Conakry (/ˈkɒnəkri/; French pronunciation:[kɔnakʁi];
Susu: Kɔnakiri;
N'Ko: ߞߐߣߊߞߙߌ߫,
Fula: 𞤑𞤮𞤲𞤢𞥄𞤳𞤭𞤪𞤭, romanized: Konaakiri) is the
capital and largest city of
Guinea. A port city, it serves as the economic, financial and cultural centre of Guinea. Its population as of the 2014 Guinea census was 1,660,973.[4]
The current population of Conakry is difficult to ascertain, although the U.S. Department of State's
Bureau of African Affairs has estimated it at two million, accounting for one-sixth of the entire population of the country.[5]
Conakry was originally settled on the small Tombo Island and later spread to the neighboring Kaloum Peninsula, a 36-kilometer-long (22 mi) stretch of land 0.2 to 6 kilometers (1⁄8 to 3+3⁄4 mi) wide. The city was essentially founded after Britain ceded the island to France in 1887.[6] In 1885 the two island villages of Conakry and Boubinet had fewer than 500 inhabitants. Conakry became the capital of
French Guinea in 1904 and prospered as an export port, particularly after a railway (now closed) to
Kankan opened up the interior of the country for the large-scale export of
groundnut.
In the decades after independence, the population of Conakry boomed, from 50,000 inhabitants in 1958 to 600,000 in 1980, to over two million today.[7] Its small land area and relative isolation from the mainland, while an advantage to its colonial founders, has created an infrastructural burden since independence.[8]
In 1970, conflict between Portuguese forces and the belligerent
PAIGC independence campaigners in neighbouring
Portuguese Guinea (now
Guinea-Bissau) spilled into the Republic of Guinea when a group of 350 Portuguese troops and Guinean loyalists landed near Conakry,
attacked the city and freed 26 Portuguese
prisoners of war held by the PAIGC before retreating, having failed to overthrow the government or kill the PAIGC leadership.[9]
According to human rights groups, 157 people died during the
2009 Guinea protest when the military junta opened fire against tens of thousands of protesters in the city on 28 September 2009.[11]
Geography
Originally situated on
Tombo Island, one of the
Îles de Los, it has since spread up the neighboring Kaloum Peninsula.
Compared to most of West Africa, Conakry's wet season sees an extraordinary amount of rainfall, averaging more than 1,100 millimetres (43 in) in both July and August. As a result, Conakry's average annual rainfall totals nearly 3,800 millimetres (150 in). However, the dry season is still dry, with January and February only receiving 1 millimetre (0 in) of rainfall on average. Sunshine is lower in the wet season than the dry season, with August receiving the least sunshine and March receiving the most.
Conakry is a special city with a single region and prefecture government. The local government of the city was decentralized in 1991 between five municipal communes headed by a mayor.[15] From the tip in the southwest, these are:
The five urban communes make up the
Conakry Region, one of the eight
Regions of Guinea, which is headed by a governor. At the second-tier prefecture level, the city is designated as the Conakry Special Zone, though the prefecture and regional government are one and the same. At an estimated two million inhabitants, it is far and away the largest city in Guinea, making up almost a quarter of the nation's population and making it more than four times bigger than its nearest rival,
Kankan.
Economy
Conakry is Guinea's largest city and its administrative, communications, and economic centre. The city's economy revolves largely around the
port, which has modern facilities for handling and storing cargo, through which alumina and bananas are shipped. Manufactures include food products and cement, metal manufactures, and fuel products.[16]
Periodic power and water cuts have been a daily burden for Conakry's residents since early 2002. Government and power company officials blame the drought of February 2001 for a failure of the hydro-electric supply to the capital, and a failure of aging machinery for the continuation of the crisis. Critics of the government cite mismanagement, corruption and the withdrawal of the power agency's French partner at the beginning of 2002. As of 2007[update], much of the city has no traffic lighting in the overnight hours.[18]
Popular anger at shortages in Conakry was entwined with anti-government protests, strikes, and violence against the rule of President
Lansana Conté and the successive prime ministers
Cellou Dalein Diallo and
Eugène Camara appointed to fill the post after the resignation of Prime Minister
François Lonseny Fall in April 2004. Violence reached a peak in
January–February 2007 in a general strike, which saw over one hundred deaths when the Army confronted protesters.[19]
Dave, Nomi (2019) The Revolution's Echoes: Music, Politics & Pleasure in Guinea. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Thomas O'Toole, Janice E. Baker. (2005) Historical Dictionary of Guinea. Scarecrow Press.
ISBN0-8108-4634-9
Philipps, Joschka (2013) Ambivalent Rage: Youth Gangs and Urban Protest in Conakry, Guinea. Harmattan Guinée.
Cohen, Adrienne ( 2019) "Performing Excess: Urban Ceremony and the Semiotics of Precarity in Guinea-Conakry." Africa: The Journal of the International African Institute. 89 (4): 718–738.
Odile Goerg. "Chieftainships between Past and Present: From City to Suburb and Back in Colonial Conakry, 1890s–1950s". Africa Today, Summer 2006, Vol. 52, No. 4, Pages 2–27
^Young, Isabelle; Gherardin, Tony (15 July 2008).
Africa. Lonely Planet. p. 411.
ISBN978-1-74059-143-0.
Archived from the original on 16 May 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2011.