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Slick teen lifts China''s World Cup hopes

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Slick teen lifts China''s World Cup hopesSlick teen lifts China''s World Cup hopes Teenage forward Zhang Yuning has given China's World Cup hopes a lift after a bustling competitive debut confirmed his emergence as one of the country's most exciting new football talents.
The Dutch-based 19-year-old, instantly recognisable by his slicked-back hair, proved a real handful for Iran's defence as China held Asia's top-ranked side 0-0 for their first point in the final round of qualifying for Russia 2018.
Zhang was singled out by Iran's experienced coach Carlos Queiroz after Tuesday's stand-out performance, in which he twice came close to breaking the deadlock in Shenyang.
It follows his breakthrough as the first Chinese player to score in the Netherlands' Eredivisie, when he nodded an injury-time winner for Vitesse Arnhem against Roda JC in March.
Zhang also scored on the last day of the season against FC Twente and, after bagging two in China's 4-2 friendly win against Trinidad and Tobago in June, his first competitive international was only a matter of time.
Coach Gao Hongbo chose to start Zhang in Shenyang and it proved an astute move as the teenager came close with a spectacular effort in the first half, and was only denied by a desperate block in the second before he came off on 79 minutes.
"It's very exciting. To represent China on the global stage was one of my dreams when I was a kid," Zhang told the Global Times.
"I think the pace of the qualifier is fine with me, I don't have any worries."
Zhang's rise is tantalising for China as they attempt not only to reach their second World Cup, but also to build a team capable of challenging established powers in the future.
Zhang was only five in 2002 when China finished winless and goalless in their only World Cup finals appearance, and puts a fresh new face on the team after years of disappointments on the international stage.

NAMPA/AFP

Short day for Djokovic

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Short day for DjokovicShort day for DjokovicThe world’s number one men’s tennis player has had a relatively easy passage in the US Open so far. Serbian easily reaches semi-finals Novak Djokovic's path to a 10th successive US Open semi-final has been a strange one, but the world number one isn't complaining.
"I'm in the semi-finals, so that's what matters for me the most," Djokovic said after quarter-final foe Jo-Wilfried Tsonga retired with a left knee injury while trailing 6-3, 6-2.
Djokovic had already received a walkover into the third round when Czech Jiri Vesely withdrew from the tournament with an injury, and he spent just 32 minutes on court before Mikhail Youzhny called it quits in their last-32 clash.
"I can only wish all of my opponents a speedy recovery," Djokovic said.
"That's all I can do on my end.
"I obviously try to focus on things that I need to do, stick to the game plan."
He said he noticed midway through the second set that something was going on with Tsonga.
"I'm sure it's not an easy situation for him to handle, playing quarter-finals and having to retire night session. But, again, it's sport," Djokovic said.
Tsonga sought treatment after he was broken for a second time in the second set, wincing as the trainer manipulated his knee before wrapping tape below the joint.
After Djokovic held to take the set, Tsonga double-faulted to open the third and called it quits.
"I have a pain in my left knee. It's something I had already in the past, so I know exactly what's happening," he said.
Djokovic, who will face France's Gael Monfils for a place in the title match, knows what it's like to be banged-up late in a long season.
His build-up to the final Grand Slam of the year was hampered by a wrist injury, and he received treatment on his arm during both his first and fourth-round matches.
He said he was more grateful for the extra rest than he was concerned about any lack of match play.
"In this stage of the season, considering some physical issues I have had in the last month, month and a half, this was the scenario that I needed," he said.
"I got a lot of days off and recovered my body. Right now I'm feeling very close to the peak. That's the position where I want to be."

NAMPA/AFP

Facebook tournament crowns champions

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Facebook tournament crowns championsFacebook tournament crowns champions The 2016 Facebook Sports Tournament at the Oluno Sports Ground in Ondangwa ended with a prize-giving ceremony on Saturday.
The tournament started on the weekend of 6 August with different sport codes such as netball, volleyball and football for veterans and youth. One of the event organisers, Vaino Shimutwikeni, told Nampa that Air Force A and Ondangwa Masters are the tournament’s champions in the youth and veterans’ football respectively.
Air Force A won after beating Hope Academy 4-3 on penalties, following their goalless draw in normal time of the final.
Ondangwa Masters defeated Eenhana-based Green Side 5-4 on penalties, after the two teams played to a 2-all draw in the normal time of their final match.
Air Force B took the third prize in the youth football category after beating NamPol Ohangwena 2-0, while the third prize in the veterans’ football category went to Ondangwa Legend. Netball and volleyball competitions were completed during the first round on 6 and 7 August and won by two Namibia Defence Force (NDF) teams - Composite Depot and Six Stars. As the winning teams, Composite Depot received a floating trophy, gold medals and N$5 000, while Six Stars took home a floating trophy, gold medals and N$3 000.
Twenty-one Brigade, also an NDF team, were the runners-up in both the netball and volleyball categories. “Six Stars ended third in the netball category, which shows the NDF dominated the tournament,” Shimutwikeni said. Air Force A and B were the other NDF teams in the semi-finals of the youth category on Saturday. Prizes for the veterans’ football category are a floating trophy, gold medals and N$5 000 (first prize), silver medals and N$3 000 (second prize) and N$2 000 (third prize).
In the youth football category, prizes awarded were a floating trophy, gold medals and N$7 000 (first prize), silver medals and N$4 000 (second prize) and N$2 000 (third prize). The tournament caters for those not playing in formal football league, and is aimed at socialising and displaying the talent of retired and emerging players.
Shimutwikeni appealed for more financial contributions by businesses and individuals in order to make the organising committee’s dream of big prizes for future champions a reality.

