Kalingalinga

As of 2013[update], it comprised 25,000 to 30,000 residents;,[2] it borders the townships of Mtendere and Kabulonga, and many of its occupants are people who were discouraged from settling in Lusaka and moved as squatters to outlying regions of the city.

By the late 1960s, many of Kalingalinga's residents were lured to Chainama Hills (later renamed "Mtendere"[3]), a newly opened development that promised "water, good roads, schools, and a clinic".

[2] According to a report by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme, by 1991 the urban upgrading of Kalingalinga "enabled 4400 low-income squatter households to obtain improved houses, services and security of tenure".

Especially housing is impacted by flooding; a study showed that while locals are taking measures to adapt to the changing circumstances, there is little support from the government.

Our Lady's Hospice in Kalingalinga has participated in studies on the disease,[11] and received a grant from the British High Commission for promoting AIDS awareness and peer education programs.

However, the boys were practically enslaved in the US, forced to sing up to seven concerts per day and to dig a swimming pool for the minister leading the group, Keith Grimes, who pocketed the choir's earnings.

Kalingalinga