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Victoria Falls is 105 km from Hwange and about 3 km from the border with Zambia where the A8 Highway ends. The P14 Highway to Kazungula runs west for 69 km to the Border Post with Botswana and Namibia. At Kazungula transit vehicles from Botswana and Namibia into Zambia are transported by a bridge across the Zambezi River.
The border post between Zimbabwe and Botswana, 4.5 km (2.8 mi) (by road) south-east of Kazungula Bridge, is also called Kazungula; it is the most direct route leading to Victoria Falls. [8] [citation needed]
Kazungula border post sign. Kazungula is a small border post settlement in Matabeleland North, Zimbabwe close to Botswana, Namibia and Zambia. Just to the west is the Botswana border village of Kazungula, from where there is a bridge for vehicles across the Zambezi River to the town in Zambia also called Kazungula. Kazungula is linked by a ...
Kazungula, Zambia –Kazungula, ... Zambia–Zimbabwe. Victoria Falls Bridge: road and rail bridge Livingstone, Zambia–Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe: 1905 [6] open ...
Here, it reaches a junction, where the road northwards proceeds to Zambia via the Kazungula Bridge (crossing the Zambezi River and becoming the M19 road on the other side of the border) (the border town on the Zambian side is also called Kazungula) and the road eastwards proceeds to Zimbabwe (to Victoria Falls) (the border with Zimbabwe is also ...
One of the two pontoon ferries that cross the Zambezi at Kazungula The Kazungula Ferry was a pontoon ferry across the 400-metre-wide (1,300 ft) Zambezi River between Botswana and Zambia . It was one of the largest ferries in south-central Africa, having a capacity of 70 tonnes (69 long tons; 77 short tons). [ 1 ]
Here the Kazungula border post serves the Kazungula Bridge crossing to Kazungula in Zambia on the north bank of the Zambezi. Nearby a second border post serves the road into Zimbabwe which runs 70 kilometres (43 mi) east to Victoria Falls.
The river forms the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe, so the falls are shared by the two countries, and the park is twin to the Victoria Falls National Park on the Zimbabwean side. [3] ‘Mosi-oa-Tunya’ comes from the Kololo or Lozi language, and the name is now used throughout Zambia and in parts of Zimbabwe. [3]