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Community HIV testing in Ohangwena

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Community HIV testing in OhangwenaCommunity HIV testing in OhangwenaUnder an American-funded outreach programme health extension officers are to provide HIV testing and counselling services to people in remote rural areas. Taking testing and counselling to remote areas 0 A pilot project on the provision of HIV testing and counselling by health extension workers has been launched in the Ohangwena Region.
The project, supported by the United States government, started on 25 July in the Engela District and by end of August 561 HIV tests had been conducted, of which only ten were positive.
About 60 health extension workers from nine health facilities were trained in the Engela District.
Speaking at the launch of the pilot project on Friday, deputy minister of health and social services Juliet Kavetuna said the project is aimed at providing HIV testing to people living in isolated communities with no easy access to health facilities.
“The launch of this community-based HIV testing and counselling programme is part of our Harambee strategy to identify, train and deploy community health workers to address critical health needs at the community and household levels,” Kavetuna said.
Kavetuna said the ministry remained committed and determined to make sure the HIV epidemic is successfully addressed.
“We are confident that we can have the same success with controlling the HIV epidemic as we have had in attaining the millennium development goals related to access to education and health,” she said.
Technical assistance and support is provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).
Kavetuna thanked the two organisations for the support they have given the Namibian government in providing health services to vulnerable populations in Namibia.
“We hope to continue working together to achieve national reductions in women, infant and child morbidity and mortality here in Namibia and foster a sustainable response for the HIV burden in the country,” she said.
Kavetuna said Oshikoto will be next to introduce the community-based HIV testing and counselling services.
USAID health deputy director Cherry Gumapas said the United States government is a steadfast partner in the Namibian government’s efforts towards ensuring equitable access to healthcare and ending the HIV epidemic.
Gumapas said the implementation of the extension workers programme is aimed at improving the health of Namibians.
Gumapas said as of June this year, 1 660 health extension workers had been trained and 1 366 had been deployed to 25 health districts in 11 regions.
KENYA KAMBOWE

Justice delayed as magistrate quits

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Justice delayed as magistrate quitsJustice delayed as magistrate quits 0 A Windhoek magistrate’s resignation earlier this year, before judgment in a case dating back seven years, could mean the case has to start afresh.
Lawyers and family say that would be traumatising and costly.
Lawyers last week argued that the former presiding magistrate in the culpable homicide case, Kaulikalelwa Nghishitende, cannot “wash her hands” of her responsibility to deliver judgment.
Both the public prosecutor and defence counsel tried to have her temporarily appointed so that she could deliver judgment in the case, but the Magistrates’ Commission said Nghishitende had declined the offer.
“The Magistrate’s Commission was willing to appoint Ms Nghishitende temporarily to dispose of her partly heard criminal cases and initially she was willing to be appointed because, according to what has been conveyed to me, one of the cases is only for judgment,” Divisional Magistrate Rina Horn wrote in an email dated 2 September, which was submitted to court last week.
However, she added that Nghishitende later informed her that it would not be possible for her to attend to her partly heard cases anymore.
Horn suggested that the trials would have to start from scratch.
During a brief telephonic conversation on Friday, Nghishitende, now employed in Oranjemund, told Namibian Sun she can’t comment on the situation but claimed that she had given her reasons for the decision.
Defence counsel Tuhafeni Muhongo, appearing on behalf of George Petchnig, argued in court last week that it would be “grossly unfair” and not in the interest of the State or the accused, to restart the trial.
He argued that Nghishitende had not provided “cogent reasons” for being unwilling to deliver judgment and that starting anew would incur double costs for the State and the accused, as well as potentially “re-traumatising” witnesses.
Muhongo told the court that all evidence in the trial had been presented and final submissions delivered by December 2015, so the case could not be deemed as partly heard, as only judgment was outstanding.
Windhoek Magistrate Alweendo Sebby Venatius however told Muhongo that the only option was to start again. He explained that the law does not make it possible to compel the former magistrate to finalise the case.
Muhonogo told Namibian Sun that in his opinion “there are no reasons whatsoever as to why the previous presiding magistrate cannot deliver the judgment that she reserved.”
He added that in his view it is the duty of magistrates who vacate an office to “plan their diaries accordingly and wind their work up in such a manner that the rights of persons and the ends of justice are not prejudiced. This is in line with the provisions of the Magistrate’s Code of Conduct and the Magistrate’s Act, 2003.”
Public prosecutor Ivann Tjizu also requested the temporary appointment of the former magistrate, as a letter dated May 2016 shows.
He told the Magistrates’ Commission that both outstanding cases in which Nghishitende had been the presiding magistrate are serious cases and “are at such an advanced stage of trial with only judgment outstanding in both while they have in addition been pending on the roll for a lengthy period.”
Furthermore, he said starting anew would be “highly undesirable and prejudicial” to the accused’s rights to a speedy trial, as well as to the State, as it would require tracing and re-subpoenaing witnesses “the majority of whose whereabouts are no longer known”.
The news that the trial would have to begin anew was a blow for Moddesty Farmer, the mother of Riozaan Freyer whose life was turned upside down by a car crash in Windhoek seven years ago.
Freyer is in a permanent vegetative state and Farmer had to quit her job to care for him.
For the past seven years, she has attended the court case against Petchnig, who was charged with culpable homicide after a police investigation found he was the driver of the vehicle that caused the crash, in which two people died.
Petchnig pleaded not guilty, claiming he had no recollection of the accident, which cost him the loss of the lower part of his arm. His defence has been based on his claim that he was not the driver of the vehicle.
“To be honest, if the case has to start afresh again, after so many years that have passed, after we have come so far, it would be very upsetting to us,” Farmer said last week.
After the case was heard in December last year, Nghishitende reserved judgment until 20 January. On that date, she informed the court that the judgment was not ready. The case was postponed to April and then to July.
On Thursday, Magistrate Venatius postponed the case to 20 January 2017 for purposes of special review.
JANA-MARI SMITH

