the people of Gbadolite enjoyed many of the spoils the rest of the country didn't have, such as reliable electricity from SNEL and drinking water from Regideso. And the roads were some of the few well maintained in the country.
Mobutu built Gabodolite into a luxurious town often nicknamed "Versailles in the Jungle". He built a hydroelectric dam on the nearby Ubangi River in Mobayi Mbongo, an international airport, Mwanda Airport, which could accommodate the Concorde, and three large palaces. As a result, the people of the town had no trouble finding jobs, often as servants. During Mobutu's regime, Gbadolite had also companies such as CDIA for farming productions, SOZAGEC for road constructions, and SAFRICAS for house constructions. The town had a General Hospital with high tech facilities which were destroyed in 1997. Gbadolite had also College Presidentiel, a high school famous for its academic excellence and administered by Jesuit Fathers to whom Mobutu gave the school. This School had a chemistry lab, physics lab, computer lab, olympic game facilities, band instruments of all kinds. The town was also famous for its Chapelle Marie la Misericorde, a luxurious church in which Mobutu buried his first wife Mama Mobutu.
Two palaces were built outside Gbadolite at Kawele. One an elaborate complex of Chinese pagodas and the other a modern mansion, these were used as residences for Mobutu and guests. The three storey palace in Gbadolite was used primarily for public functions.
When Laurent Kabila successfully led a rebellion and ousted Mobutu from power in 1997, Gbadolite was raided, and most of what was in the palaces was looted. The palaces are now being overrun by vegetation.
In 1998 the Ugandan backed MLC (Mouvement de Libération du Congo) rebel group, led by Jean-Pierre Bemba, captured Gbadolite from Kabila's government and it became the MLC's headquarters.
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