Kouroussa is a prefecture located in the Kankan Region of Guinea. The capital is Kouroussa. The prefecture covers an area of 14,050 km.² and has a population of 268,630. With Kouroussa town by far the largest in the Prefecture numbering only 10,000, the vast majority of the Prefecture's population live in small rural communities, making their living from subsistence and small scale cash crop agriculture, as well as small scale trade and mining. The majority of the population are members of the Malinke ethnic group or related Mande speakers. The eastern portion of the prefecture is formed from the Niger River valley, while most of the area characterized by low rolling hills and dry savanna grasslands or scrub-like forest.

Kouroussa Prefecture (highlighted) and surrounding region.
Kouroussa Prefecture
Location of Kouroussa Prefecture and seat in Guinea.
Location of Kouroussa Prefecture and seat in Guinea.
Country Guinea
RegionKankan Region
CapitalKouroussa
Area
 • Total14,050 km2 (5,420 sq mi)
Population
 (2014 census)
 • Total268,630
 • Density19/km2 (50/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+0 (Guinea Standard Time)

Culture edit

The majority of the prefecture's population comes from the Malinke and Djallonke ethnic groups, who speak related Mande languages and follow the Muslim religion. The Kouroussa area is the centre of the Hamana-Malinke Mande sub-group -- "Hamana" being the historic name for the region, while the Malinke are the major Mande speaking ethnic group of the upper Niger valley. There are also sizable minority communities of Fula and Dyula, the latter traditionally forming trade communities in towns like Kouroussa.

The writer and intellectual Camara Laye (1928–80) grew up in Kouroussa town, and his memoir, The Black Child, is in part about his youth in the town.[1]

Kouroussa and surrounding towns maintain the pre-colonial Mande ceremonial kingship of Hamana, with the most recent holder of the office King of Kouroussa King Sayon Keita I.[2]

Traditional music edit

Hamana-Malinke are especially known for their unique musical traditions, especially their polyphonic Djembé drumming traditions, with a number of well known drum masters—including Famoudou Konate, Daouda Kourouma, and Sékou Konaté—coming from the town.[3][4] Djembé groups in Kouroussa are known for the inclusion of the bass dununba drum and the long kenken bell.[5]

Economy edit

Transport edit

With its position near the upstream limit of navigation on the Niger River, Kouroussa town is an important center of transport and trade. The Guinea Railway crosses the Niger River at this town, where there is also a river port.[6] The town also lies at a junction in Guinea's N1 highway, which is a major transport route between Conakry, Kankan, and (via the N7 and N32) neighboring Mali.[7] The Niger – Conakry rail line runs 588 km to the capital of Guinea, with a branch of 74 kilometers running from Kouroussa to Kankan. It was built by the French, using African labor, in the first two decades of the 20th century.[8]

Agriculture edit

The Savanna climate in the prefecture support a wide range of subsistence and cash crop farming, producing rice,[9] groundnuts, onions and millet for sale, as well as supporting larger scale cotton farming and cattle ranching by both locals and semi-nomadic Fula people whose largest local center is in the nearby Fouta Djallon highlands.

Mining edit

Major mining companies are engaged in ongoing exploration drilling in a series[10] of government granted Gold mining concessions[11] near the town.[12] The Kouroussa area also has a long history as a center of small scale gold mining, which continues in so called "Artisanal Mining"[2] Recent criticism has surfaced around the working conditions, pay, and the widespread use of child labour in these small gold mines, and the method which middlemen, many based in Kouroussa, purchase and transport gold. Gold collected in Kouroussa is sold on—with almost no regulation or oversight—to larger merchant houses in Bamako, Conakry, and eventually to smelters in Europe.[13] Large scale Titanium mining has also been proposed in the Kouroussa area, with both Dredging of Heavy Mineral Sands from rivers and streams and dry pit mines proposed as of 2007.[14]

Sub-prefectures edit

The prefecture is divided administratively into 12 sub-prefectures:

  1. Kouroussa-Centre
  2. Babila
  3. Balato
  4. Banfélé
  5. Baro
  6. Cisséla
  7. Douako
  8. Doura
  9. Kiniéro
  10. Komola-Koura
  11. Koumana
  12. Sanguiana

References edit

  1. ^ G. D. Killam, Ruth Rowe. The Companion to African Literatures. Dover (2000). p. 57
  2. ^ a b The Sanimuso Foundation, "Artisanal Mining Association" Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, 2006.
  3. ^ Mögöbalu: Les Sages, les Maîtres Archived 2008-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, Website retrieved 2008-09-03
  4. ^ World Music Central:Famoudou Konaté, 2008.
  5. ^ Serge Blanc. The Djembe: The Dunun[permanent dead link], 1997, retrieve 2008-09-03.
  6. ^ UNESCO: readings of Niger at Kouroussa, 1945-1979 Archived 2006-01-06 at the Wayback Machine.
  7. ^ geonames.org: Kouroussa.
  8. ^ New International Yearbook: A Compendium of the World's Progress, Dood, Mead, & co, New York (1915) p. 274
  9. ^ listing for FAO Rice Agriculture development centre, Kouroussa.
  10. ^ afdevinfo: Kouroussa Exploration Area Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ The Kouroussa Project Archived 2007-09-09 at the Wayback Machine: Cassidy Gold corporation.
  12. ^ Cassidy Gold Set to Resume Drilling at Kouroussa Archived 2016-01-13 at the Wayback Machine Business Wire, Jan 18, 2005
  13. ^ Kids working in African gold mines[permanent dead link]. AP/RUKMINI CALLIMACHI AND BRADLEY S. KLAPPER – Aug 10, 2008.[dead link]
  14. ^ Guinee Titanium Archived 2011-07-11 at the Wayback Machine, date 2007, retrieved 2008-08-03.

10°39′10″N 9°53′06″W / 10.65278°N 9.88500°W / 10.65278; -9.88500