Opinions

Presidential consultations with Okandjoze Chiefs Assembly was expectedly a façade 

Presidential consultations with Okandjoze Chiefs Assembly was expectedly a façade 

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro Lately various instances have been running in and out of State House for what the Presidency has been billing as the conventional, but in the parlance of the first lap of the 8th administration, perhaps it is the business unusual of Her Excellency’s democratic credentials of openness, punctuated, among others, by consultations with certain entities.  So far for most of them, if not all of them, in their various and respective hues and sizes, as well as differing outlooks, political parties and/or formations; traditional authorities and/or leaders of traditional communities; chiefs; paramount chiefs; kings – call them what…
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Stopping the ‘Disneyfication’ of Namibia 

Stopping the ‘Disneyfication’ of Namibia 

Prof Uchendu Eugene Chigbu One humid morning, on a flight from Kampala to Windhoek via Johannesburg, I had a conversation with someone that later made me think twice about tourism in Namibia. A lady had just boarded the plane and moved to sit next to me. She buckled her seat belt and took out a tablet, keen to put her time to use.  “I’m Elke. Are you also stopping in South Africa?” she asked, looking sternly at me. “I’m flying to Namibia,” I replied. Surprised by my response, she kicked off a long story of her escapades travelling through Namibia…
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Apparent haste by parly committee on uranium exploration in Omaheke suspect

Apparent haste by parly committee on uranium exploration in Omaheke suspect

Kae Matundu Tjiparuro The report and/or the derivatives of the report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Natural Resources cannot but be highly suspect. Regarding the exploration of uranium in the region of Omahake, specifically in the Stampriet area by Headspring Investments, a subsidiary of the Russian energy company. A matter the local media has lately been zeroing in on. But at variance.  One headlining its story on the exploration of uranium is hanging in the balance. While the subsequent informed and reported on the Parliament’s Standing Committee on Natural Resources’ love and/or favourable inclination towards the exploration.  Gunning for…
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Women entrepreneurs to drive Namibia’s economic future

Women entrepreneurs to drive Namibia’s economic future

Hellen Amupolo Across the world, women are reshaping economies. According to global entrepreneurship data, women started almost half of all new businesses in 2024, marking a 69% rise since 2019. Sub-Saharan Africa now holds the highest female entrepreneurial activity rate globally at 26%, according to the Harvard University Centre for African Studies. This surge reflects extraordinary ambition, even as women continue to face systemic barriers. According to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, women remain 47% more likely than men to close a business due to family or personal pressures, and they continue to encounter challenges accessing finance and formal market networks.…
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Workplace burnout: The silent weakening of productivity and morale

Workplace burnout: The silent weakening of productivity and morale

Victoria Shekutamba Burnout is often described as a personal struggle and portrayed as an employee feeling overwhelmed or unable to cope with workplace demands. However, burnout is not merely an individual issue. It is an organisational risk with significant long-term consequences for performance, morale, and institutional sustainability. In many workplaces across Namibia, burnout does not always present obvious symptoms. Employees continue to report for duty, meet deadlines, and attend meetings. On the surface, operations appear stable and functional. Yet beneath this apparent stability, energy levels may be declining, engagement may be weakening, and cognitive sharpness may be gradually diminishing. It…
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War is the sport of the great empires, diplomacy is the talk show of small states 

War is the sport of the great empires, diplomacy is the talk show of small states 

Lazarus Kwedhi As conventional wisdom dictates, “oshilongo mpa oosa, mpa ondigolo” and “gumwe otati sa, gumwe otati kalako", meaning that one part of the country is mourning while another part is celebrating. One person wants you dead while another wants you alive. In light of this conventional wisdom, the USA–Israel coordinated military strike against the Islamic Republic of Iran that reportedly killed Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, along with other national and military leaders has ignited mixed feelings among Iranians, in Middle Eastern countries, and around the world at large. Anti-Islamic Republic government supporters are seen supporting the USA–Israel…
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TURNING POINT | Memory, nationhood and the architecture of identity

TURNING POINT | Memory, nationhood and the architecture of identity

In the quiet spaces where history lives, museums, archives, monuments, and preserved building, a nation converses with its past. These sites are not merely repositories of objects or relics; they are instruments through which societies narrate their collective story, negotiate identity, and transmit values across generations. The recent notice of motion in the National Assembly by George Kambala, calling for the Old State House to be converted into a museum in honour of Namibia’s founding president Sam Nujoma, therefore touches on an issue that extends well beyond architecture or administrative use of a building. It goes to the heart of how Namibia…
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A capitalist budget for economic social justice?

A capitalist budget for economic social justice?

Kae Matundu Tjiparuro It is budget time in Namibia. With all eyes and ears and, indeed, attention focussed and fixed on that single persona. With many aspirations, hopes, expectations and anticipations. Rightly or wrongly. Oft with little assurance, as it has come to transpire over the years, let alone realisation of the various hopes, expectations and, if you wish, prayers. Not strange. For how can a whole country place so many expectations on a single individual? As if she/he were Ms and/or Mr Miracles and/or Ms/Mr Everything to all and sundry. Oblivious to the reality in which the country has…
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The motion to preserve the memory and legacy of the founding father of the Namibian nation: The future of institutional memory in Namibia

The motion to preserve the memory and legacy of the founding father of the Namibian nation: The future of institutional memory in Namibia

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) When a Nation Confers the Title of Founding Father When a nation confers the title of 'Founding Father' by statute, it does more than honour a historical figure. It legislates memory. It transforms history into law. Once history enters the legal order, it demands institutional expression. Namibia now stands at such a constitutional moment. Ten months ago, the Leader of the Popular Democratic Movement (PDM), Hon. McHenry Venaani, submitted a series of parliamentary questions to the Prime Minister, Dr Elijah Ngurare, calling for cost-cutting measures by repurposing state offices for…
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Empowering the women we celebrate 

Empowering the women we celebrate 

Fransina Kahungu On International Women’s Day, 8 March 2026, we are intentionally choosing to move beyond celebration without empowerment and confront a deeper question: how do empowered women empower others? This year’s theme is Give to gain. It has often been said that women do not help other women rise once they themselves have risen. Whether this has merit or not is yet to be properly studied. However, one might confidently state that real power is influence over policy. It is the ability to shape women and not just symbolise change. It is the ability to look back and say…
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