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Africa’s treasured islands

Cheaper than the Caribbean and warmer than the Canaries — Cape Verde is a winner for winter sun adventures

- Mark Palmer TRAVEL EDITOR by KIT HESKETH- HARVEY

Dear Reader

RISHI dispensed with the perk that allowed overseas visitors to claim back VAT on purchases made in the UK.

Then Kwasi (remember him?) reinstated it and now Jeremy — the Prime Minister in all but name who, in a week’s time, won’t be Prime Minister either in name or in person — has axed it once more.

This leaves Britain plc as the only major economy not to offer inbound tourists VAT-free shopping. The Chancellor says ‘ not proceeding with the scheme is worth about £2 billion a year’ and clearly the Treasury needs all the money it can find.

But the Associatio­n of Internatio­nal Retail says it’s a ‘ hammer blow’ for British retailers and will encourage high-end internatio­nal tourists to spend their money in France and Italy rather than Britain in the important run- up to Christmas.

We all know tough decisions have to be made, but this seems short-sighted, not least because Britain has the chance to be the only major European country where the EU’s 447 million citizens can shop tax-free.

And since most regional airports only serve destinatio­ns in the EU, it would boost economic growth up and down the land.

We put on a terrific show following the death of the Queen last month and no doubt we will do the same for the Coronation next spring.

Inbound tourists are badly needed. We should be doing everything possible to woo them.

EVERYONE here is beautiful. The women, eyeing the men, sashay slimly by in their tightcut dresses, their thick coils of ringlets piled high. The men, 6ft plus, dignified, long-legged, with fine foreheads, eye them back. The children, whimper-out-loud adorable, are eyeing the stray dogs. And even the dogs are healthy and sleek. I had touched down here briefly once before, unschedule­d on a transatlan­tic flight.

One of the other passengers apparently had died. But I knew nothing then about this extraordin­ary archipelag­o, out there in the middle of the ocean.

I should have done. you should. It is

called Cape verde. Nowhere else is particular­ly close. brazil is a five-and-a-half hour flight, the UK, six.

The nearest landfall, Dakar, is 400 0 miles away. In the 1460s, Portuguese se explorers were zig-zagging down the he west coast of africa. one big zig led ed them to these ten islands, where, re, miraculous­ly, they discovered a freshwater spring. No need to zag ag any further.

Cape verde would become a crucial ial stopover for shipping routes, airlines nes and geopolitic­s. Incorporat­ed in 1951 951 as an overseas department of Portugal, its inhabitant­s continued ued to campaign for independen­ce. They hey finally achieved it in 1975.

More than likely, coming from thehe UK, you’ll fly into the islands’ capital, Praia, on santiago Island. Most of your fellow passengers will be package-holiday families, heading for the powder-white sand and azure sea of the island called boa vista. at european longitudes, there is no jet lag. ‘And beaches to suit all comers,’ a chatty Nhs nurse on the plane from birmingham had told me.

‘Kite-surfers, lounger-lizards, turtle-watchers, deep- sea fishermen, honeymoone­rs . . .’ Near to the Tropics, freshened by atlantic breezes, Cape verde’s winter sunshine is cheaper than the Caribbean and warmer than the Canaries.

At Arrivals, the tour guides wait, with comfortabl­e taxis and quiet good manners. Mine is santiago, named after the island. He is wearing an arsenal strip and baseball cap.

He takes me to Praia’s swish ocean hotel, sited spectacula­rly on a cliff, where pharmaceut­ical Ceos, russian families, a U.S. military VIP and Chinese mining magnates all whisper in huddles and glance towards africa. by contrast, lunch the next day is at a pavement restaurant, Mar di baizo, on the north-west of the island.

It’s delicious. Caldeirada de peixe: fish braised in a spiced broth of carrot, yam and green banana. Plenty for both of us, and it cost a tenner. We’d been to see Cidade velha, that first Portugese settlement and now a UNESCO World heritage site.

The miraculous freshwater spring still burbles. There’s a sprawling fortress on a mountain top, a cathedral razed by pirates, a couple of one-storey streets.

Its little vaulted church was built by the Jesuits, who were evidently capable of turning a blind eye to the slave market a cobbleston­e’s throw away. at this Crewe junction of the slaving routes, the hideous trade roared for centuries.

Its physical scars are disappeari­ng, yet the history clouds descendant­s faces with a touch of melancholy. Many still are forced to work abroad: santiago’s wife is a nurse in Cardiff. ‘ex-wife’, he qualifies, with a sad shake of his head.

santiago suggests we visit the beautiful botanic Gardens, or hike in the mighty mountains. but for me the islands’ more profound fascinatio­n lies in the shadows.

after independen­ce, the republic endured a quasi-Cuban Communist tyranny. Tarrafal is a museum: a concentrat­ion camp in which opponents of the regime died in the heat of their cells.

santiago repeats that shake of his head, removes his cap and waits for me outside. all I can murmur as I reemerge is that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.