Baby dies after hospital blackout

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Baby dies after hospital blackoutBaby dies after hospital blackoutCritically ill patients were transferred to private hospitals after the Windhoek State Hospital’s ground floor experienced a power failure yesterday morning. State hospital ICU without power for hours 0 A baby died moments after being transferred to a private hospital after the Windhoek Central Hospital intensive care unit (ICU) experienced a power outage that lasted several hours yesterday morning.
The four-month-old baby died in the ICU of the MediClinic private hospital, the health ministry confirmed yesterday. Four other patients, including two babies, were transferred to MediClinic and Lady Pohamba Private Hospital.
Three patients were discharged to other wards at the central hospital.
The ICU lost power at 05:00 and it was only restored at around 11:00. The backup generator reportedly only worked for an hour before failing.
During the blackout medical personnel resorted to using cellphones as flashlights as they attended to critically ill patients, while worried relatives sat outside in the dark waiting room.
Curious bystanders were wandering in and around the ICU while the staff of the ambulance services that came to transfer the patients to private hospitals could not find the entrance to the ICU and got lost in the dark for several minutes.
An anxious Libertina Tsuses told Namibian Sun that one of the ICU patients was her daughter who had just given birth and suffered complications.
“After she gave birth, she had water on the lungs and was brought in to the ICU last night. Now I am just wondering what will happen to her now that the power is off,” she said.
According to the health ministry’s acting spokesperson, Libita Manga, the power outage affected the hospital’s west wing ground floor and the ICU was the most seriously affected.
“Since the outage just affected part of the hospital, most parts of the hospital had power and the backup generator could not automatically switch on, it only kicks in when it is a municipal power failure,” Manga explained.
“The Department of Works electricians were called in, as well as electrical engineers from the City of Windhoek who identified that the electrical circuit breaker had a mechanical fault, which does not normally happen.”

She added that eight patients were in the ICU when the outage occurred. Five were transferred to private hospitals and the remaining three to different wards of the central hospital.
“The private institutions where patients were transferred will be compensated,” she stated.
It appeared that Health Minister Bernard Haufiku was only informed of the power failure by about 14:00.
When Namibian Sun contacted him just after lunchtime he said he was unaware of the situation, but he returned the call shortly afterwards, saying he had just been briefed by his permanent secretary, Andreas Mwoombola.
Mwoombola, who had not answered his phone the entire morning, responded to Namibian Sun’s calls after Haufiku suggested that he would be available.

