WINDHOEK, 28 November 2025 - The Alte Feste building in Windhoek. (Photo: Contributed)
EENHANA, 27 November 2025 - Ohangwena Chief Regional Officer, Filipus Shilongo. (Photo by: Eba Kandovazu) NAMPA
EENHANA, 26 November 2025 - Helena Ekondo pictured with her family at Opalasa informal settlement. (Photo by: Eba Kandovazu) NAMPA
The logo of the Electoral Commission of Namibia
OUTJO, 27 November 2025 - Returning Officer for the Outjo Constituency, Elrico Uirab presenting the final results at the collation centre at the Etoshapoort Community Hall in Outjo. (Photo by: Dalene Kooper) NAMPA
RUNDU, 27 November 2025 - Swapo Party’s Stefanus Sinonge celebrating his victory with party members at the Rundu Urban collation centre. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 27 November 2025 - Peter Shaama, the Electoral Commission of Namibia's Chief Electoral Referenda Officer. (Photo by: Molly Weyulu) NAMPA
RUNDU, 27 November 2025 - The Rundu Magistrate’s Court administration block which caught fire on Thursday. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
Defendant Gilles Rossary-Lenglet makes a statement as he leaves the trial of the sex-tape blackmail case at the courthouse after the verdict in Lyon on December 1 2025. Mayor of Saint Etienne Gaël Perdriau announced his intention to appeal against his conviction today to five years in prison, of which four are custodial, in the case known as the sextape blackmail affair after Lyon court deliberated in the trial over the so-called "sex-tape" case of Saint-Etienne's town hall. At the heart of the trial is the mayor of the town, Gael Perdriau, 53, accused of ordering a video of his former deputy Gilles Artigues with a male prostitute, and tried alongside former associates for blackmail, criminal conspiracy and embezzlement of public funds. (Photo by OLIVIER CHASSIGNOLE / AFP)
Pope Leo XIV attends a meeting with bishpops, priests consacrated persons and personal workers at the shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa, northeast of the capital Beirut, on December 1, 2025. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)
Defendant Gilles Rossary-Lenglet makes a statement as he leaves the trial of the sex-tape blackmail case at the courthouse after the verdict in Lyon on December 1 2025. Mayor of Saint Etienne Gaël Perdriau announced his intention to appeal against his conviction today to five years in prison, of which four are custodial, in the case known as the sextape blackmail affair after Lyon court deliberated in the trial over the so-called "sex-tape" case of Saint-Etienne's town hall. At the heart of the trial is the mayor of the town, Gael Perdriau, 53, accused of ordering a video of his former deputy Gilles Artigues with a male prostitute, and tried alongside former associates for blackmail, criminal conspiracy and embezzlement of public funds. (Photo by OLIVIER CHASSIGNOLE / AFP)
A boy rides a horse through smoke coming from burning waste at a dumping ground in Varanasi on December 1, 2025. (Photo by Niharika KULKARNI / AFP)
A resident waits at a relief camp inside a school after being evacuated following rapid floods in Wellampitiya on the outskirts of Colombo on December 1, 2025. At least 340 people have been killed, Sri Lankan officials said on December 1, with many more still missing. (Photo by Ishara S. KODIKARA / AFP)
Pope Leo XIV attends a meeting with bishpops, priests consacrated persons and personal workers at the shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa, northeast of the capital Beirut, on December 1, 2025. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)
(FILES) Fans of Croatian nationalist singer Marko Perkovic Thompson, known for his sympathies for the country's World War II Nazi-allied regime, gather next to the Zagreb hippodrome where he will give a concert expected by a crowd of some 450,000 people, in Zagreb, on July 5, 2025. The proliferation of ultranationalist rhetoric and the rise of historical revisionism in Croatia in 2025 threaten to reopen the wounds of a region still scarred by intercommunal wars, several observers warn. From the giant concert of Thompson, a legend of Croatian music known for his pro-Nazi sympathies, which gathered 450,000 people in Zagreb in July 2025, to the attack by hooligans on Serbian cultural events in November, tensions have been escalating in recent months, notes Florian Bieber from the Austrian University of Graz. (Photo by DAMIR SENCAR / AFP)
(FILES) Croatia's nationalist singer Marko Perkovic Thompson, known for his sympathies for the country's World War II Nazi-allied regime, performs during a concert at Zagreb Hipodrome, to an expected by a crowd of some 450,000 people, in Zagreb, on July 5, 2025. The proliferation of ultranationalist rhetoric and the rise of historical revisionism in Croatia in 2025 threaten to reopen the wounds of a region still scarred by intercommunal wars, several observers warn. From the giant concert of Thompson, a legend of Croatian music known for his pro-Nazi sympathies, which gathered 450,000 people in Zagreb in July 2025, to the attack by hooligans on Serbian cultural events in November, tensions have been escalating in recent months, notes Florian Bieber from the Austrian University of Graz. (Photo by DAMIR SENCAR / AFP)