HISTORY
Bushmen (or San) are generally assumed to have been the earliest
inhabitants of the region. Later inhabitants include the Nama and the
Damara or Berg Dama. The Bantu-speaking Ovambo and Herero
migrated from the north in about the 14th century A.D.
The inhospitable Namib Desert constituted a formidable barrier to
European exploration until the late 18th century, when successions of
travelers, traders, hunters, and missionaries explored the area. The
1878, the United Kingdom annexed Walvis Bay on behalf of Cape
Colony, and the area was incorporated into the Cape of Good Hope in
1884. In 1883, a German trader, Adolf Luderitz, claimed the rest of the
coastal region after negotiations with a local chief. Negotiations
between the United Kingdom and Germany resulted in Germany's
annexation of the coastal region, excluding Walvis Bay. The following
year, the United Kingdom recognized the hinterland up to 20o east
longitude as a German sphere of influence. A region, Caprivi Strip,
became a part of South West Africa after an agreement on July 1, 1890,
between the United Kingdom and Germany. The British recognized
that the strip would fall under German administration to provide access
to the Zambezi River and German colonies in East Africa. In exchange,
the British received the islands of Zanzibar and Heligoland.
German colonial power was consolidated, and prime grazing land
passed to white control as a result of the Herero and Nama wars of
1904-08. German administration ended during World War I following
South African occupation in 1915.
On December 17, 1920, South Africa undertook administration of
South West Africa under the terms of Article 22 of the Covenant of the
League of Nations and a mandate agreement by the League Council.
The mandate agreement gave South Africa full power of administration
and legislation over the territory. It required that South Africa promote
the material and moral well being and social progress of the people.
When the League of Nations was dissolved in 1946, the newly formed
United Nations inherited its supervisory authority for the territory.
South Africa refused UN requests place the territory under a trusteeship
agreement. During the 1960s, as the European powers granted
independence to their colonies and trust territories in Africa, pressure
mounted on South Africa to do so in Namibia, which was then South
West Africa. In 1966, the UN General Assembly revoked South Africa's mandate.
Also in 1966, the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO)
began guerrilla attacks on Namibia, infiltrating the territory from bases
in Zambia. After Angola became independent in 1975, SWAPO
established bases in the southern part of the country. Hostilities
intensified over the years, especially in Ovamboland.
In a 1971 advisory opinion, the International Court of Justice upheld
UN authority over Namibia, determining that the South African
presence in Namibia was illegal and that South Africa therefore was
obligated to withdraw its administration from Namibia immediately.
The Court also advised UN member states to refrain from implying
legal recognition or assistance to the South African presence.
International Pressure for Independence
In 1977, Western members of the UN Security Council, including
Canada, France, the Federal Republic of Germany, the United
Kingdom, and the United States (known as the Western Contact
Group), launched a joint diplomatic effort to bring an internationally
acceptable transition to independence for Namibia. Their efforts led to
the presentation in April 1978 of Security Council Resolution 435 for
settling the Namibian problem. The proposal, known as the UN Plan,
was worked out after lengthy consultations with South Africa, the
front-line states (Angola, Botswana, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia,
and Zimbabwe), SWAPO, UN officials, and the Western Contact
Group. It called for the holding of elections in Namibia under UN
supervision and control, the cessation of all hostile acts by all parties,
and restrictions on the activities of South African and Namibian
military, paramilitary, and police.
South Africa agreed to cooperate in achieving the implementation of
Resolution 435. Nonetheless, in December 1978, in defiance of the UN
proposal, it unilaterally held elections in Namibia which were
boycotted by SWAPO and a few other political parties. South Africa
continued to administer Namibia through its installed multi-racial
coalitions. Negotiations after 1978 focused on issues such as
supervision of elections connected with the implementation of the UN Plan.
