'Ville de Dakar'  City coat of arms | | (City coat of arms) |
|
| |
| (City of Dakar, divided into 19 ''communes d'arrondissement'') | |
City proper (commune) | |
|---|---|
| 'Région' | Dakar |
| 'Département' | Dakar |
| 'Mayor' | Pape Diop (PDS) (since 2002) |
| 'Area' | 82.38 km²[1] |
| 'Subdivisions' | 19 ''communes d'arrondiss.'' |
'Population' 31.12.2005 estimate | (Ranked 1st) 1,030,594[2] |
| 'Density' | 12,510/km² |
Metropolitan area (Dakar région) | |
|---|---|
| (data here are for the administrative Dakar ''région'', which matches almost exactly the limits of the metropolitan area) | |
| 'Regional president' | Abdoulaye Faye (PDS) (since 2002) |
| 'Communes' | 7 (as of Dec. 2005), plus 2 ''communautés rurales'' |
| 'Area' | 547 km²[3] |
'Population' 31.12.2005 estimate | (Ranked 1st) 2,452,656[2] |
| 'Yearly growth' | approx. +2.50 % |
| 'Density' | 4,484/km² |
| Miscellaneous | |
|---|---|
| 'Sister cities' | Washington, D.C. (USA) Taipei (Taiwan) Sfax (Tunisia) Praia (Cape Verde) Oran (Algeria) Niamey (Niger) Milan (Italy) Marseille (France) Kinshasa (D. Rep. Congo) (Palestine) Douala (Cameroon) Casablanca (Morocco) Brazzaville (Rep. Congo) Bissau (Guinea-Bissau) Banjul (Gambia) Bamako (Mali) Baku (Azerbaijan) |
:''For Dakar Rally, see
Dakar Rally. For the Israeli submarine, see
INS Dakar.''
'Dakar' is the
capital city of
Senegal, located on the
Cape Verde Peninsula, on the country's
Atlantic coast. Its position, on the western edge of
Africa (it is the westernmost African city), is an advantageous departure point for trans-Atlantic and European trade; this fact aided its growth into a major regional
port.
According to
December 31,
2005 official estimates, the city of Dakar proper has a population of 1,030,594, whereas the population of the Dakar metropolitan area is estimated at 2.45 million people.
[2]
Dakar is a major administrative centre, home to the
National Assembly of Senegal and
Senegal Presidential Palace.
Geography and climate
Dakar is located at 14°40'20" North, 17°25'22" West (14.67222, -17.422778).
[1]
Dakar has a tropical climate, with two distinct seasons : a hot and humid season (June to October), with rainfall peaking in August with 179mm of rain and temperatures averaging 27°C (80°F); and a somewhat cooler season (November to May) with almost no rain (around 1mm/month).
'Climate Table'| | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|
| Mean daily maximum temperature (°C) | 26 | 27 | 28 | 27 | 28 | 30 | 30 | 30 | 31 | 31 | 30 | 28 |
|---|
| Mean daily minimum temperature (°C) | 17 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 23 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 24 | 22 | 20 |
|---|
| 'Source:' http://www.weather2travel.com/climate-guides/index.php?destination=dakar Weather2Travel.com] |
History
The Cape Vert Peninsula was settled, no later than the 15th century, by the Lebu, an ethnic group related to the neighboring Wolof and Sereer. The original villages: Ouakam, Ngor,
Yoff and Hann, still constitute distinctively Lebu neighborhoods of the city today.
Meanwhile, in 1444, the
Portuguese arrived on the island of
Gorée, founding a settlement there, and by 1536, had begun using it as a base for the export of slaves. By this time, the mainland of Cap-Vert was under control of the
Jolof Empire, as part of the western province of
Cayor — which seceded from Jolof in its own right in 1549. A new Lebu village, called Ndakarou, was established directly across from Gorée in the 17th century to service the European trading factory with food and drinking water.
Gorée was captured by the
United Netherlands in 1588, who gave it its present name (spelled ''Goeree'', after
Goeree-Overflakkee in Holland). The island was to switch hands between the Portuguese and Dutch a couple more times before falling to the English under
Admiral Holmes on
23 January 1664, and finally to the
French in 1677. Though under continuous French administration after that,
Métis families, descendant from Dutch and French traders and African wives, dominated the slave trade. The infamous "
House of Slaves" was built here in 1776.
In 1795, the Lebu of Cape Vert revolted against Cayor rule. A new theocratic state, subsequently called the "Lebu Republic" by the French, was established under the leadership of the Diop, a Muslim clerical family originally from Koki in Cayor. The capital of the republic was established at Ndakarou.
The slave trade was abolished by France in February 1794. However, Napoleon reinstated it in May 1802, then finally abolished it permanently in March 1815. Despite Napoleon's abolition, a clandestine slave trade continued at Gorée until 1848, when it was abolished throughout all French territories. To replace trade in slaves, the French promoted peanut cultivation on the mainland. As the peanut trade boomed, tiny Gorée Island, whose population had grown to 6000 residents, proved ineffectual as a port. Traders from Gorée decided to move to the continent. A "factory" with warehouses was established in
Rufisque in 1840.
In
1857 the French established a military post at Ndakarou (which they called "Dakar") and annexed the Lebu Republic, though its institutions continued to function nominally. The Serigne (also spelled Sëriñ, "Lord") of Ndakarou is still recognized as the traditional political authority of the Lebu by the Senegalese State today.
Large public expenditure for infrastructure was allocated by the colonial authorities to Dakar's development. The port facilities were improved with jetties, a telegraph line was established along the coast to
Saint Louis and the Dakar-Saint Louis railway was completed in
1885, at which point the city became an important base for the conquest of the western Sudan.
Gorée, including Dakar, was recognised as a French ''commune'' in 1872. Dakar itself was split off from Gorée as a separate ''commune'' in 1887. The citizens of the city elected their own mayor and municipal council and helped send an elected representative to the National Assembly in Paris.
Dakar replaced Saint Louis as the capital of
French West Africa in
1902. A second major railroad, the Dakar-Niger built in 1906-1923, linked Dakar to Bamako and consolidated the city's position at the head of France’s West African empire. In 1929, the ''commune'' of Gorée Island, now with only a few hundred inhabitants, was merged into Dakar.
Urbanization during the colonial period was marked by forms of racial and social segregation---often expressed in terms of health and hygiene---which continue to structure the city today. Following a plague epidemic in 1914, the authorities forced most of the African population out of old neighborhoods, or “Plateau”, and into a new quarter, called Médina, separated from it by a “sanitary cordon”. As first occupants of the land, the Lebu inhabitants of the city successfully resisted this expropriation. They were supported by
Blaise Diagne, the first African to be elected Deputy to the National Assembly. Nonetheless, the Plateau thereafter became an administrative, commercial and residential district increasingly reserved for Europeans and it served as model for similar exclusionary administrative enclaves in French Africa’s other colonial capitals (Bamako, Conakry, Abidjan, Brazzaville). Meanwhile, the
Layene Sufi order established by
Seydina Mouhammadou Limamou Laye (1844-1909) was thriving among the Lebu in Yoff and in a new village called Cambérène.
In its colonial heyday Dakar was one of the major cities of the French Empire, comparable to Hanoi or Beirut. French trading firms established branch offices there and industrial investments (mills, breweries, refineries, canneries) were attracted by its port and rail facilities. It was also strategically important to France, which maintained an important naval base and coaling station in its harbor and which integrated it into its earliest air force and airmail circuits, most notably with the legendary Mermoz airfield (no longer extant).
During the
Battle of Dakar, which took place off the coast of Dakar on
September 23 -
September 25,
1940, the British navy attempted to rally the colonial administration in Dakar to the Allied cause and detach it from Vichy. In
November 1944, West African conscripts of the French army mutinied against poor conditions at the Thiaroye camp, on the outskirts of the city. The mutiny was seen as an indictment of the colonial system and constituted a watershed for the nationalist movement.
