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Rundu
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Key Information
Rundu is the capital and the largest city of the Kavango-East Region in northern Namibia. It lies on the border with Angola on the banks of the Kavango River, about 1,000 metres (3,300 feet) above sea level. Rundu's population is growing rapidly. The 2001 census counted 36,964 inhabitants;[3] and for the 2011 census it climbed to 63,430.
History
[edit]In 1936, it became the seat of the local governor, replacing Nkurenkuru as the capital of the Kavango district.[citation needed] Since then, it has grown into a multilingual city of the Kavango region. Its official status was changed to that of a town.[4]
Since 1993, St. Mary's Cathedral has been the episcopal seat of the Roman Catholic Apostolic Vicariate of Rundu.
Politics
[edit]Rundu is governed by a town council with seven seats.[5] The 2015 local authority election was won by SWAPO, which gained five seats (6,973 votes). One seat each went to the local Rundu Concerned Citizens Association (1,043 votes) and the All People's Party (APP, 973 votes).[6] SWAPO also won the 2020 local authority election, obtaining 3,548 votes and gaining four seats. One seat each went to the Rundu Concerned Citizens Association (863 votes), the Rundu Urban Community Commission (386 votes), and the Independent Patriots for Change (IPC), an opposition party formed in August 2020, that gained 321 votes.[7]
Geography
[edit]Localities
[edit]Many of Rundu's residents live in shacks. In 2020, the town had 18,219 informal housing structures, accommodating more than 76,000 inhabitants[8] more than the most recent (2011) census reported as the total population figure.
The oldest houses in Rundu are in the Katutura area. The houses are mainly two-bedroom homes with large backyards, even though they are situated next to the central business district.[citation needed]
On the west is Tutungeni, which means "let's build". This area was previously occupied by executives of the white-dominated business place, but now it is open for any willing buyer in need of a quiet neighbourhood. On the East is Safari. There are the middle-priced houses built in the 1970s.[citation needed] The three main localities dominated Rundu residential life until the turn of the millennium in 2000, when new housing projects by O'B Davids Properties built a new residential area called Millennium Park. After that, two others were constructed by the NHE, Queens and Kings Parks, respectively. Recently, a new formal location was added, named Rainbow.[citation needed]
Outside the formal suburbs, shanty towns symbolise the rapid urbanisation of the town and high unemployment rates. Kehemu (Ghetto), Kaisosi (also known by the locals as Cali), Sauyemwa (SA), and Ndama are the most informal areas, while a fourth, Donkerhoek (Dark Corner), is rapidly becoming formal since the Build Together Campaign was begun in 1992.[citation needed]
Climate
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Rundu has a hot semi-arid climate (Köppen: BSh), with hot summers and relatively mild winters (with warm days and chilly to cool nights). Even though it has a hot semi-arid climate, the area experiences high diurnal temperature variation during the winter with average high temperatures at roughly 26 °C (79 °F) and average low temperatures at 6 °C (43 °F). The large swing in daily temperature is more commonplace among areas with cold semi-arid climates. During the summer, the diurnal temperature variation is less pronounced. The average annual precipitation is 568 mm (22 in),[9] although in the 2010/2011 rainy season 757 millimetres (29.8 in) were measured.[10]
Economy and infrastructure
[edit]Rundu Open Market
[edit]Rundu Open Market is the most well-known and the biggest open market in the town. It was founded in 1996 through cooperation between the government of Namibia and the government of Luxembourg.[11][12][13]
Transport
[edit]Rundu Airport, mostly used for tourism and cargo, is 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) southwest of the town.[14]
The Rundu State Hospital is in the center of the town, off Markus Siwarongo street. It's the largest hospital in the Kavango East region of the country
Military
[edit]The Namibian Defence Force is in Rundu. Built in 1972, it was expanded in 1976, while South West Africa was under South African occupation. It houses 1,600 soldiers.[15] The base was named Voito Jason Kondjeleni Military Base, after People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN) fighter Voito Jason Kondjeleni, who died in 1983.[16]
Education and Culture
[edit]Rundu is home to many woodcarvers [17] and features a woodcarver's market near the open market. Several local restaurants serve traditional food, including mahangu, ground nuts, stewed meats, and fish from the Okavango River.
