THE PROVINCE OF NAMIBE
This is the greatest fishing centre of Angola,
the province of Namibe
is named after the desert which occupies the majority of its area. It is famous
around the world for a rare plant which is found here, the
Welwitchia Mirabilis. Its capital is in an enormous bay which deadens the
fury of the Atlantic waves, creating some of the finest beaches in the world.
The Moçâmedes railway (CFM) leaves the port of
Namibe,
connecting the coastline to the iron mines of Jamba
in Huíla. The main cities are
Namibe and Tômbwa.
Located between parallels 13.33° and 17,15° southern
latitude, the average temperature in this province ranges from 17° to
25°C, the climate being humid and moderately rainy and desert-like, due to
its nearness to the sea, with the Benguela
cold current and the Namibe Desert, a
precursor of the Great Kalahari Desert in Namibia. A major tourist
attraction, the
Namibe
Desert is a veritable box of surprises, due to its great variety of fauna
and the unique Welwitchia Mirabilis, the
province's calling card. Many visitors see mirages caused by the hot air
of the desert.
It is a very primitive settlement region where
one can still find bochimane with intact customs and traditions as well as
shepherds and breeders people that were so difficult to conquer during
Portuguese colonisation. This region was firstly touched by a European – Diogo Cão – in 1485. It was named of Moçâmedes
and was the first district to be created in the South of Angola. In 1840, the occupation has begun by
men in the exile and by fishermen from Algarve. The organised
exploitation of the region’s richness began in 1849 with the arrival of the first
settlers coming from Brazil.
Namibe is undoubtedly the third harbour of Angola and it
has conditions to become one of the most important of all Western Africa. It
serves mainly the export of fish as well as agricultural goods from Huíla. It is at the same time a commercial and fishing harbour. There are in Namibe
maritime industries (fishing, production of flour, oils and cannery) always
in continuous exploitation, creating incredible activities with sea products
and with the increase successively achieved of material means of work and
progressive values of exports.
The Province has asphalt roads that link the
capital to Tômbwa, Lucira and Lubango. The Harbour of Namibe includes in its
global dimension of economic development of Southern Angola, the commercial
port which purpose is connected to loading and unloading goods and shipment
of passengers, and also the mineral port for activities such as
bulky-minerals and fuels.
The commercial port is divided in different areas
for long course navigation and local traffic. The port itself is served by
15 km of railway that links it to the railway road until 756 km from the
coast to the East. The mineral port was finished in 1967 and represents an
engineering work to a world scale, almost only for the loading of iron ore
and it is also used for the unloading of fuels. It has exceptional
conditions to be considered one of the best mineral ports in the world
allowing the mooring of ships of 150000 ton., at any moment. It has also an
airport with international characteristics, 7 km from the capital.
The main
economic activity is fishing. Salines, extraction industry of adornment
stones (marbles and granite) and farming are other activities
with good present and future potential.
Presently, the majority of the captured fish
is to salt and dry and the rest is freezed, used to make farines, oils and
for cannery. Besides the fish, there are other sources of proteins, of great
value that can and must be dully used. There is also famous crab and mussels
for national consume and export. The Province of Namibe is one of the most
privileged points in the country. There, the sea, desert and savana paint an
amazing picture and the climate is even considered as the best of all the
country’s coast. Between Namibe and Tômbwa lives the Welvitchia Mirabilis –
unique species in the world of a plant similar to a giant octopus, symbol of
resistance and survival of wild and vegetable life in the desert of Namibe.
The magnificent desert of Namibe offers a set of exceptional conditions for
hunting lovers and several ethnographic characteristics worthy to be studied
and observed. Along the coast, the Atlantic gives us wonderful beaches.
Medicinal waters of Montipa flow in an excellent place for rest in the
country of Bibala, about 150 km from the capital.
The centre is included in
a singular area adapted to the practice of hunting for its great number and
variety of animals that make of it their natural habitat. The National Park
of Iona, about 200 km from Namibe, was before an animal paradise, rich in
big animals. Unfortunately today, its fauna has lost the richness due to
furtive hunters. There are however, well-organised movements aiming to the
recovery of the greatness of before. Tômbwa is placed 45 miles from
Moçâmedes by sea and 100 km by land.
