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Bazaruto Archipelago

Bazaruto Archipelago is a group of islands located in the warm Indian Ocean waters of Mozambique including Benguerra Island, Bazaruto Island, Magaruque Island and Santa Carolina (Paradise) Island. The crystal clear azure seas provide visitors with un...

Categories: Bazaruto Archipelago


Beira

Before the war, Beira, 450 mi/725 km northeast of Maputo, was a busy port filled with goods destined for Zimbabwe (both rail and road service run between Beira and Harare, Zimbabwe). The government's reconstruction efforts have been slow in reaching ...

Categories: Beira


Cabaceira


Categories: Cabaceira


Europa Island


Categories: Europa Island


Gorongosa National Park

Once the pride of Mozambique's prewar national parks, Gorongosa National Park has undergone a hugely ambitious and successful rehabilitation program that is ongoing. For travelers looking for an off-the-beaten-track escape with diverse game, rich bir...

Categories: Gorongosa National Park


Ibo Island

Ibo Island is a quaint little piece of land with a lost-world appeal. This former slave-trading center is part of the Quirimba Archipelago and is 1,000 mi/1,600 km northeast of Maputo. It is similar to Mozambique Island—full of decaying fortresses, p...

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Ilha dos Portugueses


Categories: Ilha dos Portugueses


Inhaca


Categories: Inhaca


Inhambane

One of the first areas colonized by the Portuguese in the 16th century, Inhambane, 220 mi/355 km northeast of Maputo, was once an important trading center. Today, however, it is little more than a sleepy, yet delightful, provincial coastal town. Old ...

Categories: Inhambane


Island of Mozambique

Just off the northern coast and linked to it by a motorable causeway, this historic island served as the Portuguese capital in East Africa from 1530 until it was usurped by Lourenco Marques (Maputo) in 1898. It was more recently inscribed as a UNESCO...

Categories: Island of Mozambique


La Veranda


Categories: La Veranda


Lake Niassa

Running for more than 347 mi/560 km along the Rift Valley Floor approximately 800 mi/1,300 km north of Maputo, Lake Niassa (also known as Lake Malawi) forms part of the border between Mozambique and the nation of Malawi, at the northwest extreme of M...

Categories: Lake Niassa


Maputo

Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, is quite a place to visit. It is an important port city, and Mozambique's largest city. It is known as the City of Acacias, due to the many beautiful acacia trees found along its avenues. Visit Maputo and  ...

Categories: Maputo


Maputo Elephant Reserve

Accessible by 4x4 only, this 400-sq-mi/1,040-sq-km reserve lies 49 mi/79km south of Maputo and protects an estimated population of around 650 elephant and an incredible variety of birds. Much of its other wildlife, including a population of 65 white ...

Categories: Maputo Elephant Reserve


Mozambique Channel


Categories: Mozambique Channel


National Parks and Reserves, Mozambique


Categories: National Parks and Reserves Mozambique


Niassa National Reserve


Categories: Niassa National Reserve


Pemba

Located in the far north of the country, 1,020 mi/1,650 km northeast of Maputo, this pretty town is situated at the tip of a peninsula enclosing an enormous natural harbor. Pemba was mostly untouched by the civil war and is well worth a visit for its...

Categories: Pemba


Pomene


Categories: Pomene


Ponta do Ouro

Set close to the border with the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal, approximately 143 mi/ 230 km south of Maputo, this attractive beachside village is at the heart of the most developed resort area and is popular with South African vacationers,...

Categories: Ponta do Ouro


Ponta Mamoli


Categories: Ponta Mamoli


Quelimane

Located near the Zambezi River delta, 670 mi/1,000 km northeast of Maputo, this port was the center of a thriving agricultural area before the war. Today greatly decayed, it is a center of copra (dried coconut meat) export and serves as a waypoint fo...

Categories: Quelimane


Quilalea Island


Categories: Quilalea Island


Santa Carolina Island


Categories: Santa Carolina Island


Vilankulos

Vilanculos, 435 mi/700 km northeast of Maputo, is the jumping-off point for travelers bound for the Bazaruto Archipelago (separated from the mainland town by a narrow channel) by dhow or helicopter. Visitors may spend at least a day in the town waiti...

