Rehoboth (Homeland)
Rehoboth Basterland |
|
---|---|
Capital | Rehoboth |
size | 13,860 km² |
Residents | 11,257 (1960) |
Form of government | Homeland |
Chairman of the Executive Council | 1979–1989: Johannes Diergaardt |
founding | 1976 |
resolution | May 1989 (before Namibia's independence ) |
currency | South African rand |
license plate | SWA |
Location of the former homeland Rehoboth |
Rehoboth (also Basterland ) is a historic area in South West Africa (today's Namibia ) and home of the Rehoboth Baster people . The term comes from the German colonial times and the time of the South African occupation . From 1976 to 1990 the Basterland was a homeland based on the South African model. The area had about 21,439 inhabitants in 1991 and was 13,860 square kilometers in size. The main town was Rehoboth .
Basterland is located in what is now the Namibian regions of Hardap and Khomas . It is traditionally run by Kapteins who are no longer officially recognized as the only traditional guides in Namibia .
Situation since 1990
On March 20, 1990, one day before Namibia's declaration of independence, the Rehoboth area declared itself independent.
You see an area of 14,216 square kilometers in the borders of 1872 with about 35,000 inhabitants (as of 2017), who are made up of 92% Rehoboth Baster and 8% Namibians, as their country.
literature
- James Minahan : Encyclopedia of the stateless nations: ethnic and national groups around the world Westport , Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2002., ISBN 0313323844 .
Web links
- Official site of the Baster area (English)
- Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, Rehoboth Basters (English)
Individual evidence
- ^ A b The Rehoboth Basters' declaration of independence of March 20, 1990. Rehoboth Basters. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
- ↑ James Minahan: Encyclopedia of the stateless nations: ethnic and national groups around , pp. 290ff.