
CREDIT: SPLASH NEWS

CREDIT: SARA JAYE WEISS / INF

CREDIT: RAMEY
WINDHOEK - Namibia has offered citizenship to the new baby girl of
Hollywood couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, born near the western town of
Swakopmund.
Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt was born at 1:40 am (0040 GMT) near
Swakopmund, some 400 kilometers (250 miles) from Windhoek, the capital of the
southern African country, said Environment and Tourism Deputy Minister Leon
Jooste.
"It is with enormous pleasure that I inform the Namibian nation about the
birth of Angelina's healthy baby girl early this morning," Jooste said in a
statement.
"The entire procedure went according to plan and there were no medical or
other complications at all."
"Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt will according to Namibian law be allowed to obtain
Namibian citizenship if the parents should choose to do so," he said, adding
that a Namibian passport for the new arrival would be discussed with the parents
"at a later stage."
The girl is the couple's first biological child.
Jolie adopted two children, Maddox from Cambodia in 2002 and Zahara from
Ethiopia last year. Their surnames have been changed to Jolie-Pitt.
The golden couple and the two adopted children checked into the Burning Shore
beach resort in early April, where their bodyguards and Namibian police have
shielded them from paparazzi.
The new parents are "thoroughly overjoyed", Jooste added, "and they have
expressed their happiness to be able to share this experience in Namibia".
Jolie, 30, and Pitt, 42, will remain in Namibia for some time to allow mother
and daughter to recuperate, Jooste said.
The movie stars, who became close during the filming of the movie "Mr. and
Mrs. Smith" last year, "expressed their deepest appreciation for the love,
warmth and kindness of the Namibian people as well as understanding from all
during this special and sensitive time", according to the statement.
Jolie has helped draw world attention to Africa through her work as goodwill
ambassador for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
She has been welcomed by the Namibian government which has asked the press to
respect the couple's privacy. Three French paparazzi and a South African
photographer were ordered to leave the country for trying to take snaps of
Jolie.
Jolie visited the desert country and former German colony in 2002 for the
filming of the movie "Beyond Borders".
"This is delightful news and it is an honour for our country, Namibia," said
local Governor Samuel Nuuyoma.
"The birth of a baby is something very special in our African tradition," he
told AFP by phone from Swakopmund.
There was speculation that Jolie had opted to have a water birth at the
private Welwitschia hospital near Swakopmund, but staff at the clinic were
tight-lipped on Sunday.
"We may not say anything to the media. We had to sign papers that we would
not reveal anything to reporters," said a hospital staff member.
Local journalist Donna Collins said Jolie may have given birth at the beach
resort.
"There was no movement of the usual Jolie-Pitt convoy of vehicles last
night," she said.
The owner of the Burning Shore hotel at Langstrand, just outside of
Swapokmund, declined to give details of one of the celebrity world's most
anticipated arrivals.
"I cannot give you any details about the birth," said Guenther Heimstaedt.
"All announcements are handled in Los Angeles."