Opinions

Dear Inspector General Joseph Shikongo,

We write to you as the Windhoek Observer, and by extension on behalf of a concerned but hopeful Namibian public, to commend the Namibian Police Force for launching a national crime prevention operation scheduled to run from 30 January to 1 February across all 14 regions of our country. At face value, this is a welcome and necessary intervention. More importantly, it is long overdue. For far too long, crime has crept steadily into every corner of Namibian life, from our cities to our villages, from our homes to our places of work. What was once sporadic has become routine.…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | #UNMUTED

As we move deeper into 2026, the identity of the young Namibian professional is undergoing a quiet but radical transformation. We are no longer defined simply by the degrees we hold or the offices we occupy; we are defined by the complexity of the burdens we carry and the ingenuity of the "hustle" we have mastered. This edition of the Young Observer seeks to peel back the polished veneer of corporate success to reveal the raw, lived truths of our generation. From the high-stakes pressure of the Groove Economy to the systemic lockout of the Experience Paradox, we are navigating…
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Ideology vs pragmatism, which is which?

Ideology vs pragmatism, which is which?

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro Yours Truly Ideologically could not but take a keen and deep interest as well as be intrigued by the opinion piece of Rodney Cloete in the Namibian Sun of last Wednesday, 21 January, 2026 titled: Beyond East and West: What Namibia gets wrong about great power competition. Admittedly for Yours Truly, it is not only a good read but a good write for that. Its essence being the endeavour entreating Namibia to wake up to the challenges of today in a practical and unideological, if not an ideological, way, believing the days of ideology, those of hardline Western…
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Beyond ceremony, remembering our leaders toward enduring legacy

Beyond ceremony, remembering our leaders toward enduring legacy

PAUL T. SHIPALE (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) With only a few days remaining before the anniversary commemorations of three of Namibia’s most distinguished leaders, one cannot help but pause and reflect not only on their lives, but on how the nation chooses to remember them. The month of February carries profound historical and emotional weight for Namibians. It marks the remembrance of Dr Abraham Iyambo on 2 February, the late Third President of the Republic of Namibia, Dr Hage G. Geingob, on 4 February, and the Founding Father of the Namibian Nation and First President of our…
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Municipalities: competence must trump politics

A video clip now circulating widely on social media has struck a nerve across the country. In it, Prof. Job Amupanda confronts the CEO of a local authority over a presentation made to a parliamentary committee. The presentation contained a slide titled “Statistical Overview”, yet when questioned, the CEO could not provide a single statistic. The uncomfortable exchange that followed has since become a viral moment, but beyond the embarrassment of one official lies a much deeper and more troubling national issue: the appointment of individuals to critical public positions without the competence such offices demand. This newspaper has previously…
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Why partnerships matter in the clean energy journey 

Why partnerships matter in the clean energy journey 

Gift Kandukira Each year on 26 January, the International Day of Clean Energy reminds the world that the energy transition is not optional; it is foundational to development, resilience and competitiveness.  For Namibia, energy is the backbone of household wellbeing, economic growth and industrial productivity.  It also speaks directly to SDG7: universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy services, a growing share of renewables, and faster energy-efficiency gains. Clean energy is not a peripheral sustainability initiative; it is an operational necessity and a national responsibility.  Yet the transition to cleaner energy is not achieved through a single project or…
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Namibia on the rise: streaming, 5G and the promise of progress

This week, Namibia found itself in the spotlight for two remarkable reasons, both signalling the country’s growing relevance on the global stage. American internet sensation IShowSpeed arrived in Windhoek as part of his highly publicised Africa StreamTour, drawing international attention to Namibia’s vibrant culture, energy, and youthful dynamism. At the same time, the Communications Regulatory Authority of Namibia (Cran) announced the rollout of 5G technology, a move poised to revolutionise the nation’s ICT landscape and drive economic growth across multiple sectors. At first glance, these two events may seem unrelated: one a pop culture phenomenon, the other a technical leap…
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Sacky Shanghala: From legal drafter and advisor: a pioneer of the law to legal aid seeker as an accused man without a defence 

Sacky Shanghala: From legal drafter and advisor: a pioneer of the law to legal aid seeker as an accused man without a defence 

PAUL T. SHIPALE (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) Sacky Shanghala, former Minister of Justice and former Attorney General of Namibia, spent years boasting that he was the architect of the country’s laws; no national regulation was issued without his opinion. Today, however, he finds himself accused in the Fishrot scandal, without the resources to secure an adequate defence, facing prosecutors paid with multimillion-dollar packages. “Why am I not legally represented as a former Minister of State? Why does the state have money for prosecutors but not for us?” Shanghala asked at the High Court of Windhoek. The contrast…
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Words matter: Minister Sankwasa must lead with measure and restraint

Public office is not merely a position of authority; it is a platform of influence. Every statement made by a minister carries weight beyond ordinary conversation, shaping public perception, institutional trust, and national cohesion. It is for this reason that the recent controversies surrounding Minister of Urban and Rural Development James Sankwasa deserve sober reflection, not only by the minister himself, but by all who occupy positions of leadership in Namibia’s democratic order. The Editors Forum of Namibia (EFN) issued a strong condemnation following a personal and xenophobic attack directed at The Namibian journalist Tracy Tafirenyika. The attack reportedly arose after Tafirenyika…
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Street children, border gaps and a focus on financial and immigration legislation

Street children, border gaps and a focus on financial and immigration legislation

Ian Coffee By late 2025, Namibia faced a visible surge of Angolan minors on city streets and in northern towns, selling wooden curios and begging. Advocates described it as a humanitarian disaster in plain sight.  The presence was not confined to border regions. It stretched along the Oshikango to Windhoek corridor and pooled at intersections where tourism is thick and oversight thin. Is this a question of compassion alone, or is it a test of whether our immigration and child protection systems can hold under pressure? The facts are plain. There was a marked increase between August and October. Local…
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