NAMPA

Omageelo ga yaga komuntu kaakongo

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Omageelo ga yaga komuntu kaakongoOmageelo ga yaga komuntu kaakongoNonando opolisi oya kala tayi ningi iipalanyolo iinene miikundaneki kombinga yaakongo yaali paveta, okwa tokolwa opo ooveta dhi lundululwe opo ku vule okugandjwa omageelo omanene kwaamboka taya ka monika ondjo miipotha yuukongo wiiyamakuti. Epangelo onkene tali kondjitha uukongo waali paveta Oshiwike sha piti, aantu ya thika po-10 oya tulwa miipandeko sho ya adhika niilyo yiiyamakuti mbyoka ya gamenwa.
Omatulo miipandeko ngoka oga ningwa pethimbo ndyoka omahwahwameko geli ompinge nuukongo mboka ga hulu mEtosha National Park.
Omahwahwameko ngoka oga kala miilonga okutameka momasiku ga-6 gaJuni sigo 31 gaAguste nomuule wethimbo ndyoka aakongo ya thika po-15 oya tulwa miipandeko.


Mayola-Ndjai gwIilonga mOpolisi yaNamibia, James Tjivikua, okwa tseyitha etulo miipandeko ndyoka lya ningwa omasiku ngaka ta popi kutya ooniga dhoompanda ndatu, iifufuta inayi shangithwa 7 oshowo iikuti noshiyenditho shimwe oya kwatwako.


Okwa popi kutya pokati kaJuli naAguste okwiitsuwa oompanda dha sa dha thika po-33 mEtosha nomakonaakono oga ulike kutya 25 odha dhipagwa kaakongo. Okwa popi kutya otaku ka ningwa omakonaakono ku talike kutya oompanda dhoka otadhi kwatakanithwa nooniga 14 dhoka dha kwatwako nuumvo.
Momudhingoloko gwaPalmwag omwa adhika oompanda 6 dha sa.
Okwa tulwa miipandeko omuntu gumwe ngoka a adhika e na ondjembo kayi na oombapila, omanga yatatu ya tulwa miipandeko sho ya adhika nomageyo goondjamba. Mosoondaha ya piti okwa tulwa miipandeko aantu yane mboka yaadhika noondjembo dhaana oombapila na oya tulwa miipandeko pethimbo yaadhika yuuka mEtosha.


Pahapu dhUuministeli wOmidhingoloko nOmatalelepo,
Aatamanekwa mboka ohaya kala ya homata nopolisi ohayi longo nuukeka opo ku yandwe etiko lyombinzi pethimbo lyetulo miipandeko.
Metitano, aatamanekwa yane oya tulwa miipandeko konima sho ompanda onduudhe ya dhipagwa pErindi Game Reserve.
Metine lya piti natango aantu yaali oya tulwa miipandeko sho yaadhika nooniga dhoompanda moRundu.


Minista Pohamba Shifeta okwa pandula omatulo miipandeko ngoka ga ningwa oshiwike sha piti, ta popi kutya ngele Namibia osho ta tsikile ngaaka nena elyenge lyuukongo mboka otali ka tewa po.


Shifeta okwa popi kutya otaya ka nkondopeka elongelo kumwe lyawo nOpolisi oshowo Etanga lyEgameno nokugandja omadheulo opo ku kwashilipalekwe kutya iimbuluma mbyoka oya yiwa moshipala.


ELLANIE SMIT

Elongo lyaakuluntu otali ku mangulula

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Elongo lyaakuluntu otali ku mangulula Elongo lyaakuluntu otali ku mangulula Petrus Hanghome okwa hokolola nkene onkalamwenyo ye yalundulukaa konima sho a yi kootundi dhelongo lyaakuluntu mo-1993 nomonena ota vulu okuya momakwatathano nakehe gumwe. Hanghome okwa li ta popi pethimbo lyedhimbuluko lyEsiku lyoLitercy mOshitopolwa shaShana, ndyoka lya ningilwa poshinyanga shiigongi shUukwangula.
Oshituthi shoka osha ningwa kohi yoshipalanyolo ‘Promotion of Information Communication Technology in delivering literacy and lifelong learning for sustainable development’
Okwa popi kutya mo-1993 okwa li ta kathele yina mokutembudha egumbo lyawo momukunda Ohakweenyanga sho uuvu moradio opo aakuluntu mboka kaye shi okulesha nokushanga ya kiinyolithe yo ya tameke ootundi sholiteracy.
Hanghome okwa hokolola kutya konima yesiku limwe sho uuvu etseyitho ndyoka okwa tokola okuya kOshakati Primary School hoka oko a kiishangitha.
“Ngame ondili oshiholelwa shepondolo lyelongo lyaakuuluntu. Ngele owa mono tandi ende tandi lesha nokupopya oshiingilisa osha tamekela melongo lyaakuuluntu,” Hanghome ta ti.


Hanghome okwa tsu omukumo aakuluntu yakwawo mboka kaye shi okulesha nokushanga opo ya tameke ootundi dhelongo lyaakuluntu molwaashoka otashi ya kwathele uuna taya kongo woo omakwatho miiputudhilo ya yooloka.


Omukomeho gwElongo mOshana, Hileni Amukana okwa popi kutya elongo ndyoka nali tale komukalo gokwiilonga tagu tala pomahala agehe. Amukana okwa popi kutya Oshana oshi na aailongi aakuluntu ya thika po-550 mboka yiishangitha noNational Literacy Programme in Namibia (NLPN) mo 2016 moka 122 alumentu omanga aakiintu ye li 428.
Amukana okwa popi kutya omahwahwameko guutekinologi melongo lyaakuluntu otashi gandja uunongo koohandimwe nkene ye na okuuva onkalo yuuyuni nokukutha ombinga mukehe shoka tashi ningwa nokuholola woo omawi gawo.
Kombinga yomikundu ngoka gwa taalela ootundi dhoka, Amukana okwa popi kutya aakuluntu yamwe ihaya kuthako ootundi dhawo nomukumo naalumentu oyendji ihaya hiti ootundi dhoka. Okwa popi kutya aahwahwameki yootundi dhoka nayo otaya thigi po iilonga okuka ya kiilonga yi li hwepo.
KENYA KAMBOWE

