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Abuja

Abuja, Nigeria, is a planned city, built from scratch to be the country's capital (which it became in 1991). Abuja lies very close to the geographical center of Nigeria, a location chosen to appease all the ethnic groups. It has also been a very expe...

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Agadez

This city of 30,000, located near the center of Niger, is often referred to as the sister city of Timbuktu. It's simply fascinating. If you approach overland, you'll see it rise right out of the desert: Its distinctive sand-brick architecture blends ...

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Ayorou

A fascinating Sunday market and a nice hotel and restaurant overlooking the Niger River make Ayorou worth a stop. On Sundays, the market teems with Tuareg, Fulani and Djerma traders who live in the surrounding bush and in villages along the river. Th...

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Banana Island

Banana Island is the main tourist destination in Sierra Leone. The proximity to Freetown and the lovely environment of a pristine tropical island make Banana Island a popular choice for daytrips and overnight excursions. The island has rich...

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Benin City

Benin City, Nigeria, is surrounded by an ancient moat and the remains of a city wall. This former Edo-Bini capital, 150 mi/240 km east of Lagos, Nigeria, has a traditional oba's (king's) palace and a strong artistic tradition. The Edo have produced s...

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Birnin Konni

"Konni," for short, is mostly a road stop for travelers on their way to Maradi or Zinder. Indeed, it looks the part. However, if you have the time or inclination, you'll find that Konni does have a fair amount of character. The Konni marketplace is a...

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Calabar

Calabar, Nigeria, is one of the country's oldest trading cities, and a place where few tourists go. It's a pity, as Calabar is one of our favorite places in Nigeria. Set on a hill overlooking the Calabar River, it is as picturesque as the country get...

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Ibadan

Located 80 mi/130 km northeast of Lagos, Ibadan is enormous, ugly and plagued with crime, and there are few good places to stay. If you do find yourself in Ibadan, visit the Dugbe market (one of the country's largest) and the University of Ibadan. Th...

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Ife

Ife, Nigeria, is the home of Oranyan, the mythical founder of the Yoruba people. Ife is considered the cradle of Yoruba civilization. While in Ife, visit the museum (a small but interesting collection of historical artifacts), the king's palace (you'...

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Jos

Jos, Nigeria, is a pleasant tin-mining town on a high plateau near the center of Nigeria. Jos has a museum with displays of items from the Nok excavation, which uncovered ruins of civilizations that existed 4,000 years ago. The museum also has full-s...

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Kano

Kano, Nigeria, is an atmospheric, mud-walled, 1,000-year-old Muslim center in the far northern part of the country. On the edge of the Sahel (the fringe of the Sahara), Kano is the oldest city in West Africa and has many cultural and historical links...

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Lagos, Nigeria

Lagos is Nigeria's largest city and is both the financial center and the most populous city in the country. Situated on the southwest mouth of Lagos Lagoon, Lagos is one of the busiest and largest ports on the continent. Lagos has a thriving musi...

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Maradi

This town of 189,000 is the customary overnight stop when traveling between Niamey and Zinder. Maradi's location in the center of the country and near the Nigerian border brings interesting people and commodities to its marketplace. It has a lively n...

Categories: Maradi


N'Guigmi

Located in the farthest reaches of eastern Niger, N'Guigmi is the last town on the dirt road to Chad. It's a gray, dusty frontier outpost that feels very much like the end of the road. The market to the south does a big trade in camels, because the a...

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Niamey

Niger's capital, located in the far western region of the country, is a lively, fairly modern city of 748,600. Niamey offers unique open-air markets that are great for people-watching—they're patronized by members of the Tuareg, Sonuri and Fulani tri...

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Onitsha

Onitsha, Nigeria, was destroyed in the Biafran civil war but has since been rebuilt. The city is famous outside Nigeria for its Onitsha Market Literature—short moralistic pieces about life in the region (a few of these pamphlets are, in fact, sold at...

Categories: Onitsha


Oshogbo

Oshogbo, Nigeria, is one of Africa's most creative art centers and a must-see on any trip to the country. The town is filled with artists working in the style of the Oshogbo school, producing original masks, tapestries, batiks and sculptures, often b...

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Park W

This game reserve, which lies just two hours south of Niamey (near the town of Dosso), is home to elephants, gazelles, lions, baboons and waterbucks. Niger shares the reserve with its neighbors, Benin, Togo and Burkina Faso. Though it's only a short...

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Port Harcourt

Port Harcourt, Nigeria, is a large, industrial port city that offers little for tourists. Port Harcourt is the center for Nigeria's black gold—oil—which is pumped from the ground at the numerous oil instillations in the Niger Delta around Port Harcou...

Categories: Port Harcourt


Tillaberi

Tillaberi, which lies along the Niger River between Niamey and Ayorou, has been listed as having the highest average annual temperature in the world. Walking among the closely set mud-brick buildings during the hot season can be very trying. The Sund...

Categories: Tillaberi


Yankari National Park

The wildlife in Nigeria's Yankari National Park is less impressive than that of countries in East Africa, but the park, located on a savanna, does have a few lions, crocodiles, elephants, baboons, hippos and several species of antelope. Yankari has b...

Categories: Yankari National Park


Zinder

The former colonial capital (pop. 202,300), Zinder has a great walled market where you can buy, among other things, camel paraphernalia—saddles, blankets, reins and even dried camel dung (it's burned as fuel). There's also an old Foreign Legion fort ...

Categories: Zinder


Niger straddles the Sahel, the unforgiving boundary zone in north-central Africa where the greener climes of the south give way to sandy soil and stunted vegetation and then to the dry silence of the Sahara. At just about any time of the year, it can be a blazing furnace. But Niger is also a hotbed of fascinating traditional cultures—which seem to have little in common with each other.Free Niger Vacation Package Quote


Niger Travel Agents

The people of Niger are as colorful and diverse as the landscape is bleak. To the south, in the more verdant area along the Niger River, are the Hausa, who are farmers and merchants, and the Djerma and Songhai, who retain some of the royal traditions of ancient empire. To the north are the nomadic herders—primarily the Fulani and Tuaregs, some of whom are known as the Blue People because of their use of indigo dye. For the hardiest travelers, who don't mind the heat and inconveniences, Niger is one of the best places in Africa to encounter a variety of contrasting cultures.


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Niger


Niger straddles the Sahel, the unforgiving boundary zone in north-central Africa where the greener climes of the south give way to sandy soil and stunted vegetation and then to the dry silence of the Sahara. At just about any time of the year, it can be a blazing furnace. But Niger is also a hotbed of fascinating traditional cultures—which seem to have little in common with each other.

The people of Niger are as colorful and diverse as the landscape is bleak. To the south, in the more verdant area along the Niger River, are the Hausa, who are farmers and merchants, and the Djerma and Songhai, who retain some of the royal traditions of ancient empire. To the north are the nomadic herders—primarily the Fulani and Tuaregs, some of whom are known as the Blue People because of their use of indigo dye. For the hardiest travelers, who don't mind the heat and inconveniences, Niger is one of the best places in Africa to encounter a variety of contrasting cultures.

Geography

Niger is one of the 14 landlocked nations in Africa. The country shares borders with Libya and Algeria to the north, Nigeria and Benin to the south, Mali and Chad to the east, and Burkina Faso to the west. The Niger River snakes for 300 mi/500 km, passing through the southern region and capital. The northern area is characterized by mountains. The country is mostly covered by desert, but there are grasslands in the more populous southwestern region (90% of the population lives within 100 mi/160 km of the southern border).

