Berbérati


Berbérati is the third-largest city in the Central African Republic, with a population of 76,918. Located in the south-west of the country near the border with Cameroon, it serves as capital of the Mambéré-Kadéï Prefecture and gives its name to the main Sub-prefecture.

History

The city was founded in 1893. In the early 20th century Berbérati was part of Oubangui-Chari, one of the four territories comprising French Equatorial Africa which later became Central African Republic. In 1911 it was ceded to German Empire under the terms of the Morocco–Congo Treaty and Treaty of Fez, becoming part of the German colony of Neukamerun, until it was reconquered by the French in 1916 following the defeat of German forces in western Africa during World War I.

Health

The state-owned university hospital of Berbérati is an unfenced complex of several bungalows near the town center. The hospital was constructed in the 1950s and operated by French military doctors until the 1980s. The French hospital administrators were succeed by an expatriate Italian Catholic nun, although the hospital also receives Protestant support.

Transports

Berbérati is served by the Berbérati Airport.

Climate

classifies its climate as tropical wet and dry.

Places of worship

Among the places of worship, they are predominantly Christian
churches and temples : Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Central African Republic, Evangelical Baptist Church of the Central African Republic, Roman Catholic Diocese of Berbérati. There are also Muslim mosques.