JEMIMA BEUKES

Karibib to host third Navachab half-marathon

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Karibib to host third Navachab half-marathonKaribib to host third Navachab half-marathon The third annual Navachab half-marathon is set to take place in Karibib on Saturday.
Since its introduction in 2014, the race has become a staple on the Namibian calendar even though last year’s entrants did not match the number of the maiden edition.
The first race had about 250 runners but last year only had 180 athletes taking part in the various categories.
The Navachab Gold Mine at Karibib is the main sponsor of the event, while Namibia Marble and Granite Company has joined in funding this year’s event.
In addition to giving N$5 000 to the organisers, the marble company will also man one of the water points during the race.
FNB Karibib, which has been one of the co-sponsors since the launch of the event, and the Karibib town council will man other water points.
“This event has been marked for mass participation and we expect runners from all the regions,” said Bethold Karumendu, the regional sport officer and organiser of the Navachab half-marathon.
He added that the directorate of sport has made about seven buses available to transport athletes to the race.
“We will house those that do not have accommodation at the Usakos Youth Hostel, which is about 30km from Karibib,” he stated.
Navachab spokesman Lion Kahimise said the excitement of hosting the event is reaching fever pitch in Karibib.
“The town is ready to accept you and we would like to encourage everyone to come out in numbers to participate,” Kahimise said at the launch of the race in Windhoek yesterday.
The winners of the senior (men and women) 21km race will walk away with N$5 000 prize money while the junior (men and women between 13-19 years) race winners will get N$2 000.
The veterans (40-49) will get N$2 000 and the masters (50+) will take home N$1 500 for coming home first.
Registrations for the race start on Friday.
“We will do registrations in town on Friday before moving to the Usab Field later in the afternoon to continue until late. We will also do late registrations on the morning of the race,” Karumendu said.

HECTOR MAWONGA

Namibia''s relay team ends fourth

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Namibia''s relay team ends fourthNamibia''s relay team ends fourthNamibians at the Paralympic Games did not deliver good results yesterday, when the relay team missed out on a medal while swimmer Gideon Nasilowski failed to advance to the finals. Track journey ends for Benson A good start from the heats by the Namibian T11-13 relay team could not materialise in the finals yesterday afternoon, after the team missed out on being in the top three.
The team consists of Martin Aloisius T12, Johannes Nambala T13, Ananias Shikongo T11 and Moses Tobias T11 with their guides, Ivan Tjiviju and Andre Oberholster.
The team that was led by Johannes Nambala starting off well ended fourth.
Nambala was leading and handed over the baton to Tobias Moses but he was too slow to hand over to Martin Aloisius, who had to hand over to Ananias Shikongo.
Shikongo took it home but was not fast enough to catch up with the leading athletes, and the team settled for fourth place.
In another event, S3 swimmer Gideon Nasilowski finished in sixth place, missing out on the finals of the S3 50m freestyle.
The event was the only one for Nasilowski at this year’s Paralympic Games.
Meanwhile, the track road ended for Johanna Benson when she ended last in the T37 400m finals yesterday afternoon.
Benson is now only left with the long jump event, scheduled at 16:05 (Namibian time) today.
She qualified to the finals as the fastest loser on Monday when she came fourth in the heats.
She is unable to defend her 200m title at this year’s event as it is not part of the 2016 Paralympic Games.
Nambala was due to run his 400m heats late yesterday, while T11 Shikongo and Moses were due to run 200m heats.
Namibia’s two-time Paralympic powerlifter Ruben Soroseb will be in action tomorrow and said he will use the experience to win a medal.
He competed at the 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens, Greece, and the 2012 London Paralympic Games, where he ended 15th and ninth, respectively.
Soroseb will compete in the 107kg powerlifting final today at 15:00 Namibian time.
He told Nampa on Sunday that he was happy to have qualified for the games in Rio.
“I am ready and looking forward to the competition. I will be happy if I win a medal for my country as it will be a bonus and if I don’t win, I will go back to the drawing board and work hard again,” he said.
The athlete said powerlifting does not get the necessary financial and coaching support back home, which makes it difficult for him to compete when he qualifies for competitions.
“Powerlifting is one of the sports codes that do not get support in Namibia. I train by myself and I do not have competitions to compete in at home, but I do not have time to complain about it as it won’t help right now. I just need to be happy that I am fortunate enough to represent my country at three Paralympic Games.”
Soroseb added that he is not sure if he will continue with the sport after the Games.
“I am really not sure if I will continue being a powerlifter after these games. In the past, I used to be a discus thrower and might do that or shot-put because with those sport codes one can get support.”
- Additional reporting NAMPA


