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Sub-Saharan Africa
As a result of their shared history, Namibia and Germany are linked by a special relationship. Namibia was a German colony from 1884 to 1915. It was during this period that the Herero, Nama and Damara rose up against German colonial rule. The uprising was violently crushed by German troops (most decisively at the Battle of Waterberg in 1904). How many died is a matter of historical dispute: depending on the source consulted, figures vary at between 30 and 80 per cent of the Herero people. Many of the survivors were forced into compulsory labour or interned in camps. Members of many other ethnic groups were either driven off their land or forced to work on German farms.
Namibian-German relations
The German government acknowledges the country's special historic and moral responsibility toward Namibia. The German Bundestag introduced this notion of Germany's special responsibility toward Namibia in its Namibia resolution of 1989, and reaffirmed it expressly in its resolution of 2004. The German government is meeting this responsibility through increased bilateral cooperation, most of which involves development cooperation. This is also reflected in the scale of German development funding for Namibia, which receives higher per capita inputs than any other country in Africa. Development cooperation is an integral component and a cornerstone of the special relationship.
The German government is determined to strengthen the special bond of partnership and friendship between the two countries. Back in 1991, soon after independence, both countries concluded a cultural agreement, encompassing cooperation in the areas of research and higher education, language promotion, media, film, literature and sport. In addition to Germany’s implementing organisations of official development cooperation, many German non-governmental organisations and private initiatives are actively engaged in Namibia.
German Embassy

German Embassy in Namibia
Sanlam Centre, 6th Floor
154 Independence Avenue
Windhoek
Namibia
Phone: +264 / 61 / 27 31 00
Fax: +264 / 61 / 22 29 81






