SOUTHEAST NIGERIA
Anambra
offers many exciting attractions throughout the area, including the Ogbunike
caves, Agulu Lake, Igbo-Ukwu archaeological excavations and the Aguleri
Game Reserve. Onitsha, located on the Eastern bank of
the River Niger, is famous for its robust market and commercial activity.
The traditional Ofala festivals, performed by royalty in Anambra, are
rare pageants of color and fanfare. Calabar is an attractive city on the
bank of the New Calabar River, near its confluence with the Cross River,
which has a long history as the regional port of eastern Nigeria. Residents
here trace their ancestots back to Babylon before the time of Christ.
First visited by the Portuguese at the end of the 15th Century, Calabar
is also the center from which many missionaries ventured forth in the
19th and 20th centuries, including Mary Slessor, who arrived in Calabar
in 1875. Places of interest include the National Museum in the old Residency
Building. The building was prefabricated, shipped from Britain and erected
atop Consular Hill in 1884, later known as Government Hill. The museum
itself is history, a vibrant colonial stylecitadel commanding superb views
of Calabar and the Calabar River. The museum traces the history of Calabar
and the surrounding areas in a spacious setting. Enugu
is the center of the Nigerian coal industry, situated in attractive, hilly
country with wide roads and expressways and main arteries leading north,
south, east and west.Sites in Enugu include a branch of the National Museum,
the Iva Valley Coal Mine Museum (where coal was first mined in 1909),
and University of Nigeria faculties. It also boasts one of the best hotels
in Nigeria, the Nike Lake Hotel. Oron is in the southeast
corner of the Akwa-Jbom State, on the Cross River, and is worth visiting
for its National Museum. The Museum, overlooking the river, encases the
history of the local Ibibo people plus an important collection of wooden
Ekpo memorial carvings that portray the male ancestors of the Ibibo people,
believed to be two to three centuries old
Owerri is predominantly inhabited by the Igbo penpIe.
The Igbos are renowned for their music and dancing, especially the colorful
masquerades in which the dancers wear elaborate masks. Places of interest
include an amusement park, the Nekede Botanical and Zoological Gardens,
the Palm Beach Tourist Village at Awomama and the Oguta Lake Holiday Resort,
which has recently developed into an international tourist center.
Port Harcourt is the capital of River State and is the
center of the oil industry in Nigeria. It is called "The Garden City"
because of its abundance of trees and parks. Now the second most important
port in Nigeria, Port Harcourt did not exist before 1913. Nearby are the
two historic ports of Bonny and Brass, formerly connected with the slave
trade, but which now serve as oil ports and terminals. The town is a good
base from which to explore the local creek villages and towns. The local
people include Elk, Kalabari and Ibos, not to mention British, French,
American and Dutch, who work in the oil fields.
Sites include the State Museum, which features many examples of local
culture including masks and carvings. The Cultural Center on Bonny Street
has a stage and auditorium for plays, dancing and a shop where tourists
can purchase local handicrafts. The Azumint Blue River sports beautiful
clear water with sandy beaches. Tourists can rent canoes for a ride down
the river to stop at a beachside picnic site, outfitted with wooden chairs,
tables and grills for a pleasant riverside barbecue.
Umuahia is home to the National War Museum where relics
of the Nigerian civil war are on display, including weapons and fascinating
local inventions. Other attractions include the Akwette Blue River Tourist
Village and Uwana Beach. Visitors to Akwette will be impressed with its
unique weaving industry.
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