Amathole District Municipality

The Amathole District Municipality (Xhosa: uMasipala weSithili sase Amathole) is one of the 7 districts of the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The seat is East London. As of 2011, over 90% of its 892,637 inhabitants spoke isiXhosa. The district code is DC12. Amathole means "calves", the name of the mountain range and forest which forms the northern boundary of the district.[3]

Amathole
Amatola District
Official seal of Amathole
Location in South Africa
Location in South Africa
Coordinates: 32°30′S 27°30′E / 32.500°S 27.500°E / -32.500; 27.500
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceEastern Cape
SeatEast London
Local municipalities
Government
 • TypeMunicipal council
 • MayorKhanyile Maneli (ANC)
 • Deputy MayorNomfusi Winnie Nxawe (ANC)
Area
 • Total21,595 km2 (8,338 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[2]
 • Total892,637
 • Density41/km2 (110/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
 • Black African97.2%
 • Coloured1.5%
 • Indian/Asian0.1%
 • White1.0%
First languages (2011)
 • Xhosa93.6%
 • English2.3%
 • Afrikaans2.1%
 • Other2%
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
Municipal codeDC12

Government edit

The Executive Mayor of Amathole District Municipality since 2016 is Khanyile Maneli, the Deputy Mayor is Nomfusi Winnie Nxawe and the Municipal Manager is Thandekile Themba Mnyimba.

Geography edit

Neighbours edit

Amathole is surrounded by:

Local municipalities edit

The district contains the following local municipalities:

Local municipality Population %
Mnquma 252,390 28.27%
Mbhashe 254,909 28.56%
Amahlathi 122,778 13.75%
Ngqushwa 72,190 8.09%
Great Kei 38,991 4.37%
Raymond Mhlaba 151,379 16.96%

Raymond Mhlaba Local Municipality, following amalgamation of Nxuba (24,264; 2.72%) and Nkonkobe (127,115; 14.24%)] municipalities.

Demographics edit

The following statistics are from the 2011 census.

Languages edit

Language Population %
Xhosa 817,395 93.62%
English 19,647 2.25%
Afrikaans 18,230 2.09%
Sign language 5,164 0.59%
Zulu 2,637 0.30%
Other 2,391 0.27%
Sotho 2,069 0.24%
Northern Sotho 1,741 0.20%
Ndebele 1,691 0.19%
Tswana 1,167 0.13%
Venda 401 0.05%
Swati 345 0.04%
Tsonga 250 0.03%

Gender edit

Gender Population %
Female 473,389 53.03%
Male 419,247 46.97%

Ethnic group edit

Ethnic group Population %
Black African 868,017 97.24%
Coloured 13,133 1.47%
White 8,949 1.00%
Indian/Asian 1,126 0.13%

Age edit

Age Population %
000 - 004 147,098 8.84%
005 - 009 192,361 11.56%
010 - 014 216,586 13.01%
015 - 019 208,995 12.56%
020 - 024 146,750 8.82%
025 - 029 115,632 6.95%
030 - 034 99,327 5.97%
035 - 039 96,666 5.81%
040 - 044 92,560 5.56%
045 - 049 77,430 4.65%
050 - 054 59,027 3.55%
055 - 059 47,029 2.83%
060 - 064 53,352 3.21%
065 - 069 38,858 2.33%
070 - 074 31,716 1.91%
075 - 079 18,830 1.13%
080 - 084 15,262 0.92%
085 - 089 4,022 0.24%
090 - 094 2,026 0.12%
095 - 099 559 0.03%
100 plus 173 0.01%

Politics edit

Election results edit

Election results for Amathole in the South African general election, 2004.

  • Population 18 and over: 979,166 [58.83% of total population]
  • Total votes: 630,953 [37.91% of total population]
  • Voting % estimate: 64.44% votes as a % of population 18 and over
Party Votes %
African National Congress 523,630 82.99%
United Democratic Movement 50,559 8.01%
Democratic Alliance 32,467 5.15%
Pan Africanist Congress of Azania 7,627 1.21%
African Christian Democratic Party 4,492 0.71%
Independent Democrats 3,680 0.58%
New National Party 2,600 0.41%
Freedom Front Plus 795 0.13%
Inkhata Freedom Party 785 0.12%
Azanian People's Organisation 765 0.12%
SOPA 740 0.12%
United Christian Democratic Party 625 0.10%
EMSA 407 0.06%
Peace and Justice Congress 400 0.06%
UF 293 0.05%
National Alliance 269 0.04%
Christian Democratic Party 257 0.04%
TOP 236 0.04%
Keep It Straight and Simple Party 132 0.02%
New Labour Party 109 0.02%
Minority Front 85 0.01%
Total 630,953 100.00%

Maladministration edit

As of January 2024, the municipality is under administration, one of 32 in the country, and three in the Eastern Cape where the provincial executive has intervened due to maladministration[4]

References edit

  1. ^ "Contact list: Executive Mayors". Government Communication & Information System. Archived from the original on 14 July 2010. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  2. ^ a b c "Statistics by place". Statistics South Africa. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  3. ^ du Plessis, E.J. (1973). Suid-Afrikaanse berg- en riviername. Tafelberg-uitgewers, Cape Town. p. 68. ISBN 0-624-00273-X.
  4. ^ Thorne, Seth. "South Africa's 32 most 'dysfunctional' municipalities". Businesstech. Retrieved 13 January 2024.

External links edit