No, the Congo River is not near Lake Victoria. The Congo River is located in central Africa, flowing through the Congo Basin, while Lake Victoria is situated in East Africa, bordered by Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. The two bodies of water are part of different river basins and are situated several hundred kilometers apart.
There are many lakes along the Murray River. They include, among others: * Lake Alexandrina and Lake Albert (near the mouth) * Lake Bonney (Barmera) * Lake Victoria (on the Victoria side of the SA-Vic border) * Barmah lake (near Ehuca-Moama) * Lake Mulwala (near Mulwala) * Lake Hume and the Hume Dam near Albury
Sydney, Australia.
Yes people can swim in the Congo River. The people that live near the Congo river use it as transportation and for food.
No because the real one is at near rwanda and have been found By james may I think at 2013
no its not lake victoria is
the Congo river is mainly used for the transportation of minerals, fuel, wood, and agricultural produce.
Kevin Fredercikckfak
Pierre, South Dakota is located near both a lake (Lake Oahe) and a river (Missouri River). Lake Oahe is formed by the Oahe Dam on the Missouri River.
The Zambezi River begins in northwestern Zambia, near the border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It flows through six countries before emptying into the Indian Ocean in Mozambique.
The landlocked country near Lake Victoria is Uganda. Lake Victoria is situated in East Africa and is bordered by three countries: Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania. Uganda is located to the northwest of the lake, making it the only landlocked nation among the three.
The Nile actually originates in two spots-the Blue Nile starts at Lake Tana in Ethopia, and the White Nile starts at Lake No in sudan- eventually these two meet at a place known as 'al-Mogran, near Khartoum, Sudan. River Nile is a major north-flowing river in north-eastern Africa, generally regarded as the longest river in the world, it is 6,650 km (4,130 miles) long.
The Haya language, which is a Niger-Congo language, is spoken in Tanzania and named after the Haya who speak it. They live in the south and southwest of Lake Victoria.