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Back To: Cities
Nouakchott
Nouakchott began as a village in the desert on the caravan route
north from Dakar, and was chosen in 1958 to be the site of the
national capital. Before that,
Mauritania shared a capital,
Saint-Louis, in Senegal, with the other members of the French
West African Federation.

Nouakchott is located on the Atlantic coast and provides access to
the
Sahara and
Sahel regions alike, but it is
rapidly getting entirely surrounded by the Sahara, with sand piling
up against walls and fences.
Recurring draughts have forced people to leave their villages and
head for the city, which has grown about 40-fold in the last 50
years. Its population is around 881,000
In addition to being the seat of government and administration,
Nouakchott is a growing commercial centre and has a printing works,
a hospital, and numerous schools. Its water supply is provided by a
desalinization plant. The hospital, designed shortly after
independence, is unique in that it has wards which are linked by
inner courtyards.
It is home to the Nouakchott National Library (founded 1965) which
houses a collection of manuscripts, the
silver market, and unspoiled beaches. One beach is devoted to
fishing boats where various species of freshly caught fish are sold.
There are two mosques; one a gift of Saudi Arabia in the town
center, the other, a gift of Morocco further south. Nouakchott has a
National Museum, which offers a good introduction to the lifestyle
and culture of the nomads of Mauritania. The city is home to the
Université de Nouakchott, opened in 1981, the only
university in Mauritania. The National School of Administration
(1966), the National Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies (1961)
and the National Archives are all here.
Movie theatres are found in the Mauritania’s main urban centers, and
cercles (social, sporting clubs) provide recreational opportunities
in Nouakchott,
Nouadhibou, and Rosso.
An agreement was signed on August 5, 2007 between Mauritania, Sudan,
and China to build $630m Mauritania Railway linking the port of
Nouakchott and phosphate mines at Bofal, about 430km away. The line
goes near the border with Senegal.
The deep-sea port, opened in 1986 at Nouakchott, can accommodate
320,000 tons of shipping a year. Processed copper had been exported
along a highway to the wharf at Nouakchott. There are substantial
gypsum deposits near Nouakchott; most of the annual production is
exported to Senegal.
There are international airports at Nouakchott and Nouadhibou, and
other cities are linked by regular air services.
References: Encyclopedia Britannica
http://www.britannica.com/nations/Mauritania
Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nouakchott
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