Ya hala eidhopo mo lyaShaningwa mekondjelo lyevi mOmatando

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Ya hala eidhopo mo lyaShaningwa mekondjelo lyevi mOmatandoYa hala eidhopo mo lyaShaningwa mekondjelo lyevi mOmatandoElelo lyondooopa yaNgwediva oli na einekelo kutya Ominista yOmayambulepo gOondoolopa niitopolwa, Sophia Shaningwa otayi kiidhopa moontamanana dhevi pokati kelelo ndyoka naakwashigwana yomomudhingoloko gwaMatando. Aakwashigwana oya hala omayamukulo moshikumungu shevi mOmatando Elelo lyondoolopa olya lopota kutya aakwashigwana yomOmatando 1,2 no 3 otaya shunitha monima omayambulepo gondoolopa momudhingoloko gwawo. Aakwashigwana mboka aniwa otaya pula ya uvithweko kutya osha ende ngiini omikunda dhawo dhi ninge oshitopolwa shondoolopa mo-2003 omanga inaya tseyithilwa. Oya hala omapulo okuza kelelo lyondoolopa oshowo kelelo lyoPamudhugululwakalo gUukwanyama.
Mayola Angelina Angula, okwa koleke koshifokundaneki shoNamibian Sun kutya okwa li a fala Shaningwa komudhingoloko ngoka, pethimbo lyomauliko giipindi mondoolopa ndjoka ngoka opo ga hulu, opo Shaningwa a ka tale komudhingoloko ngoka na oku na einekelo kutya otaka idhopo moshikumungu shoka.
Angula okwa popi kutya elelo olya mono evi ndyoka momikunda dhoka ndatu mo-2003, ihe ooyene yomahala ya tameke taya landitha po ooplota dhawo kaakwashigwana mboka ya hala okukala popepi nondoolopa nooyene yomikunda oya kala taya gandja uumwene wevi kaakwashigwana mboka.
Okwa popi kutya otaya kutha ko ehala ndyoka molwaashoka olya metwa nale naamboka taya ka futwa oomboka owala ya li poo manga evi inali metwa. Mboka ye yapo konima sho evi lya metwa nale otaya ka yiwa nayo moonkundathana nongele otaya vulu oondando dhooplota nena otaya pewa ompito ye dhi landepo nongele itaye dhi vulu nena otaya ka thiga po ehala ndyoka.
Mboka ye li mpoka tapu ka enda oopate nominino dhiiyekelwahi nomeya nena otaya ka dhiga po ehala ndyoka oshali na itaya futwa.



Omunashipundi gwokomitiye yaakwashigwana mboka, Linekela Shipindo okwa lombwele oNamibian Sun kutya, yo inaya landa ooplota ihe oya pewa evi kaakwanezimo yawo naavali yawo opo ya vule okutunga omagumbo gawo.


“Aakwanezimo yetu inaya lombwelwa kutya oyeli oshitopolwa shondoolopa sigo omo-2012 sho elelo lyondoolopa lya li lya hala okuhanagulapo omagumbo gawo tali popi kutya oga tungwa pwaahena epitikilo. Otwa pumbwa uuyuuki molwaashoka aantu oyendji mOmatando mboka ya gumwa konkalo ndjika oya kalapo ethimbo lyoomvula dha thika po-10, omanga ehala ndyoka inali tulwa momake gondoolopa,” Shipindo ta ti.
Pambaapila, ehala ndyoka olya tulwa momambo gepangelo kutya olya ninga ehala lyondoolopa yaNgwediva mo-2012. Shipindo okwa popi kutya yo itaya pataneke omayambulepo gondoolopa ihe oya hala omahala gawo ga shangithwe naamboka taya gumwa ya futwe.
Elenga enene lyaNamutayi, Amon Shipanga okwa zimine nokukoleka kutya ooyene yomikunda dhoka oyali ya futwa ihe okwa gandja uusama kelelo lyondoolopa sho inali tseyithila aakwashigwana pethimbo.


ILENI NANDJATO

Iiponga otayi mana po oshigwana

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Iiponga otayi mana po oshigwanaIiponga otayi mana po oshigwana Ekalekepo lyoompamgo moondjila dhaNamibia ogwo owala omukalo ngoka tagu vulu okuya moshipala iiponga yomoondjila mbyoka tayi faalele oomwenyo dhaakwashigwana omayovi oshilongo.
Dhoka oohapu dhamushanga gwoNamibia Road Safety Council (NRSC) Eugene Tendekule.
Okwa popi kutya nonando otaku ningwa oonkambadhala kehe kaakalekipo yooveta omukalo gwekondololo lyoompango dhomoondjila kagu li pamuthika gwopombanda moshilongo.
Tendekule okwa popi kutya omakonaakono ngoka ga ningwa oga mona kutya aalongithi yoondjila oye na omauyelele kehe ngoka taya pumbwa mekaleko lyiiponga kokule ihe omaihumbato gaahingi naalongithi yoondjila oga pumbwa okulunduluka.
Okwa popi kutya ngele omaihumbato guuhasha nokushinga nuuhasha mokati kaahingi otaga tsikile nena aahingi onkene taya tsikile nokwiidhimbika oompango dhomoondjila.
Okwa popi kutya aahingi yaNamibia oye na omukalo gwokupogola oompango dhomoondjila nolundji aantu ohaya kala taya hingi ya endelela naashoka otashi etitha aanti ya hinge oondapo oonene noonkondo.
Olopota ya ningwa koGender Research and Advocacy Project (GR&AP) yoLAC, oya mono kutya iiponga oyindji otayi pula opo ku katukwe oonkatu dhelongo lyaalongithi yondjila mekwathelo lyepangelo naakalekipo yoompango.
Rachel Coomer, gwoGR&AP, okwa gwedha ko kutya otwa pumbwa oompango dha gwedha kwaadhoka dhili nale miilonga opo oondjila dhetu dhi kale ehala lya gamenwa.
Olopota yoLAC oya popi woo kombinga yomapaya gokwiimangelamo kaakuluntu naanona kutya otaga hupitha oomwenyo.
Coomer okwa popi kutya molwaashoka omikalo dhilwe ngaashi oompate oombali iinima mbyoka yi na ondilo na otayi kwata ethimbo, ope na shoka tashi vulu okuningwa manga ngaashi okuyambulapo onkalo yuukolele wiihauto moopate dhaayehe.
Mehuliloshiwike lya piti, okwa lopotwa iiponga mbyoka ya faalela oomwenyo dhaantu yahetatu palopota ndjoka ya pitithwa koMVA.
Iiponga mbyoka oya etitha omayehameko gaantu 32 na oya holoka miitopolwa unene shaKhomas, , Otjozondjupa, Hardap, Erongo nOhangwena.
JANA-MARI SMITH