Dakar was the capital of the short-lived
Mali Federation from
1959 to
1960, after which it became the capital of Senegal.
Since independence, urbanization has sprawled eastward past Pikine, a commuter suburb whose population (2001 est.1,200,000) is greater than that of Dakar proper, to
Rufisque, creating a
conurbation of almost three million (over a quarter of the national population).
Dakar is a major financial center, home to a dozen national and regional banks (including the BCEAO which manages the unified West African CFA currency), and to numerous international organizations, NGOs and international research centers. Dakar has a large Lebanese community (concentrated in the import-export sector) that dates to the 1920’s, a community of Moroccan business people, as well as Mauritanian, Cape Verdian and Guinean communities. The city is home to as many as 20,000 French expatriates. France still maintains an air force base at Yoff and the French fleet is serviced in Dakar’s port.
The Fort D'Estrees on Gorée Island, where slaves were held, auctioned, and packed onto ships, was restored by the Senegalese government in the 20th century and transformed into a museum.
Administration
The city of Dakar is a
commune, (also sometimes known as ''commune de ville''), one of the 67 communes of Senegal. The commune of Dakar was created by the French colonial administration on
June 17,
1887 by detaching it from the commune of
Gorée. The commune of Gorée, created in
1872, was itself one of the oldest western-style municipalities in
Africa (along with the municipalities of
Algeria and
South Africa).
The commune of Dakar has been in continuous existence since 1887, being preserved by the new state of Senegal after independence in 1960, although its limits have varied considerably over time. The limits of the commune of Dakar have been unchanged since
1983. The commune of Dakar is ruled by a democratically elected municipal council (''conseil municipal'') serving five years, and a mayor elected by the municipal council. There have been 20 mayors in Dakar since 1887. The first Black mayor was
Blaise Diagne, mayor of Dakar from
1924 to
1934. The longest serving mayor was
Mamadou Diop, mayor for 18 years between
1984 and
2002.
The commune of Dakar is also a ''
département'', one of the 34 ''départements'' of Senegal. This situation is quite similar to
Paris in
France which is both a commune and a ''département''. However, contrary to French ''départements'', ''départements'' in Senegal have no political power (no departmental assembly), and are merely local administrative structures of the central state, in charge of carrying out some administrative services as well as controlling the activities of the communes within the ''département''.
The ''département'' of Dakar is divided into four
arrondissements: Almadies, Grand Dakar, Parcelles Assainies (which literally means "drained lots"; this is the most populated arrondissement of Dakar), and Plateau/Gorée (downtown Dakar). These arrondissements are quite different from the
arrondissements of Paris, being merely local administrative structures of the central state, like the Senegalese ''départements'', and are thus more comparable to French
departmental arrondissements.
In
1996, a massive reform of the administrative and political divisions of Senegal was voted by the Parliament of Senegal. The commune of Dakar, whose population approached 1 million inhabitants, was deemed too large and too populated to be properly managed by a central municipality, and so on
August 30, 1996 Dakar was divided into 19 ''communes d'arrondissement''.
These ''communes d'arrondissement'' were given extensive powers, and are very much like regular communes. They have more powers than the arrondissements of Paris, and are more akin to the
London boroughs. The commune of Dakar was maintained above these 19 ''communes d'arrondissement'', and it coordinates the activities of the ''communes d'arrondissement'', much as
Greater London coordinates the activities of the London boroughs.
The 19 ''communes d'arrondissement'' belong to either of the four arrondissements of Dakar, and the ''
sous-préfet'' of each arrondissement is in charge of controlling the activities of the ''communes d'arrondissement'' in his arrondissement.
