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Filed Under (Accommodation, Honeymoon, Inhambane, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on July-18-2008

The tranquil, romantic Flamingo Bay Water Lodge, in Inhambane, is the only resort in Mozambique built on stilts situated in the water. The main building, connected by a wooden walkway, is set apart from the chalets. The resort offers a golf cart service which will take you to your room, or to the main building which houses the reception, lounge, curio shop, swimming pool, as well as the bar and restaurant.



Filed Under (Bazaruto Islands, Mozambique News, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on July-9-2008

Santa Carolina Island, part of the Bazaruto archipelago, off the coast of the southern Mozambican province of Inhambane, will soon have a luxury hotel, thanks to a 50 million US dollar investment by the Rani Resorts Group.

The Mozambican Tourism Ministry approved in March a proposal for the building of the new hotel.

Rani Resorts, founded by Saudi businessman Adel Aujan, owns a chain of hotels in Mozambique, including the Indigo Bay Island Resort on Bazaruto, the largest island in the archipelago, the Pemba Beach Hotel, in the northern province of Cabo Delgado, and luxury resorts on Medjumbe and Matemo Islands in the Quirimbas archipelago, off the northern coast.

The group is currently designing the architecture of the hotel on Santa Carolina, which should be presented to the government before the end of this year. In the meantime, work is underway to demolish the ruins of the existing hotel.
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Filed Under (Mozambique Travel) by Marian on July-4-2008

Maputo – Mozambique’s President, Armando Guebuza, witnessed the signing of a joint management accord to run Gorongosa National Park, in Sofala province, in central Mozambique Tuesday. The agreement was between the Mozambican government and the Carr Foundation, a non governmental organization which aims to bring back the park to its previous splendour, as a major tourist destination. President Guebuza was quoted by state-owned Radio Mozambique as saying that the agreement opened up the opportunity to involve the park dwellers in the management, abandoning the trend of removing people living in the areas surrounding such parks. “By involving residents the park seeks to valorize the thousands of Mozambicans living in the park and thus having them taking care of the natural resources and the biodiversity in the park,” the president said. “This allows for a healthy interaction between populace, government and the foundation, for the benefit of nature and all involved.”

Guebuza was optimistic that international interest in tourism in Mozambique is on the rise. The country was seeing increased investment in hotels, the number of tourists visiting the country was growing, and there is considerable hope that Mozambique will benefit from tourist spin-offs from the 2010 Football World Cup to be held in South Africa.

A few weeks ago, the President recalled, the Bay of Pemba, in the north of the country, was admitted to the Club of the Most Beautiful Bays in the World. That event and Tuesday’s ceremony “shows how diversified are our tourism offers”.

The Gorongosa ceremony, he added, “also represents our commitment to conserve and value the biodiversity we inherited from our ancestors, and our unbending determination to use it in a sustainable manner”.

Conservation of ecosystems was not an end in itself, Guebuza stressed. Instead the conservation areas, and their fauna and flora, should serve the country’s socio-economic development. The government had no intention, he said, of abandoning the interests of the 120,000 or so Mozambicans who live within the boundaries of the conservation areas, and their buffer zones.

Instead the “new paradigm” adopted was one of “participatory management” of natural resources, so that Mozambican communities would be “strategic partners” in tourist undertakings, with the opportunity of benefitting from tourism. The interests of local communities, private business and the state would be integrated in tourist projects “in a balanced manner”, Guebuza pledged.

The country’s wild life, he insisted, must in the first place “benefit Mozambicans and the development of Mozambique and of all humanity”.

Guebuza recognised that current logging activities and slash-and-burn agriculture on the Gorongosa mountain range posed a serious threat of erosion. “We shall continue to seek solutions to ensure that the Gorongosa range, an integral part of this ecosystem, is protected from erosion”, he said. “This necessarily involves replacing, in cooperation with the communities, the current economic activities with others that do not degrade the soil and damage biodiversity”.

He called for the replanting of ironwood and other precious hardwood trees on the mountain range, and suggested involving local schools in the reforestation activities. The mountain range, he said, “should continue to be the renewable source of clean water that feeds the park, the crops of the communities, their livestock and other activities in the surrounding areas.”

The President of the Foundation, Greg Carr, told the ceremony “people from across the world will come here, and they will see the best that Planet Earth has to offer, for the Park is extremely beautiful, and they will also see the best that humanity has to offer – creative, generous and kind human beings”.

He thought that Gorongosa was an example “of the highest beauty that God has created in any part of the world”. It contained, on the mountain slopes, “the only true humid tropical forest in Mozambique – it is a world treasure of biodiversity”.

