
Ovamboland Flag
Ovamboland (also:
Owamboland or short Ovambo/Owambo) was
the name given by English-speaking visitors to the land occupied by
the Ovambo people in what is now northern
Namibia
and southern Angola
.
History
Before the Apartheid Period
Before the
first world war, some
infrastructure in the area was provided by local
Finnish missionaries of the
Finnish Missionary
Society, who established Ovamboland as their first mission
field in 1870, the first mission being at
Omandongo.
During the
First World War South
African troops conquered the German colony of
South West Africa in 1915, and took
control of Ovamboland in 1917, though it still lay outside the
"police zone".
Apartheid Period
Following the
Odendaal
Commission in the 1950s the South African government decided to
apply the
apartheid policy in South
West Africa, which South Africa continued to rule in terms of a
League of Nations mandate,
and continued to do so after the
mandate was revoked in
1968.
Ovamboland then became a
bantustan called
Owambo, intended by the apartheid government to be
a
self-governing "homeland" for the
Ovambo people. It was set up in 1968 and
self-government was granted in 1973.
Owambo was the setting of a protracted
counter-insurgency war that formed part
of the
Namibian War of
Independence in Namibia, or
South African Border War in South
Africa.
Since Independence of Namibia
Owambo, like other homelands in South West Africa, was abolished in
May 1989 at the start of the transition to independence. The region
is now commonly referred to as The North but the term
Ovamboland is still in use.More than half of the entire
population, almost thousand of people, live here on just 6% of the
Namibian territory.
See also
External links