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Botswana Travel Guide - Overview
Outstandingly dramatic,
Botswana encompasses striking salt pans, diamond-rich deserts
and fertile flood plains which teem with game. The north, in particular,
offers superb wildlife-watching
opportunities, making this one of southern Africa's top
safari destinations.
A sizable proportion of the country - over 40% - is given over to
national parks,
reserves and private concessions,
where
tourists crane
their necks out of jeeps to check out the roving animals. But Botswana's
policy of favouring low-impact luxury
tourism ensures
that even the most famous game-viewing areas rarely feel crowded.
The jewel in Botswana's crown is, without a doubt, the
Okavango Delta - the largest inland
delta in the world. Its seasonal lagoons
and waterways are crammed with hovering birds,
while zebras and
giraffes amble across vast grass flats.
Northeast of here is Chobe
National Park,
home to gigantic elephant herds, some
of them 400-strong.
Botswana is one of Africa's success stories. Since gaining independence
in 1966, it has achieved steady economic growth through successful
exploitation of its agricultural potential and its enviable diamond
reserves. It has
not escaped controversy - the HIV/AIDS pandemic and alleged maltreatment
of the Kalahari
Bushmen have caused international concern - but it remains a
peaceful and stable nation of remarkable natural beauty.

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