Tourism in the national park, Carr said, “creates jobs for the local communities, and the division of tourist revenues with the communities helps build schools and health centres in the traditional communities around the park”. In addition the park management team was helping peasant farmers increase the productivity of their fields.

He stressed that his foundation was assisting in what was a genuinely Mozambican project. 98 per cent of the park’s management and work force are Mozambican nationals, and “the restoration of the Gorongosa Park is a Mozambican project guided by a Mozambican vision”.

The Tuesday ceremony follows a contract signed in January between the government and the Carr Foundation to co-manage the Park for 20 years. That contract came after three and a half years of restoration activities under a Memorandum of Understanding between the government and the foundation. Up to 2007, the Carr Foundation had invested 10 million US dollars in the park.

Gorongosa’s wildlife was devastated during the war of destabilisation, when the park was occupied by the apartheid-backed Renamo rebels. The once thriving elephant population was virtually wiped out, as were most other large mammals. The current management has been painstakingly restocking the park, particularly with grazing species such as buffalo, zebra and wildebeest that are key to the stability of the ecosystem.

The park management is currently engaged on a large herbivore count, a survey of the carnivores (Gorongosa once had the largest lion population in Africa), a fish survey and a map of the highly varied vegetation. There are plans to set up a permanent biological research centre in the park.

The park covers 4,000 square kilometres, located at the southern end of the East African Rift Valley. Towering over the park is the Gorongosa range, which is 1,862 metres above sea level at its highest point.



Filed Under (Destinations, Honeymoon, Mozambique Travel, Quirimbas) by BC Travel on July-3-2008

Quilalea is a tranquil island in Northern Mozambique positioned in an idyllic corner of Mozambique’s Quirimbas Archipelago. Entirely uninhabited, this Indian Ocean island offers complete exclusivity and unmatched natural beauty. There are nine private villas each with stunning sea views, providing a malaria-free nirvana of luxury accommodation. Quilalea Island Resort is surrounded by the sparkling, blue waters of the warm Indian Ocean; Quilalea is the ideal honeymoon destination for those in search of the perfect romantic island getaway, or the ultimate holiday for those in need of relaxation, adventure and rediscovery.



Filed Under (Mozambique News, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on July-2-2008

Portugal on Tuesday cancelled more than 390 million dollars in debt owed by Mozambique and agreed to a separate loan to help key sectors of the African country’s economy, officials said.
Mozambican finance minister Manuel Chang said the cancellation of the 393.4 million dollars (249 million euros) Mozambique owed former colonial power Portugal, dating back to 1975, would help fight poverty in the country.
Portugal’s finance minister, Fernando Teixiera dos Santos, also signed a line of credit of 100 million euros to help develop economic sectors such as agriculture and mining.
Mozambique’s economy is still struggling to recover after a long period of civil war between 1975 and 1992.
Mozambique Holiday



Filed Under (Mozambique News, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on July-1-2008

Maputo, Mozambique, 1 July – The Ponta do Ouro Marine Reserve, in the south of Mozambique, is to be given World Heritage status by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in December of this year, the Mozambican Tourism Minister said.

Fernando Sumbana told Mozambican news agency AIM, at the end of a meeting with his South African and Swazi counterparts that the decision aimed to protect and conserve marine species such as turtles, whales and dolphins.
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Filed Under (Mozambique News, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on June-13-2008

MAPUTO, 3 June 2008 (IRIN) – Time is one of the few commodities that duty manager Susana Diniz, 28, does not have much of as she attends to a stream of guests booking into the 158-room Holiday Inn hotel in Mozambique‘s capital, Maputo. 

“We have been fully booked for the last few weeks, thanks to the international guests attending some conferences taking place here,” Diniz told IRIN. She recently returned home after a seven-year stint in the hospitality industry in Brazil, where she obtained a hotel management degree.
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Filed Under (Mozambique News, Mozambique Travel) by BC Travel on June-3-2008

From Tofo Beach Cottages:

I have to write to say that there is really no reason for cancellations if the only reason is fear of xenophobia.  There is absolutely no trouble in any part of Mozambique related to these troubles in South Africa, not even in Maputo.  Garry and I have just travelled from Tofo to Nelspruit and back again and there was no sign anywhere, on the roads, or in towns of villages or anywhere, of any kind of trouble whatsoever.  The border was peaceful… I believe that the media have blown the situation completely out of proportion (as usual) and, although I know of the troubles that have been happening in South Africa, these have not been duplicated in Mozambique.  This is a safe, calm and peaceful country