The ''commune d'arrondissement'' of
Dakar-Plateau (34,626 inhabitants), in the arrondissement of Plateau/Gorée, is the historical heart of the city, and most ministries and public administrations are located there. The densest and most populated ''commune d'arrondissement'' is
Médina (136,697 inhabitants), in the arrondissement of Plateau/Gorée. The ''commune d'arrondissement'' of
Yoff (55,995 inhabitants), in the arrondissement of Almadies, is the largest one, while the smallest one is the ''commune d'arrondissement'' of
Île de Gorée (1,034 inhabitants), in the arrondissement of Plateau/Gorée.
The ''département'' of Dakar is one of the four ''départements'' of the
Dakar ''région'', which is one of the 11
''régions of Senegal''. The Dakar ''région'' encompasses the city of Dakar and all its suburbs along the
Cape Verde Peninsula. Its territory is thus roughly the same as the territory of the metropolitan area of Dakar. Since the administrative reforms of 1996, the ''régions'' of Senegal, which until then were merely local administrative structures of the central state, have been turned into full-fledged political units, with democratically elected regional councils, and regional presidents. They were given extensive powers, and manage economic development, transportation, or environmental protection issues at the regional level, thus coordinating the actions of the communes below them.
Following the political transition of 2000 when
Abdoulaye Wade, leader of the opposition (
Senegalese Democratic Party, or PDS), defeated President
Abdou Diouf (
Socialist Party of Senegal), local elections were held in
2002. Two leaders of the PDS, Pape Diop and Abdoulaye Faye, ambitioned to become mayor of Dakar. Eventually, a compromise was found: Pape Diop would run for the municipal election of Dakar, while Abdoulaye Faye would run for the regional election of Dakar. The local elections of Senegal were held on
May 12, 2002, and saw the PDS largely defeating the Socialists. Pape Diop was elected mayor of Dakar, defeating the long time Socialist mayor Mamadou Diop, while Abdoulaye Faye was elected president of the regional council of the Dakar ''région'', defeating the Socialists who hitherto controlled the ''région''.
Sights
Attractions in Dakar include major
markets,
Dakar Grand Mosque (built in
1964),
Gorée Island, the
IFAN Museum of
West African culture,
clifftop walks and
beaches, and
Hann Park, home to
Senegal Zoo.
Transportation
The town serves as a port and is home to the
Léopold Sédar Senghor International Airport. It is also the terminus of the
Dakar-Niger railroad line.
Miscellaneous
Dakar is the finishing point of the
Dakar Rally and is a member of the
Organization of World Heritage Cities.
Cheikh Anta Diop University, also known as the
University of Dakar, was established in
1957.
In the TV series, '', Dr. Paul Stubbs mentioned that nanites were made in factories in Dakar, in the episode "
Evolution".
Notable Residents
★
Aliaune "Akon" Thiam, R&B Singer
★
Ségolène Royal, French politician born in Dakar
★
Ousmane Barro, Basketball Player,
Marquette University.
★
Youssou N'Dour, Singer and percussionist
★
Patrick Vieira, footballer,
Inter Milan.
★
El-Hadji Dieng, footballer,
Xavier University
Sister cities
Dakar has one
sister city:
[6]
★
Washington, D.C.,
USA
Sagana Diop, basketball ball player, Dallas Mavericks
Boris Diaw, basketball player, Phoenix Suns
References
1. Tableau de répartition de la surface totale occupée
2. "Situation économique et sociale du Sénégal", édition 2005, page 163
3. "Situation économique et sociale du Sénégal", édition 2005, page 19
4. "Situation économique et sociale du Sénégal", édition 2005, page 163
5. "Situation économique et sociale du Sénégal", édition 2005, page 163
6. "Sister Cities Online Directory: Senegal, Africa." ''Sister Cities International, Inc.'' Retrieved on March 23, 2007.
External links
★
dakarville.sn - City of Dakar official website.
; Photos
★
Photos of Dakar
★
Photos of Dakar on Flickr - Photos tagged with Dakar Senegal on Flickr.com