Ikelemba River

The Ikelemba River (Mto Ikelemba) is a river in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is a left tributary of the Congo River.

Location
The Ikelemba River flows in an arc from east to west. It is navigable for 137 km from Bombimba to where it enters the Congo River. It joins the Congo from the east just north of where the Ruki River enters the Congo River. The Lulonga, Ikelemba and Busira all contribute to the Mbandaka flooded forests, which cover a permanently flooded area of 10415 km2.

Colonial period
The explorer Henry Morton Stanley visited the region. He wrote that the Ikelemba entered the Congo about 30 mi above the Mohindu or Buruki River (Ruki River). He estimated it would provide 125 mi of river course accessible to trade, and said it was the commercial reserve of the Bakuti tribe. The river was about 150 yd wide, and had black waters. Stanley speculated that the Ikelemba, Lulungu (Lulonga River) and Mohindu might be connected by a system of channels running through a low jungly forest.

The Ikelemba company was founded in the Congo Free State on 29 October 1898 to exploit the Ikelemba River, with a capital of 500,000 francs. In the first two years the comnpany harvested about 5 tonnes of rubber each month, and cleared 50 ha to plant coffee, cocoa and rubber trees. After this results were poorer, and the company suffered from the fall in rubber prices. In 1910 all of the company's assets were transferred to the newly formed Société Equatoriale Congolaise Lulonga-Ikelemba.