Nampa News Photos

EPUKIRO, 14 January 2026 - Epukiro Secondary School's staff celebrates the school's achievement in the Grade 12 NSSCAS results. (Photo: Contributed)
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WINDHOEK, 14 January 2026 - Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport, Arts and Culture, Sanet Steenkamp pictured during the official announcement of the 2025 NSSCO and NSSCAS examination results in Windhoek. (Photo by: Justina Shuumbwa) NAMPA
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KATIMA MULILO, 13 January 2026 - Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Land Reform Ruthy Masake speaking at the first Zambezi regional youth indaba here on Tuesday. She is pictured with acting Regional Governor and Kabbe North Constituency Councillor, Bernard Sisamu. (Photo by: Michael Mutonga Liswaniso) NAMPA
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WINDHOEK, 13 January 2026 - Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport and Culture, Sanet Steenkamp pictured with some of the top performing learners in the 2025 national examinations. (Photo by: Molly Weyulu) NAMPA
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RUNDU, 12 January 2026 - Andreas Muyongo Mungongi, who made his first appearance in the Rundu Magistrate’s Court on Monday. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
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SWAKOPMUND, 13 January 2026 - Stakeholders attending the five-day SADC Agricultural Information Management Systems (AIMS) workshop, which is being held under the second phase of the support towards the Operationalisation of the SADC Regional Agricultural Policy in Swakopmund. (Photo by: Isabel Bento) NAMPA
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RUNDU, 12 January 2026 - Kavango East Director of Education, Christine Shilima. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
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SWAKOPMUND, 12 January 2026 - Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport, Arts and Culture Sanet Steenkamp visited several schools in Swakopmund as part of her ministry’s assessment on how schools in Erongo Region were opening and to present the 2025 national examination results to President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah. (Photo by: Isabel Bento) NAMPA
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International News Photos

Primatologist and director of the Fongoli Savanna Chimpanzee Project Dr. Jill Pruetz holds the skull of a West African chimpanzee at the research center on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
A West African chimpanzee climbs down a tree while holding a baobab fruit on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
A West African chimpanzee climbs a tree on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
Primatologist and director of the Fongoli Savanna Chimpanzee Project Dr. Jill Pruetz holds the jaw of a West African chimpanzee at the research center on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
West African chimpanzees groom each other on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
A West African chimpanzee carries a baobab fruit as he walks on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
A West African chimpanzee walks on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
A West African chimpanzee reacts on the Fongoli home range in the Kedougou region, on December 10, 2025. The group of rare chimpanzees, who dwell in the bush of hot, southeast Senegal instead of the forest, are living on the extreme edge of what is possible for their species.
Their unusual lives offer clues as to humans' own evolutionary past as we migrated to new climates, while their adaptations to the heat feel timely in a world where temperatures are on the rise. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP