Years ago, before I’d even visited Namibia or heard of Kolmanskop, my friend JP du Toit told me about Pomona. It used to be a diamond-mining town in the Sperrgebiet, a strip of desert that stretches for 280 km north of Oranjemund, with a surface area of 26 000 km² – bigger than Israel.
The desert might seem hostile, but there are riches below the surface. The Germans realised this and declared it off-limits in 1908. Since then, about 10 % of the Sperrgebiet has been mined for diamonds and access has been strictly controlled.
Unlike Kolmanskop, which you can see from the B4 tar road 10 km inland from Lüderitz, Pomona is about 60 km further south, in the middle of the desert.
“Pomona is spooky but not creepy,”…