Schools
[edit]There are five tertiary Institutions in Rundu, namely the University of Namibia, the Institute of Open Learning (IOL), the Rundu Vocational Training Centre, the Namibia College of Open Learning (NAMCOL), and Triumphant College. The Namibia University of Sciences and Technology has a centre which provides support for students who are studying at a distance. There are six secondary schools in the town: Rundu Secondary School, Dr. Alpo Mbamba Secondary School, Dr. Romanus Kampungu Secondary School, Elias Neromba Senior Secondary School, Noordgrens, and Kamunoko Secondary School.
Twin towns – sister cities
[edit]Rundu is twinned:
References
[edit]- ^ "Table 4.2.2 Urban population by Census years (2001 and 2011)" (PDF). Namibia 2011 - Population and Housing Census Main Report. Namibia Statistics Agency. p. 39. Retrieved 24 August 2016.
- ^ "2023 Population & Housing Census Preliminary Report" (PDF). Statistics Namibia.
- ^ Republic of Namibia 2001 Population and Housing Census (Basic Analysis with Highlights ed.). Windhoek: Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission. July 2003. p. 21. ISBN 0-86976-614-7.
- ^ Heussen, Sven (7 July 2010). "Revisionsurteil verweigert. Generalbuchprüfer rügt Dorfrat von Rundu – Chaos in der Verwaltung" [Internal audit refused. Auditor-General admonishes Rundu Village Council – Administration in chaos]. Allgemeine Zeitung (in German).
- ^ "Know Your Local Authority". Election Watch. No. 3. Institute for Public Policy Research. 2015. p. 4.
- ^ "Local elections results". Electoral Commission of Namibia. 28 November 2015. p. 4. Archived from the original on 10 December 2015.
- ^ "2020 Local Authority Elections Results and Allocation of Seats" (PDF). Electoral Commission of Namibia. 29 November 2020. p. 8. Retrieved 14 January 2021.
- ^ Nghinomenwa, Erastus (12 August 2020). "Namibia's ghetto life: Half million live in shacks countrywide". The Namibian. p. 1.
- ^ Menges, Werner; Oliveira, Yokany (23 May 2019). "Khomas faces worst drought in 90 years". The Namibian. p. 1.
- ^ Menges, Werner (26 May 2011). "Rainy season was one for the record books". The Namibian. Archived from the original on 15 December 2011.
- ^ RunduOpenMarkets.org/
- ^ Namibia (Other Places Travel Guide) by Jeremiah Allen
- ^ Kavango Women Keep Pots Boiling New Era, 16 February 2005
- ^ Namibia Airports Company Rundu
- ^ Deckers, Florian (29 November 2016). "MPs recommend demolition of Rundu base". The Namibian. p. 5.
- ^ "Army base renamed after PLAN fighter". New Era. 5 September 2014. Archived from the original on September 29, 2014.
- ^ [1] Namibia: Woodcarvers of the Kavango by Fifi Rhodes. AllAfrica. 12 April 2012.