Negotiations and Transition
Intense discussions between the concerned parties continued during the
1978-88 period, with the UN Secretary General's Special
Representative, Martti Ahtisaari, playing a key role. The 1982
Constitutional Principles, agreed upon by the front-line states,
SWAPO, and the Western Contact Group created the framework for
Namibia's democratic constitution. The U.S. Government's role as
mediator was critical throughout the period, one example being the
intense efforts in 1984 to obtain withdrawal of South African defense
forces from Southern Angola.
In May 1988, a U.S. mediation team, headed by Assistant Secretary of
State for African Affairs Chester A. Crocker, brought negotiators from
Angola, Cuba, and South Africa, and observers from the Soviet Union
together in London. Intense diplomatic maneuvering characterized the
next 7 months, as the parties worked out agreements to bring peace to
the region and make implementation of UN Security Council
Resolution 435 possible. On December 13, Cuba, South Africa, and the
People's Republic of Angola agreed to a total Cuban troop withdrawal
from Angola. The protocol also established a Joint Commission,
consisting of the parties with the United States and the Soviet Union as
observers, to oversee implementation of the accords. A bilateral
agreement between Cuba and the People's Republic of Angola was
signed in New York on December 22, 1988. On the same day a
tripartite agreement, in which the parties recommended initiation of the
UN Plan on April 1 and the Republic of South Africa agreed to
withdraw its troops, was signed. Implementation of Resolution 435
officially began on April 1, 1989, when South African-appointed
Administrator General Louis Pienaar officially began administrating
the territory's transition to independence. Special Representative Martti
Ahtisaari arrived in Windhoek to begin performing his duties as head
of the UN Transition Assistance Group (UNTAG).
The transition got off to a shaky start on April 1 because, in
contravention to SWAPO President Sam Nujoma's written assurances
to the UN Secretary General to abide by a cease-fire and repatriate only
unarmed insurgents, approximately 2,000 armed members of the
People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN), SWAPO's military
wing, crossed the border from Angola in an apparent attempt to
establish a military presence in northern Namibia. The special
representative authorized a limited contingent of South African troops
to aid the South West African police in restoring order. A period of
intense fighting followed, during which 375 PLAN fighters were
killed. At Mt. Etjo, a game park outside Windhoek, in a special
meeting of the Joint Commission on April 9, a plan was put in place to
confine the South African forces to base and return PLAN elements to
Angola. While the problem was solved, minor disturbances in the north
continued throughout the transition period. In October, under order of
the UN Security Council, Pretoria demobilized members of the
disbanded counterinsurgency unit, Koevoet (Afrikaans for crowbar),
who had been incorporated into the South West African police.
The 11-month transition period went relatively smoothly. Political
prisoners were granted amnesty, discriminatory legislation was
repealed, South Africa withdrew all its forces from Namibia, and some
42,000 refugees returned safely and voluntarily under the auspices of
the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Almost 98% of registered voters turned out to elect members of the
constituent assembly. The elections were held in November 1989 and
were certified as free and fair by the special representative, with
SWAPO taking 57% of the vote, just short of the two-thirds necessary
to have a free hand in drafting the constitution. The Democratic
Turnhalle Alliance, the opposition party, received 29% of the vote. The
Constituent Assembly held its first meeting on November 21 and its
first act unanimously resolved to use the 1982 Constitutional Principles
as the framework for Namibia's new constitution.
By February 9, 1990, the Constituent Assembly had drafted and
adopted a constitution. March 21, independence day, was attended by
Secretary of State James A. Baker III to represent President Bush. On
that same day, he inaugurated the U.S. Embassy in Windhoek in
recognition of the establishment of diplomatic relations.
On March 1, 1994, the coastal enclave of Walvis Bay and 12 offshore
islands were transferred to Namibia by South Africa. This followed
three years of bilateral negotiations between the two governments and
the establishment of a transitional Joint Administrative Authority
(JAA) in November 1992 to administer the 300 square mile territory.
The peaceful resolution of this territorial dispute, which dated back to
1878, was praised by the U.S. and the international community, as it
fulfilled the provisions of U.N. Security Council 432 (1978) which
declared Walvis Bay to be an integral part of Namibia.
source: U.S. State Department Background Notes 1995