Wacca


Wacca is a town in central Ethiopia. Located in the Dawro Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples' Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of with an elevation of 2220 meters above sea level. It is the largest town in Mareka woreda.
Wacca is reported as having a telephone station in the 1930s, but this service had vanished by 1994. Two roads connecting the town to the outside world, one to Chida 73 kilometers in length and the other to Sodo 75 kilometers long, were under construction by 1996. The contractor was the Italian firm of Salini Costruttori. These roads were completed in late 1998/early 1999. The town is also served by an airport.

History

visited Wacca when he was the British resident in southern Ethiopia, where he shared a meal with a local chief which he obviously did not enjoy:
The Sudan Interior Mission had a station at Wacca from 1952 until it was nationalized in 1988 and the buildings used as a school. Foreign travelers who came to the station in early 1965 found the original missionaries still in residence, and learned they were the first non-natives to visit the station in three years. A visitor in 1972 described Wacca as a town on top of a mountain, with a post office, a pharmacy, and an Ethiopian Orthodox church. Most buildings had iron sheet roofs and there were numerous eucalyptus trees. In 1995, the local school participated in an experimental curriculum to teach subjects in the Gamo-Gofa-Dawro language.

Demographics

Based on figures from the Central Statistical Agency in 2005, Wacca has an estimated total population of 3,439 of whom 3,424 were men and 6,863 were women.
The 1994 census reported Wacca had a total population of 3,788 of whom 1,904 were men and 1,884 were women. The five largest ethnic groups reported for this town were the Kullo, the Amhara, the Oromo, the Konta, and the Gurage ; all other ethnic groups made up 4.77% of the population. Kullo is spoken as a first language by 89%, 6.47% Amharic, 0.98% spoke Konta, and 0.84% spoke Oromiffa; the remaining 2.81% spoke all other primary languages reported.