Kapoeta

Kapoeta.

Kapoeta (även Kapoita) är en stad i Sydsudan. Den är huvudort i länet Kapoeta South i delstaten Eastern Equatoria.[1] Orten ligger i sydöstra Sydsudan på östra stranden av River Singaita cirka 275 km öster om Juba landvägen och på 670 meters höjd över havet.[källa behövs] Vid folkräkningen 2008 hade payamen Kapoeta Town 16 449 invånare.[2]

Källor

  1. ^ ”Kapoeta South” (på engelska). County Profiles. Conflict Sensitivity Resource Facility South Sudan. https://www.csrf-southsudan.org/county_profile/kapoeta-south/. Läst 5 februari 2024. 
  2. ^ ”Statistical Yearbook for Southern Sudan 2010” (på engelska) (PDF). Southern Sudan Centre for Census, Statistics and Evaluation. 2010. sid. 31. Arkiverad från originalet den 13 november 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121113145321/http://ssnbs.org/storage/Statistical%20Year%202010.pdf. Läst 5 februari 2024. 

Artikelursprung

Den här artikeln är helt eller delvis baserad på material från engelskspråkiga Wikipedia, Kapoeta, tidigare version.

Media som används på denna webbplats

Peace agreement dancers in Kapoeta, Sudan.jpg
Original caption states, " Sudan: Disseminating the Peace — Sudan residents of Kapoeta, Eastern Equatoria, do a traditional peace dance at a rally where the Comprehensive Peace Agreement text was distributed. In present-day Eastern Equatoria state, South Sudan.
  • Eighteen months after the agreement that ended Sudan's two-decade civil war had been signed, few Sudanese knew its details. That began to change in April and May 2006, when USAID launched an initiative to help more than 150,000 people in five Southern Sudanese states access details of the agreement and participate more fully in implementing the peace.
  • Documents in Arabic and English were distributed to all government officials in the south, and an official summary was developed and published in English and Arabic. The Sudan Radio Service created audio versions of the summary in seven languages — Moro, Arabic, simple Arabic, Toposa, Shilluk, Dinka, and Nuer — and the Sudan Mirror published 22,000 summaries to be included as supplements in its Easter edition."