History

Now virtually ignored by the outside world, Niger was once an important crossroads of the salt, slave and ivory trades. For centuries, various states, empires and bands of nomads tried to control it. In the late 19th century, the French began colonizing the area and retained control until Niger gained independence in 1960. Though it was severely hurt by drought and famine in the early 1970s, it made slow but steady progress economically, thanks in part to the exploitation of uranium deposits near Arlit. However, the collapse of uranium prices on the world market and a drought in 1984 once again set the country back. The French government continues to buy the bulk of Niger's uranium at prices well above market value, and the discovery of gold in the region of Goetheye and near the border with Burkina Faso has brought a measure of hope for Niger's economy. Encroaching desertification, however, is changing many traditional ways.

The Tuaregs mounted a full-scale rebellion in 1992, and although the revolt ended with a peace agreement, separatists still launch attacks against the military and the occasional foreign visitor. In 1996, a coup d'etat by Gen. Ibrahim Bare Mainassara ended the country's up-and-down five-year experiment with democracy. Elections held in that year were condemned by some observers as fraudulent, but Gen. Mainassara was elected president nonetheless. Mainassara was not popular, and in April of 1999, he was gunned down by members of his own security force. Members of the military quickly took control of the country, and the ruling junta promised to cede control to the winners of the scheduled elections. As good as its word, the junta stood aside when a civilian government led by President Mamadou Tandja was elected, creating a new, if fragile, political stability.

Trouble soon began to brew again in 2002, as government soldiers, unhappy with pay and working conditions, staged a series of mutinies. The following year, Niger found itself at the center of controversy as both Britain and the U.S. claimed that Niger had sold uranium to Iraq. Though the claim was subsequently denounced as false, it drew unwanted attention to the country and its dependence on the exportation of uranium ore.

That same year, in 2003, Niger criminalized slavery under increasing international pressure. In 2005, however, in an amazing about-face, the government cancelled a public ceremony that was to free some 7,000 slaves, claiming that slavery had never existed in the country. (United Nations statistics suggest that there are still about 43,000 people being held as slaves in Niger.)

Snapshot

Among the attractions of Niger are tribal culture, game parks, desert scenery, architecture and museums.

Niger will appeal only to flexible, tolerant travelers who are experienced in touring developing countries and who are interested in Saharan and West African culture. It is not for anyone who is greatly concerned about comfort and strict sanitation standards, who cannot tolerate high temperatures or whose trip will be ruined by unexpected schedule delays or sudden changes in plans.

Potpourri

If you are in Niger during early September, don't miss the famous Cure Salee of the Wodaabe. The Wodaabe are a sect of the Fulani tribe known for their fine features and great beauty. The Cure Salee is an annual festival where (among other things) Wodaabe men attempt to woo themselves a bride. The stage for their courtship is the gerewol, which is essentially a beauty contest. Eligible men decorate themselves with elaborate make-up and jewelry and dance for hours on end. Eventually, eligible women may choose a man (or not), but the entire festival is terrific, unforgettable theater.

Banking has a bad name in Niger, but that may be changing. Traditionally, most banks have been owned by the state, which may explain why 90% of savings institutions in Niger have failed in the last decade. In contrast, more than 80 "village" or "coop" banks, some with inscrutable names such as "The Suffering Has Come to an End," have opened up across Niger in the last decade. The new banks are locally owned and managed but are backed by a German development firm rather than the impoverished Nigerien government.

M. Ali Seybou, the former dictator of Niger, resides in Ouallam, 60 mi/100 km to the north of Niamey. He is known as an affable host.

The Tuaregs are descended from the light-skinned Berbers of the North African coast. They claim that they are oppressed by the governments of Niger and Mali. Several hundred people have died during the Tuareg uprising in both nations during the past several years. The severe drought in the early 1970s led many Tuareg tribesmen, whose ancestors had roamed the desert for centuries, to settle in towns.

In the southwest, the plantations grow mostly peanuts and cotton.

For the trip of a lifetime, experienced travelers should consider taking the local bus from Niamey to Gao, Mali.

Yes, those are open sewers along the streets of Niamey.

The average life expectancy is only 42 years. Per capita income is around US$250 per year.




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