WINDHOEK, 27 June 2025 - One of the trucks donated by the European Union to the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform. (Photo: Contributed)
Swapo Party Youth League regional secretary in the Kavango East Region, Anselm Marungu. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 30 June 2025 – Egypt's Ambassador to Namibia Wael Lotfy (L) pictured with President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah (right) during a courtesy call on statehouse aimed at strengthening diplomatic ties and exploring bilateral cooperation. (Photo by: Negumbo Ali) NAMPA
WALVIS BAY, 30 June 2025 - Minister of International Relations and Trade Selma Ashipala-Musavyi hands over the trading certificate to the Walvis Bay Salt Company CEO Andre Snyman, the first company to trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework the during the official launch of the Namibia’s first export consignment under the framework at Walvis Bay on Monday. This marked the country’s formal entry into Africa’s largest trade agreement. (Photo by: Isabel Bento) NAMPA
WALVIS BAY, 30 June 2025 - Minister and Deputy Minister of International Relations and Trade Selma Ashipala-Musavyi and Jennely Matundu (middle) photographed with Erongo Governor Neville Andre Itope, Namport CEO Andrew Kanime and Walvis Bay Salt Company CEO Andre Snyman among other leaders during the official launch of the Namibia’s first export consignment under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework at Walvis Bay on Monday, marking the country’s formal entry into Africa’s largest trade agreement. (Photo by: Isabel Bento) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 30 June 2025 – The International Paralympic Committee (IPC), in collaboration with the Namibia Paralympic Committee (NPC), launched a three-day regional sports training workshop in Windhoek on Monday. The workshop runs until Wednesday and brings together over 80 participants from 17 African countries for coaching and classification training. (Photo by: Hesron Kapanga) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 30 June 2025 – The International Paralympic Committee (IPC), in collaboration with the Namibia Paralympic Committee (NPC), launched a three-day regional sports training workshop in Windhoek on Monday. The workshop runs until Wednesday and brings together over 80 participants from 17 African countries for coaching and classification training. (Photo by: Hesron Kapanga) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 30 June 2025 – Minister of Health and Social Services Esperance Luvindao and pro bono doctors pose for a photo at the launch of the first phase of the Decongestion Strategy on Monday in Windhoek. (Photo by: Molly Weyulu) NAMPA
The Mayor Silvia Orriols poses for a photograph in the town hall of Ripoll, north of Barcelona, on June 10, 2025. Silvia Orriols, a 40-year-old former administrative worker, was virtually unknown beyond Ripoll when this quiet place of 10,700 inhabitants was thrust into the international spotlight in 2017, as it emerged that the perpetrators of the jihadist attacks that left 16 people dead in Barcelona and Cambrils, mostly young men of Moroccan descent, had grown up there. Six years later, Orriols secured 30.7% of the vote in the municipal elections with the newly founded ultranationalist and Islamophobic political party Alianca Catalana (Catalan Alliance), which won its first mayoralty after opposition parties failed to reach an agreement to block the far-right group. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
The Mayor Silvia Orriols poses for a photograph in the town hall of Ripoll, north of Barcelona, on June 10, 2025. Silvia Orriols, a 40-year-old former administrative worker, was virtually unknown beyond Ripoll when this quiet place of 10,700 inhabitants was thrust into the international spotlight in 2017, as it emerged that the perpetrators of the jihadist attacks that left 16 people dead in Barcelona and Cambrils, mostly young men of Moroccan descent, had grown up there. Six years later, Orriols secured 30.7% of the vote in the municipal elections with the newly founded ultranationalist and Islamophobic political party Alianca Catalana (Catalan Alliance), which won its first mayoralty after opposition parties failed to reach an agreement to block the far-right group. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
A picture taken on June 10, 2025 shows a ballot box used during the October 1, 2017 Catalan referendum at the town hall of Ripoll, north of Barcelona. Silvia Orriols, a 40-year-old former administrative worker, was virtually unknown beyond Ripoll when this quiet place of 10,700 inhabitants was thrust into the international spotlight in 2017, as it emerged that the perpetrators of the jihadist attacks that left 16 people dead in Barcelona and Cambrils, mostly young men of Moroccan descent, had grown up there. Six years later, Orriols secured 30.7% of the vote in the municipal elections with the newly founded ultranationalist and Islamophobic political party Alianca Catalana (Catalan Alliance), which won its first mayoralty after opposition parties failed to reach an agreement to block the far-right group. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
The Mayor Silvia Orriols poses for a photograph in the town hall of Ripoll, north of Barcelona, on June 10, 2025. Silvia Orriols, a 40-year-old former administrative worker, was virtually unknown beyond Ripoll when this quiet place of 10,700 inhabitants was thrust into the international spotlight in 2017, as it emerged that the perpetrators of the jihadist attacks that left 16 people dead in Barcelona and Cambrils, mostly young men of Moroccan descent, had grown up there. Six years later, Orriols secured 30.7% of the vote in the municipal elections with the newly founded ultranationalist and Islamophobic political party Alianca Catalana (Catalan Alliance), which won its first mayoralty after opposition parties failed to reach an agreement to block the far-right group. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
The Mayor Silvia Orriols poses for a photograph in the town hall of Ripoll, north of Barcelona, on June 10, 2025. Silvia Orriols, a 40-year-old former administrative worker, was virtually unknown beyond Ripoll when this quiet place of 10,700 inhabitants was thrust into the international spotlight in 2017, as it emerged that the perpetrators of the jihadist attacks that left 16 people dead in Barcelona and Cambrils, mostly young men of Moroccan descent, had grown up there. Six years later, Orriols secured 30.7% of the vote in the municipal elections with the newly founded ultranationalist and Islamophobic political party Alianca Catalana (Catalan Alliance), which won its first mayoralty after opposition parties failed to reach an agreement to block the far-right group. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)
The former Slovak National Theatre director general Matej Drlicka poses for a picture during an interview with AFP journalists in Bratislava, Slovakia on April 28, 2025. In the crackdown of nationalist Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico's government on culture and media, many heads of major cultural institutions have been replaced. The government says it wants to promote "Slovak culture", accusing those dismissed of "wasting public funds" and other violations, but the moves have drawn thousands into the streets in Bratislava to protest the sector's "destruction". (Photo by JOE KLAMAR / AFP)
The former Slovak National Theatre director general Matej Drlicka poses for a picture during an interview with AFP journalists in Bratislava, Slovakia on April 28, 2025. In the crackdown of nationalist Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico's government on culture and media, many heads of major cultural institutions have been replaced. The government says it wants to promote "Slovak culture", accusing those dismissed of "wasting public funds" and other violations, but the moves have drawn thousands into the streets in Bratislava to protest the sector's "destruction". (Photo by JOE KLAMAR / AFP)
The former Slovak National Theatre director general Matej Drlicka poses for a picture during an interview with AFP journalists in Bratislava, Slovakia on April 28, 2025. In the crackdown of nationalist Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico's government on culture and media, many heads of major cultural institutions have been replaced. The government says it wants to promote "Slovak culture", accusing those dismissed of "wasting public funds" and other violations, but the moves have drawn thousands into the streets in Bratislava to protest the sector's "destruction". (Photo by JOE KLAMAR / AFP)