Mobile price wars

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Mobile price warsMobile price warsCombined with ever-cheaper smartphones, the new 4G network will swell the number of internet users and prompt those already using data, millions of them on sluggish 2G networks, to upgrade. Indian tycoon pledges free 4G Outside a tiny Reliance store in a trendy Mumbai neighbourhood, residents queued for hours this week for a new SIM card promising free data - and a dramatic reshaping of the Indian mobile landscape.
Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man, announced his long-awaited Reliance Jio 4G network with an audacious free service for the rest of 2016, followed by vastly cheaper data plans and free voice calls for life.
Anticipating the shake-up, rival Airtel has already slashed 3G and 4G prices by up to 80% while Vodafone has heaped more data into its prepaid tariffs.
Yet analysts say competitors will struggle to match the deep pockets of a startup backed by Reliance Industries, the energy-to-chemicals conglomerate.
“I am hoping Jio can help me bring down my bills while providing unlimited internet usage,” said Pushpraj Yadav, an e-commerce worker in Mumbai who complains he “incurs huge bills” for his data use.
“Competition between Jio and other networks like Airtel is good for consumers.”
India’s mobile market is plagued by patchy reception, frequent call drops, erratic pricing and 3G internet speeds that fluctuate wildly.
“With Reliance Jio, I expect the data charges to be low and the connectivity to be better than other networks,” said Amit Biswas, an Indian navy officer in Mumbai.
“Mobile connectivity in some parts of the country is really bad.”
With his US$20 billion investment in mobile, Ambani is betting on a fast-evolving internet landscape in a country where nearly a billion people are still not online.
Public wifi is scarce and broadband access is weak, with many rural areas lacking the infrastructure to deliver high speeds.
Most of the hundreds of millions of Indians coming online over the next decade will start with smartphones, something being avidly targeted by tech giants Google and Facebook.
NAMPA/AFP

SA dodges recession

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SA dodges recessionSA dodges recessionSouth Africa avoided slipping into recession with official statistics showing the economy grew 3.3% in the second quarter after a 1.2% contraction in the previous quarter. Economy grows 3.3% The rand rallied on Tuesday on the back of better emerging market sentiment and after news that South Africa has avoided a technical recession with better-than-expected growth numbers for the second quarter of 2016.
Statistics South Africa announced on Tuesday that GDP expanded by 3.3% quarter-on-quarter (q/q). This compares with the 2.8% expected, and following the 1.2% contraction in the previous quarter. The year-on-year growth was 0.6%.
By 12:46 the rand was trading at R14.17, more than 20c firmer from its overnight close of R14.38 in New York.
South African data in the past couple of months has been fairly decent, and this was certainly reflected in the GDP number, said TreasuryOne.
“We are still a miles away from where we want to be, but there is some light on the horizon.”
“This is good news all round as a technical recession was avoided. The Easter weekend falling in March no doubt helped the second quarter and we may actually get positive growth this year,” economist Mike Schüssler told Fin24.
Mike de Beer, who announced the growth stats on behalf of Statistician General Pali Lehohla, said for the first time in a long while there was a positive growth rate in all three of the largest sectors. The primary sector showed a growth rate of 8.8% with mining up by 11.8%, the secondary sector grew by 5.3% with manufacturing up 8.15%, and the tertiary sector showed a growth rate of 2% with finance and transport both up 2.9%.
De Beer indicated that manufacturing, mining and quarrying made the biggest contribution to GDP growth. Manufacturing rose by 8.1%; this was largely due to higher production in petroleum and chemical products, rubber and plastic products and motor vehicles, parts and accessories and other transport equipment.
He said nominal GDP is estimated at just more than R1trn. The finance sector is the biggest contributor followed by government, trade and manufacturing. About R1 in every R5 comes from the financial sector.
Real expenditure on GDP increased by 3.4% in the second quarter on a q/q basis. It was mostly export driven. Government consumption expenditure lifted by 1.3%. There were declines in gross fixed capital formation and imports of goods and services.
Household final consumption expenditure went up by 1% q/q. The strongest growth came from miscellaneous goods and services (8.9%). The growth in consumption expenditure was mostly on the services side.
Government final consumption expenditure increased by 1.3% q/q and gross fixed capital formation fell by 4.6% q/q. Construction works declined by 14.4% and machinery and other equipment by 13%.
Exports increased by just over 18% in the second quarter, while imports dropped by 5.1% q/q.
De Beer said the growth rate tells the same story as the last three or four years in terms of GDP growth.
“Yes, it is good news, but - and this is the big problem - the economy is already far weaker in the third quarter and we need to also understand that with a population growth at 1.7%, we are growing far slower than that on a year-on-year basis,” said Schüssler.
He said that means the average South African is still poorer than a year or even three years ago.
“That is the real problem: we are not keeping pace with our population growth,” he cautioned.