Rundu
View on GrokipediaHistory
Pre-colonial and Early Settlement
The area around Rundu, situated on the southern banks of the Okavango River in northern Namibia, was first occupied by Khoisan forager-hunter-gatherer groups, who are considered the earliest inhabitants of the broader Kavango region. Archaeological investigations along the Kavango River reveal evidence of Late Iron Age settlements, including iron production sites dating to as early as AD 840, indicating sustained human activity focused on resource exploitation in the riverine environment. These early populations likely subsisted on hunting, gathering, and rudimentary metallurgy, with sites such as Kapako yielding artifacts that predate later Bantu arrivals. Bantu-speaking agro-pastoralists, collectively known as the Kavango people, migrated into the region during the 18th century, displacing or assimilating earlier Khoisan groups to establish dominance along the river. Originating from eastern areas near the Kwando River in what is now Angola, these migrants—comprising five primary clans or tribes (Mbukushu, Sambyu, Gciriku, Kwangali, and Mbunza)—arrived between approximately 1750 and 1800, drawn by the fertile floodplains suitable for cultivation and fishing.[6][7] The Kavango organized into decentralized chiefdoms, with settlements characterized by pole-and-daga (mud) structures clustered near the river for access to water, fish stocks, and alluvial soils. Early Kavango economy centered on subsistence agriculture, growing drought-resistant crops like millet and sorghum through slash-and-burn methods, supplemented by cattle herding, woodworking for canoes (watu), and seasonal fishing using weirs and traps.[8] Inter-tribal trade networks exchanged goods such as iron tools, baskets, and livestock, fostering social cohesion amid occasional conflicts over resources. Rundu, as a strategic riverine locale, likely functioned as one such village hub under local headmen, though no singular founding event is documented prior to colonial records.[5] This pre-colonial pattern persisted until the late 19th century, when European exploration began encroaching from the south.Colonial Era and Border Conflicts
The Kavango region, site of present-day Rundu, fell under nominal German control as part of South West Africa from 1884, though direct administration was sparse due to its northeastern isolation and the colony's emphasis on central and southern territories. German officials conducted initial expeditions into the area only in the late colonial phase, with reports accumulating knowledge of local peoples and geography from 1891 to 1911, often portraying Kavango kingdoms as semi-autonomous entities beyond effective governance reach.[9] Resistance to encroaching authority culminated in the 1903 Kavango Uprising, where local groups challenged German imperial agents, an event quelled amid broader patterns of colonial suppression preceding the Herero and Nama conflicts elsewhere. The Okavango River, forming the natural boundary with Portuguese Angola, became a focal point for colonial demarcation disputes. Initial Anglo-German treaties of 1886 and 1890 outlined the frontier, but tensions from conflicts at the adjacent Cunene River prompted German proposals for adjustments, including a 11 km shift along the Okavango to resolve ambiguities in riverine control and resource access.[10] These negotiations reflected broader European rivalries over African interiors, with minimal armed clashes at Rundu but ongoing administrative frictions over cross-river trade and migration. Following Germany's defeat in 1915, South Africa assumed mandate administration, stabilizing the border through inherited agreements while establishing police outposts to enforce it against smuggling and unauthorized movements. Under South African rule, Rundu emerged as a planned administrative hub in 1936, designated the Kavango district capital with a Native Affairs Commissioner's office, supplanting Nkurenkuru and formalizing oversight of riverine settlements that predated colonial intervention.[5][11] Proximity to Angola necessitated early border security measures, including patrols to curb Portuguese colonial influences and local cross-border ties, though overt conflicts remained limited until mid-century. Environmental pressures compounded frontier dynamics; severe flooding in the 1950s displaced riverside communities like Nkondo, prompting forced relocations to elevated sites such as Nkarapamwe township for both flood mitigation and enhanced surveillance along the volatile border.[12] These actions underscored colonial priorities of control over peripheral zones, blending resource management with strategic containment.Apartheid Period and South African Border War
