MTL - African Entrepreneurship Records-Chapter 133 Northwest Immigration Jobs

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  Chapter 133 Northwest Immigration Work

  The front line is advancing very quickly, and the Kingdom of Rwanda and the Kingdom of Yigara are in sight.

  The Kingdom of Rwanda and Igara faced natural pressure from the East African colonies, and finally suppressed the Eastern Bantus, and now they have new enemies to face.

  Unlike the Kingdom of Karawi and the Kingdom of Burundi, Rwanda and the Kingdom of Igara did not border the East African colonies before, so they basically don’t know about East Africa.

  But the enemy who can make Burundi flee the country must be a ruthless character, and it is also very troublesome to face the new invaders, the Kingdom of Rwanda and the Kingdom of Igara.

  After all, compared with the Kingdom of Burundi and the Kingdom of Karawi, the Kingdom of Rwanda and Igara are not much better. The impact of the Eastern Bantu on the four southern countries was disastrous.

  Now the princes and ministers of the two countries are very entangled. It is better to fight well or escape. They may not be able to fight well, and they are reluctant to part with their little possessions.

  If it was before the invasion of the Eastern Bantus, the two countries must have the confidence to fight East Africa. Looking at the state of the country now, it is a question of whether they can gather a decent army.

   Soon, the two countries will no longer have to entangle, and refugees from Burundi and Karawi Kingdom helped the two countries make a choice.

  Although this wave of refugees is nothing compared to the invasion of the Eastern Bantus, the two countries are not as strong as before.

And forget about the influx of refugees from Burundi and Karawi, and spread rumors all the way. The East African colonial army is described as a devil, and the kind that eats people without putting salt. One is more terrifying than a hundred East Bantus. (Of course, most aborigines don't know how to count at all, that's what it means).

  As for whether the people of Rwanda and the Kingdom of Igara believe it? It must be a rumor that one person said so. So many people escaped from the southeast, they must not have lost their heads. Everyone in the East African colonies does not know, but everyone knows the East Bantu people!

  Worse than the Eastern Bantus! The people of the two countries who have suffered so much from the war have already taken all their belongings and fled north with the refugees from Burundi and Karawi without waiting for the news from the central government.

  The people of the country have all run away, and they are still resisting. The high-level officials of the kingdom are also planning to run away, calling all available forces, and going to the north.

  Compared to the East African colonies, the aborigines are still willing to deal with other aborigines. Anyway, the East Bantu people can do it, so I can do it too. The two countries plan to go north to reopen.

  Of course, the high-level leaders of the two countries are not stupid, and they will not go to the four northern countries to find trouble. They just plan to use the road to develop in Northwest Africa (Congo and Central Africa).

  As for why not go directly to the west, the main reason is that the mountains and forests in the west are not easy to walk through, so it is better to borrow the way from the northern countries (plateau grassland).

And choose to re-establish the country in the northwest because these aborigines came to East Africa from West Africa at the beginning (African blacks originated in West Africa). The ancestors came from the northwest direction.

  The migration of countries is very normal for this kind of low-level civilization (refer to the change of the capital of the Shang Dynasty).

  …

   "Has everyone boarded the boat?" Werner Yori, captain of the Neihu Force in East Africa, asked.

   "Captain, all the people are ready. Except for our own people, there are a total of 127 immigrants on board this trip, and the supplies to be transported to the front line are almost ready." Hanks Fisher replied.

   "Okay, get ready to go!" said Werner Joly.

  While the war is going on on the front line, the East African colonies are also speeding up the speed of immigration.

  East African Neihu Troops also joined the task of transporting immigrants and supplies. Mwanza Shipyard worked overtime to build ships and increase the capacity of Neihu Troops.

  In addition to waterways, East Africa has also opened up inland immigration transportation routes. The inland is time-consuming and labor-intensive, so military supplies and other materials that are eager to be transported to the front line are mainly transported by the Neihu troops.

  The first batch of immigrants to the northwest set off with Yarman's troops. They used simple wheelbarrows to push food and set off with the army with rainproof cloth.

   It takes about a month to reach Burundi and Karawi by walking the whole journey, 28 days at the fastest, and early 30 days at the end, and if there is a waterway in Mwanza, it can be reached in 23 days at the earliest.

  Of course, it is definitely impossible to rely solely on walking. The East African colonies gathered a large number of livestock and vehicles to transport immigrants and materials.

  At the same time, the villages and cities along the way are used as bases to provide convenience for immigrants and the army in sections, and to prepare rations and drinking water, which greatly saves time.

  Especially in the Central District and the Upper Binhai District, with dense villages and a large population, coupled with the early development of animal husbandry, a large amount of transportation capacity can be temporarily lent to serve immigrants.

  At present, the number of immigrants arriving in Hong Kong every day is about 3,000 (there are fluctuations, some months have more immigrants, and some months have fewer immigrants). This is the effect of the recent superposition of German immigrants and Paraguayan immigrants.

  Among them, about 1,800 people were sent to the newly occupied area in the northwest of Bubu, about 900 people were sent to Western Kenya, and the remaining 100 people were sent to Omorat (Omo River Basin).

   Among them, the first batch of immigrants arrived in Burundi and Karawi on May 3, and now it is June (war preparations start in early April and start in May).

  For nearly a month, more than 50,000 people were resettled in the East African colonies like Burundi and Karawi. Fortunately, the East African colonies are now food production areas, and with the support of the Hexingen Consortium, they can supply so many immigrants in a short time.

   Now that the war has been going on for more than a month, the East African army is about to rush into the territory of Igala and Rwanda (the army marches faster than the immigrants, so the army and the immigrants set off at the same time, but the army is still faster in the later stage).

  Sufficient immigrants ensure the development of newly occupied areas. After all, the indigenous countries in the northwest have gotten rid of hunting life and survived on primitive agriculture, so the new immigrants only need to accept the indigenous land.

  The work of the immigrants is mainly to reclassify and modernize the indigenous land, and the development conditions are definitely better than those in the initial stage of the East African colony.

   After all, only the Sultanate of Zanzibar had some plantations along the coast at that time (the East African colonies had not annexed the coastal land of the Sultanate of Zanzibar at that time), and all land had to be developed by itself.

Immigrants to the northwest can be said to directly pick up ready-made land. Of course, the new immigrants also have their own difficulties, that is, the immigration route of more than one thousand kilometers. Immigration is no small challenge.

  Fortunately, the East African colonial government has arranged many service points along the route, otherwise the journey would have been tragic.

  (end of this chapter)