NEWS24

Top management appointments at RMB

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Top management appointments at RMBTop management appointments at RMB FNB Namibia subsidiary RMB Namibia this week announced two top management appointees to lead the corporate and investment bank into the future.
The lender announced its appointment of Daniel Motinga as senior client coverage manager in the public sector, and that of Tuyeni Akwenye as coverage manager.
Renowned economist Motinga is a former head of research at FNB Namibia, and holds a MA in economics from the University of East Anglia in the UK, as well as a BEcon from Unam and a Hons BCom from Unisa.
“Primarily I am responsible for growing and driving a sustainable relationship with stakeholders in the public sector, in support of the Group’s medium and long-term strategy,” Motinga said of his selection.
“I am certainly looking forward to building mutually beneficial engagements within this portfolio,” he said.
In joining the RMB Namibia coverage team, Akwenye is responsible for delivering a full scope of corporate and investment banking solutions to clients in the financial institutions sector.
He holds a Bachelor of Business Science in Actuarial Science, obtained from the University of Cape Town (UCT), an Associate level Actuary and is a CFA Level 3 candidate.

STAFF REPORTER

Investors scope out Khorixas

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Investors scope out KhorixasInvestors scope out KhorixasNorth-central Namibia’s former capital has more to offer the world than just national monuments and rock art. Second development conference considers merits The business community last week focused its attention on the southern Kunene Region town of Khorixas, as the town council hosted its second annual Khorixas Local Economic Development Conference.
Addressing the business community, investors, government representatives, educators and traditional leaders at the official opening on Friday, minister of works and transport Alpheus !Naruseb implored all to consider how they could help add value to the area.
This year’s conference took place under the theme ‘Khorixas, the ideal investment destination of choice’.
In that regard, he recognised the forum’s identifying of four pillars, namely tourism, agriculture, mining and education, as critical success points for the national economy and the development of Khorixas in particular.
“Khorixas is the gateway to a number of tourist attractions in northern Kunene, including the World Heritage Park Twyfelfontein, the Organ Pipes, the Welwitschia mirabilis, the Petrified Forest or Hai-Kais, and multiple tourism establishments sprouting along the Arid Eden tourist route,” !Nariseb said.
He urged tourism industry players to keep in mind environmental sustainability in their endeavours, while ensuring tourists feel free to move around the country without fear of violence or attack.
In terms of mining, he urged investors to look at ways in which minerals could be processed inside the country, “such that we enhance our manufacturing capacity and further add value to our own resources”.
“Markets should be explored not only abroad, but also within our country so that we can proudly own, wear and use our own mineral resources,” the minister said.
Moving his attention to education and Namibia’s perceived lack of a skilled workforce, !Naruseb said resources in urban centres were being exhausted due to inward migration from the rest of the country.
“I therefore encourage the creation, decentralisation and establishment of services in the regions, particularly in towns like Khorixas, so that we are able to share the burden of resource constraints.
“Establishment of vocational training institutions in smaller towns will better address the needs of our people, particularly those at grassroots level,” he said.
He urged delegates to seriously consider opportunities available at the town and promote it as a viable selling point to other investors.
“National statistics from institutions such as the Development Bank of Namibia (DBN) show that Kunene is one of the regions with the fewest projects being funded,” the minister said.
“This ailment should be addressed critically by policymakers, planners and business personalities so that we can tap into untapped markets to host opportunities ensuring that no one is left out.”

DENVER ISAACS

Nigerian army faces new dangers in Boko Haram campaign

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Nigerian army faces new dangers in Boko Haram campaignNigerian army faces new dangers in Boko Haram campaignNigeria''s military has liberated large swathes of land from Boko Haram but a ride with an army convoy, all guns firing for fear of ambush, shows how far the northeast is from normality after a brutal Islamist insurgency that has displaced millions. Extent of Boko Haram destruction becoming clear The moment military convoys leave the relative safety of Bama, Borno state's second town, soldiers in the lead vehicle open fire with a heavy cannon into the scrub along the road to pre-empt attacks by remaining fighters from the Islamist group.
As they head for the regional capital, Maiduguri, the soldiers scan the road for bombs or booby-traps, while shooting at any possible cover - abandoned petrol stations, burned out farmhouses, trees, even clumps of elephant grass. Jeep drivers behind them in the convoy join in, firing assault rifles indiscriminately through windows with one hand while gripping the steering wheel with the other.
" If there is somebody there and you fire at him, he definitely wants to fire back so then you know his position and take action," said Colonel Adamu Laka, the military commander in Bama. " You are trying to seize the initiative."
Such extreme measures highlight the lack of security across Borno despite the army's success in driving Boko Haram out of occupied territory that 18 months ago was the size of Belgium.
Reuters was given access to the Nigerian army on the ground as it seeks to reimpose order in Borno after seven years of dominance by Boko Haram, one of the world's deadliest Islamist groups and a major challenge to a government also grappling with an economic crisis caused by plunging oil prices.
As the first international reporting team to travel through the area by road since Boko Haram was pushed back, Reuters was able to see the devastation caused by the group. Roads are highly dangerous, no food is grown in the fields, and people are still trickling out of their hiding places in the bush.
The military campaign has curbed an insurgency that has killed at least 15,000 people since 2009 but in a new phase of the conflict, the army now finds itself facing small groups of guerrillas operating in the sparsely populated, wooded terrain.
In July, Boko Haram fighters hiding in trees along the Bama-Maiduguri road ambushed a United Nations aid convoy, wounding five people.
With the U.N. saying up to 5.5 million people in the northeast might need food aid this year, the military is under intense pressure to make roads safer. It is no easy task.
" There are so many ambush sites along the road so we are cutting the trees," Colonel Laka said.
As Boko Haram has been forced back, the government and aid agencies have been able to assess for the first time the extent of the humanitarian disaster left in the jihadists' wake.
The U.N. children's agency, UNICEF, said last month nearly half a million children were at risk of 'severe acute malnutrition' in the area around Lake Chad that has been ravaged by Boko Haram.
According to UNICEF, in Borno, where two in three medical centres or clinics had been partially or completely destroyed, 49,000 children will die this year if help does not arrive.
" Towns and villages are in ruins and communities have no access to basic services," UNICEF said.
Describing civilians liberated by the army, Mohammed Kanar, northeastern coordinator for the national relief agency, said: " You will see them emaciated. As for an adult man, you can even count his ribs."
The numbers could well rise as civilians emerge from the countryside into towns now controlled by the army. " We had to leave the bush because we were hungry," said Haja Jamil, 40, a pregnant yet painfully thin woman who arrived in Bama two weeks ago with two children.
" Boko Haram kept coming and hassling us. We are still afraid of them," she said, sitting on the floor of a military clinic in Bama while feeding her 3-year-old daughter, Aisha.
Deserted city
Since President Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler, took office last year, the army has found fresh resolve against Boko Haram, which has been fighting to establish a mediaeval caliphate in the southern stretches of the Sahara.
The military has moved its headquarters to Maiduguri, drafted in new generals and improved cooperation with neighbouring countries, allowing it to capture and take control of dozens of towns such as Bama. But the plight of Bama shows the extent of the challenge in recovering from the group's scorched earth campaign.
Once a city of more than a quarter of a million people, Bama is now a ghost town, littered with burnt-out buildings and home to 11,000 people living behind military fortifications.
Goats nibble at grass growing in cracks in the road. Piles of rubbish fester in ditches. The main street is lined with fire-gutted banks and shops, walls daubed with graffiti in Arabic saying " God is Great" .
Before it left, the group, whose name means 'Western education is sinful' in the local Hausa language, also ransacked schools and the palace of Bama's traditional ruler.
Now, soldiers camp in abandoned shops behind walls of sand-bags. Officers work in a tent, near a wall painted with the black flag of Middle East militant group Islamic State, to which Boko Haram pledged loyalty this year.
The army has set up makeshift classrooms for displaced children and piles of concrete blocks trucked in from Maiduguri point to hoped-for reconstruction, but the proximity of Boko Haram in the Sambisa forest - its final bolthole, according to the army - makes normality a distant dream.
NAMPA/REUTERS