KAINO NGHITONGO

Kasu prepares for Nefie Kandjii Cup

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Kasu prepares for Nefie Kandjii CupKasu prepares for Nefie Kandjii Cup The Katutura Sport Union (Kasu) is getting ready to host its annual Nefie Kandjii football and netball competition on Friday, 30 September.
This year’s edition will take place at the Khomasdal Sport Field with the draw for the respective competitions taking place on Tuesday, 27 September at the English Primary School in Katutura.
The winning football team stands a chance to win N$10 000 while the runners-up will get N$5 000 and the losing semi-finalists N$2 500.
Named after Katutura Central Constituency councillor Ambrosius Kandjii, the tournament will also have a netball competition where the winners receive N$5 000 and the losing finalists N$2 500.
Both semi-final losers get N$1 250.
This year’s event is sponsored by Kau Van Rooi Stud, Kakero Urban Planning Consultancy and Eben Hei Leather CC.
Teams interested in competing in the event can contact Kasu chairperson Kuveri Tjonga on 081 223 6732. This will be the third tournament hosted by Kasu this year following the Valentine’s Cup in March and the Jossie Winter Cup, which was held in June.

SPORT REPORTER

Record crowd at Trustco junior event

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Record crowd at Trustco junior eventRecord crowd at Trustco junior event The Namibia Tennis Association (NTA) conducted a junior tennis tournament last weekend at different venues in Olympia.
The tournament, which was sponsored by Trustco, attracted an annual record number of more than 70 junior players in the age groups under-8 to under-18.
The highlight of the tournament was the hotly contested finals between U-18 Namibia number one seed Dantago Gawanab and FNB development player Risto Shikongo.
Shikongo took the first set 6-2 but Gawanab turned the match around by winning the second set 6-1.
The final set was tightly contested as Shikongo put up a brave fight with the set decided by a tie break.
Gawanab won the tie break 9-7.
Shikongo later had comfort as he teamed up Tevin Tait to win the U-18 doubles event after the pair beat Marsen von Lieres and Gawanab 6-2, 7-5.
The U-18 girls’ competition was won by Jessica Riedel, who finished ahead of Lisa Yssel in the round robin competition.
Another competition highlight saw Carlos Uirab of the FNB Development programme outclassing Jaco Bekker in the U-12 finals 6-1, 6-2.
The largest number of tournament participants came from the U-8 group, who competed on half courts and with softer and slower balls.
They also had two different player level categories.
In the beginners’ ‘red ball’ group boys and girls use red balls which have a lower bounce and a lower velocity.
Roelou Louw took first place while Tinashe Musavengana came second in the boys’ category.
Mienke Stals was the winner in the girls’ U-8 ‘red ball’ competition with Vekaama Opperman winning the silver medal.
In the U-8 advanced players’ ‘orange ball’ category Abraham Alemu had the upper hand against Nathan Chase.
The girls’ U-8 contest was won by Maja Brinkmann while Anne Stals came second.
During the prize-giving, NTA president Samson Kaulinge thanked the parents who had turned out to support their children.
He specifically noted the support of Trustco in making this tournament a success.
Trustco spokesman Neville Basson handed over medals and prizes to all winners.
“We at Trustco are proud to be associated with developing sports events like this in the country,” he said.

ROBERT RIETHMUELLER

Enduro heads to Farm Döbra

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Enduro heads to Farm DöbraEnduro heads to Farm DöbraDrama is expected when the Namibian Enduro Championship takes place this weekend. Penultimate race to see dramatic fight for top spot The Bank Windhoek Namibian Enduro Championship is approaching a dramatic final of the season with only two races left to go.
Exciting racing will therefore be guaranteed at Farm Döbra, close to Windhoek, this weekend, with round seven of the championship taking place.
With its diverse landscape, including broad riverbeds, rocky terrain, canyons and breathtaking views, it has become a favourite for many riders.
Spectators can follow the action near the pit area along a sandy river bed.
The Namibian Enduro Championship regulations provide that riders can cancel one result of the eight events of the championship in the final calculation at the end of the season.
Factoring this in, Henner Rusch (KTM), Pascal Henle (KTM) and Kai Hennes (KTM) will battle it out for the championship crown in the motorbikes with more than 250cc class in the last two events.
Currently the three riders are separated by 20 championship points with Rusch 10 points ahead of Henle, and 20 points ahead of Hennes.
In the motorbikes up to 200cc class, Ingo Waldschmidt (KTM), Marcel Henle (KTM), Tommy Gous (Yamaha) and Joern Greiter (KTM) are all still in championship contention.
Marcel Henle closed the gap to championship leader Waldschmidt with victory at Abbabis during the last Enduro event.
In the senior motorbikes class, Frank Ahlreip (KTM) has been building the pressure on championship leader Sven Schneidenberger (KTM) with good results in the last two events.
In the clubman’s class, Juergen Gladis (KTM) leads the championship ahead of Gerald Heiser (KTM) by three championship points.
Throughout the season, the two riders have been in extremely close contention and are likely to finish neck-in-neck.
The off-road bikes class is firmly under control of championship leader Kurt Hartung (KTM), followed by Juan van As (KTM) and Lenny Bagwitz (KTM).
In the development class, the top three riders are separated by only 14 points.
In the women’s quad class, championship leader Shannon Rowland (Honda) claimed her third victory of the season at Abbabis and is just one point away from sealing the championship.
Venue