It was russian aeroflot flight crews who, at Communism’s collapse, spotted a potential tourist industry.

DECADES on, the new airports spread across the archipelag­o are convenient and efficient. The variety of the islands is astonishin­g. From each, you see the next beckoning.

‘In brava,’ says santiago, ‘the water supply is not so good. They have black teeth. sal is the windsurfin­g island. Maio and santa luzia are protected reserves, with rare sea birds on the lagoon, strange reptiles, hump-backed whales. sao vicente is where the artists, the musicians go. Their carnival is better than rio.’

Then there’s Fogo, known for its crisp white wine, modestly priced and remarkably good. ‘ over there, see? Fogo. Island of fire.’

The flight to Fogo takes you over the volcano’s crater. The last eruption, in 2014, engulfed much of the island which hadn’t already been blown to bits. like black candlewax, jagged layers of spilt lava solidified as they hissed towards a charcoal shoreline. Whole villages were buried, the tops of churches poking through apocalypti­c pumice.

but, say Fogoans, ‘what the volcano takes, it gives back’. The soil is of miraculous fertility.

The subsistenc­e farmers rebuild their cottages on top of the originals and chance the next eruption: due, apparently, in about 2034.

For the time being, urchins like chimney-sweeps sift through spoil-heaps to pay for their school supplies while mangoes ripen purple and pendulous in the fierce sun.

a series of 19th- century squares processes up from Fogo’s harbour. here are the sobrados, the merchant mansions: slaves and stock downstairs, family upstairs.

one such is my hotel, the Colonial, restored by the most remarkable man I have met here. vincent Marten is a force of Danish nature.

Colossally-muscled, inked as a mercenary, he is a marlin fisherman straight out of hemingway, a salvager of wrecks, ice- hockey player for Canada, boatbuilde­r, authority on Portugese colonial architectu­re and an interior designer to knock shoreditch out cold. ‘I buy a ruin. I put on Dire straits and sit alone in the room to work out how to bring it all together,’ he says.

There is a power cut, but it matters not a jot. Candleligh­t gleams on massive interior shutters and across a lofty ceiling. above the antique bed, the headboard has been fashioned by vincent from industrial corrugated iron. Turkish rugs, Madagascan sea chests, carved english fauteuils. I feel like rimbaud in his final years.

Out into Fogo’s starlit streets and I find the Tropical Club, where we eat whelks and percebes (goose barnacles), and then a grouper, poached in madeira sauce. That the bill climbs to £30 I blame upon the local grog: light rum with a heavy punch.

We are joined informally — because everything on Fogo is informal — by honeymoone­rs from the next table. He is the black sheep of an Angolan political dynasty, who ran away to join the Foreign Legion: she, a beautiful Swiss doctor, heiress to a cheese fortune. Visitors to Cape Verde, I conclude, are more interestin­g than most.

Morabeza means ‘hospitalit­y’ in Creole: the secret language of the slaves, now defiantly reclaimed as the lingua franca.

On the island of Sal, the Hotel Morabeza defines it beautifull­y. Spacious, cool rooms overlook pools and, beyond them, a safe and golden beach.

Formal dinner, served beneath white lanterns, is reminiscen­t of the Cap d’Antibes but without the hefty price tag. Breakfast is plentiful, and includes cachupa, the corn and fish stew which is the national dish.

Along the beach boardwalk to Sal’s windsurfin­g playground­s, the locals sing funana: those beguiling, half- way- to- Brazil call-and-responses, accompanie­d on the accordion.

Preppy North Europeans are measured up for one-offs by the African tailors: beach-robes in vivid, hand-painted Ghanaian textiles, at £30 a pop.

In a rocky global market, what are Cape Verde’s chances of sustaining its high reputation for tourism?

A layover British cabin crew at a cafe tells me that, whereas two years ago they didn’t rate its odds, they now do. One of them imports Winalot for the local dog charity.

At Departures, saluting farewell in his Arsenal cap, Santiago’s sad head-shake turns to a quiet chuckle. He knows I’m sold on Cape Verde.

TRAVEL FACTS

KIT travelled with Cape Verde Experience ( capeverde.co.uk) whose island-hopping packages to Sal, Santiago and Fogo, start from £2,099pp for seven nights plus flights.

The variety of islands is astonishin­g... and the carnival is better than Rio’s

 ?? Pictures: GETTY/ISTOCKPHOT­O/SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Rugged charm: Beautiful Tarrafal beach on the island of Santiago in Cape Verde
Pictures: GETTY/ISTOCKPHOT­O/SHUTTERSTO­CK Rugged charm: Beautiful Tarrafal beach on the island of Santiago in Cape Verde
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 ?? ?? Historic: Church on the island of Fogo
Historic: Church on the island of Fogo
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 ?? ?? Colourful: Market on Santiago island and, above, Cape Verde is home to carnivals
Colourful: Market on Santiago island and, above, Cape Verde is home to carnivals

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