This inlet was discovered by Diogo Cão
in 1485, in his third voyage along the African coast. The discoverer named
it Angra das Aldeias because he found there big fishermen’s villages.
The first name – Porto Alexandre – came from the name of the British explorer
James Edward Alexaner that came to Benguela (that was then formed by the
present county of Namibe) officially authorised in 1834. After independence,
the name changed to Tômbwa – name by which the natives called the Welvitchia
Mirabilis.
Useful information
Police: Tel.: (064) 61014
Municipal Command Centre: Tel.: (064) 610149
Fire and Ambulance Service: Tel.: (064) 60869 Hospital Municipal do Namibe:
Tel.: (064) 32767
Hospital doTômbwa: Tel.: (064) 30003
Angola Telecom: Tel.:
(064) 60308
Beaches
Namibe
offers its visitors splendid beaehes,
exeellentloeations
for water sports or seuba diving, with a
variety of speeies of fish. The
bestknownbeaches are: Miragens, Praia
Azul, Praia Amélia, Praia das Barreiras andFlarningos.
How to get
There
By air
There is an international airport in the province's capital. There are
daily flights by TAAG - LinhasAéreas de Angola.
By road
From the south, coming from the
Republic of Namibia, going down the
SerradaLeba
in Huíla; from the north, along the main road
from Benguela, following the coastline. Ali
the municipalities of Namibe can be reached by
road.
Natural Attractions
Iona: 15 150 km2
in area, Iona is the 1argest in the province. Set up as a reserve in 1937,
it was upgraded to national park in 1964. The main species in this park
are the mountain zebra and the Guelengue.
Namibe:
Set up as a Special Reserve in 1957, it has an area of 4450 km2.
There are ostriches, black rhinoceros, the mountain zebra and
Guelengue.
General1y
speaking, the fauna of Namibe is very varied,
from lions to e1ephants to suricata, a rare
mammal 30 to 40 cm. tall, living in holes, often standing on its hind
legs, using its tail to balance.
Placesofhistoricalinterest
Archaeologicalremains:PindaMilitaryBarraeks, KapangombeMilitaryBarraeks, Capa
da Capraiaand Fumas do
Kapangumbe.
Monuments:
Palácio do Governo, Fortaleza do São Fernando, nowadaystheCommand Centre for
theAngolanNavy, NamibePortCaptainey, Tribunal
do Comarea do Namibe
(Central Court), Correios e Telégrafos (postOffieebuilding), CFM
Railwaystationand Fortaleza do Capangombe.
Morro da Torre do Tombo, Bentiaba (Prison
centre) andTehipopilo-Caraculo
rock engravings.
ReligiousMonuments:Churches: São Adrião, N.S. Fátima, Praia Amélia
Chapel, Nossa Senhora do Mundo (Bibala),
QuiploaChapel.
“The most incredible bays of the country – Moçâmedes, Porto
Alexandre and Baía dos Tigres – are all of excellent quality
but the last
two, for their wideness and excellent conditions, compete with the best
ports in the world: I don’t know any Port in the world like Porto Alexandre.”
- said a 19th Century famous navigator. Tômbwa is the second
demographic centre and the first fishing port of the country. It is situated
at 45 miles South of Namibe, in a splendid cut of the coast, famous for its
safe shelter and fishing quality of its sea.
The settlement began by
fishermen coming from Algarve in 1860, starting afterwards the export of
goods from their industries to Northern ports and near countries: Ambriz,
Congo, S. Tomé and Gabon. Some of the best shelter ports of the African Coast are situated in the Angolan coast.
In the region, Salinas, Namibe,
Tômbwa and Baía dos Tigres; from the four ports, the best its Tômbwa.
It is a wide and magnificent port
protected from the coastal undulation forming a Southern shelter with several
miles of length. Tômbwa can shelter in his
interior and exterior ports a fleet so big that probably does not exist. Its
magnificent natural conditions and specialised aspect – fishing – do not
need big works. The several cannery industries placed there, have the
necessary means for their functions. Tômbwa is today the most important
fishing port in Angola.