During South Africa's administration of Namibia as South West Africa, Rundu assumed strategic military importance due to its position along the Okavango River bordering Angola, serving as a forward operating base in the South African Border War from 1966 to 1989. The South African Defence Force (SADF) established Rundu Air Force Base as a key logistics and air support hub for counter-insurgency operations against the People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN), the armed wing of the South West Africa People's Organisation (SWAPO). In May 1968, the SAAF's 1 Air Commando was formed at Rundu to coordinate helicopter and fixed-wing operations, initially supporting Portuguese forces against insurgents before shifting focus to SADF ground troops amid escalating PLAN infiltrations from Angola.[13] The base facilitated cross-border activities, including the airlifting of UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi to Pretoria for consultations, underscoring Rundu's role in South Africa's broader regional strategy against Soviet- and Cuban-backed forces. SADF units stationed there provided artillery support, runway defence, and rapid reaction capabilities, with the installation expanding significantly during the 1970s and 1980s to accommodate mechanised battalions and air assets amid intensified fighting in the Kavango and Caprivi regions. Apartheid-era policies extended to Rundu included racial segregation in housing and services, though the military presence prioritised operational security over strict urban enforcement, leading to a transient population of white troops and contract workers alongside local Kavango communities subject to influx control and pass laws.[14][15] Following the 1988 New York Accords ceasefire, Rundu transitioned from active combat zone to demilitarisation site. From August 1989 to April 1990, United Nations Transition Assistance Group (UNTAG) personnel, including Australian engineering troops from the 8th Construction Squadron, occupied sections of the base to monitor SADF withdrawal and facilitate elections, erecting dummy anti-aircraft positions to deter residual threats while overseeing the handover to Namibian control. This period marked the effective end of South African military dominance in Rundu, paving the way for independence on 21 March 1990.[16][17][18]Post-Independence Developments
Following Namibia's independence on March 21, 1990, Rundu underwent a transition from its role as a South African military base during the Border War to a burgeoning commercial and administrative hub, facilitated by improved cross-border stability with Angola and the end of hostilities. The city's strategic location on the Okavango River enabled it to emerge as a key node for informal trade in goods like timber, fish, and agricultural products, drawing merchants and informal traders from both sides of the border. This shift supported local livelihoods amid Namibia's broader post-independence economic stabilization, though initial growth was constrained by the lingering effects of conflict and limited formal investment.[19] Population expansion accelerated due to rural-to-urban migration within Namibia and inflows from Angola, including refugees fleeing that country's civil war (1975–2002), leading to more than a doubling of residents by the early 2000s. Official censuses recorded Rundu's inhabitants at 36,964 in 2001 and 63,430 in 2011, with an estimated annual growth rate of approximately 4.9% in the late 1990s, driven by employment opportunities in trade, fishing, and public services. Urbanization pressures manifested in informal settlements and strained basic services, positioning Rundu as Namibia's second-largest urban center after Windhoek and a focal point for regional development initiatives.[20][5] Infrastructure investments intensified from the 2010s onward to address water scarcity, flooding risks, and connectivity needs. The John Mutorwa Road, constructed with Chinese assistance and completed around 2025, enhanced intra-urban links and access to markets, reducing travel times and supporting commerce. Water supply projects, including a N$665 million scheme launched in 2025 to expand treatment capacity via pipeline from the Okavango, marked the first major regional initiative of its scale since independence, aiming to serve growing demands amid climate variability. Emerging energy developments, such as Namibia's inaugural green hydrogen facility near Rundu announced in 2025, signal diversification into renewable exports, leveraging the area's riverine resources for electrolysis-powered production.[21][22]Geography and Environment
Location and Topography
Rundu is positioned in northeastern Namibia as the administrative capital of the Kavango East Region, situated directly on the southern bank of the Okavango River, which delineates the border with Angola to the north.[23] The city's geographic coordinates are approximately 17°56′S latitude and 19°46′E longitude.[24] The terrain surrounding Rundu is predominantly flat, characteristic of the broader Kavango region, with elevations averaging around 1,100 meters (3,609 feet) above sea level.[25] [26] The Okavango River serves as the dominant topographic feature, carving a valley that supports riverine floodplains and adjacent lush vegetation, contrasting with the drier, sandy savanna woodlands extending inland.[27] This flat topography facilitates agricultural activities along the riverbanks but also contributes to seasonal flooding dynamics influenced by upstream flows from Angola.[28] The surrounding landscape includes mopane-dominated woodlands typical of the Kavango-Zambezi transfrontier area, with minimal relief variations beyond the riverine zone.[25]Climate Patterns
Rundu features a hot semi-arid to subtropical savanna climate (Köppen classification Aw/BSh), marked by distinct wet and dry seasons driven by the seasonal migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone and influences from the Angolan highlands.[29] The wet season spans November to March, coinciding with summer, when convective thunderstorms deliver the majority of annual precipitation, while the dry season extends from April to October, with minimal rainfall and increasing aridity toward winter.[30] Annual precipitation averages 647 mm, concentrated in the wet months, supporting seasonal flooding along the nearby Okavango River but rendering the region vulnerable to droughts during El Niño-influenced years.[31] Temperatures exhibit high seasonal and diurnal variability, with an annual mean of 22.9°C.[31] The hottest period occurs in late spring to early summer, peaking in October with average highs of 36°C (97°F) and lows of 20°C (68°F); extremes can exceed 40°C during heatwaves.[30] The coolest season lasts from late May to early August, featuring daytime highs around 25–28°C and occasional nocturnal lows dipping to 2–10°C, though frost is rare due to the region's low elevation of about 1,100 meters.[32] Relative humidity peaks during the wet season at 60–70%, dropping to 20–30% in the dry winter, contributing to hazy conditions from biomass burning.[30] Precipitation patterns show January as the wettest month, with approximately 173 mm over 15 rainy days, often in intense, short bursts that lead to localized flooding.[33] July records near-zero rainfall (0 mm average), underscoring the bimodal nature of the rainy season's onset and cessation.[30] Long-term data indicate variable interannual rainfall, with northern Namibia's semi-arid zones like Rundu experiencing declining trends in some decades due to shifting atmospheric circulation, though recent analyses highlight no statistically significant overall decrease since the 1970s.[34] These patterns influence local agriculture, with wet season reliability critical for maize and millet cultivation, while dry periods heighten fire risks in the surrounding miombo woodlands.[29]Localities and Urban Layout
Rundu exhibits a linear urban layout primarily aligned along the southern bank of the Okavango River, extending southward and eastward from the central business district (CBD) near the Angola border. The town's development reflects a mix of formal planned zones and informal expansions, shaped by historical settlement patterns and post-independence growth pressures. The CBD, encompassing administrative and commercial hubs, anchors the northern edge, while residential and industrial extensions radiate outward, with informal settlements often clustering on the peripheries due to rapid population influx and limited serviced land.[35] Formal localities include the older central areas such as Tutungeni, Nkarapamwe, and Safari, which form the core of planned residential and mixed-use development in Rundu East and South. These zones feature grid-like street patterns and basic infrastructure, originating from early urban planning efforts. More recent formal expansions, like Millennium Park, introduce modern residential layouts with improved housing standards to accommodate growing middle-class populations. Industrial activities are concentrated in designated extensions, such as Rundu Extension 4, zoned for business and light manufacturing to support the local economy.[35][36] Informal settlements dominate the urban fringe, including Sauyemwa, Kehemu (locally termed the "Ghetto"), Kaisosi (known as "Cali"), Ndama, and Donkerhoek ("Dark Corner"), characterized by unplanned shack dwellings and semi-formal housing lacking full municipal services. These areas house a significant portion of Rundu's low-income residents, driven by rural-urban migration and cross-border influences, and pose challenges for infrastructure upgrading under the town's structure plans. Donkerhoek, adjacent to the river, offers relatively quieter residential appeal but remains semi-informal. The Rundu Urban Constituency encompasses much of this layout, divided into east and west electoral segments for administrative purposes.[37][38] Ongoing urban planning, guided by the 1999 Long-Range Physical Structure Plan and subsequent updates, divides Rundu into four analytical units for development control, emphasizing phased expansion of serviced land to integrate informal areas while preserving environmental buffers along the river. Recent initiatives, including a 2025-2044 urban structure plan, aim to formalize layouts and address service gaps amid the town's push toward city status, though implementation lags due to resource constraints.[35][39][40]Demographics
Population Growth and Statistics
As of the 2023 Namibia Population and Housing Census conducted by the Namibia Statistics Agency (NSA), Rundu Urban recorded a population of 118,632 residents, making it the second-largest urban center in Namibia after Windhoek.[41] [42] This figure encompasses the densely settled urban constituency spanning 155.8 square kilometers, with a population density of 761.4 persons per square kilometer.[42] The census data reflect a female-majority composition consistent with national trends, though constituency-specific sex ratios were not disaggregated in preliminary regional reports.[43] Rundu's population has exhibited accelerated growth compared to national averages, driven by rural-urban migration, regional economic opportunities in trade and agriculture, and natural increase. The 2011 census enumerated 63,430 inhabitants in Rundu Urban, representing a near-doubling over the subsequent 12 years.[41] This translates to an average annual growth rate of approximately 5.3% from 2011 to 2023, surpassing Namibia's overall urban population increase of 64.4% in the same period and the national growth of 43.1%.[3] Independent analyses, including local government reports, corroborate this rate at around 5.2%, attributing it to influxes from surrounding rural areas and cross-border dynamics with Angola.[44]| Census Year | Population (Rundu Urban) | Annual Growth Rate (to next census) |
|---|---|---|
| 2011 | 63,430 | 5.3% (2011–2023) |
| 2023 | 118,632 | - |