PhotosLocation


el+mek+nimr+bridge Latitude and Longitude:

15°36′50.0″N 32°31′58.7″E / 15.613889°N 32.532972°E / 15.613889; 32.532972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El Mek Nimr Bridge
El Mek Nimr Bridge in Khartoum
Coordinates 15°36′50″N 32°31′51″E / 15.613758°N 32.530903°E / 15.613758; 32.530903
Crosses Blue Nile
Locale Khartoum
Characteristics
Total length642.5 m
History
Construction start2005
Construction end2007

Opened in 2007, the El Mek Nimr Bridge links the downtown area of Khartoum, Sudan, with the adjacent city of Khartoum North across the Blue Nile river. [1] It is named after Mek Nimr, a leader of the Ja'alin tribe in northern Sudan, who was famously defeated against the Egyptians.

References

  1. ^ "Sudan blocks bridges to Khartoum ahead of protests". Middle East Monitor. 2022-04-06. Retrieved 2023-05-01.

External links

15°36′50.0″N 32°31′58.7″E / 15.613889°N 32.532972°E / 15.613889; 32.532972



el+mek+nimr+bridge Latitude and Longitude:

15°36′50.0″N 32°31′58.7″E / 15.613889°N 32.532972°E / 15.613889; 32.532972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El Mek Nimr Bridge
El Mek Nimr Bridge in Khartoum
Coordinates 15°36′50″N 32°31′51″E / 15.613758°N 32.530903°E / 15.613758; 32.530903
Crosses Blue Nile
Locale Khartoum
Characteristics
Total length642.5 m
History
Construction start2005
Construction end2007

Opened in 2007, the El Mek Nimr Bridge links the downtown area of Khartoum, Sudan, with the adjacent city of Khartoum North across the Blue Nile river. [1] It is named after Mek Nimr, a leader of the Ja'alin tribe in northern Sudan, who was famously defeated against the Egyptians.

References

  1. ^ "Sudan blocks bridges to Khartoum ahead of protests". Middle East Monitor. 2022-04-06. Retrieved 2023-05-01.

External links

15°36′50.0″N 32°31′58.7″E / 15.613889°N 32.532972°E / 15.613889; 32.532972



Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook