Kongo-Wara rebellion

Kongo-Wara rebellion
Date1928–1931
Location
Result Rebellion defeated
Belligerents

Gbaya people and clans


Co-belligerents:
Mbum people
Mbai people
Pana people
Yangere people
Mbimou people

Goundi people

France

Fula people


Co-belligerents:

Gbaya chiefdoms
Commanders and leaders
Karnou 
Bissi
Yandjere
Governor Auguste Lamblin
Paul Germain
Gaëtan Germain
Pierre Crubillé
Lt. Émile Boutin
Strength
290,000 villagers
60,000 warriors
Unknown
Casualties and losses
10,000–100,000 Unknown

The Kongo-Wara rebellion, also known as the War of the Hoe Handle and the Baya War, was a rural, anticolonial rebellion in the former colonies of French Equatorial Africa and French Cameroon which began as a result of recruitment of the native population in railway construction and rubber tapping. It was a large colonial uprising but also among the least well-known uprisings during the interwar period. Much of the conflict took place in what is now part of the Central African Republic.