Opinions

From crisis to hope: How genomic research could turn the tide on prostate cancer in Namibia 

From crisis to hope: How genomic research could turn the tide on prostate cancer in Namibia 

Uvatera Maurihungirire Prostate cancer is the most common cancer affecting men in Namibia, with an alarmingly high rate of 63.8 cases per 100 000 men. In Sub-Saharan Africa, this number is predicted to at least triple by 2040. This means that prostate cancer has now overtaken other leading malignancies in Namibia, including breast and cervical, making it a critical public health concern that requires urgent attention. Despite this, many men are diagnosed only when the disease has advanced, which limits treatment options and reduces survival rates. Why are the numbers so high? Several factors contribute to the high prostate cancer…
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OBSERVER DAILY | The coming shock: Why suspending deduction codes could hit Namibia hard

When the Namibian government announced that, effective 30 November 2025, it will suspend the deduction code system for public servants, the news landed like a thunderclap across the financial sector. On paper it may look like a simple administrative tweak, removing the ability for lenders and insurers to collect repayments directly from civil servants’ salaries. In reality, it threatens to upend a seven-billion-dollar ecosystem of term-lenders, microlenders and insurance providers whose business models hinge on deduction at source (DAS). The immediate poster-child of the disruption is Letshego Namibia, which according to Simonis Storm researcher Kara van den Heever originates 96%…
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OBSERVER DAILY | From grief to guesswork: Why the Lubowski interview fails the evidence test

Thirty-six years after Anton Lubowski’s assassination, the wound remains open and the questions still sting. That grief deserves recognition and compassion. No family should carry the weight of a loved one’s unresolved murder. The sorrow of Gabrielle and Nadia Lubowski is real, and their yearning for answers is understandable. But grief, no matter how deep, cannot stand in for proof. Pain is not evidence, and in their recent interview the two women drift from mourning into dangerous conjecture. Their claims that Sam Nujoma, SWAPO’s founding president, was effectively a South African asset and complicit in Anton’s killing are not just…
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Clarifying what a policy is and what it is not: The National Upstream Petroleum Local Content Policy

Clarifying what a policy is and what it is not: The National Upstream Petroleum Local Content Policy

Mutindi Lydia Jacobs As the Ministry of Industries Mines and Energy (MIME) continues it’s nationwide consultations on the draft National Upstream Petroleum Local Content Policy, a critical public debate has emerged. Some stakeholders have voiced concerns over the policy's perceived lack of teeth, specifically its absence of penalties and a concrete institutional framework. This criticism, while understandable, stems from a common misconception about the fundamental difference between a government policy and a law. Understanding this distinction is essential for anyone wishing to contribute meaningfully to shaping the future of Namibia's promising oil and gas sector. The Blueprint vs. The Building: What…
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OBSERVER DAILY | A silent emergency: burn-out among Namibia’s medical interns demands urgent action

Namibia’s hospitals are quietly facing a crisis that could shape the future of our entire health system. The nation’s medical interns, young doctors in the most formative and vulnerable stage of their careers, are burning out. They are working marathon shifts that stretch far beyond reasonable limits, often without adequate compensation or structured mental-health support. This is not merely an unfortunate rite of passage; it is a dangerous pattern that threatens the interns themselves, the patients they serve, and the very pipeline of Namibian doctors we rely on to care for future generations. Internship is meant to be demanding. These…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | Why stashing cash isn’t enough: A Gen Z guide to building real wealth 

YOUNG OBSERVER | Why stashing cash isn’t enough: A Gen Z guide to building real wealth 

Janet Washamba Haufiku : Data analyst and writer You’re 25, and your first pay cheque just landed. Your mind races: should you finally buy that dress you’ve been longing for? Send your mother a gift that says, “I appreciate you more than words”? Or maybe take that long-overdue trip to the coast and finally relax? That first pay cheque hits like dynamite; suddenly, Europe feels within reach, dinner at your favourite restaurant is doable, and even that $15,000 apartment in Kleine Kuppe doesn’t seem so far away. But just like real dynamite, money is powerful and needs careful handling. Spend…
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OBSERVER DAILY | Parliament in chaos: A national embarrassment

The scenes that unfolded in Parliament on Thursday were nothing short of disgraceful. What should have been an ordinary sitting of the National Assembly turned into chaos when Affirmative Repositioning (AR) members clashed with Speaker Saara Kuugongelwa-Amadhila. The events left Namibians shaking their heads, wondering whether the institution meant to embody our democracy is losing its way. It began when AR member Tuhafeni Kalola rose without permission and refused to take his seat when instructed to do so. The Speaker ordered him out of the chamber, but he refused. When security officers were called in, fellow AR MPs Job Amupanda…
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The petroleum local content policy is in whose interest if not capitalism?

The petroleum local content policy is in whose interest if not capitalism?

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro The government, to be specific, the Upstream Petroleum Unit in the Office of the President, has been having roadshows countrywide and regionally, if not in selected areas and regions, to apparently explain the National Upstream Petroleum Local Content Policy.  Upon picking this up through the media, the first question that occurred to mind is who have been invited to these roadshows, who have been attending and, with due respect and circumspection, if those invited and who have been attending these roadshows do and could realistically be expected to indeed comprehend what this subject matter entails to provide constructive,…
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Africa’s absence at the biggest Chinese military parade in history

Africa’s absence at the biggest Chinese military parade in history

PAUL T. SHIPALE (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) Introduction Africa today finds itself in a paradoxical position, one that demands an introspection transcending the coldness of econometric language, delving into the depths of structural causes and existential implications for the continent's self-determination. The continent is, unequivocally, one of the largest suppliers of the critical minerals and raw materials that form the bedrock of China’s industrial and technological ascendancy, such as cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo for electric batteries, oil from Angola to fuel its burgeoning industry, platinum from South Africa for advanced manufacturing, uranium from Namibia,…
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BOOK REVIEW | A symbol of a people’s determination: THE WINDHOEK OLD LOCATION by Henning Melber and Dieter Hinrichs

BOOK REVIEW | A symbol of a people’s determination: THE WINDHOEK OLD LOCATION by Henning Melber and Dieter Hinrichs

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro Indeed there could be no more befitting title than A Symbol of People's Determination, a book about the history of the Old Location, the residential area of the indigenous Africans in the then Apartheid South West Africa. Before their forceful removal in the late 1960s from the Old Location, present-day Hochland Park residential area in Windhoek. Befitting title in the sense that indeed the Old Location gave genesis to present-day Katutura. Not as it is today when it has sprawled all over. But then only a small conclave of brick houses spread over a radius of eight (8)…
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