Angelina Jolie took son Maddox Jolie-Pitt around
the town of Swakopmund, Namibia's second biggest town and traditional "summer
capital."
SWAKOPMUND, Namibia - Paparazzi gathered in Namibia are pacing the
floor like anxious fathers in a maternity ward.
With tabloids predicting
the imminent arrival of the most famous celebrity baby of the year, Hollywood
stars Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt remained almost invisible in their remote
Namibian resort, ducking reporters intent on getting a career-making scoop.
Despite a widely reported due date of May 18, there was little sign on
Thursday the baby was about to make its appearance -- leaving gossip hounds
panting for news.
A local newspaper on Thursday quoted sources saying Jolie was to give birth
within the next two days, possibly opting for a home birth with a special
aircraft on standby.
"Jolie ... is expected to go into labor in the next 48 hours," the Namibian
said under the banner headline "Jolie-Pitt baby expected shortly."
There are three private hospitals in the two closest towns of Walvis Bay and
Swakopmund.
But other baby-watchers have concluded the real due date could still be weeks
away, making for an even longer wait for what one New York magazine dubbed the
most eagerly anticipated birth since Jesus.
Residents of the southern African desert country known chiefly for its giant
sand dunes say they are confounded by the relentless media interest in their
famous guests, who arrived six weeks ago with adopted children Maddox and
Zahara.
"I think it is such a big fuss, I couldn't give a damn to be quite honest. I
feel sorry for them, they should just be left alone," said Ingrid Wheal, who
owns a local curio shop.
TOUGH SECURITY
The arrival of Pitt, 42, and Jolie, 30, -- dubbed "Brangelina" by the tabloid
press -- in Namibia six weeks ago created a media frenzy that prompted the
stars' bodyguards and security to try hound journalists out of town.
Reporters that remain lurk in coffee shops or quietly scout the area,
latching onto any movement or scrap of information from the lodge, and keeping a
low profile out of fear of possible deportation.
Green cloth screens mask the beach resort, while pepper-spraying bodyguards
and police in camouflage have made the task almost impossible.
Security around the lodge was heightened even further on Thursday, as
bodyguards cased the surrounds for prying lensmen hoping to earn the
multimillion-dollar paycheck the first pictures of the baby are expected to
earn.
The Daily Mirror in London reported the couple has signed a deal with a U.S.
weekly magazine for the baby's first pictures.
"They've signed a 2.6 million ($5 million) deal with a publication and the
money will go to children's charity UNICEF," the tabloid quoted a source close
to the couple as saying.
"Angelina's very private but they figured they might as well use the
opportunity of one child being born to help a lot of others."
Namibia, a country of deserts and diamonds neighboring South Africa, was seen
as a perfect getaway for Jolie, with its sparse population largely unfazed by
the Hollywood buzz.
Jolie spent months in the area while filming "Beyond Borders," largely
unrecognized by the local residents.