Zambezi Region

The Zambezi Region is one of the 14 regions of Namibia. It is located in the north-eastern part of the country. It is largely concurrent with the major Zambezi River after which it was named. The region has eight constituencies and its capital is the town of Katima Mulilo. The self-governed village Bukalo is also situated in this region.[5] The Zambezi Region had a population of 90,596 in 2011.[6] As of 2020, it had 47,884 registered voters.[7]

Zambezi Region
Location of the Zambezi Region in Namibia
Location of the Zambezi Region in Namibia
CountryNamibia
SeatKatima Mulilo
Government
  GovernorLawrence Sampofu[1]
Area
  Total14,785 km2 (5,709 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[3]
  Total90,596
  Density6.1/km2 (16/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (CAT)
HDI (2017)0.628[4]
medium · 8th

Politics

The region comprises eight electoral constituencies:

In the 2015 regional elections SWAPO won in all eight constituencies[8] and obtained 77.5% of all votes (2010: 80%). In the 2020 regional election SWAPO still had the vast majority of votes (45.4%) but lost four of the eight constituencies, three to independent candidates and one to the Independent Patriots for Change (IPC), an opposition party formed in August 2020.[7]

Geography and Climate

The Zambezi Region can be classified as a tropical area, with high temperatures and high rainfall during the December-to-March rainy season, making it the wettest region in Namibia. The terrain mostly consists of swamps, floodplains, wetlands and woodland.

In addition to the Zambezi River, the Caprivi Region also holds the Kwando River, which marks the border with Botswana. Tributaries include the Linyanti and the Chobe. The Kwando meets the Zambezi in the far east of the region.

Katima Mulilo is the largest town, with other notable villages and settlements, including Chefuzwe, Lusese, Bukalo, Kalimbeza, Isize, Luhonono, Mafuta, Liselo, Musanga, Kongola, Chinchimane, Bukalo, Sibinda, and Impalila, along with Kayuo, Wenela, Mapulanga, Sambeso, Katembo, Siambiza, Luzibalule, Sachona, Lubuta, Mulanga, Mashambo, Omega Ill, Chetto, Bwabwata, Gaucha, Geusha, Yishesha, Sekrige, Singalamwe, Choi, Ngonga, Muneambuanas, Dipito, Sangwali, Photo, Sikwalo, Matengu, Yaka, Linyati, Muketela, Sibbinda,Makanga, Mahachana Chengere, Sebukis, Katonga, and Sachinga.

Borders

The Zambezi Region is almost entirely bordered by foreign countries. Its only domestic border is a with the Kavango East Region in the west.

The Namibia-Zambia-Botswana tripoint lies less than 100 metres from the Zimbabwe border - causing Namibia sometimes erroneously thought to border Zimbabwe.

Flora and fauna

The region is home to 450 animal species, including elephants, making the Zambezi Region a popular game-watching spot. Wildlife is protected by several national parks, Bwabwata National Park, Nkasa Rupara National Park (previously known as Mamili National Park), and Mudumu National Park; animals travel freely across the unmarked border with Botswana, where the Chobe National Park lies. The Caprivi strip is also a prime bird-watching area, with almost 70 percent of bird species found in Namibia being recorded here.

Population

Over 90,000 people live in the Zambezi Region of Namibia,[2] about four percent of Namibia's population. The population is mostly composed of subsistence farmers who make their living on the banks of the Zambezi, Kwando, Linyanti and Chobe Rivers. 33,000 are part of the Subia people[9] and about 17,000 are part of the Lozi people amongst other ethnic groups such as Mafwe, Mbalangwe, Yeyi and Totela. According to Ethnologue, Silozi is the lingua franca.[10]

Economy and infrastructure

According to the 2012 Namibia Labour Force Survey, unemployment in the Zambezi Region is 28.0%.[11] Zambezi has 102 schools with a total of 39,808 pupils.[12]

Tourism

Bwabwata National Park is 6,100 square kilometres (2,400 sq mi) and extends for about 180 km (110 mi) from the Kavango River River in the west to the Kwando River in the east. Deciduous woodlands are dominated by trees such as wild seringa, copalwood and Zambezi teak. While the park is sanctuary to 35 large and numerous small game species, visitors are not likely to see many of these animals, as vehicles are restricted to the road between Kavango and Eastern Caprivi. Animals likely to be seen are elephant, roan and kudu. Buffalo occur towards the west. As many as 339 bird species have been recorded in the west of the Zambezi Region.

The wild and little visited Nkasa Rupara National Park (formerly Mamili National Park) is Namibia's equivalent of the Okavango Delta, a watery wonderland of wildlife rich islands, river channels and wetlands. The focal points of the 320 km2 (120 sq mi) national park are Nkasa and Lupala, two large islands in the Kwando/Linyati river. During the dry season the islands can be reached by road but after the rains 80% of the area becomes flooded, cutting them off from the mainland.

Mudumu National Park is a vast 1,000 km2 (390 sq mi) expanse of dense savannah and mopane woodland with the Kwando River at its western border. The park is home to small populations of sitatunga and red lechwe while spotted neck otter, hippo and crocodile inhabit the waterways. Animals to be encountered are elephant, buffalo, roan, sable, kudu, impala, oribi, zebra, wild dog as well as some 430 species of birds.

The Namibian Wetland Route, established in 2005, is a local tourism association of businesses along a route from Divundu to Impalila.

History

Until the end of the 19th century, the area was known as Itenge, and it was under the rule of the Lozi kings. In the late 19th century the strip of land was administered as part of the British protectorate of Bechuanaland (Botswana). The German Empire in 1890 laid claim to the British-administered island of Zanzibar; Britain objected and the dispute was settled at the Berlin Conference later that year. On 1 July 1890, the British acquired Zanzibar and Germany acquired the territory which became known as the Caprivi Strip. Caprivi was named after German Chancellor Leo von Caprivi, who negotiated the land in an 1890 exchange with the United Kingdom. Leo von Caprivi arranged for the Caprivi strip to be annexed to German South West Africa in order to give Germany access to the Zambezi River as part of the Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty. The German motivation behind the swap was to acquire a strip of land linking German South West Africa with the Zambezi River, providing easy access to Tanganyika (Tanzania) and an outlet to the Indian Ocean. Unfortunately for the Germans, the British colonisation of Rhodesia (Zimbabwe and Zambia) stopped them well upstream of Victoria Falls, which proved a considerable barrier to navigation on the Zambezi.

During World War I, the Caprivi Strip again came under British rule and was governed as part of Bechuanaland but it received little attention and became known as a lawless frontier. The region became of geopolitical importance during the 1980s when it was used as a jumping off point and re-supply route for South African support for the UNITA movement in Angola.

Caprivi Region became one of Namibia's thirteen regions when the country gained independence in 1990.

Renaming

In August 2013, following a recommendation of the fourth Delimitation Commission for the Electoral Commission of Namibia, the Caprivi Region was renamed the Zambezi Region in a step to eliminate names of colonial administrators from Namibia's maps.[13] Alternative proposals for the region's name had included Iyambezi, Linyandi, Itenge, and others.[14] The name of the Zambezi town of Schuckmannsburg was also changed to Luhonono as part of the same process.

The renaming was not without controversy, however. The group Concerned Caprivians (or Caprivi Concerned Group) released a press statement expressing concern over the name change as well as Delimitation Commission boundary and constituency demarcation changes.[15] Caprivi African National Union (CANU) party secretary general Robert Sililo argued that the renaming was motivated by a desire to dilute Caprivian identity and history.[15] A statement from Concerned Caprivians read, "the name change from Caprivi to Zambezi is destined to destroy our identity and history as a symbol of renaissance, the dilution of political foundations in the identity of CANU party".[16]

References

  1. "President announces governors". The Namibian. 10 April 2015.
  2. "Namibia's Population by Region". Election Watch. Institute for Public Policy Research (1): 3. 2013.
  3. "Zambezi 2011 Census Regional Profile" (PDF). Statistics Namibia. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  4. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  5. "New Bukalo village council eyes development". Namibian Sun. 28 August 2014. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  6. "Zambezi (Region, Namibia) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map and Location". www.citypopulation.de. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  7. "Regional Council 2020 Election Results". Interactive map. Electoral Commission of Namibia. 18 January 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  8. "Regional Council Election Results 2015". Electoral Commission of Namibia. 3 December 2015. pp. 22–23.
  9. "Subia people group in all countries | Joshua Project". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  10. "Lozi". Ethnologue.
  11. Duddy, Jo Maré (11 April 2013). "Unemployment rate still alarmingly high". The Namibian.
  12. Miyanicwe, Clemans; Kahiurika, Ndanki (27 November 2013). "School counsellors overstretched". The Namibian. p. 1.
  13. Nakale, Albertina (9 August 2013). "President divides Kavango into two". New Era. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014 via via allafrica.com. Alt URL.
  14. Mubita, Charles (16 August 2013). "From Caprivi to Zambezi – a historic journey through time". Namibian Sun. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  15. Sankwasa, Faith (29 August 2013). "Zambezi residents to protest name change". Namibian Sun. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  16. Sanzila, George (30 August 2013). "Namibia: Name Change Demo Flops". New Era. Retrieved 1 September 2013 via AllAfrica.com.

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