The Richtersveld in the Northern Cape has been awarded world heritage status, becoming the eighth such site in the country, Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Marthinus van Schalkwyk said on Thursday.
Covering 160 000ha in the Northern Cape, the ”dramatic mountainous desert” featured harmonious interaction between humans and nature, and migration patterns by the Nama people that had lasted for at least two millennia, said the World Heritage Committee in Christchurch, New Zealand, on Wednesday.
It was the only area where the Nama still constructed portable rush-covered, domed houses.
The Nama were descendants of the Khoi-Khoi who once occupied southern Namibia and most of the present-day Western and Northern Cape provinces. Over a century or more, those in the south were pushed north by the spread of farms from the Cape.
The Nama presently live in three small villages established as mission settlements outside the proclaimed area: Kuboes to the north, Lekkersing to the south-west and Eksteenfontein to the south.
The site joined the Isimangaliso Wetlands Park (Greater St Lucia Wetlands Park), uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, Robben Island, Cape Floral Region Protected Areas, Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape, Vredefort Dome and the fossil hominid-bearing sites of South Africa (Cradle of Humankind, Makapan Valley and Taung Skull Fossil Sites) as places of outstanding universal value, said Van Schalkwyk.
The Richtersveld was returned to the ownership of the people under the land restitution programme a few years ago.
”It is remarkable that within a few short years this community has not only aspired to management of its cultural and environmental assets to the highest international standards, but that it has through acquiring world heritage status succeeded in achieving the highest level of recognition for this.” — Sapa