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Botswana, Namibia advance Trans-Kalahari Railway to boost trade, jobs

GABORONE, Aug. 16 — Officials from Botswana and Namibia convened on Friday at Maun in Botswana’s North West District for a Joint Ministerial Committee meeting to assess progress on the Trans-Kalahari Railway (TKR) project.

During the meeting, Botswana’s Minister of Transport and Infrastructure, Noah Salakae, and Namibia‘s Minister of Work and Transport, Veikko Nekundi, have noted that the joint railway project is on track and within budget in line with the approved Roadmap.

They have also reaffirmed their shared commitment to advancing the project as a strategic infrastructure initiative, aimed at enhancing regional connectivity, trade, and socio-economic development between Botswana, Namibia, and the wider Southern African region.

The joint railway project “promises more than a railway line. It promises to advance our goals of economic diversification, poverty reduction, and inclusive growth,” Salakae said at the meeting’s opening.

Calling the project “too important to fail,” Salakae said that with improved access to African markets under the African Continental Free Trade Area, the railway has the potential to create jobs and build skills.

“If the feasibility numbers do not immediately convince financiers, we must not fold our arms. We must innovate, adapt, and build the partnerships that will make it happen,” he urged, encouraging technocrats to explore innovative financing by blending public, private, and development capital.

For his part, Nekundi described the TKR as a strategic tool to unlock regional trade, generate employment, and attract investment across both countries and beyond.

“As we will be approaching the next phase of securing private sector investment, finalizing financial models and ensuring regulatory and operational readiness, let us remain committed to delivering this project through a transparent, public-private partnership that brings value to our nations,” he said.

Botswana and Namibia signed an agreement in March 2014 to construct the 1,500-km railway, linking Botswana’s coal mines to Namibia‘s port of Walvis Bay.

August 16, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia declares end to cholera, malaria outbreaks

WINDHOEK, Aug. 15– Namibia has officially declared an end to a cholera outbreak in the Opuwo District of the Kunene Region and a widespread malaria outbreak in the northern part of the country.

Minister of Health and Social Services Esperance Luvindao made the announcement Wednesday evening, citing successful containment efforts and a return to pre-outbreak epidemiological patterns.

“In June 2025, Namibia declared a cholera outbreak in Opuwo District, Kunene Region, following confirmed cases,” she said, adding that a total of 18 suspected cases were reported, with nine confirmed.

Luvindao said swift action was taken, led by the Ministry of Health and Social Services, in collaboration with the World Health Organization, the United Nations Children’s Fund, the Red Cross and other partners.

“Through rapid case detection, prompt treatment, intensified risk communication, community engagement, water and sanitation interventions, and cross-border collaboration, we were able to halt the transmission,” she said.

The minister said that no new cholera cases have been reported for over 28 days, the required monitoring period before declaring the outbreak over.

An outbreak of malaria, which started on Dec. 23, 2024, led to an “unusual spike” in cases, especially in northern Namibia. As of Aug. 1, the outbreak had resulted in 95,412 cases and 154 deaths nationwide. (Xinhua)

August 15, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia moves to strengthen digital laws to fight financial crime

WINDHOEK, Aug. 15 — Namibia plans to table a Data Protection Bill in September and introduce legally recognized electronic signatures next February as part of efforts to combat financial crime and strengthen the country’s digital economy, Minister of Information and Communication Technology Emma Theofelus said Thursday.

Speaking at the Standard Bank Anti-Financial Crime Conference 2025 in Windhoek, Theofelus said the Data Protection Bill would safeguard personal data, enhance privacy, and create a secure environment for digital transactions, aligning Namibia with international standards.

“The bill will also build public trust in digital platforms, support innovation, and provide clear rules for the ethical use of data,” she said.

Under the Electronic Transactions Act of 2019, electronic signatures will have the same legal status as handwritten ones, she said, adding that this measure will help reduce forgery, improve transaction traceability, and promote financial inclusion by enabling secure, remote business and government service access.

Financial crime is a development challenge, Theofelus said, citing figures from the Financial Intelligence Center (FIC) showing that in the past year, over 96.9 million Namibian dollars (about 5.5 million U.S. dollars) in suspected illicit proceeds were frozen, and nearly 80 million Namibian dollars were preserved in the High Court.

The FIC supported 148 investigations, identifying 50 victims and 128 persons of interest, while the Namibia Revenue Agency collected 2.7 million Namibian dollars from tax assessments totaling 47 million Namibian dollars, she said.

The minister also highlighted the government’s recent artificial intelligence readiness assessment, saying laws and policies will be developed to create an enabling environment for AI while safeguarding citizens.

Furthermore, she called for a coordinated approach involving government, financial institutions, law enforcement, civil society, academia, and the media to strengthen integrity, transparency, and accountability in the fight against financial crime. (Xinhua)

August 15, 2025 0 comment
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From Ban to Burial: President’s State Funeral for Hawala Sparks Policy Backlash

By John K WaDisho

Windhoek | Aug. 15 — President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah has posthumously conferred the Honour of National Hero and granted a State Funeral to the late Lieutenant General (Retired) Salomon Hawala, despite having earlier announced a suspension of such funerals.

Hawala, born 17 August 1935 and passing 11 August 2025, will be laid to rest on 6 September in Ongwediva, Oshana Region. The Presidency praised his “distinguished military service, steadfast leadership, and unwavering dedication” to Namibia’s liberation and nation-building.

In March 2025, Nandi-Ndaitwah declared a halt to all state funerals until a new national honours policy was finalised, citing the need to cut ceremonial costs. However, her statement included a clause allowing presidential discretion for “cases of extraordinary national significance.”

Hawala’s recognition is not the first exception. Official records indicate at least two state funerals have been held since the suspension — in April and June 2025.

This makes Hawala’s the third under the supposed freeze, fuelling public debate about whether the suspension is symbolic rather than substantive.

Supporters argue that Hawala’s liberation credentials fully justify the exception. Critics counter that repeated exemptions undermine fiscal discipline and risk turning the suspension into a political slogan.

As tributes pour in, the tension between policy promise and political practice lingers. Without clearer guidelines on when exceptions apply, the line between rare honour and routine exception may remain blurred.

For now, the nation will watch Ongwediva, where a hero will be honoured — and a presidency will be quietly judged- Namibia Daily News

August 15, 2025 0 comment
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Wildfires ravage Europe in worldwide heat waves

MADRID, Aug. 14 — Record heatwaves have turned Europe into a sweltering sauna above 40 degrees Celsius as raging wildfires sweep many countries on high alert.

The extreme summer heat has created favorable conditions for rampant wildfires, which have already killed several people, displaced thousands and forced firefighters to battle blazes across large parts of Europe.

In France, a heatwave broke temperature records in the southwest, with maximums up to 12 degrees Celsius above normal, before spreading to the center-east and northeast of the country.

“Often remarkable, even unprecedented maximum temperatures, often 12 degrees above normal levels, were reached this Monday,” Meteo France said Tuesday in a press release.

The intense heat, combined with dry winds and rare rainfall, has created ideal conditions for fueling wildfires, which have erupted across southern Europe and the Balkans.

In Croatia, air temperature records were set in Sibenik, at 39.5 degrees, and Dubrovnik, at 38.9 degrees, while large forest fires raged along its coasts and ripped through neighboring countries in the Balkans.

In Spain, for example, a lightning-sparked wildfire near Madrid killed one man, forced hundreds of residents to evacuate, and scorched about 1,000 hectares of land, while a second fire in the southern resort town of Tarifa prompted around 2,000 people to flee, and additional blazes in Zamora and Castilla y Leon forced hundreds more to leave.

A fire map published on the website of national broadcaster RTVE shows widespread fire activities across the country, with orange and red indicators marking both active fires and affected zones.

Authorities are requesting help from European partners as Spain faces its 10th consecutive day of a record-breaking heatwave, with temperatures peaking at 45 degrees.

The country is ready to seek more help from European allies, such as more firefighters, Spanish Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska was quoted by local media Cadena SER as saying on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, wildfires continue to scorch northern Portugal, with more than 1,300 firefighters and 16 aircraft busy battling flames, one of which has been burning for 10 days.

Large fires have also been roaring in northwestern Türkiye, Albania and Montenegro, where thick smoke blankets several towns.

In Albania, one man died, while a Montenegrin soldier was killed during firefighting operations, and in Greece, wildfires have prompted emergency evacuations at multiple tourist destinations.

Meteorologists attribute the extreme heat to a large high-pressure system drawing warm, dry air over the continent and expected to persist through at least Monday in many areas.

According to data from the European Union (EU)-funded Copernicus Climate Change Service, as the planet continues to warm, not all regions are heating up at the same pace, with Europe warming at a speed more than twice the global average since the 1980s.

The EU’s climate monitoring agency links this accelerated warming to shifts in weather patterns, lower levels of air pollution and Europe’s geographic features, including areas that stretch into the Arctic, the planet’s quickest-heating region.

High heat kills tens of thousands of people in Europe every year. Researchers estimate that dangerous heatwaves in Europe will kill 8,000 to 80,000 more people a year by the end of the century as the lives lost to stronger heat outpace those saved from milder winters.

“This summer, like every summer now, has been exceptional in terms of extreme heat around the world,” said Bob Ward, policy director of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London School of Economics. (Xinhua)

August 14, 2025 0 comment
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Trump warns Russia of “very severe consequences” if ceasefire is rejected

WASHINGTON, Aug. 14 — U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday warned that Russia would face “very severe consequences” if President Vladimir Putin refuses to agree to a ceasefire in the ongoing conflict with Ukraine during their upcoming meeting.

After a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and several European leaders, Trump said that if his talks with Putin go smoothly, he hopes to hold a trilateral meeting with Putin and Zelensky in the near future.

Earlier in the day, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent indicated that Washington could tighten sanctions on Moscow if the Trump-Putin talks fail to produce results.

The one-on-one meeting between Trump and Putin is scheduled for Friday in Anchorage, the largest city in the U.S. state of Alaska. Trump described the upcoming talks as a “feel-out meeting.” (Xinhua)

August 14, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia set to turn oil discoveries into people-centered development

WINDHOEK, Aug. 14– Namibia will ensure that its emerging oil and gas sector becomes a driver of sustainable and inclusive development, with benefits extending beyond resource extraction, President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah said on Wednesday.

In remarks delivered on her behalf by Special Advisor and Head of the Upstream Petroleum Unit Kornelia Shilunga at the official opening of the third Namibia Oil and Gas Conference in the national capital of Windhoek, the president said the country’s success would be measured “not in the number of barrels extracted, but in the number of lives uplifted.”

She outlined a strategy to position oil and gas as a catalyst for a diversified, knowledge-driven economy, in line with Namibia‘s long-term development goals under Vision 2023 and the forthcoming Sixth National Development Plan.

According to Nandi-Ndaitwah, resource revenues should be channeled toward infrastructure, human capital, and local enterprise development, while the environment is safeguarded and commitments to a just energy transition are upheld.

“Oil and gas development must create decent jobs for Namibians across the value chain, build domestic capacity through skills transfer and technology sharing, and stimulate economic diversification by linking with manufacturing, logistics, energy, and other sectors,” she said.

The president also stressed that these measures would help Namibia avoid over-reliance on hydrocarbons, while ensuring that the country’s natural resources contribute to the well-being of both current and future generations.

The three-day conference, held under the theme “From Exploration to Action: Positioning Namibia as the Next Energy Frontier,” has attracted over 1,100 delegates and 73 exhibitors.

It aims to foster dialogue among policymakers, industry leaders, and investors as Namibia transitions from exploration to commercial production of its recent offshore discoveries. (Xinhua)

August 14, 2025 0 comment
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Namibia condemns Israel’s plan to control Gaza City

WINDHOEK, Aug. 14 — The Namibian government has expressed deep concern and condemned the recent decision by the Security Cabinet of Israel to take control of Gaza City, warning that it will worsen the already dire humanitarian crisis in the region.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, the Namibian Ministry of International Relations and Trade voiced its disapproval, noting that the plan threatens to worsen a situation marked by widespread hunger, deprivation, and the risk of forced starvation.

Penda Naanda, executive director in the ministry, said the ministry welcomes the condemnation of this plan by compassionate members of the international community.

“Guided by the principles enshrined in our constitution, Namibia continues to advocate for the peaceful resolution of international disputes and remains firmly committed to supporting initiatives that promote and protect the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people,” he added.

“Drawing on our history of overcoming illegal occupation and apartheid, Namibia fully understands the cost of oppression and hopes and dreams of freedom,” Naanda said.

“Our nation’s experience fuels our empathy and solidarity with those enduring denial of self-determination.

” Naanda said Namibia, therefore, calls on all member states (of the United Nations) to uphold their international obligations and not stand by while a humanitarian catastrophe of potentially monumental proportions unfolds.

“The ministry reiterates Namibia‘s unwavering and principled position in favor of peace and dialogue, as envisioned through the relevant United Nations General Assembly and Security Council resolutions,” he concluded. (Xinhua)

August 14, 2025 0 comment
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U.S. should stop slandering China’s economic, trade cooperation with other countries: Chinese foreign ministry

BEIJING, Aug. 13 — China urges the United States to stop overstretching the concept of security, and to cease slandering and disrupting China’s economic and trade cooperation with other countries, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Wednesday.

Spokesperson Lin Jian made the remarks when asked to comment on allegations from U.S. officials and analysts, who have said that Chinese companies have built a network of ports around the world in order to exercise control over global commerce, conduct so-called espionage and take other moves.

“We hope the U.S. side will stop overstretching the concept of security, cease its peddling of the so-called China threat, and stop slandering and disrupting China’s economic and trade cooperation with other countries,” Lin stressed. (Xinhua)

August 13, 2025 0 comment
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Ithete Warns: Namibia’s Oil Boom Could Slip Through Our Fingers

By John Kay WaDisho,

Windhoek| 13 Aug. — Addressing government officials, industry leaders, and investors, Ithete stressed that the Orange Basin’s vast potential will only translate into real national benefit if local citizens lead in skills, ownership, and decision-making.

He warned against an “imported oil industry” that sidelines local capacity, urging operators and contractors to commit tangible investments in training, supplier development, and technology transfer.

The minister called for infrastructure that serves multiple sectors beyond oil, from ports to fabrication yards, and insisted on transparent local-content frameworks to ensure Namibian companies and workers play a central role.

With production timelines tightening — and final investment decisions looming by 2026 — Ithete emphasised that the country must move quickly to align skills, regulatory readiness, and industry partnerships.

His central point was blunt: “Our oil must build our nation.” Without firm commitments to local participation, he cautioned, Namibia risks watching the benefits of its most significant economic opportunity flow abroad – Namibia Daily News

August 13, 2025 0 comment
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