Germany''s Merkel hits back at critics of immigration policy

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Germany''s Merkel hits back at critics of immigration policyGermany''s Merkel hits back at critics of immigration policy Chancellor Angela Merkel on yesterday vowed to continue efforts to strengthen security at home and speed up repatriations of migrants who were denied asylum in Germany, but insisted the overall situation was much better now than a year ago.
Merkel, whose conservative party lost significant ground to the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party in a regional election on Sunday, struck a defiant tone in a speech to parliament, denying that the influx of hundreds of thousands of migrants would cut benefits for Germans as some have feared.
She also defended her handling of German-Turkish relations and said a European Union deal with Ankara to curb the flow of migrants was necessary and could serve as a model for agreements with other countries.
NAMPA/REUTERS

Threatening socio-economic decline

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Threatening socio-economic declineThreatening socio-economic decline While there is nothing wrong with the broad ideals of the proposed NEEEF Bill, the end result of this is piece of legislation leaves many people with feelings that it’s discriminatory, mainly to the poor and downtrodden.
At the same time, the entire process has brought out some other pertinent issues like the arrogance of the business community and their complaints about discrimination without offering any viable alternatives – like perhaps a 25% solidarity tax to benefit everyone? This brings us to the very question of solidarity tax – if indeed the Proposed NEEEF Bill could have proposed a percentage of solidarity tax to be levied on business, instead of the current scenario which is entirely geared towards benefitting an elite few people (no doubt the most greedy ones too – the ones that will not share a single cent), then we would not have any problem with the bill. In fact the majority of Namibians would support the Bill – vocally, I might add (except the business people of course).
This once again brings us to the business people, their arrogance and the way they continue to treat their workers without whom they would not make any money in the first place.
Most workers in Namibia still only have rights on paper which disappear once they try to find justice – why? The fact of the matter is that in its current state the NEEEF Bill will only benefit a select few – that’s if the businesses don’t close down and ship out – which would lead to greater unemployment figures and greater poverty as a result and overall economic decline.
The authors of the Bill are obviously blinded by greed at the prospects of personal material gain in the form of their new and “innovative” benefit scheme for the elite, and designed by the elite.
On the other hand, the just as greedy business community, driven by arrogance, hasn’t come up with any alternatives for a scheme to benefit the poverty stricken majority on whose backs they built their empires. As long as critical reasoning escapes us, we are headed for disaster.

City CEO will be appointed this year

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City CEO will be appointed this yearCity CEO will be appointed this year

The City of Windhoek is likely to have a new chief executive officer before the end of this year.
Mayor Muesee Kazapua told Nampa that the recruitment process will be finalised this year.
Kazapua said the council management committee will soon give their recommendations to the line minister, Minister of Urban and Rural Development Sophia Shaningwa, for final approval.
The City of Windhoek has been without a chief executive officer since former CEO Niilo Taapopi’s term ended on 16 December 2014.
No suitable candidate was found for this crucial position in three interview sessions held since then.
Kazapua said during the fourth round of interviews in July this year, the top three candidates were Namdeb general manager Riaan Burger; Erongo Regional Electricity Distributor chief executive Robert Kahimise and former Social Security Commission chief executive Kenandai Tjivikua.
The fourth candidate was Sanlam Namibia CEO Tega Shiimi ya Shiimi, Kazapua said.
“The council management committee will soon come up with recommendations between the top three candidates and the minister will give the final approval,” he said.
It was reported recently that the interview panel recommended Burger for the position.
The panellists for the fourth round of interviews included Ohlthaver & List Group chairperson Sven Thieme, Namport CEO Bisey /Uirab, presidential adviser Inge Zaamwani-Kamwi, chief regional officer of the Khomas Regional Council Clement Mwafila, and finance permanent secretary Ericah Shafudah.
They were also the panellists for the third round of interviews in September 2015.
However, some of the city management team and council management members were said to be against the panel recommendations to appoint Burger as City of Windhoek CEO because he is white.
Burger worked at Namdeb as engineering manager from 2006 to 2008, and was later promoted to head of strategic projects, a position he served in from March 2007 until 2011. In 2012, Burger was promoted to general manager at the diamond company.
He holds a master’s degree in business administration from Stellenbosch University in South Africa.
The city council has appointed its strategic executive for human resources, Fillemon Hambuda, as acting CEO from 1 September 2015 until further notice.