To find the venue for this weekend’s event, riders and spectators need to follow the B6 out of Windhoek in an easterly direction towards Gobabis for approximately 15km, and turn off to the Otjihase Mine.
After driving towards the mine for approximately 14km, the mine entrance will appear.
From this point onwards there will be signs showing the way to the pit area.
The Namibian Enduro Club offers quad and off-road motorbike enthusiasts the possibility to enjoy the enduro sport and encourages newcomers to join.
For further information, consult the Namibian Enduro Club website, www.namibianenduro.com, where more information and registration forms are available.


SPORT REPORTER

Nothing left for me to prove, says Kerber

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Nothing left for me to prove, says KerberNothing left for me to prove, says Kerber Newly crowned world number one Angelique Kerber has nothing left to prove after clinching the US Open for a second grand slam this year and securing a place in the record books, the German said on Tuesday.
The 28-year-old became the oldest player to rise to that rank when the new list was published on Monday, capping a memorable summer that also included the Olympic silver medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics and a Wimbledon final appearance.
Her success in Rio was followed up by a final defeat in Cincinnati to Katerina Pliskova, who she then beat in the US Open final.
"In Cincinnati, that is where the questions about number one started coming up and that is where the additional pressure started," she said.
Kerber had started the year by winning the Australian Open but said her triumph in New York on Saturday, coupled with the number one ranking, had now taken off any pressure.
"Winning the second grand slam, it was a bit different," she told a news conference in Munich following her return to Germany.
"I don't have anything to prove anymore. I am at the top, number one. I waited for this moment all my life," she said. "Melbourne was different as it was my first grand slam. I had to deal with a lot of things off the court after that."
Kerber, who beat Pliskova in three sets in New York, having secured the top spot days earlier following Serena Williams' exit, said her improved fitness and mental strength had been key to her success.
"This year everything came together. The experiences, specifically dealing with pressure. I am even fitter now than earlier this year. I am more positive and can deal with things even if they do not go that well."
"This mental strength was a life-saver when I was trailing 3-1 in the third set," she said. "At 28, I am now at the peak of my career and can enjoy it."
Kerber said she would now put her tennis racquet to the side for a few days and would treat herself to a special gift with some of her $3.5 million prize money.
"It will probably be in the direction of jewellery. But exactly what it will be I do not know yet."

NAMPA / REUTERS

Real begin Champions League defence

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Real begin Champions League defenceReal begin Champions League defenceReal Madrid talisman Cristiano Ronaldo faces an emotional reunion with boyhood club Sporting Lisbon when his side begin the defence of their Champions League crown tonight. Leicester City make debut in champion’s league Ahead of the start of their 2016-17 Champions League campaign against Sporting Lisbon on Wednesday, AFP Sports takes a look at five reasons defending champions Real Madrid can conquer Europe for the 12th time:
Understandably given Madrid are by a distance the most successful team in the history of the competition, no club associates themselves more with the history of the Champions League.
A second title in three years took Real four clear of AC Milan as the undoubted kings of Europe and when it comes to big European nights come the springtime, the Santiago Bernabeu is transformed into a cauldron.
A huge part of their success comes from the fact when it comes to balancing priorities at the business end of the season, unlike some others, Madrid always side with the Champions League over domestic duties. Expect this season to be no different.
Coach Zinedine Zidane and President Florentino Perez insisted Real's squad was "impossible" to improve upon as they shunned splashing on a Galactico signing in the transfer market.
The return of Alvaro Morata from Juventus was Real's only significant move, which has left an unusual air of stability at the Bernabeu.
Morata's arrival also adds depth in one of the few positions that needed strengthening as the Spanish international will battle Karim Benzema to be Zidane's first-choice central striker between Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale
Top scorer in the competition for the past four seasons and of all-time, Cristiano Ronaldo is Mr. Champions League and has another significant milestone in reach.
The Portuguese is just seven goals short of a century in the Champions League and having hit double figures in Europe for the past five seasons and recently returned to fitness following knee ligament damage, another barrel load of Champions League goals to take him into three figures seems certain.
As if Madrid needed any more motivation to defend their title, one of their superstars has an extra special reason to make it back to the final.
Gareth Bale said he came to Madrid to win the Champions League and has done just that in two of his first three seasons. However, the chance to win it in front of a home crowd in Cardiff on June 3 next year is especially enticing.
"It would be very nice. I've experienced the Super Cup in Cardiff before and it would be amazing to experience an actual Champions League final in Cardiff as well," said Bale last week.
One of the very few feats left for Madrid to conquer in the Champions League is breaking the remarkable 26-year run since the trophy was last retained.
Madrid have tried and failed four times since Milan did it in 1990, but the experience gained from six successive semi-finals means they are better-placed than ever to defend the trophy.
NAMPA / AFP

