Aminuis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aminuis | |
|---|---|
Aminuis from bird's eye view (2017) | |
| Coordinates: 23°38′00″S 19°22′00″E / 23.63333°S 19.36667°E | |
| Country | |
| Region | Omaheke Region |
| Constituency | Aminuis Constituency |
| Time zone | UTC+2 (South African Standard Time) |
| Climate | BWh |
Aminuis is a cluster of small settlements in the remote eastern part of the Omaheke Region of Namibia, located about 500 km east of Windhoek.[1] It is the district capital of the Aminuis electoral constituency.
Aminuis features a post office and police station. Many government ministries have dependencies in the settlement.[1] The Catholic Church operates a parish, Our Lady of Perpetual Succour in Aminuis; it belongs to the Archdiocese of Windhoek.[2] The Roman Catholic Church is the oldest church in Aminuis. Other churches include Oruuano Church, Zion Christian Church (ZCC), St Phellips, and a Born Again church.
The village is riddled by poverty and joblessness. The main economic activity is subsistence farming with cattle, goats and sheep but frequent droughts make this difficult. The Tswana people used to mine salt from a nearby pan but went out of business after they could not meet the demand that it be iodised.[1]
Education
There are a number of schools in the Aminuis area:
- Roman Catholic Mokaleng Combined School, a school founded by missionaries in 1902[1]
- Rietquelle Junior Secondary School, Rietquelle,[3] founded in 1935 as first government school for the indigenous population.[4] Founder and at first sole teacher at the school was Otto Schimming.[5][6]
- Motsomi Primary School[7]
- Hosea Kutako Primary School, built in 1974 with a capacity of 900 learners[7]
- Dr. Fisher Primary School.
