Vhembe District Municipality Explained

Vhembe
Settlement Type:District municipality
Seal Size:150x100px
Coordinates:-22.9333°N 58°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:South Africa
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Limpopo
Subdivision Type2:District
Seat:Thohoyandou
Parts Type:Local municipalities
P1:Musina
P2:Collins Chabane
P3:Thulamela
P4:Makhado
Government Type:Municipal council
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Nenguda Dowelani[1]
Area Total Km2:25597
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:1294722
Population As Of:2011
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Racial makeup
Demographics1 Info1:98.7%
Demographics1 Info2:0.2%
Demographics1 Info3:0.4%
Demographics1 Info4:0.8%
Demographics Type2:First languages
Demographics2 Footnotes:[3]
Demographics2 Info1:67.2%
Demographics2 Info2:24.8%
Demographics2 Info3:1.6%
Demographics2 Info4:1.3%
Demographics2 Info5:5.1%
Timezone1:SAST
Utc Offset1:+2
Blank Name Sec1:Municipal code
Blank Info Sec1:DC34

The Vhembe District Municipality (Venda: Masipala wa Tshiṱiriki tsha Vhembe; Tsonga: Masipala wa Xifundza xa Vhembe) is one of the 5 districts of the Limpopo province of South Africa. It is the northernmost district of the country and shares its northern border with the Beitbridge District in Zimbabwe and on the east with the Gaza Province in Mozambique. Vhembe consists of all the territories that were part of the former Venda Bantustan; however, two large densely populated districts of the former Tsonga homeland of Gazankulu, in particular, Hlanganani and Malamulele, were also incorporated into the municipality, hence the ethnic diversity of the district. The seat is Thohoyandou, the capital of the former Venda Bantustan. According to the 2011 census, the majority of the municipality's 800,000 inhabitants spoke TshiVenda as their mother language, while 400,000 spoke Xitsonga as their home language. However, the Tsonga people form the majority south of the Levubu River, while the Venda are the minority south of Levubu at 15%. The Sepedi speakers number 27,000. The district code is DC34.

History

Vhembe is settled by the Venda people who constitute the majority of the population of Vhembe. Later, from around 1820 onwards, the Tsonga people started to invade from the south east and are today a majority in the whole southern and eastern part of Vhembe, which are known today as Malamulele (in the east of Vhembe) and Hlanganani (in the south of Vhembe). At the same time, the Boer Voortrekkers arrived in Vhembe, at around 1836. Venda communities are only found in Vhembe district and as a result, there are no existing Venda communities or villages outside the district. Vhembe means Limpopo river in the Venda language.

Before the renaming of Limpopo Province in 2002, the name Vhembe was submitted to the Limpopo legislature as one of the desired names for the new Province but the majority of the members of the Legislature voted against the name Vhembe in favour of the name Limpopo. The Dzata ruins in Thulamela Local Municipality once served as the main settlement and capital of the Venda empire which had dominated the area during the 18th century.

Boer settlement of the territory began in the late 18th century and gradually upsurged throughout the 19th century. By the turn of the century, the Soutpansberg was taken by the Boers from the Venda rulers, making it one of the last areas in the future republic of South Africa to come under white rule. During the apartheid era, the bantustan of Venda (declared independent in 1979) was established in the eastern part of the Vhembe area, and was reintegrated into the country in 1994. The former bantustan capital, Thohoyandou (named after a chief that had led the expansion of the Venda empire in the 18th century) is the current seat of the Vhembe district.

On 11 December 2008, Vhembe was declared a disaster zone by the Limpopo government due to the spread of cholera from across the Zimbabwean border to the district.

The Vhembe region became the Vhembe Biosphere Reserve in 2009, which was officially declared a biosphere reserve in 2011.[4] The reserve includes the Blouberg Range, the Kruger National Park, the Philip Herd Nature Reserve,[5] the Nwanedi Nature Reserve,[6] the Makgabeng Plateau, the Makuleke Wetlands, the Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape and the Soutpansberg.[7]

Geography

The main geographical feature of the district is the Soutpansberg mountains.