Categories: Vilankulos


Xai Xai

Once a favorite beach resort for South Africans, Xai-Xai (pronounced shy-shy) has fallen into neglect. Still, a beautiful beach, seaside hotel and nice campground make the town an agreeable stopover on the north-south road, 140 mi/225 km northeast of...

Categories: Xai Xai


Visit Mozambique during its Reconstruction for its stunning beaches, World Heritage sites, funky colonial architecture and colourful local culture.

Maputo, the capital, is quite a place to visit and is mostly famous for its beaches. The University of Mozambique is in the city, which also has a museum on Mozambique's history, a military museum, and the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady of Fatima.


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Mozambique


In the early 1970s, Mozambique was entrenched as one of southern Africa's top travel destinations. Sunshine, warm weather and long golden stretches of palm-lined sand made Mozambique beaches a paradise. However, independence from Portugal in 1975 sparked a brutal and protracted civil war that reduced the stream of visitors to a trickle. Yet despite the country's earlier woes, a triumphant spirit has prevailed since a ceasefire was signed in 1992, and travelers are again drawn by Mozambique's many charms and increasingly sophisticated infrastructure.

The major attraction is the country's 1,500-mi/2,400-km coastline, which is replete with idyllic beaches, tropical islands, crumbling forts, fascinating architecture, a culture steeped in African and Arabic heritage, and delicious seafood.

The country is being rebuilt at a rapid pace. Developers have moved in with ambitious plans to build luxury vacation resorts and re-populate the national parks with wildlife. And Maputo, the nation's capital, is no longer a devastated shantytown, but a lively city that is on the upswing.

One symbol of this recovery is Maputo's Polana Hotel, once a majestic monument to grand colonial style. Allowed to decay after independence in 1975, the Polana has been restored and is now one of the most expensive hotels in Africa. It's the kind of place where arms dealers rub shoulders with World Bank financiers and Gucci-clad tourists tucking into champagne breakfasts.

Although the evidence of recovery is undeniable, the nation's game parks, whose animal populations were almost wiped out during the war (one game park was even used as a rebel base), are still far below the standards of those in neighboring countries, but infrastructure and accessibility are steadily improving, along with the size of wildlife herds. Construction of a Chinese-funded and directed national highway running the length of the country is well advanced and will further boost Mozambique's presence as a viable safari destination.

Geography

Almost twice the size of California, Mozambique is a large, elongated country covering an area of 309,495 sq mi/801,590 sq km. The country has lowlands near the coast, rising to high plateaus in the interior and, near the western border, mountains reaching as high as 7,925 ft/2,415 m.

Three of Africa's major rivers flow through the country—the Limpopo in the far south, the Zambezi in the center (pouring into the Indian Ocean south of Beira) and Rovuma along the northern border with Tanzania. The immense Rift Valley lake known to Malawians as Lake Malawi and to Mozambicans as Lago Niassa forms part of the border with Malawi.

A number of offshore islands haloed by magnificent white-sand beaches concentrate in two archipelagos: Quirimbas in the north, and Bazurato in the south.

History

Mozambique was first populated by Bantu-speaking people whose ancestors arrived in the first century AD. Arab traders set up posts along the coast, and in 1505, soon after explorer Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, the Portuguese made Mozambique their primary trade center on the eastern coast of Africa.

This Portuguese colony was one of the most exploited on the continent: Almost every resource was taken from Mozambique, and everything that its colonizers "contributed" was simply put into place to better serve them. After plundering the country for gold, ivory and slaves, the Portuguese virtually turned Mozambique over to private companies that made profits by controlling transportation routes to neighboring landlocked countries and providing cheap (often forced) African labor for the mines and plantations of nearby British colonies. Little attention was paid to the local economic infrastructure or the skills of the country's population.

With this legacy, the stirrings of resistance and the decades of fighting that followed were predictable. Following the shocking Mueda Massacre in 1960, in which Portuguese troops opened fire on peacefully protesting villagers, the independence movement quickly gained momentum. In 1962, the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique, known as Frelimo, was formed.

