In the 1960s, a plan was proposed to divert the Ubangi River into Lake Chad.
The Ubangi River, a major tributary of the Congo, drains the southern and central parts of the country.
The chief artery for external transport is the Ubangi River, which forms part of an 1,100-mile (1,770-km) river-and-rail route to the Atlantic.
Its southern border is the Ubangi River.
The rest of the displaced crossed the Ubangi River into ROC.
The more extensive forest regions of the central cuvette and of the Ubangi River valley have increasingly been tapped.
It lies in the north of the country on the Ubangi River.
Bangui is on the northern banks of the Ubangi River.
In 1889, the French established a post on the Ubangi River at Bangui.
It is located in the northwestern part of the country on the Ubangi River.