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- <text id=93CT1610>
- <title>
- Benin--Travel
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Northern Africa
- Benin
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- Travel
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Climate and clothing: Lightweight, washable clothing is
- appropriate in the hot, humid climate. The harmattan, a
- dust-ladden wind, blows in December and January. Shorts are
- generally not worn on the streets.
- </p>
- <p> Customs: A visa and health certificate with a valid yellow
- fever inoculation are required for entry. Health requirements
- change; check latest information. Visas may be obtained from
- the Benin Embassy in Washington, DC, or from the Benin Mission
- to the United Nations in New York. Benin will not issue visas
- in passports containing Taiwanese, Israeli, or South African
- visas. Exit visas are required after stays in Benin. Benin has
- no restrictions on importation of currency, but there may be
- limits on taking out CFA francs. For full and current
- information on visas and other requirements check with the
- Embassy of Benin.
- </p>
- <p> Health: Water is generally not potable and must be boiled
- and filtered. Food must be prepared carefully. Malaria,
- including strains which resist the usual chloroquine
- prophylaxis, is endemic, and hepatitis is a hazard. Cotonou is
- latitude 6 north of the Equator; precaution against sun exposure
- is advised to avoid sunstroke and heat exhaustion. Limited
- quantities of French patent medicine are available.
- </p>
- <p> Telecommunications: Telephone service from Cotonou is good
- but expensive. Cotonou is 6 hours ahead of eastern standard
- time.
- </p>
- <p> Transportation: International air service to Benin is via
- Abidjan, Paris, and Brussels. UTA, Air Afrique, Sabena,
- Nigerian Airlines, Ghana Airways, Aeroflot, Air Burkina, Air
- Zaire, and Air Ivoire serve Cotonou. Air connections to Europe
- also can be made through Lome and Lagos. Two rail lines service
- the coast,and a third extends north to Parakou. Roads between
- Cotonou and Lagos and Lome are good. Many roads in Benin are in
- poor condition and, in the north, are often impassable during
- the rainy season. Spare parts and repair services are available
- for French cars. Both Honda and Toyota have dealerships in
- Cotonou, but models may differ from US models.
- </p>
- <p> Hotels: Cotonou has an international class hotel, the Benin
- Sheraton, opened in 1982. The Hotel Aledjo, run by the
- French-PLM chain, also is first class. Less expensive is the
- Hotel de la Plage. In the north, the PLM runs an excellent
- hotel in Natitingou-the Tata-Somba. There is a good hotel in
- Parakou (Les Routiers). For trips to the Pendjari game park,
- there is a small (21-room) hotel in Porga. Abomey also has an
- adequate hotel.
- </p>
- <p> Tourist attraction: Pendjari, a game reserve in northern
- Benin, is open from November to May. There are antelope,
- elephants, hippopotami, caymans, lions, cheetahs, baboons,an
- birds. A museum in Abomey,located in the old Royal Palace, is
- devoted to the Kingdom of Dahomey. In Ouidah, a museum has been
- established in the former Portuguese fort. Exhibits focus on
- the slave trade and Benin's links with Brazil and the Caribbean.
- The museum in Porto Novo has a small but good collection of
- traditional masks and statues. Another well-publicized tourist
- attraction is the village of Ganvie, one of the fishing
- villages built on stilts in the middle of a lagoon. One can
- visit Ganvie by motor-canoe run by the National Tourist
- Organization.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- March 1989.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-