Sydney to host women''s World Cup

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Sydney to host women''s World CupSydney to host women''s World Cup The women's rugby league World Cup will be held alongside the men's tournament for the first time next year in Sydney in what officials said Tuesday was a " game-changer" for the sport.
The competition last held in England in 2013 was won by Australia, and organisers plan to play the women's and men's finals as a double-header in December 2017.
" It's only fitting these gifted athletes get the opportunity to showcase their skills on a global stage and we see next year's women's rugby league World Cup as a game-changer for the sport," Rugby League World Cup 2017 organising committee chief executive Andrew Hill said in a statement.
" Female participation in all forms of rugby league is the fastest-growing category in the game and women's international rugby league has made great strides forward in recent years."
The 2017 contest starts on November 16 and will involve five confirmed teams -- England, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea as well as a sixth from the Pacific qualifying series held next month.
Previous women's rugby league World Cups were part of the Festival of World Cups, which includes contests among defence, police, wheelchair and university teams.
NAMPA / AFP


Aantu ayehe naya kuthe ombinga mOmutumba gwEvi-ELCRN

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Aantu ayehe naya kuthe ombinga mOmutumba gwEvi-ELCRNAantu ayehe naya kuthe ombinga mOmutumba gwEvi-ELCRNEhangano lyoEvangelical Lutheran Church in the Republic of Namibia (ELCRN) olya pula UUministeli wOmatulululo gEvi wu kwatelemo aakuthimbinga ayehe momalongekidho gwomutumba gwevi ngoka kwa tegelelwa guningwe. Epangelo olyo alike itali vulu okuungaunga noshikumungu shevi ELCRN okwa popi momukanda gwiikundaneki kombinga yomatokolo ga ningwa momutumba gwelelo lye ngoka gwa ningwa momasiku 19 gaAguste nuumvo. Okwa holola kutya etokolo limwe lya ningwa, opo aakuthimbinga ayehe moshikumungu shevi mwakwatelwa oongeleka nomahangano gopashigwana ga kuthe ombinge melongekidho lyomutumba gwevi.
Lyopokati mpoka omahangano ge na sha niikumungu ya guma oshigwana otaga ka tseyithwa kombinga yetamekitho lyiigongi naakwashigwana miitopolwa ayihe moshilongo mokiilongekidhila Omutumba Omutiyali gwEvi moshilongo ngoka tagu pangelwa okuningwa muNovemba.
Omitumba dhoka otadhi ka ningwa kohi yondunda yoNamibia Non-governmental Organisations Forum (Nangof).
ELCRN okwa popi kutya iputudhilo yopombanda moshilongo oshowo omahangano gokuninga omapekaapeko nago ga kwatelwemo nokupitika ga kuthe ombinga. Elelo lyoongeleka olya holola kutya oli wete kutya aanambelewa yuuministeli itaya vulu okwiivongokonona yoyene nokutala kutya oya longa ngiini iilonga yawo.
ELCRN Desk for Social Development otayi ka pewa pshinakugwanithwa shokuhwahwameka ekuthombinga lyoELCRN okupitila moWorking Committee on Land reform ndjoka ya totwapo konima yoTabitha National Workshop.
Elelo lyongeleka olya pula omupresidende gwaNamiba a gandje e lombwelo omolwa omaihumbato gonayi ngoka ga etitha kwiindikwe omuhwahwameki gwevi Sululu Isaacks, opo ka fumbikwe mofaalama yomatulululo opo etokolo ndyoka li kuthwe oonkondo sigo oshikumungu sholudhi ndoka sha kandulwa po pethimbo lyomutumba ngoka kwa tegelelwa guningwe.
ELCRN okwa popi woo kombinga yonkalo yoshikukuta ndjoka ya guma oshigwana konyala miitopolwa ayihe yoshilongo na oya pula epangelo li kaleke manga ooprograa dhilwe ko ku vule okukandulwa po uupyakadhi woshikukuta nokugandja omakwatho.
Ongeleka oya pula woo oshikondo shopaumwene naakengeli moshilongo oya kale nokugandja omayambidhidho kaakwanaluhepo.
Kombinga yoshikumungu shomadhipagago gakiinahenda ga ningwa pethimbo lyuukoloni waNdowishi noonkundathana pokati kaNamibia naGermany, elelo ndyoka olya gandja omagwedhelelo po opo evi ndyoka tali popiwa li topolwe mokati kakwashigwana mboka ya gumwa na oyali ya kuthwa evi lyawo .
FRED GOEIEMAN



