WINDHOEK, 03 March 2026 - Hilaria Mukapuli, chairperson of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Budget and Finance speaking at the Analysis of the National Budget workshop. (Photo by: Andreas Thomas) NAMPA
NKURENKURU, 03 March 2026 - The Nkurenkuru Vocational Training Centre officially opened its first trainee intake, on Tuesday, signalling a step to grow skills and jobs in Kavango West. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
NKURENKURU, 03 March 2026 - The Nkurenkuru Vocational Training Centre officially opened its first trainee intake, on Tuesday, signalling a step to grow skills and jobs in Kavango West. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 02 March 2026 - Policymakers, regulators, supervisors, law enforcement agencies, intelligence services, reporting entities and civil society at the National Risk Assessment (NRA) workshop. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 02 March 2026 - The Okandjoze Chiefs Assembly met with President Nandi-Ndaitwah at State House to reaffirm their stance on the genocide repatriation related to the Ovaherero and Nama communities. (Photo by: Simsolia Kambonde) NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February - Commissioner of the Namibia Revenue Agency, Sam Shivute at the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare at the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Education, Innovation, Sports, Arts and Culture, Sanet Steenkamp. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardin makes his way in his wheelchair across the newly redesigned Piazza Pia in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardin makes its way on his wheelchair past the colonnade of St. Peter's Square, in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardin boards a metro train at a station in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardin uses a stair lift to leave a metro station in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardini is assisted by a passerby while trying to use a damaged ramp to access the sidewalk after crossing a street in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardin navigates a damaged ramp to access the sidewalk under reapair after crossing a cobblestone street in Rome on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Italian lawyer Alessandro Bardini looks at a parking space reserved for people with disabilities in Rome, on February 25, 2026. Paralympic organisers and Italy's government have invested tens of millions of euros in making the venues and areas around the Milan-Cortina Paralympic Games more accessible for people with disabilities. But the story is not the same across Italy, particularly in the capital Rome, known as much for its uneven roads and anarchic parking as for its ancient ruins. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP)
Real Madrid's Spanish forward David Barral (C) runs with the ball past Barcelona's Spanish defender Fernando Navarro (L) and Dutch midfielder Phillip Cocu (R) during the exhibition friendly football match between Spain's Real Madrid Legends and Barcelona Legends at the Akron Stadium in Guadalajara, Mexico, on March 3, 2026. (Photo by Ulises Ruiz / AFP)