Kumba

Kumba is a metropolitan city found in the Meme department in the Southwest Region, Western Cameroon, popularly referred to as "K-town". Being the most developed and largest city in the Meme department, Kumba has attracted people from the neighbouring villages like Mbonge, Ekondo Titi amongst others. Kumba has an estimated population of about 400,000 inhabitants with about three quarters of this population falling within the youthful age group. The increase in population is as a result of increase in birth rate and a fall in infant mortality rate, as a result of improvement in infant health care, and rural to urban migration. The N8 and N16 highways meet at Kumba.

Kumba

K-Town
Motto(s): 
The Green City
Kumba
Location in Cameroon
Coordinates: 4°38′N 9°27′E
Country Cameroon
ProvincekindSouthwest Region
Elevation
240 m (790 ft)
Population
 (2015)
  Total400,000

History

The history of the Bafaw people, indigenous to Kumba, can be retraced to a certain Esambe Ngoe from the Mboh plane of the Nkongsamba region. He settled at a place called Mashuie found around Kokobuma. It is said that one of his sons, a hunter named Midiki Bokeng, left to go hunting and founded Kumba. In his honor a monument has been put up around the Town Green. During the British rule, Abel Mukete was the district head of Kumba and the position was passed down to his eldest son, Nfon Victor E Mukete, being the chief of Kumba, which is a first class category of the chiefdom, making Chief Mukete a First Class chief and also the Paramount Chief of the Bafaw people.

Economy

Kumba is a trade centre for cocoa, palm oil and rubber, and has a timber industry as well. Kumba is a local road junction, making it the main commercial town in anglophone Cameroon. It has two main markets, Kumba Market and Fiango Market, and several smaller markets created by farmers who bring food directly from their farms such as the Mbonge Road market, Three Corners market, and Back Market. Due to the high level of activity in the city, it has attracted the Nigerians, particularly the Igbo and Yorruba who own more than 60% of the shops in the town (culled from a personal survey, January 2011). Controlled by the Kumba City Council, it is the most income generating source of the council. Most of the people in Kumba are farmers and this has made Kumba one of the leading towns in Cameroon that provides foodstuff to its neighbouring towns and cities and also to some neighbouring countries including Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Chad.

Geography

Kumba is the biggest town in the Meme Department and Southwest Region of Cameroon. It is made up of flat lands around the Buea Road area, hills around Fiango and Mbonge Road. There are three main water bodies: the famous Lake Barombi Mbo, which is the largest volcanic lake in Cameroon and a major tourist attraction, the famous Kumba Water that passes through Buea Road at the Kumba Mbeng bridge, and running through Kumba town is the Mbanga water as it is locally called but known by the locals as the Mabonjise. Most major roads to the nearby villages radiate from Kumba, running to the Nigerian border at Mamfe, the Korup National Park at Mundemba, and Mount Koupe to the east.

Transport

Kumba is the terminus of a branch railway of the western system of Camrail. Kumba has three major motor parks: one situated at Buea road in Barombi Kang, the second at Fiango (Three Corners), and the third on Mbonge road (Mile One).

Government

Kumba is the headquarters of the Meme department of the Southwest Region. It has three sub-divisional councils: Kumba 1 (Kumba Town-Kake, a part of Buea Road), Kumba 2 (Kosala, Hausa-quarters and Fiango) and Kumba 3 (Three Corners, Mambanda and a part of Buea Road) Each has a local mayor. The town is also run by a government appointed Senior Divisional Officer (SDO) and a government Delegate.

Languages

Most people in Kumba speak English, Pidgin and to a small extent French, and at least one of a variety of indigenous languages, most dominantly Bafaw, Bakundu, Bakossi and Mbonge.

The indigenes of Kumba are the Bafaw and the Bakundus. Bafaw is an ethnic group who speak Lifaw, a language similar to Duala, and the Bakundu ethnic group who speak the Bakundu language(Orocko language), Mboh, Bakundu Language and Bakossi, and certainly Southern Bantoid. The Bafaw people are ruled by their Paramount chief Fon Victor Esemisongo Mukete who is the current chairman of Camtel, Cameroon's own telecommunication company and the current CEO of Mukete Plantations Limited, a family business and plantation measuring over 200 square kilometers in different localities in the Meme department. The Bakundu people are ruled by their paramount chief Tata Itoe Benjamin Motanga, who is currently the board chairman of the Cameroon Development Corporation. Due to the city's cosmopolitan nature, the Bafaw and the Bakundu now form just a percentage of the general population of the city, and have lost many aspects of their culture, except for their language which is spoken mostly by the elderly and some of the younger generation.

See also

References

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