Opinions

YOUNG OBSERVER | #UNMUTED 

As we look toward Parliament next week, the air in Namibia is thick with anticipation. A new budget, a reformed healthcare system, and a rising tide of entrepreneurship in our regions all point to a single truth.  The New Namibia is no longer a distant promise because it is currently under construction by those willing to do the work. We are witnessing a moment where policy and possibility are finally converging, demanding a response from every citizen who has ever hoped for a more equitable society. Leading without a title is a concept we must now put into practice with…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | Fuelling the high performer

YOUNG OBSERVER | Fuelling the high performer

Physical health is the primary engine of cognitive performance, yet the link between nutrition and daily productivity is often overlooked in the rush of a demanding professional schedule. To maintain high levels of focus and energy throughout the day, it is essential to view food as more than just a source of satiety because nutrition is the biological foundation that dictates mental clarity, decision-making capacity, and the ability to sustain effort over long periods. Whether managing a complex technical project, studying for advanced professional qualifications, or navigating a fast-paced corporate environment, your output is intrinsically tied to your metabolic input.…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | The N$100 billion conversation

YOUNG OBSERVER | The N$100 billion conversation

This week, the minister of finance stepped up to the podium in Parliament to table the 2026/27 national budget. For many young Namibians, this moment often feels like a distant exercise in accounting—a series of dry numbers and complex fiscal terms that belong to the world of politicians and economists. However, in a year defined by shifting energy landscapes and a total transformation in how we access education and healthcare, this budget is the most important document you will not read. It is the blueprint for your economic survival and the primary tool that will determine whether the "New Namibia"…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | The health pill: Reclaiming the standard of care

Following a directive from President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, senior government officials, including executive directors, the deputy auditor general, the secretary to the National Assembly and the President herself, will begin the transition from private medical suites to the corridors of our state hospitals. This is not merely a policy change or a budget-saving exercise because it is a profound reclamation of the public standard. For the youth of Namibia, this shift represents the end of a two-tier reality where the quality of a citizen’s healthcare was determined by the colour of their medical aid card. To understand the youthful urgency of…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | The strength of second acts

YOUNG OBSERVER | The strength of second acts

A child does not mark the end of a young woman's potential, yet for decades, the social narrative in Namibia has often treated young motherhood as a definitive full stop to personal and professional ambition. As we navigate the early months of 2026, it is time to dismantle this outdated stigma and recognise that the resilience required to raise a child while pursuing a future is one of the highest forms of leadership. Following the implementation of the latest national strategies for reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent health, and nutrition, we are seeing a shift in how the state and…
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A budget that stabilises but does not transform

When minister Ericah Shafudah tabled the N$104 billion national budget this week, she presented it as a careful balancing act between fiscal discipline and developmental necessity. On paper, it is a responsible document. In substance, however, it raises a more difficult question: is Namibia managing decline cautiously or building growth boldly? The answer, at least for now, leans toward caution. The numbers are instructive. Of the N$104 billion, a staggering N$81.3 billion is directed toward operational expenditure, salaries, administration, recurrent costs and the machinery of government. Only N$6.5 billion is earmarked for development spending. That ratio should concern anyone serious…
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Petroleum Amendment Bill: much ado about nothing!

Petroleum Amendment Bill: much ado about nothing!

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro It is not its intrinsicality that has attracted Yours Truly Ideologically’s attention to the ongoing debate in the National Assembly over the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) Amendment Bill. But the attendant hullabaloo in the august house, especially against the position and disposition of some would-be honourable members from respective sides of the house’s aisle as it would be. Positions and dispositions that, on the face of it, seemed diametrically opposed to one another. But unfortunately on close observation, they seem not so much fundamentally and ideologically. Depending on any member’s blind political loyalty instead of conscious ideology and/or…
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Response to the editorial: “Defending the defenders of the Law”

Response to the editorial: “Defending the defenders of the Law”

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) Protecting Justice Without Redesigning Power: A Reflection on Judicial Security, Executive Incentives, and Constitutional Balance the tragic death of Prosecutor Justine Shiweda is a national wound. She was a regional control prosecutor at the Ondangwa Magistrate’s Court, a senior prosecutorial position indicating that she likely managed a significant caseload while supervising other prosecutors. She indeed stood at the front line of criminal accountability. No magistrate. No prosecutor. No judicial officer should face mortal danger for fulfilling a constitutional duty. In this regard, both the president and the chief justice said…
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Equality or efficiency? Public healthcare reform through Fanon’s “zone of being” and “zone of non-being”.

Equality or efficiency? Public healthcare reform through Fanon’s “zone of being” and “zone of non-being”.

Sakaria Johannes The recent directive by the Ministry of Health and Social Services requiring government employees to seek treatment in public hospitals has generated considerable public debate. At the heart of the discussion lies a tension between equality and efficiency. Some civil servants argue that, as contributors to the state machinery and providers of essential services, they deserve priority or differentiated healthcare access. Others maintain that public institutions should serve all citizens equally, without hidden hierarchies. This policy can be meaningfully examined through the philosophical framework of Frantz Fanon, particularly his concept of the “zone of being” and the “zone…
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Beyond the paycheque: The unseen crisis in Namibia’s security sector

Beyond the paycheque: The unseen crisis in Namibia’s security sector

Faizel Patterson  The recent implementation of a new national minimum wage for the security industry is, without question, a welcome and necessary step towards social justice for some of our nation’s most essential workers. Both employers and employees agree that better pay is a shared goal. However, the public discourse surrounding its implementation has been dangerously simplistic, ignoring a complex economic reality that, if mishandled, could trigger the very crisis it seeks to prevent: mass unemployment. Approving a wage increase is easy. To implement it sustainably is hard. The inconvenient truth is that for any service-based company, from security to…
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