Ondangwa tayi landitha po oplota dhoka inadhi pwa okufutwa

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Ondangwa tayi landitha po oplota dhoka inadhi pwa okufutwaOndangwa tayi landitha po oplota dhoka inadhi pwa okufutwa Konyala aantu ya thkia po150 mboka ya li ya ningi omaindilo gooplota dhomagumbo mOndangwa okwa tegelelwa ya ka kanithe ooplota dhawo olwaashoka inaya futa.
Mboka taya ka gumwa konkalo ndjoka oomboka ya pewa ooplota ihe otaya nyengwa okudhi futa.
Momusholondondo gwaamboka omwa kwatelwa aanangeshefa oshowo aanapolotika.
Elelo lyondoolopa yaNdangwa olya gandja ooplota dha thika po-200 pokati komvula 2001 no 2015 nooplota dhoka otadhi ka pewa mboka yeli momusholondondo gwokutegelela okumona ooplota, pahapu dhomunambelewa omukuluntu gwelelo lyondoolopa yaNdangwa , Ismael Namgongo.
Okwa popi kutya mboka yali ya pewa evi oya tseyithilwa pamushangwa kutya oye na oomwedhi hamano ya fute omavi gawo.
Elelo lyondoolopa olya popi kutya olya tokola okulanditha po omavi gaamboka taya nyengwa okuga futa opo ya kandulepo ompumbwe yomagumbo mondoolopa.
“Elelo lyondoolopa otali longitha iimaliwa oyindji okulonga nokuwapaleka evi ndyoka ihe mboka ye li pewa otaya ndopa okulifuta, otatu indile aantu ya ninge omaindilo gevi uuna ya pyakudhukwa,” Namgongo ta ti.
Mboka ya futako komavi gawo otaya ka shunithilwa iimaliwa yawo.
Namgongo ina vula okugandja ongushu yomavi ngoka ihe okwa popi kutya oyoomiliyona odhindji.


ILENI NANDJATO

Hope for EU-Morocco trade deal

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Hope for EU-Morocco trade dealHope for EU-Morocco trade dealA potential resolution is on the cards to solve a diplomatic clash between Morocco and the European Union (EU). Annulment should be overturned, says advisor The European Union’s top court should set aside a judgment invalidating a farm trade accord between the EU and Morocco, an adviser to the court said on Tuesday, offering a potential resolution to a diplomatic clash between the two.
The General Court of the European Union, the EU’s second-highest court, ruled in December that the trade deal was void after a suit filed by the Polisario Front, which wants independence for the disputed territory of Western Sahara. The court held that the EU had failed to examine whether a deal would affect the exploitation of natural resources in the Moroccan-controlled territory. That ruling prompted Morocco to suspend contact with EU institutions for four weeks and the EU to lodge a legal appeal. Advocate General Melchior Wathelet said on Tuesday that Western Sahara was not part of Morocco so neither the 2000 EU-Morocco Association Agreement nor the 2012 EU-Morocco Agreement on liberalisation of trade in agricultural and fishery products applied to the territory. If the trade agreements were declared valid by the European Court of Justice, the EU and Morocco should avoid a repeat of the diplomatic clash at the start of this year.
Opinions by the advocate general are not binding, but EU court judges follow them in the majority of cases.
The EU and Morocco have struck agreements allowing duty-free quotas for agricultural products such as tomatoes and granting access for European vessels to fish in Moroccan waters in return for financial assistance. The two sides also began negotiations in 2013 to form a deeper and broader free trade agreement.
Morocco has controlled most of Western Sahara since 1975 and claims sovereignty over the sparsely populated stretch of desert to its south, which has offshore fishing as well as phosphate and possibly oil reserves.
But its annexation of the region led to a rebellion by the Polisario Front backed by Morocco’s neighbour Algeria. The Front and Morocco have been at loggerheads ever since.

