Okahandja Explained

Okahandja
Native Name:Kaiǁkhaes
Settlement Type:City
Motto:Semper Prorsum
Pushpin Map:Namibia
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Namibia
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Namibia
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Otjozondjupa Region
Subdivision Type2:Constituency
Subdivision Name2:Okahandja constituency
Established Title:Town
Established Date:1894
Area Total Km2:229
Population As Of:2023 census
Population Footnotes:[1] [2]
Population Total:45,159
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:SAST
Utc Offset:+2
Coordinates:-21.9833°N 71°W
Blank Name Sec1:Climate
Blank Info Sec1:BSh

Okahandja is a city[3] of 45,159 inhabitants in Otjozondjupa Region, central Namibia, and the district capital of the Okahandja electoral constituency. It is known as the Garden Town of Namibia. It is located 70 km north of Windhoek on the B1 road. It was founded around 1800, by two local groups, the Herero and the Nama.[4]

History

Okahandja means the place where two rivers (Okakango and Okamita) flow into each other to form one wide one in Otjiherero.[5]

A German pastor, Heinrich Schmelen, became the first European to visit the town in 1827.[6] In 1844, two missionaries were permanently assigned to the town, Heinrich Kleinschmidt and Hugo Hahn. A church dates from this period. A military post was established at the initiative of Theodor Leutwein in 1894, and it is this date that is officially recognized as the town's founding.[7]

A number of important historic Namibian people are buried in Okahandja, among them Maharero, Jan Jonker Afrikaner, Hosea Kutako and Clemens Kapuuo.

Economy

The population of Okahandja is growing rapidly. It stood at just over 14,000 as measured by the 2001 Population and Housing Census, and is estimated to have surpassed 24,000 in 2012.[8] [9]

Von Bach Dam is situated outside of Okahandja. It provides the majority of Windhoek's water. An open-air curio market attracts tourists, and the town serves as the administrative centre for the Herero people.

Transport

Okahandja Railway Station, situated on the WindhoekSwakopmund line, was built in 1902 during Imperial Germany's colonial rule of German South West Africa. Today it belongs to the Trans-Namib railway network.[10]

Education

In the 1870s Rhenish missionaries established the first school. The Augustineum School was reopened at Okahandja on 9 November 1905; it was later moved to Windhoek. Okahandja has six primary schools and two high schools. Namwater Vocational, situated outside the main town, is the only institute of higher education in Okahandja.

The National Institute for Educational Development (NIED) is today situated in Okahandja. NIED was created after independence as the institute from where a new national system of education was created, replacing the previous racist system of apartheid.

Previously the German school Regierungsschule Okahandja was in the city.[11]

List of schools in Okahandja

  1. Okahandja Secondary School[12]

Politics

Okahandja is governed by a municipal council that has seven seats.[13]

In the 2010 local authority election in Okahandja, SWAPO won with approximately 62% of the vote. Of the five other parties seeking votes in the election, Rally for Democracy and Progress (RDP) received approximately 13% of the vote, followed by the United Democratic Front (UDF, 8%), the United People's Movement (UPM, 7%), National Unity Democratic Organization (NUDO, 6%) and Democratic Turnhalle Alliance (DTA, 2%).[14] The 2015 local authority election was again won by SWAPO which gained five seats and 2,572 votes. One seat each went to the DTA and the UDF with 236 and 213 votes, respectively.[15]

SWAPO also won the 2020 local authority election but lost its absolute majority in the municipal council. It obtained 1,865 votes and gained three seats. One seat each went to the Independent Patriots for Change (IPC, an opposition party formed in August 2020, 654 votes), the local Okahandja Rate Payers' Association (ORPA, 574 votes), the Landless People's Movement (LPM, an opposition party formed in 2016, 377 votes), and the UDF (290 votes).[16]

Sport

Okahandja offers the following sports codes; Soccer, Netball, Basketball, Tennis, Horse Raising, Dancing, Running, Gym, Spin & Drifting, Radio Helicopters...

Okahandja United FC competes in the Namibia Premier Football League as of the 2023.[17] The oldest soccer club in town is known as Spoilers Sports Club that was founded in 1963 and managed over the years by "Ou Boss" Reinhardt Maletzky. In the 1970s, Okahandja Soccer Club had a competitive football team that won several competitions.[18]

In addition, local club Liverpool Okahandja were NFA-Cup winners in 1992 and Namibia Premier League champions in 2002. Other local teams were Magic Tigers, Battle Boys, Teenagers, Golden Arrows.

See also

References

-21.9833°N 71°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Table 4.2.2 Urban population by Census years (2001 and 2011) . Namibia 2011 - Population and Housing Census Main Report . Namibia Statistics Agency . 24 August 2016 . 39.
  2. Web site: 2023 Population & Housing Census Preliminary Report. Statistics Namibia. dmy .
  3. Web site: Local Authorities. Association of Local Authorities in Namibia (ALAN). 1 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20130610203011/http://www.alan.org.na/?q=localauthorities%2Flist. 10 June 2013. dead.
  4. Web site: Okahandja, a town in Namibia. The Cardboard Box. 25 October 2010.
  5. http://www.otjozondjuparc.gov.na/okahandja Otjozondjupa Regional Council
  6. Web site: Biographies of Namibian Personalities, R-Z. Dierks. Klaus. Klaus Dierks. 27 March 2011.
  7. http://www.okahandja.net/history/default.html Okahandja History
  8. Book: Republic of Namibia 2001 Population and Housing Census. Basic Analysis with Highlights. July 2003. Central Bureau of Statistics, National Planning Commission. Windhoek. 0-86976-614-7. 21.
  9. News: Windhoek entombed in debt. Paulus. Paulus. 24 September 2012. New Era. allafrica.com.
  10. Web site: The Development of the Namibian Railway Network. The Rail History Until the 1990s. Dierks. Klaus. Klaus Dierks. www.klausdierks.com. 6 November 2012.
  11. "Deutscher Bundestag 4. Wahlperiode Drucksache IV/3672" . Bundestag (West Germany). 23 June 1965. Retrieved on 12 March 2016. p. 32/51.
  12. Web site: Namibian . The . 2015-07-14 . The Debate Corner … Goodbye, Okahandja Secondary School . 2024-06-15 . The Namibian . en-GB.
  13. News: Know Your Local Authority . Institute for Public Policy Research . Election Watch . 2015 . 3 . 4.
  14. http://www.ecn.na/results/2010/Press_Release_Local_Authority_-_Otjozondjupa-Okahandja.pdf Local Authority Election Results for Okahandja
  15. Web site: Local elections results . . 6 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151210194328/http://www.ecn.na/documents/27857/218731/LA+results+%28press+release%29+2015.pdf/870a030b-8547-487f-ad18-b22713b16d4c?version=1.0 . dead . 10 December 2015 . 28 November 2015 .
  16. Web site: 2020 Local Authority Elections Results and Allocation of Seats . 16 . 29 November 2020 . . 4 March 2021 . 24 January 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210124162938/https://www.ecn.na/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Media-Release-on-LA-Results_2020.pdf . dead .
  17. Web site: Wells . Chelva . We want to make it difficult for whoever visits Okahandja: Gariseb . 14 November 2022 . NAMPA PR . 11 July 2023.
  18. News: Alcino 'Shorty' da Costa - The Portuguese dynamo . Kambaekwa . Carlos . . 20 August 2010 .