Mufulira
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mufulira | |
Location in Zambia | |
Coordinates: | |
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Country | Zambia |
Admin. division | Copperbelt Province |
Population (2000) | |
- Total | 122,336 |
Mufulira is a city (population 122,336) in the Copperbelt Province of Zambia. It grew up in the 1930s around the site of the Mufulira Copper Mine on its north-western edge. The city is 16 km from the border of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is the start of the Congo Pedicle road connecting the Copperbelt to the Luapula Province, making that province Mufulira's commercial hinterland. A tarred highway to the south-west connects Mufulira to Kitwe (40 km) and Chingola (55 km), and another to the south-east connects to Ndola (60 km), the commercial and transport hub of the Copperbelt. A branch of Zambia Railways (freight only) serves the mine.
The Mufulira Mine is now owned and operated by Mopani Copper Mines which employs 10,000 permanent workers and expects to produce 300,000 tonnes of copper bars in 2007 after rehabilitating the Mufulira copper smelter. Production and employment levels are down from the 1969 peak when the Copperbelt made Zambia the world's 4th largest copper producer.
In Zambia, Mufulira is well-known for being the home of the successful Mufulira Wanderers football team. Zambia's current president, Levy Mwanawasa, was born in Mufulira, as well as Welsh international sportsmen Robert Earnshaw (football) and Dafydd James (rugby union).
[edit] See also
- Copperbelt Province including the history of copper mining in Zambia.
- Robert Lange
[edit] References
- Mbendi Profile: Zambia Copper Mines. Accessed 15 March 2007.