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Filed Under (Mozambique Travel) by Marian on May-27-2008

In a bid to give boost to the lucrative tourism industry in the African continent, South African Tourism along with the tourism boards of other countries in the Southern region of Africa are working at creating a ‘Uni Visa’ or Universal Visa for inbound tourists to countries in the region. This Universal Visa will enable them to gain access to countries like South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Botswana, Namibia, Tanzania and Mozambique. It is being developed with the objective of breaking barriers between the nations in the Southern African region to promote tourism. The `Uni Visa,’ is expected to be in place by 2009.

Full Story on TravelBizMonitor



Filed Under (Bazaruto Islands, Mozambique islands, Pemba, Quirimbas) by BC Travel on May-23-2008

Rani Resorts owns Pemba Beach Resort, Indigo Bay Island Resort, Matemo Island Resort, Medjumbe Island Resort and Lugenda Bush Camp. Rani Resorts has perfected the talent of indulging guests in exotic and unspoiled locations in southern Africa. Rani embraces some of the area’s most stunning destinations – the jewel-like Bazaruto Island and Quirimbas Archipelagos, historical Pemba and the untouched wilderness of Niassa Game Reserve.Erectile Dysfunction, comprare kamagra online,

Each exclusive Rani property has been designed to world-class standards, each one reflecting the natural beauty of its surrounds. Their portfolio of well known properties includes island retreats off the coast of Mozambique, private game reserves on the African mainland and a resort on the Mozambican coast.
Holiday in Mozambique



Filed Under (Inhambane, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on May-22-2008

Tofo is a small town with only a couple roads – it’s popular with South Africa holidaymakers, so there are a few dive schools here, a couple of hostels and resorts and a small market selling numerous tourist trinkets.
I decided to stay at Bamboozi, a very basic, backpackers place a few kilometres out of town and for the next week the most difficult decision I faced each day was whether to have dinner in the bar at the hostel or walk 10 minutes along the beach to Dino’s, the other restaurant.



Filed Under (Bazaruto Islands, Mozambique islands) by BC Travel on May-21-2008

Azura GabrielGeneral Management: Azura is delighted to announce the appointment of highly qualified management couple Jean-Francois and Nicola Crinquand who will start at the end of May. Jean-Francois is Relaix and Chateaux Hotel Management trained, the couple have significant overseas experience in managing luxury boutique hotels in remote island locations in the Caribbean, as well as in Africa and Europe. Most recently they launched and managed the exclusive 5 star luxury Jade Mountain in St Lucia, and also managed its sister property at Anse Chastanet (Conde Nast Traveller reader awards 2007, TOP 25 HOTELS, The Americas & the Caribbean).
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Filed Under (Mozambique Travel) by marian on May-17-2008

All would-be travellers to Mozambique are advised to read Justin Fox’s book “With Both Hands Waving” (Kwela books 2002).  Apart from many useful observations about how, and how not to travel in Mozambique, the book includes copious historical notes.  At the time that journey was done the smart tar road running west of Gorongoza crater had not been completed. 

Driving is on the left (except when dodging potholes). 

R1,00 = MTN3,10.  The standard note is MTN100 = R32 (about).  Most tourist prices are quoted in US dollars ($1,00=MTN25), to which the metacal is linked.

THE MAPUTO ROUTE: On our first visit in 2003 we decided to avoid border posts and travel from Johannesburg through Komatipoort and Maputo and then the long 2500 kilometer potholed road North.  4-wheel drive is quite unnecessary, but the potholes smashed our front shock absorbers.  The road is still not too good, but at least the terrible 100 kilometers between Rio Save and Nchope has been fixed.

THE ZIMBABWE ROUTE:

Image

Zimbabwe road vista

The best and shortest road is the 600 kilometers through Zimbabwe via Masvinga to Forbes Post at Mutare; then down the Beira corridor through Chimoio, turn left at Nchope and then on to the new 300 km Gorongosa tar road to the Zambesi ferry at Caia.  Transit visitors to Zimbabwe may carry extra fuel which has been declared. In 2007 we experienced numerous unpleasant road blocks in Zimbabwe.  The latest unsettled election results can only make matters worse.  So, sad  to say, the Zimbabwe route should be avoided until things become stable again.

For More info – click here



Filed Under (Mozambique Travel) by marian on May-17-2008

MOZAMBIQUE

With so much hot air in the world of responsible tourism, it is a huge relief to be genuinely impressed by Nkwichi Lodge on the shores of Lake Niassa (Lake Malawi) in Mozambique.

