WINDHOEK, 03 March 2026 - Proflight Zambia’s airplane arriving in Windhoek for the inauguration. (Photo: by Justina Shuumbwa) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 03 March 2026 - Proflight Zambia’s airplane arriving in Windhoek for the inauguration. (Photo: by Justina Shuumbwa) NAMPA
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, 02 MARCH 2026 - Chairperson of the Dr Hage Geingob Presidential Centre, Professor Peter Katjavivi, and Geingob's daughter, Nangula Geingos, met with President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah to discuss collaborating with the government for the success of Dr Hage Geingob's Centre. (Photo by: Uakutura Kambaekua) NAMPA
Vivian Arinaitwe, 24, a biomedical engineer and CEO of Che Innovations, displays a unit of NeoNest at their workspace in Kampala, on March 6, 2026. NeoNest is an award-winning, low-cost medical device developed by Che Innovations to prevent neonatal hypothermia during ambulance transfers from rural health facilities to referral hospitals. Designed for low-resource settings, the portable infant warmer helps maintain a stable temperature for preterm and low-birth-weight babies during transport, when they are most vulnerable to life-threatening heat loss. (Photo by Badru Katumba / AFP)
Vivian Arinaitwe, 24, a biomedical engineer and CEO of Che Innovations, displays a unit of NeoNest at their workspace in Kampala, on March 6, 2026. NeoNest is an award-winning, low-cost medical device developed by Che Innovations to prevent neonatal hypothermia during ambulance transfers from rural health facilities to referral hospitals. Designed for low-resource settings, the portable infant warmer helps maintain a stable temperature for preterm and low-birth-weight babies during transport, when they are most vulnerable to life-threatening heat loss. (Photo by Badru Katumba / AFP)
Vivian Arinaitwe, 24, a biomedical engineer and CEO of Che Innovations, displays a unit of NeoNest at their workspace in Kampala, on March 6, 2026. NeoNest is an award-winning, low-cost medical device developed by Che Innovations to prevent neonatal hypothermia during ambulance transfers from rural health facilities to referral hospitals. Designed for low-resource settings, the portable infant warmer helps maintain a stable temperature for preterm and low-birth-weight babies during transport, when they are most vulnerable to life-threatening heat loss. (Photo by Badru Katumba / AFP)
Kenyan innovator and ecopreneur, Sheryl Mboya, 26, poses with one of her innovations, an edible cup; an idea born of her dislike of plastic pollution in Nairobi on March 6, 2026. Christened 'snackuit', the law graduate's patented edible tableware is her answer to single-use plastics pollution and is alot safer for the general environment due to it's biodegradability.Developed under GreenX Telemechanics Limited, a technology and innovation developer whose core objective is to come up with innovative solutions such as Snackuit, that not only address challenges mankind face but also contribute to climate action. (Photo by Tony KARUMBA / AFP)
Kenyan innovator and ecopreneur, Sheryl Mboya, 26, demonstrates the superior structural integrity to hold hot-liquid of one of her innovations, an edible cup, an idea born of her dislike of plastic pollution in Nairobi on March 6, 2026. Christened 'snackuit', the law graduate's patented edible tableware is her answer to single-use plastics pollution and is alot safer for the general environment due to it's biodegradability.Developed under GreenX Telemechanics Limited, a technology and innovation developer whose core objective is to come up with innovative solutions such as Snackuit, that not only address challenges mankind face but also contribute to climate action. (Photo by Tony KARUMBA / AFP)
Kenyan innovator and ecopreneur, Sheryl Mboya, 26, poses with one of her innovations, an edible cup; an idea born of her dislike of plastic pollution in Nairobi on March 6, 2026. Christened 'snackuit', the law graduate's patented edible tableware is her answer to single-use plastics pollution and is alot safer for the general environment due to it's biodegradability.Developed under GreenX Telemechanics Limited, a technology and innovation developer whose core objective is to come up with innovative solutions such as Snackuit, that not only address challenges mankind face but also contribute to climate action. (Photo by Tony KARUMBA / AFP)
Kenyan innovator and ecopreneur, Sheryl Mboya, 26, poses with one of her innovations, an edible cup; an idea born of her dislike of plastic pollution in Nairobi on March 6, 2026. Christened 'snackuit', the law graduate's patented edible tableware is her answer to single-use plastics pollution and is alot safer for the general environment due to it's biodegradability.Developed under GreenX Telemechanics Limited, a technology and innovation developer whose core objective is to come up with innovative solutions such as Snackuit, that not only address challenges mankind face but also contribute to climate action. (Photo by Tony KARUMBA / AFP)
Kenyan innovator and ecopreneur, Sheryl Mboya, 26, poses with one of her innovations, an edible cup; an idea born of her dislike of plastic pollution in Nairobi on March 6, 2026. Christened 'snackuit', the law graduate's patented edible tableware is her answer to single-use plastics pollution and is alot safer for the general environment due to it's biodegradability.Developed under GreenX Telemechanics Limited, a technology and innovation developer whose core objective is to come up with innovative solutions such as Snackuit, that not only address challenges mankind face but also contribute to climate action. (Photo by Tony KARUMBA / AFP)