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Belgian Congo Belgian Congo was a Consolidation Territory in Africa
allocated to the British Isles NSA during the Crusade. When Mr Nakhjavani and Mr
Olinga dropped Samson Mungono at Kamina in August 1953 there were already two
non-African Bahá'ís in different parts of the country. The
first LSA was established by May 1954 (Messages to the Bahá'í World,
68). From 1957 until 1964 the Belgian Congo was part of the RSA of Central and
East Africa. By Ridvan 1963 the Bahá'í
Community comprised 143 LSAs.
Politically, the Belgian Conga eventually split into Congo (Kinshasa,
1960); French Equatorial Africa; Central Africa (later renamed the Central
African Republic), Chad, and Gabon.
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