Opinions

How accountable are community organisations?

How accountable are community organisations?

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro How accountable are community organisations? Yours Truly Ideologically is posing this question disturbed greatly by news and complaints that have been filtering through for some time now from the peripheries concerning the lack of accountability among our community institutions. Concerned because community organisations, ideally, are and should be the first among the firsts to usher in and spearhead egalitarianism as well as all the way guard, guide and protect such where and whenever it is realised among our communities. However, nascent such realisation may be. In the belief and orientation of “to each according to his/her needs and…
Read More
The geopolitical significance of the FIFA 2026 World Cup and the erosion of American universalism

The geopolitical significance of the FIFA 2026 World Cup and the erosion of American universalism

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) The 2026 FIFA World Cup was conceived as the ultimate celebration of football’s global reach. For the first time in history, forty eight national teams will compete in a tournament jointly hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, creating the largest and most geographically expansive World Cup ever organized. On paper, the event represents the triumph of globalization. More nations will participate, more supporters will travel, and more audiences than ever before will share in football’s most celebrated spectacle. Yet as the tournament approaches, a profound contradiction is becoming…
Read More
Andimba Herman Toivo ya Toivo’s moral authority and his warning against Tribalism 

Andimba Herman Toivo ya Toivo’s moral authority and his warning against Tribalism 

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) Ya Toivo’s warning and the questions Namibia must confront There are conversations that dominate Namibia’s public space. We hear about economic growth, foreign investment, oil discoveries, mining expansion, GDP forecasts, and development plans. Politicians speak proudly of progress. Investors speak confidently of opportunity. Government reports point to stability and economic potential. Yet there are other conversations that rarely receive the same attention such as the growing sea of tin (kambashus) shacks surrounding our towns and cities; the rising cost of fuel; the increasing price of water and electricity; the young…
Read More
Ngurare right to worry about housing, but wrong to point fingers at who failed homeowners and the homeless

Ngurare right to worry about housing, but wrong to point fingers at who failed homeowners and the homeless

Lazarus Kwedhi Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare’s recent call for “humanity over profit” in housing loan repayments has struck a nerve. Many Namibians are struggling with repossessions, arrears, and the fear of losing homes they have spent decades paying for. The Prime Minister deserves credit for raising the issue and forcing it back onto the national agenda. But good intentions or political speeches do not guarantee good policy, in this case, if the diagnosis is wrong, which means the cure will not work. The Prime Minister's central complaint is that banks offer 20-year home loans while cars are financed over five…
Read More
What South Africa’s conference of the left reveals about a deeper political crisis

What South Africa’s conference of the left reveals about a deeper political crisis

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) The recent Conference of the Left in South Africa should not be viewed merely as another ideological gathering within the country’s crowded political landscape. Rather, it represents a symptom of a deeper structural transition unfolding across Southern Africa, one in which the historical legitimacy of liberation movements is steadily weakening while no new political paradigm has yet emerged with sufficient credibility to replace it. Call it “the interregnum of morbid symptoms" following a famous quote by Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci in his Prison Notebooks when he said “The crisis consists…
Read More
Your cover should feel like confidence

Your cover should feel like confidence

Johannes Hesekiel For most people, short-term insurance is something they only think about when life goes wrong. A burst geyser, a stolen cell phone, a car accident, a break in, or a sudden storm that damages a home. In those moments, emotions run high. Clients are stressed, frustrated or confused, and they want one thing more than anything else. They want reassurance. They want to know that someone is on their side. The truth is that insurance is not only about claims or premiums. At its core, it is a safety net that gives people confidence to live their lives…
Read More
Senegal’s Sonko and Faye Divide: A Reflection on the Dual System of Legitimacy- one Institutional and the other Ideological. 

Senegal’s Sonko and Faye Divide: A Reflection on the Dual System of Legitimacy- one Institutional and the other Ideological. 

Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) When political victory gives way to the burden of governance Political movements are often forged in struggle. They emerge from dissatisfaction, mobilize citizens around a shared vision, and promise to transform society. During the journey to power, unity appears natural because attention is directed toward a common objective. Yet history repeatedly demonstrates that the greatest test of a movement is not winning power, it is governing after victory. The emerging political divide between Senegalese President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and his former Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko offers a powerful illustration of…
Read More
Private schools, tutorial centres and the protection of teachers: Is there a regulatory gap in namibia?

Private schools, tutorial centres and the protection of teachers: Is there a regulatory gap in namibia?

Sakaria Johannes Private schools and tutorial centres have become an important part of Namibia's educational landscape. They complement public education, create employment opportunities, and provide learners with alternative pathways to academic success. Many of these institutions operate professionally and contribute positively to the country's development. However, an important question remains largely unexplored: Are teachers and other employees in the private education sector adequately protected? The enactment of the Education Act, 2020 (Act No. 3 of 2020) was an important milestone in the regulation of education in Namibia. The Act provides a framework for the registration, governance, and operation of private…
Read More
Founding Father Sam Nujoma’s Enduring Lessons for Africa; The Destiny in Our own Hands, Looking to the Future with Confidence and Hope and Unity of Purpose and Action

Founding Father Sam Nujoma’s Enduring Lessons for Africa; The Destiny in Our own Hands, Looking to the Future with Confidence and Hope and Unity of Purpose and Action

By Paul T. Shipale (with inputs by Folito Nghitongovali Diawara Gaspar) More than three decades after Namibia’s independence, Founding Father Sam Nujoma’s call for responsibility, unity, and self determination remains a guide for Africa’s future. When Namibia attained independence on 21 March 1990, its founding president, Sam Nujoma, addressed a nation emerging from decades of colonial rule and liberation struggle. Standing before his people at a defining moment in African history, he declared: “As of today, we are masters of this vast land of our ancestors. The destiny of this country is now fully in our own hands. We should,…
Read More
Channeling Sisa Namandje: Why black Namibians must reclaim the ownership mindset

Channeling Sisa Namandje: Why black Namibians must reclaim the ownership mindset

Listening to prominent lawyer and businessman Sisa Namandje deliver the keynote address at the inaugural John Akapandi Endjala Memorial Lecture, I found myself reflecting not only on the economic realities facing black Namibians, but also on the mindset required to change those realities. His speech was, above all, a tribute to the late John Akapandi Endjala, a businessman whose impact extended far beyond his own enterprises. Endjala represented a generation of black entrepreneurs who understood that success carried with it a responsibility to open doors for others. In many ways, his life embodied a principle we desperately need to revive…
Read More