OTJIWARONGO, 01 December 2025 - A section of community members at the 2025 commemoration of World Aids Day on Monday at Otjiwarongo in the Otjozondjupa. (Photo by: Mulisa Simiyasa) NAMPA
OTJIWARONGO, 01 December 2025 - The Minister of Health and Social Services, Dr Esperance Luvindao, speaks at the 2025 commemoration of World Aids Day at Otjiwarongo on Monday. (Photo by: Mulisa Simiyasa) NAMPA
RUNDU, 28 November 2025 - Rundu Rural Constituency Councillor Paulus Mbangu. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
KAPAKO, 29 November 2025 - Augustinus Linyando Kupembona, the newly elected Swapo councillor for the Kapako constituency. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 29 November 2025 - The Electoral Commission of Namibia has completed the vote counting for the regional council and local authority elections, and the final results were made public on Saturday. (Photo by: Uakutura Kambaekua) NAMPA.
OTJIWARONGO - The head-on collision between two trucks Saturday morning on Otjiwarongo-Kalkfeld road which claimed lives of both drivers aged 29 and 46 years. Two other occupants from a Volvo truck survived it with minor body injuries. (Photo by: Mulisa Simiyasa) NAMPA
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
Environmental agency workers clean up piles of logs washed ashore on Padang beach, West Sumatra, on December 2, 2025, after being swept along by the flash floods that struck the region. Governments and aid groups in Indonesia and Sri Lanka worked to rush aid December 2 to hundreds of thousands stranded by deadly flooding that has killed around 1,200 people in four countries. (Photo by REZAN SOLEH / AFP)
Environmental agency workers clean up piles of logs washed ashore on Padang beach, West Sumatra, on December 2, 2025, after being swept along by the flash floods that struck the region. Governments and aid groups in Indonesia and Sri Lanka worked to rush aid December 2 to hundreds of thousands stranded by deadly flooding that has killed around 1,200 people in four countries. (Photo by REZAN SOLEH / AFP)
Logs washed ashore are seen on Padang beach, West Sumatra, on December 2, 2025, after being swept along by the flash floods that struck the region. Governments and aid groups in Indonesia and Sri Lanka worked to rush aid December 2 to hundreds of thousands stranded by deadly flooding that has killed around 1,200 people in four countries. (Photo by REZAN SOLEH / AFP)
West Indies' Roston Chase bowls during day one of the first Test cricket match between New Zealand and West Indies at Hagley Oval in Christchurch on December 2, 2025. (Photo by Sanka Vidanagama / AFP)
New Zealand's Michael Bracewell bats during day one of the first Test cricket match between New Zealand and West Indies at Hagley Oval in Christchurch on December 2, 2025. (Photo by Sanka Vidanagama / AFP)
AFP presents a photo essay of 51 images by photographer Alexander NEMENOV on the Kaliningrad Amber Combine - the state owned facility producing 90% of the world's amber. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)
A worker looks at a water gun operating in Kaliningrad Amber Combine quarry in the village of Yantarny (former German Palmniken), some 40 kms from Kaliningrad on October 16, 2025. The Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, former German Koenigsberg, about half the size of Belgium, is separated from the rest of Russia by Poland and Lithuania. Founded in 1255, once the home of the kings of Prussia and forever associated with the 18th-century philosopher Immanuel Kant, Kaliningrad is home to around one million people comprising 80 nationalities, although the Russian community (80 percent) is by far the largest. The territory's effective separation from Russia dates back to the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991. As a key military installation on the Baltic, the city and the port were closed off to non-Soviet citizens until 1991. In 1992 it became a free-trade zone, and in 1996 a special economic zone, acquiring privileges with relation to foreign investors. The enclave retains its strategic importance, both as the port for Russian missile-equipped submarines and as a base for the 11th army. The Kaliningrad Amber Combine produces 90% of the world's amber. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)
A craftsman carves a bear from a piece of amber at Kaliningrad Amber Combine in the village of Yantarny (former German Palmniken), some 40 kms from Kaliningrad on October 16, 2025. The Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, former German Koenigsberg, about half the size of Belgium, is separated from the rest of Russia by Poland and Lithuania. Founded in 1255, once the home of the kings of Prussia and forever associated with the 18th-century philosopher Immanuel Kant, Kaliningrad is home to around one million people comprising 80 nationalities, although the Russian community (80 percent) is by far the largest. The territory's effective separation from Russia dates back to the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991. As a key military installation on the Baltic, the city and the port were closed off to non-Soviet citizens until 1991. In 1992 it became a free-trade zone, and in 1996 a special economic zone, acquiring privileges with relation to foreign investors. The enclave retains its strategic importance, both as the port for Russian missile-equipped submarines and as a base for the 11th army. The Kaliningrad Amber Combine produces 90% of the world's amber. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP)