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Russia condemns Ukraine’s attacks on oil tankers, port in Black Sea

MOSCOW, Dec. 01 — Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova on Sunday condemned recent Ukrainian attacks on two oil tankers and a port in the Black Sea, denouncing those who planned and carried out the strikes.

According to a statement released by the ministry, Zakharova said the two tankers sailing under the Gambian flag and en route to the Russian port of Novorossiysk were attacked by unmanned surface vessels on Friday and Saturday.

The port of Novorossiysk also came under attack on Saturday. She added that Ukrainian intelligence services had claimed responsibility for the attacks.

“We must emphasize that the targeted civilian energy infrastructure plays a vital role in ensuring global energy security and has never been subject to any international restrictions or sanctions,” the spokesperson said, adding that these attacks jeopardized the safety of navigation in this vital waterway.

Russia also calls on the international community to condemn these attacks and give a proper assessment of the destructive actions, Zakharova said. (Namibia Daily News / Xinhua)

December 1, 2025 0 comment
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100 tons of low-quality fuel destroyed in W. Afghanistan

KABUL, Nov. 29 — Authorities have destroyed 100 tons of substandard petroleum products at the Islam Qala border customs facility in western Afghanistan’s Herat Province, the local media outlet Tolonews reported on Saturday.

According to the report, the seized materials included unusable petrol and diesel that had been covertly transported into the country by smugglers using commercial vehicles over various periods of time.

The efforts to prevent the entry of low-grade or illegally imported fuel continue at border checkpoints across the country, the report said.

The Afghan government announced its plans last year to increase oil production from the Amu Darya Basin to 3,000 tons per day. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 29, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia grappling with 5 concurrent disease outbreaks: official

WINDHOEK, Nov. 28 — Namibia is currently grappling with five simultaneous disease outbreaks, Health and Social Services Minister Esperance Luvindao announced on Friday.

According to Luvindao, the ministry is actively responding to outbreaks of poliovirus, chilera, measles, mpox, and Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF).

“I am aware that reports of various disease outbreaks may cause anxiety among the public.

However, I stand before you today to appeal for calm and to assure you that there is no need for panic because the ministry, with the support of stakeholders, is mounting comprehensive response measures,” Luvindao said.

The minister highlighted two particularly critical developments. A poliovirus type-2 was detected in a sewage sample collected on Oct. 24 from the Ndama sewage pond in Rundu District.

“Laboratory analysis revealed that this specific poliovirus type-2 is genetically linked to two human cases reported in Menongue District, Cubango Province, Angola,” she said.

“This represents the importation of the virus into Namibia. Therefore, I hereby acknowledge that there is a poliovirus event in Namibia and, hence, we will respond accordingly in line with international standards”.

According to the Minister, Namibia has been polio-free for many years, with the last outbreak recorded in 2006.

Meanwhile, the minister formally declared a cholera outbreak in the Grootfontein health district of the Otjozondjupa Region on Thursday.

As of Monday, five suspected cases had been recorded, three of which tested positive. She said all cases are confined to an informal settlement in Grootfontein with no travel history, indicating local transmission.

Luvindao also provided updates on ongoing outbreaks of measles, the CCHF, and mpox.

“I must inform the nation that we have lost two lives to this measles outbreak in the Grootfontein and Okahao districts,” she noted, adding that one death has also been reported from the CCHF, while no fatalities have occurred from mpox. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 28, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia strengthens animal health controls after Congo fever case

WINDHOEK, Nov. 28 — Namibia has introduced enhanced animal health control measures following the confirmation of a human case of Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever in the capital, Windhoek.

In a statement on Thursday, the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Land Reform said the measures aim to reduce the risk of virus transmission from ticks and infected animals to humans.

Under the new guidelines, authorities will enforce tick-control activities at all animal gatherings in line with national animal health legislation, the ministry said.

Its Directorate of Veterinary Services will also supervise tick-control measures at identified high-risk livestock facilities and auction sites.

Livestock producers are required to ensure that all animals passing through gathering points are free of ticks, while farms nationwide have been urged to maintain proper tick-management practices using approved acaricides.

