<span>In World War I, the Ottoman Empire, which controlled most of the Middle East, which is essentially Southwest Asia, was allied with Germany and Austria, and was thus on the losing side. The Ottoman Empire was dissolved and most of the Middle East was carved up into "mandates," pseudo-colonies governed by France or Britain with the intent of establishing them as self-supporting states. The boundaries of these mandates can still be seen in the present-day borders of Syria, Jordan, and Iraq. Since the mandate borders did not take into account cultural, ethnic, or historical boundaries, they are indirectly responsible for some of the sectarian violence within certain countries of the Middle East today. I believe modern Turkey and Saudi Arabia were also established soon after the war.
I hope this helps!
</span>
Base on my research, the African colonies are characterized by the lack of services, non-representative governments, larger police forces and worst is the forced labor. These are the style of the European rule during the so-called "THE AFRICAN COLONIES OF GERMANY AND THE WAR" from the journal article of Adams C. C. (Jun. 1916).
I would go with C as FEMA is a United States agency and Katrina hit in 2005.
Well it depends on the country
The answer is 10, my friend!