First, the lodge itself: seven stunning thatch, wood and stone chalets hidden beneath the tree line, designed to be removed without leaving a trace; dinner under baobabs that have stood firm through 40 years of civil war and for 2,000 years before that; showers under the African sky; tiny coves of empty white sand along a freshwater lake famed for its snorkelling; and genuine peace in one of the remotest parts of Africa.

There are other places, perhaps, whose brochures could paint such a dreamy picture, but pitifully few that are so closely linked to the development of their local communities. Funding from the lodge has contributed to the neighboring Manda Wilderness Project, which — with the support and help of the local community — is turning 100,000ha of lakeside Mozambique into a community-owned conservation area.

Where decades of war and grinding poverty have destroyed the local ecosystem, tourism is now reason enough to nurture the area back to its prewar status as one of East Africa’s most ecologically abundant wilderness areas.

With support and funding from the lodge, a clinic and six primary schools have been built, basic medical training provided, and an agriculture project established to train 60 farmers in more sustainable methods of farming. Those farmers now provide fruit and vegetables for the lodge’s kitchen. The community seems to determine exactly which projects happen, and the support of the lodge — among others — makes much of it possible. An impressive partnership, but one you cannot visit without flying.

Details: www.mandawilderness.org

Nominated for Times Newspaper Green Spaces Travel Award by Alexia Woolsey, London



Filed Under (Mozambique News) by marian on May-17-2008

Maputo, Mozambique – The Arab Bank for the Economic Development of Africa (BADEA) is to contribute US$8 million to a project providing sanitation to the centre of the city of Beira in Mozambique’s Sofala province, under the terms of an agreement signed Monday in Maputo.

The funding was made official with the signing of an agreement by finance minister, Manuel Chang and by the Director-General of BADEA, Abelaziz Khélef.

The sanitation project for Beira city-centre aims to provide better conditions for public health by reducing rates of malaria, cholera and other diseases spread by stagnant water.

Mozambique’s relationship with BADEA goes back to 1975, when the first credit agreement was signed to support the Balance of Payments, to the value of US$10 million.

Since then the bank has financed around 32 projects in the areas of roads, agriculture and rural development, transport and communications, energy, health, fisheries, education and higher education, with a total of around US$176 million.



Filed Under (Mozambique News) by marian on May-17-2008

The starting point for development in Mozambique must be the rural areas, declared President Armando Guebuza on Wednesday.

Speaking at the opening session in Maputo of the Annual Meeting of the African Development Bank (ADB), Guebuza said “we shall overcome the challenges of economic emancipation by making the rural areas the nuclei of planning and development”.

He warned that the problems of rural poverty will not be solved “by the simple liberalization of prices. On the contrary, reality shows us that measures to liberalise and make flexible the economy can in the countryside generate the opposite effects, in the absence of structural measures that seek to deal with the causes of the isolation of rural areas from the rest of the national economy”.

Throughout Africa, Guebuza continued, there was a lack of transport and communications infrastructure to bring regions together and “to link centres of production with centres of consumption”. But the free functioning of markets “presupposes the existence of infrastructures that facilitate these linkages”.

To bring these infrastructures into the countryside, and to provide rural dwellers with efficient institutions providing public services “are the major challenges we face in the struggle to develop Mozambique”, he said.

“We advocate endogenous development, with strong participation by the beneficiaries, including the private sector”, the President stressed, “and which is expressed in increased agricultural production and productivity, increased household income, the creation of rural markets, and the encouragement of agro-industry”.

Turning to the sharp rises in oil and grain prices, Guebuza warned that these “have an impact on the productive sector, on the balance of payments and on the state budget. This is not just a problem of food security. We are facing a large scale social and economic problem”.

He called on the international community to commit itself more decisively “in the collective search for solutions to this challenge, which in countries such as ours can interfere in our programme to fight against poverty and to achieve the Millennium Development Goals”.

Guebuza hoped that the ADB meeting could reach consensus on the paths to follow. “We must act more speedily than the speed at which oil prices are rising”, he insisted. “Let us turn this challenge into an opportunity to strengthen our partnerships and accelerate the development of our countries”.

The Minister of Planning and Development, Aiuba Cuereneia, who is the current chairperson of the ADB’s Board of Governors, also stressed the energy and food crises. He noted that the price of a tonne of rice has risen from 373 US dollars at the start of the year to 760 dollars now. Wheat had reached the price of 412 dollars a tonne, and even maize, the staple food for much of Africa, had risen by 29 per cent, from 171 to 220 dollars a tonne.

This hit African economies severely, he said, and in particular would “increase poverty levels in African cities”. Nonetheless, Cuereneia urged African leaders to turn the threats into an opportunity “to make better use of Africa’s potential, such as its land and natural resources so that we can face the crisis by increasing production and productivity”.