Animal handlers are advised to exercise caution during husbandry activities, including wearing protective clothing to minimize exposure to ticks.

Namibia confirmed the outbreak after laboratory tests detected the virus in a patient who was hospitalized on Nov. 18 and died the following day in Windhoek. Namibia Daily News / Xinhua

November 28, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia reports 2nd cholera outbreak in 2025

WINDHOEK, Nov. 28 — Namibia declared a new cholera outbreak in the country’s north-central town of Grootfontein, marking the country’s second outbreak this year, health authorities said on Thursday.

Nambian Minister of Health and Social Services Esperance Luvindao said laboratory tests confirmed the Vibrio cholerae bacteria in a patient who presented at the Grootfontein District Hospital on Nov. 18.

As of Monday, six suspected cases had been recorded, with three confirmed, Luvindao said, adding that all cases originated from an informal settlement in Grootfontein and had no recent travel history.

“This is the second outbreak we have managed this year,” Luvindao said, mentioning a cholera outbreak declared in the Opuwo Health District in June that was successfully contained in August.

According to the minister, rapid-response measures have been activated, including deploying investigation teams, strengthening disease surveillance and establishing oral rehydration points and cholera treatment units in affected areas. Community engagement and public education campaigns have also been intensified, she added. Namibia Daily / Xinhua

November 28, 2025 0 comment
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U.S. threatens peace, stability, destroys strategic security balance: KCNA

PYONGYANG, Nov. 28 — The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)’s official news agency on Friday condemned the U.S.-South Korea military drills and arms buildup, calling Washington “the chieftain threatening the peace and stability and destroying the strategic security balance.”

Recently, the United States and South Korea staged an anti-special operation naval drill in the waters near Phyongthaek, Kyonggi Province of South Korea under the pretext of countering “infiltration” by mobilizing a guided missile destroyer, anti-submarine helicopters, sea-patrol planes and other naval and air forces, said the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in a commentary.

Washington has additionally deployed F-16 fighters to the Osan Air Base in Kyonggi Province to intensify the joint operational capability, which is aimed at deterring the DPRK and regional countries, it added.

The DPRK will “further devote itself to defending its national sovereignty and interests and protecting the regional peace and stability through the exercise of its essential rights as the U.S. continues to renew its record in the demonstration of its military strength threatening the regional countries,” said the commentary. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 28, 2025 0 comment
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UAE pledges 1 bln USD to support Yemen’s energy sector

ADEN, Yemen, Nov. 27 — The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has pledged 1 billion U.S. dollars to support electricity and energy projects across war-ravaged Yemen, according to a report by the state-run Saba news agency on Wednesday.

The announcement was made following a meeting in Aden between Presidential Leadership Council chief Rashad Al-Alimi and UAE Ambassador Mohamed Hamad Al Zaabi, who reaffirmed Abu Dhabi’s intention to help restore Yemen’s battered power network.

Yemen has faced chronic electricity outages for more than two decades, with southern provinces like Aden experiencing blackouts that can stretch up to 12 hours a day.

Damage to power plants, limited fuel supplies and fragmented authorities have left millions relying on private generators and small-scale solar systems.

The UAE’s new pledge coincided with the First National Energy Conference held in Aden, where government officials, investors, and renewable energy experts gathered to discuss long-term reforms aimed at stabilizing the grid and attracting financing to the country. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 27, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia loses nearly 4 mln USD to digital fraud in first 10 months of 2025

WINDHOEK, Nov. 25– Namibia’s banking sector has lost more than 65 million Namibian dollars (about 3.75 million U.S. dollars) to digital fraud between January and October this year, Deputy Governor of the Bank of Namibia Leonie Dunn has said.

Fraud losses have risen significantly in recent years, from 8.7 million Namibian dollars in 2020 to over 54 million Namibian dollars in 2024, with social engineering, card-not-present transactions and point-of-sale skimming emerging as persistent threats across the financial sector, Dunn said Monday at the Fraud and Cybersecurity Risk Awareness Summit in Windhoek, the capital.

She said that informal-sector users and pensioners are particularly vulnerable to digital frauds.

Namibia’s expanding digital ecosystem, supported by 88.4-percent 4G coverage, has improved financial access but has also shifted risks from traditional banking halls to mobile devices, where cybercriminals are increasingly active, Dunn said, calling for continuous consumer education and stronger collaboration across banks, fintech firms, telecom operators and regulators.

She said the central bank has strengthened information-security rules, enhanced cybersecurity standards for the national payment system, intensified public-awareness efforts, and is preparing to launch ConsumerConnect, an AI-enabled complaints platform.

Dunn also emphasized the role of the Financial Sector Cyber Resilience and Fraud Mitigation Council, which coordinates efforts to strengthen national cyber readiness and safeguard the country’s digital financial infrastructure.

She called for more efforts to create a national cybersecurity framework, increase fraud-trend reporting, and embed digital trust and safety into all financial innovations, saying sustained action is needed to preserve public confidence in the financial system. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 25, 2025 0 comment
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Violence against women, girls remains “alarmingly widespread” in Western Pacific: WHO

MANILA, Nov. 25 – – The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday said violence against women and girls remains pervasive worldwide, with new data showing that nearly one in three has suffered intimate partner or sexual violence in their lifetime, a rate that has barely shifted in 25 years.

The agency said the findings highlight an “indisputable reality” that, despite decades of advocacy and policy measures, gender-based violence persists as a preventable social and public health crisis and a profound violation of human rights.

Such violence leaves long-lasting physical, emotional, and economic impacts, contributing to depression, injury, poor reproductive outcomes, and limiting women’s ability to fully participate in society, the WHO said in a news release.

In the Western Pacific Region, the WHO said more than a quarter of women and girls have experienced intimate partner or sexual violence.

About 9 percent of women aged 15 to 49 suffered intimate partner violence (IPV) in the past year, with national rates ranging from 1.2 percent to 42.2 percent.

Another 4.3 percent endured non-partner sexual violence in the previous 12 months, while 9.4 percent have faced such abuse at some point in their lives.

Nearly one in five women across the region has experienced IPV in their lifetime — lower than the global average of one in four — but WHO stressed that the burden remains severe.

In several Pacific island countries, the agency said lifetime IPV prevalence reaches one in two women, among the highest levels recorded globally.

“The scourge of violence against women and girls remains one of the most egregious violations of human rights and a serious threat to health,” said Saia Ma’u Piukala, WHO regional director for the Western Pacific.

He said the updated evidence reinforces the need for action all the more clearly.

“Governments and communities must use data to drive stronger policies, scale up prevention efforts, and invest in health system readiness, so every girl is protected, and every woman is empowered,” added Piukala.

A new WHO survey on health system readiness to respond to interpersonal violence shows that while many countries are strengthening policies to prevent violence against women and girls, major gaps persist in delivering essential services and collecting reliable data.

According to the survey, more countries are now integrating strategies to address violence into national multisectoral plans and recognizing the pivotal role of health systems in responding to survivors’ needs. But implementation remains uneven.

Although some countries include intimate partner violence and post-rape care in their national health plans, many still struggle to ensure survivors can consistently access these critical services.

Comprehensive post-rape care is available nationwide in only a handful of countries, leading to stark geographic disparities.

Data systems also remain weak, the survey said. Just over half of countries have conducted recent surveys on violence against women, and even fewer maintain usable homicide data, gaps that hinder monitoring, accountability, and effective policymaking. (Namibia Daily News /Xinhua)

November 25, 2025 0 comment
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Arms, munitions discovered in N. Afghanistan

KABUL, Nov. 25– Personnel of the national army have uncovered arms and ammunitions in the northern Afghanistan Balkh province, reported the state-run Radio and Television of Afghanistan (RTA) on Tuesday.

The weaponry, which included six stocks of Kalashnikov assault rifles, a pistol, four hand grenades, and hundreds of bullets and other military equipment’s were discovered during search operations in Sholgara district on Monday, the state-owned media outlet added.

Without providing more details, citing the army sources RTA added that no one has the right to keep or carry arms illegally elsewhere in the country. (Namibia Daily News/Xinhua)

November 25, 2025 0 comment
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