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Namibia: Kunene Welcomes Tourists’ Return


SINCE the lockdown in March, the Kunene region has been one of many regions badly affected after borders were closed to tourists.

The tourism industry is the livelihood of thousands of its inhabitants.

Ansta Gabathuler, owner of Farmhouse Restaurant Outjo Bed and Breakfast, says she is looking forward to getting international visitors again.

“Covid-19 will still be there, whether they come or not. Tourists don’t bring Covid-19, we still have the pandemic even without tourists,” she says.

Gabathuler says her business is suffering since she cannot secure a loan from a financial institution.

“I need to earn something. I cannot pay my employees and suppliers. We need to open our borders to generate an income,” she says.

Additionally, circumstances forced her to cut her 16 employees’ salaries and working hours.

Gabathuler says if her business shuts down, she does not see it reopening again.

She believes if tourists return to Namibia from next week, paying salaries and rent would not be a problem, although she calls for tourism establishments to be given relief by the government amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Damara Living Museum’s Hans //Noabeb welcomes the reopening of the country’s borders to tourists.

//Noabeb, who has 36 employees showcasing Damara culture near Twyfelfontein, says his establishment will adhere to the government’s regulations, and the museum, which had to close in March, has been prepared for foreign visitors.