Taveta, Kenya


Taveta is a town in the Taita-Taveta County, Kenya.

Location

Taveta town is wedged into a projection of Kenyan territory bordered on the north and west by Tanzania.
The town lies at the border with Tanzania, directly across from the town of Holili. This is approximately, by road, west of Voi, the nearest large town, on the Arusha–Holili–Taveta–Voi Road. This lies approximately, by road southeast of Nairobi, the capital and largest city in Kenya. The coordinates of the town are:3°23'44.0"S, 37°40'34.0"E. In addition to Mount Kilimanjaro, Taveta also enjoys proximity to Lake Chala, a volcanic freshwater lake of extraordinary depth.

Overview

Taveta thrives as a point of commerce between Kenya and Tanzania, with a twice-weekly outdoor market especially large for a town of its size. The market is fueled in part by Taveta's rail connection through Voi with the Mombasa-Nairobi-Kampala line, built during the era of British Kenya. Large numbers of people walk across the border from Tanzania to buy and sell wares in Taveta; smuggled goods such as Tanzanian rubies and coffee are occasionally available there.
Taveta Town is a fast-growing town. The Town Council of Taveta has acquired a former sisal plantation for town expansion. All government border offices are located some, west of the central business district of the town, towards the border with Tanzania, with modern new office premises. The Holili/Taveta customs and immigration post is a One Stop Border Post.
The current Member of Parliament for Taveta Constituency, which is largely the district and by extension the town, is Dr. Naomi Shaaban. She is a third term Member of Parliament.
At one time, Taveta has had several Members of Parliament from different tribes, namely Mwacharo Kubo a taita, Norman Lukindo a kamba, Jackson Mwalulu a kamba, Alex Dingiria, Othinel Mnene, Naomi Shaaban, all Tavetas, and even a Kenyan of Greek origin, Basil Criticos.

Population

, the urban center had a population of 22,018. The main ethnicities in Taveta are the Taveta and Kamba tribes.