Neighbours

Vhembe is surrounded by:

Local municipalities

The district contains the following local municipalities:

Local municipalityPopulation%Dominant language
381 696 29.58%Venda
516 03139.56%Venda
328 636[8] 25.48%Venda
68 359 5.38% Venda

Demographics

The following statistics are from the census 2011 10% sample.[9]

LanguagePopulation%
861 910 67.3%
318 973 24.9%
19 935 1.6%
16 317 1.3%
12 369 1.0%
27038 2.1%
12994 1.0%
4193 0.3%
1 864 1.0%
1 179 0.1%
660 0.1%
2 412 0.2%
1 205 0.1%

Gender

GenderPopulation%
Female 757 501 54.4%
Male 645 278 45.6%

Population group

Population groupPopulation%
Black African 1 272 427 98.3%
White 14 168 1.1%
Indian/Asian 5 435 0.4%
Coloured 1 858 0.1%
Other 1 180 0.1%

Age

AgePopulation%
00 - 04 163 984 12.7%
05 - 09 142 612 11.0%
10 - 14 144 313 11.1%
15 - 19 159 642 12.3%
20 - 24 130 534 10.1%
25 - 29 99 850 7.7%
30 - 34 80 042 6.2%
35 - 39 71 038 5.5%
40 - 44 59 394 4.6%
45 - 49 53 881 4.2%
50 - 54 45 418 3.5%
55 - 59 35 508 2.7%
60 - 64 27 315 2.1%
65 - 69 21 205 1.6%
70 - 74 18 526 1.4%
75 - 79 16 045 1.2%
80 - 84 13 847 1.2%
85+ 11 916 0.9%

Politics

Election results

Election results for Vhembe in the South African general election, 2004.

PartyVotes%
348 768 90.21%
15 553 4.02%
5 821 1.51%
4 687 1.21%
2 875 0.74%
2 098 0.54%
1 767 0.46%
916 0.24%
864 0.22%
585 0.15%
469 0.12%
359 0.09%
336 0.09%
301 0.08%
282 0.07%
258 0.07%
198 0.05%
191 0.05%
129 0.03%
92 0.02%
80 0.02%
Total 386 629 100.00%

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Executive Mayor . Vhembe District Municipality . 16 March 2020 . 1 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200601061327/http://www.vhembe.gov.za/council/council-executive-mayor . dead .
  2. Web site: Statistics by place . Statistics South Africa . 27 September 2015 . 13 November 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201113164357/http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=964 . live .
  3. Web site: Statistics by place . Statistics South Africa . 27 September 2015 . 13 November 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201113164357/http://www.statssa.gov.za/?page_id=964 . live .
  4. Web site: The official launch of the Vhembe Biosphere Reserve . 5 April 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151002130826/http://www.leshiba.co.za/biosphere/the-official-launch-of-the-vhembe-biosphere-reserve.html . 2 October 2015 . dead . dmy-all .
  5. Web site: ArcGIS Web Application. 12 January 2022. South Africa Protected Areas Register (PAR). 8 March 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220308035432/https://dffeportal.environment.gov.za/portal/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=7e27f116dd194c1f9d446dacc76fe483. live.
  6. Web site: Protected Areas Register (PAR). 12 January 2022. Protected Areas Register (PAR) South Africa. 8 March 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220308035432/https://dffeportal.environment.gov.za/portal/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=7e27f116dd194c1f9d446dacc76fe483. live.
  7. http://www.unesco.org/mabdb/br/brdir/directory/biores.asp?code=SAF+06&mode=all UNESCO - Biosphere Reserve Information
  8. NOTE: official census statistics for Collins Chabane not available (March 2020).
  9. Statistics South Africa. Census 2011 10% sample