NAMPA

Stiffer penalties for wildlife crimes

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Stiffer penalties for wildlife crimesStiffer penalties for wildlife crimesThe environment ministry has vowed to strengthen its collaboration with law enforcement agencies in tackling poaching. More poaching incidents reported While the police have been making headway against poachers, the relevant laws are being amended to ensure heavier sentences for those convicted of wildlife crimes.
Last week ten suspects were arrested for poaching and illegal possession of protected wildlife products.
These arrests came shortly after the fifth phase of the anti-poaching operation in Etosha National Park ended.
The operation lasted from 6 June to 31 August. During that time 15 suspected poachers were arrested.
Major-General James Tjivikua, Deputy Inspector-General for Operations at NamPol, shared the latest anti-poaching news, saying that three rhino horns, seven unlicensed firearms, 34 rounds of ammunition as well as one vehicle and a rifle silencer had been confiscated.
He said an aerial count in July and August found 33 rhino carcasses in Etosha and ballistic tests confirmed that 25 of the animals had been shot by poachers. He said DNA samples will be cross-checked against the 14 rhino horns that have been confiscated this year.
In the Palmwag area six rhino carcasses were discovered during an aerial count.
Three other firearms that were confiscated were referred for ballistic testing and one suspect was arrested for being in the possession of an unlicensed firearm while three other suspects were arrested for being in the possession of an elephant tusk, Tjivikua said.
In the latest incidents four suspects were arrested on Sunday when they were about to enter the Etosha National Park for illegal hunting of rhinos. According to the Ministry of Environment and Tourism these suspects were heavily armed and the police and other stakeholders acted swiftly and professionally to avoid bloodshed during the arrest.
On Friday four suspects were arrested after a black rhino was poached at Erindi Game Reserve.
Also last week Thursday, two suspects were arrested at Rundu for the illegal possession of rhino horns.
Environment minister Pohamba Shifeta commended the latest arrests and said if Namibia continues on this path it will be able to break the syndicates involved in poaching.
According to Shifeta the arrests were made possible by the cooperation of the public and other stakeholders.
Shifeta said the ministry will strengthen its efforts in effective crime prevention and law enforcement through coordinated and integrated clusters of activities such as security planning, monitoring and adaptive management, a strong and effective presence on the ground, and dedicated investigation units that focus on criminal and poaching syndicates and organised crime.
“We will further strengthen our collaboration with the police, army, judiciary, intelligence service, communities, farmers and all other relevant stakeholders and continuous training and capacity building of staff members and those involved in this operation and wildlife crime prevention,” said Shifeta.

ELLANIE SMIT

Namibia’s crisis on the roads

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Namibia’s crisis on the roadsNamibia’s crisis on the roadsStudies have proven that over 90% of crashes happen as a result of human behaviour. Strict enforcement vital in curbing road mayhem Aggressive and enhanced law enforcement on Namibian roads is a crucial step needed to curb lethal driver attitudes which cost hundreds of lives and millions in taxpayer dollars annually.
“Effective policing is the most important requirement for improved road safety performance. We can have the best roads, the best rules of the road, the best regulatory environment, but if these are not properly policed and effectively enforced, like it or not, we will continue to have accidents and fatalities on our roads,” Eugene Tendekule, executive secretary of the Namibia Road Safety Council (NRSC), told Namibian Sun this week.
He said despite efforts by law-enforcement agencies and road-safety authorities “traffic policing is not at the level where one would have liked it to be”.
Year to date comparative statistics with 2015 show a noticeable reduction in crashes, the Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA) Fund said this week.
Crashes decreased by 5%, from 2 897 to 2 774 incidents recorded so far this year.
Fatalities dropped by 4%, with 482 killed by September 2015 compared to 268 this year.
Injuries fell by 6%, from 5110 to 4819, the MVA report shows.
“This means that in one way or another, road-safety campaigns are yielding results, although at a slow pace,” MVA spokesperson Kapena Tjombonde said.
Nevertheless, Tendekule explained that a study examining the effectiveness of awareness and education campaigns found “that road users are aware of what needs to be done, but the change of attitude and behaviour requires long-term sustainable efforts supported by effective law enforcement”.
He said as long as traffic violations and reckless driving remain undetected, drivers will continue to take risks and ignore traffic laws.
“The level of detection is low, which is compounded by the capacity of the courts to deal with voluminous traffic cases generated by the various law-enforcement agencies,” he said.
According to the MVA Fund, studies have proven that over 90% of crashes happen as a result of human behaviour.
According to the fund, Namibia is gradually moving towards adopting the safe system approach, a set of guiding principles that mark a shift from a sole focus on crash reduction to the elimination of death and serious injury.
The safe system approach builds upon the ground-breaking road safety efforts of the Netherlands and Sweden, and involves a holistic view of the road transport system, including users and planners.
An MVA analysis found that the top three types of crashes in Namibia are roll-overs (30%), collisions (28%) and pedestrian related (28%).
“Law enforcement is a very critical component in the road-safety space because it deters the deviant driver and forces them to behave in a certain manner,” Tjombonde commented.
According to Tendekule, many Namibian drivers have a reputation for “taking uncalculated risks” and as such there is a “lot of excitement on our roads.”
He added that people tend to be extremely impatient and are always in a hurry when driving, thus leading to higher travelling speeds.
He said many drivers justify their reckless behaviour because of the distances they have to travel.
For a number of consecutive years, MVA crash statistics found that the most vulnerable road users are aged between 15 and 35 years and are predominately male. Pedestrians and passengers are classified as high risk.
The fund has formed strategic partnerships with various road-safety authorities, as well as Unicef, to conduct road-safety audits and regular road-safety campaigns.
“Continuous public education will perpetually remind road users of road-safety tips,” Tjombonde explained.
According to a report on enhancing road safety, published by the Legal Assistance Centre (LAC), Namibia’s legal framework governing road safety is “relative to other African countries … reasonably comprehensive”.
However, the report, compiled by the Gender Research and Advocacy Project (GR&AP) of the LAC, found that the high fatality and accident rate calls for “innovation in the legislative framework alongside government action on education, strategic policies and more intensive law enforcement.”
Rachel Coomer, GR&AP public outreach manager, added that “we need more law enforcement of the current law and we should be considering some new strategic methods to keep our roads safe as well”.
While infrastructure, including more dual carriageways, is costly and a long-term strategy, there are “numerous options that can be implemented that can make a difference. One example is improving the quality of cars on our roads,” she said.
In addition, simple life-saving habits, such as using seatbelts and child restraints, “cannot be overstated.”
JANA-MARI SMITH