After more than a decade of civil war, Frelimo, led initially by the charismatic Eduardo Mondlane, finally succeeded in overthrowing the Portuguese regime. However, when the Portuguese suddenly abandoned the country in 1975, they did so without preparing Mozambique for the change. Frelimo became the new Mozambican government and decided to embrace socialism, establishing close ties with the Soviet Union. A sudden, rapid exodus of more than 300,000 white, mostly Portuguese, residents followed.

Frelimo's socialist leanings alarmed the white governments of South Africa and Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia). In the late 1970s, the Rhodesian Special Branch founded Renamo (Mozambican National Resistance), a guerrilla organization designed to "destabilize" Mozambique.

After Zimbabwe gained independence in 1980, Renamo was backed by South African Defense Force (SADF) and although it was never successful in overthrowing the government, it did destroy a tremendous number of roads, schools and telephone lines, and its soldiers killed more than 100,000 civilians in the process. The conflict evolved into a full-scale civil war (1977-1992) that killed as many as 1 million people.

Prompted by changing events in South Africa and the global collapse of socialism, Renamo and Frelimo signed a peace treaty in 1992, but by then the country's infrastructure was in tatters.

The rebuilding process got off to a good start: In 1994, the country held its first free elections in years. Frelimo won, securing 44% of the vote as opposed to Renamo's 38%. A free-market economy replaced the old socialist programs, and foreign aid has been generous, most notably considerable investment by China in recent years.

Nonetheless, in 2013 a resurgence of Renamo insurgency has led to sporadic localized violence in six central and northern provinces, and government forces have been implicated as the main aggressor in recent atrocities.

Discovery in 2011 of large gas fields off the coast promise to boost Mozambique's economy. But for all its evident regeneration, Mozambique remains one of the poorest countries in the world. Many of its modest successes have been negated by droughts, famine and floods.

If you go, you're likely to have an entire pristine beach to yourself. Visitors should be aware that there is still tension between political parties, and sometimes violent clashes occur, though rarely in touristic areas. Land mines and unexploded ordnance may still be present throughout the country, though it was declared "mine-free" in 2015.

Snapshot

Among Mozambique's chief attractions are beaches, African culture, quiet islands, Portuguese-style architecture and deep-sea fishing.

Mozambique will appeal to adventurous travelers who love beaches and African culture, who have experience traveling in developing nations and who have already visited some of Africa's more accessible countries. Outside of Maputo, do not expect service and sanitation standards to be very high (except in small enclaves such as the Bazaruto Archipelago, which has upscale lodgings).

Potpourri

Maputo's Polana Hotel was a favorite of British author Graham Greene, who used it as a setting in The Human Factor. Villa Algarve, another beautiful old building in Maputo, has a more sordid history: It was the headquarters of PIDE, the Portuguese secret police that terrorized Mozambique when it was a colony.

Fertilizer companies don't send their salespeople to Mozambique—the country's soil is so good that it rarely needs to be fertilized.

Joaquim Chissano, president of Mozambique from 1986 to 2005, was an ardent follower of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the former spiritual guru to the Beatles who died in February 2008. Chissano believes transcendental meditation helped end the civil war and the country's worst drought in a century.

More than 750,000 people were killed in the country's civil war, and the nation is still polarized by a political divide.

The main exports of the country are coal, bauxite, shrimp and cashew nuts.

When Mozambique's game parks were closed during the war, no one guarded the animals. As a result, many of them were slaughtered for their skins and horns. The white rhino can no longer be found in Mozambique.

Mozambique's first-ever Olympic gold medal was won by female track-and-field athlete Maria Mutola at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Known as the "Maputo Express," Mutola, who began her sporting career playing football on an all-boys team in shantytowns around Maputo, snared her victory in the 800 m sprint and raced her way into the hearts of her fellow countrymen. A street in Maputo was even renamed in her honor. Mutola held the 800 m African record from 1994 until June 2008, when her time was bettered by the young Kenya runner Pamela Jelimo.

In 1986, Samora Machel, the first president of independent Mozambique, died in an aircraft crash in South Africa. The official cause was pilot error, but many people believe that the error was induced by a decoy radio navigation beacon set in place by the apartheid government of South Africa.

In 1998, Graca Machel, wife of the late president Samora Machel, married Nelson Mandela, then the president of South Africa. She remains unique in having been the first lady of two different nations.




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