WINDHOEK, 28 May 2025 - Hundreds of people gathered at Parliament Gardens in Windhoek for the Genocide Remembrance Day commemoration on Wednesday. (Photo by: Edward Tenete) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 27 May 2025 - Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Land Reform, Inge Zaamwani handed over allotment letters to nine beneficiaries who previously lived in corridor areas in the Omaheke Region. (Photo by: Ali Negumbo) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 27 May 2025 - President of Special Olympics Africa, Charles Nyambe. (Photo: Contributed)
KATIMA MULILO, 26 May 2025 - Chief Administrator of the Namibia Sports Commission, Freddy Simataa Mwiya, officially opened the Namibian Local Authority Sports and Recreation Association (NALASRA) Games at Katima Mulilo. (Photo by: Michael Mutonga Liswaniso) NAMPA
NKURENKURU, 26 May 2025 - The Real Madrid Foundation Football Clinics in collaboration with Cadilu Fishing and the Namibia Schools Sport Union, implemented a football programme in the Kavango West Region on Monday. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
NKURENKURU, 26 May 2025 - The Real Madrid Foundation Football Clinics in collaboration with Cadilu Fishing and the Namibia Schools Sport Union, implemented a football programme in the Kavango West Region on Monday. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 24 May 2025 - African Stars FC players pictured at the Independence Stadium. (Photo by: Edward Tenete) NAMPA
NKURENKURU,22 May 2025 - No cattle were lost at the Kavango Cattle Ranch over the past 12 months due to illness, Namibia Industrial Development Agency (NIDA) CEO, Richwell Lukonga, has said. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
Club America's Colombian defender #26 Cristian Borja fights for the ball with LAFC's Spainish defender #14 Sergi Palencia during a play-in match between LAFC and Club America for the final spot in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, California, on May 31, 2025. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP)
Club America's Uruguayan midfielder #07 Brian Rodriguez celebrates scoring his team's first goal from the penalty spot during a play-in match between LAFC and Club America for the final spot in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, California, on May 31, 2025. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP)
Club America's Uruguayan midfielder #07 Brian Rodriguez (R) celebrates scoring his team's first goal from the penalty spot during a play-in match between LAFC and Club America for the final spot in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, California, on May 31, 2025. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP)
Club America's players celebrate their team's first goal from the penalty spot during a play-in match between LAFC and Club America for the final spot in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles, California, on May 31, 2025. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP)
(FILES) South African conductor Ofentse Pitse poses for a photograph during rehearsals at Marks Park Sports Club in Johannesburg on June 4, 2024 as they prepare for a show that brings together classical music and popular South African genre, Amapiano. (Photo by Phill Magakoe / AFP)
(FILES) People dance in the VIP area of a nightclub during an amapiano party in Gauteng, Johannesburg, on February 26, 2022. On a viral video of Manchester United’s Paul Pogba, fresh from a haircut, rhythmically jutting his chin to the sky to the catchy sound, or perhaps during a TikTok binge while trying to memorise a dancer’s slick footwork, you might have not known it then but that’s Amapiano -- a uniquely South African genre. “The pianos” in Zulu - what you hear blended in with some deep house, a jazzy soulful beat, and a lot of bass - have catapulted from the country’s townships to the world. (Photo by GUILLEM SARTORIO / AFP)
(FILES) South African amapiano dancer and singer Kamo Mphela (3L), Amapiano Artist of 2021, prays with her team before a performance at a nightclub in Johannesburg, on February 26, 2022. On a viral video of Manchester United’s Paul Pogba, fresh from a haircut, rhythmically jutting his chin to the sky to the catchy sound, or perhaps during a TikTok binge while trying to memorise a dancer’s slick footwork, you might have not known it then but that’s Amapiano -- a uniquely South African genre. “The pianos” in Zulu - what you hear blended in with some deep house, a jazzy soulful beat, and a lot of bass - have catapulted from the country’s townships to the world. It’s "a whole culture movement, I don't wanna just say it's just a sound because it gets influenced by so many other stuff that are just part of the hood lifestyle,” Kamo Mphela, told AFP donning a sexy furry black-and-white outfit reminiscent of Disney’s Cruella de Vil. (Photo by GUILLEM SARTORIO / AFP)
(FILES) Dancer and choreographer Bontle Moloi, also known as Bontle Modiselle, (C) dances during an amapiano class at her dance studio in Johannesburg, on June 1, 2023. (Photo by Michele Spatari / AFP)