High treason accused remanded

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High treason accused remandedHigh treason accused remanded

The remaining eight of 12 accused in the second Caprivi treason trial were remanded to 27 October to afford them another opportunity to get legal representation.
The lawyer who was representing them, Norman Tjombe, last week withdrew from the trial on the instructions of the accused. Tjombe declined to explain the reason for the withdrawal, citing client/attorney privilege.
Judge Petrus Unengu informed the eight accused that he will give them another opportunity to obtain legal representation.
The eight accused were part of a group of twelve people deported from Botswana on allegations of attempting to secede the Zambezi Region from Namibia.
They are Progress Kenyoka Munuma, Shine Samulandela Samulandela, Manuel Manepelo Makendano, Alex Sinjabata Mushakwa, Diamond Samunzala Salufu, Hoster Simasiku Ntombo, Boster Mubuyaeta Samuele and John Mazila Tembwe.
They question the jurisdiction of the High Court in the case. They claim they were abducted from Botswana and brought to Namibia by officials of the Namibian government with the full knowledge and cooperation of the Botswana government.
They allege that they were illegally taken from the Dukwe Refugee Camp, where they were residing as asylum seekers, to Francistown Security Prison.
From there, they were transported to a centre for Illegal immigrants, also in Francistown, where they were allegedly detained unlawfully at the request of the Namibian authorities.
The Supreme Court recently dismissed their appeal against the High Court dismissal of their special plea.
Unengu postponed the matter to enable the accused persons to get legal aid and to set a trial date.
The judge also asked the suspects whether they were informed about the Supreme Court dismissal of their application.

FRED GOEIEMAN

Sailing in style

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Sailing in styleSailing in style




Tatoosh, a 303-foot (92m) private super-yacht owned by the multi-billionaire co-founder of Microsoft and one of the top 50 richest people in the world Paul Allen, is heading for Walvis Bay.
The yacht departed from Rio de Janeiro on 30 August and is scheduled to visit the port of Walvis Bay on 11 September.
Allen acquired Tatoosh in 2001 at a reported cost of $100 million (N$143 billion). He also owns the 416-foot (127m) Octopus.
Tatoosh was listed for sale at €125 million (N$199 billion) with Fraser Yachts in May 2010. The listing was withdrawn in 2014 after failing to attract a buyer.
Tatoosh was originally built for mobile phone magnate Craig McCaw at Rendsburg in Germany by Nobiskrug and completed in June 2000. It features amenities such as multiple helicopter landing pads and basketball courts.
The yacht has five decks with a master suite, saloon and other rooms on the top deck. The saloon is equipped with a French limestone fireplace and a dining area. There are staterooms and a ladies’ powder room on the main deck.
It also accommodates a shaded 1.8-metre-deep swimming pool with adjustable floor depth located aft on the main deck beneath a full overhang, a movie theatre and custom 46-foot (14m) sailboats.
Teodorín Nguema Obiang, the son of Equatorial Guinean president Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, reportedly hired Tatoosh for £400,000 (N$7 million) for a Christmas cruise and entertained rap singer Eve on it.

OTIS FINCK

Teachers continue voting despite delays

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Teachers continue voting despite delaysTeachers continue voting despite delays

Thousands of teachers yesterday continued voting on whether they will embark on a national strike.
Several challenges have been experienced, but the Namibia National Teachers’ Union (Nantu) leadership promised that these problems would be ironed out.
Before the voting started on Tuesday regional governors were still to address teachers in a last-ditch attempt to convince them not to vote in favour of striking. But in many regions teachers shunned these meetings and officials were met by empty chairs.
In the Khomas Region the voting started on Tuesday and was to end by 18:00 yesterday, after which counting would start.
Voting started in Erongo, Kunene, Kavango West and Hardap yesterday.
Nantu secretary-general Basilius Haingura told Namibian Sun that the voting was delayed on Tuesday because the ballot papers were only approved on Monday and could not be dispatched on time to the voting stations at all circuit offices and directorates of education countrywide. The process was expected to start at 13:00, but only got under way at about 16:00.
Haingura said they were not expecting any delays yesterday.
He said another problem was that teachers were still queuing after 18:00 when the voting stations closed and they had to ascertain whether voting was allowed to continue after 18:00.
Another challenge was the vast distances union officials had to cover in two weeks’ time and that they only had two days for voting per region. He said this meant that mobile voting stations could only spend two hours at a place before moving on.
The last day of voting will be on 15 September from 13:00 to 18:00.
Haingura said preliminary results would not be released. The final results for the regions will be announced on 16 September and the national results will be announced on 19 September.
Teachers are voting for or against a strike after Nantu failed to convince the government to increase their salaries by 8%. The government offered 5%, citing economic difficulties and budget constraints.

ELLANIE SMIT
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