ZAMBIA #SUPERLEAGUE Zambian striker Justin Shonga scored this belter for the Nkwazi FC side that posted a 2-0 win ...
Chambishi F.C. is football club from Zambia based in Chambishi. They are playing in the Zambia National Division One.
Green Buffaloes Football Club is a Zambia Army-sponsored football team which was founded in 1965 as Zambian Army and later changed to Green Buffaloes FC. Green Buffaloes is one of the successful club in the history of Zambian football and dominanted largely from the early '70s up to the late '90s. The club is based in the capital city Lusaka, Zambia, that plays in the FAZ/MTN Super League, the top flight of Zambian football.
Chambishi is a town in Kalulushi District in the Copperbelt Province of Zambia. According to the 2010 Census its population stands at slightly above 51,000.
Chambishi Stadium is a multi-use stadium in Chambishi, Zambia. It is currently used mostly for football matches and serves as the home for Chambishi F.C. of the Zambian Premier League.
The Chambeshi River of northeastern Zambia is the most remote headstream of the Congo River (in length) and therefore its source is in the Congo River. (However, by volume of water, the Lualaba River is the greater "source" of the Congo.) The Chambeshi rises as a stream in the mountains of northeast Zambia near Lake Tanganyika at an elevation of 1,760 metres (5,770 ft) above sea level.
The Chambeshi Monument, in the Northern Province of Zambia, also called the Chambeshi Memorial and the Lettow-Vorbeck Memorial, commemorates the final cessation of hostilities of the First World War, three days after the Armistice in Europe.
Chambi is a small village in Himachal Pradesh. in India.
Cham Mehr-e Bala is a village in Jayedar Rural District, in the Central District of Pol-e Dokhtar County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 649, in 142 families.
Cham-e Shir or Cham-i-Shir or Cham Shir may refer to:
Chahar Bisheh is a village in Mishan Rural District, Mahvarmilani District, Mamasani County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 67, in 15 families.