NAMPA / REUTERS

Will you lose your job to a robot?

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Will you lose your job to a robot?Will you lose your job to a robot?The fields of arts and science may end up as the last bastions of human occupations, as new technologies render certain jobs obsolete. The fields of arts and science may end up as the last bastions of human occupations, as new technologies render certain jobs obsolete. With many of today’s jobs beginning to lose relevance in a world increasingly dominated by new technologies, the challenge facing anyone at the beginning of their career is studying something that will match the demand for jobs of the future, while developing the skills necessary to succeed in the modern workplace.
Sixty-five percent of current students will end up in jobs that have not even been invented yet. This also means that people already employed in jobs need to start thinking about how they are going to make a living in the next 10 to 20 years.
Technologies such as robotics and
artificial intelligence, which are able to perform high-level, cognitively complicated tasks, may render certain jobs obsolete. Replacing human workers with technology is simply more productive and efficient.
However, it’s not all bad news, and it’s important to remember that the fourth industrial revolution is not going to be possible without the human minds that set it in motion in the first place.
Analysts predict that there will be a surge in job opportunities for software developers, data analysts and digital architects, as well as jobs that require creativity, ingenuity and innovative thinking.
Therefore, jobs that are either highly creative professions that can’t be automated, or professions in computer, science and mathematics related fields as well as architecture and engineering, which combine art and science, are the most likely to grow.
Are you worried about losing your job to artificial intelligence? Tell us your thoughts by clicking here.

Develop the right skills for the job
There are five essential skills you should develop to be successful in the modern workplace – the five ‘C’s’: communication, collaboration, critical thinking, creativity and computational thinking
You need to focus on problem solving and a certain way of thinking and operating, rather than only developing technical skills such as mastering a specific coding language or software.
With technology advancing so quickly, it’s vital that young people learn to be agile and embrace change.
These skills are essential for work in the 21st century and need to be instilled in young people at school level.

“Humans need not apply”
The best piece of advice for future job-seekers is to stay away from jobs that are in danger of becoming obsolete. There are certain “musts” humans need to remain relevant—particularly when it comes to thinking clearly about the skills future generations must prioritize. In order to make it in the future world of work students will need:
Empathy – Empathy is so difficult to replicate in machines. It will be valuable in the human–A.I. world. Perceiving others’ thoughts and feelings, collaborating and building relationships will be critical.
Education – We will need increased investment in education to attain higher level thinking and develop the knowledge and skills needed to implement new technologies on a large scale.

Creativity – Creativity is one of the most coveted human skills. Machines will continue to enrich and augment our creativity.
Judgment and accountability – We may be willing to accept a computer-generated diagnosis or legal decision, but we will still expect a human to be ultimately accountable for the outcomes.
Of course nobody can predict the future, the best approach would be to constantly stay abreast of new developments by upskilling yourself to remain relevant, being flexible and adaptable to change, and staying away from jobs and industries that are in danger of becoming null and void as a result of technology.

NEWS24

SA employees rate caffeine more important than safety

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SA employees rate caffeine more important than safetySA employees rate caffeine more important than safety

A recent survey of 12 000 office workers nationwide has revealed a few surprise findings.
The poll revealed the likes, loathes and wants from South Africans at their workplace, where they spend about a third of their lives.
Richard Andrews, managing director of Inspiration Office, an Africa-wide office space and furniture consultancy, said: “We asked people what was the most important thing for them in the workplace and 95% said access to good tea and coffee.
“This topped the list ahead of security (91%) and a healthy environment (87%) of what South Africans see as the most important in the workplace.”
Rounding out the most important things was natural light (85%), greenery (71%), canteens (65%) and comfortable chairs (52%).
“Essentially, it’s all the smaller things that people really need to be happy in the workplace,” said Andrews.
The poll also quizzed people on their biggest annoyances at work.
Top of the list was loud colleagues, followed by colleagues who “smelled up the place” by eating lunch at the desk.
Third was “unbearable bosses.”
“It seems as many offices move to open plan design...the trend of squeezing more people into less space has brought workers in closer proximity to each other. There is nowhere to hide from other peoples’ habits.
“People talking loudly on the phone, endlessly talking to colleagues and making a general ruckus (88%) topped the list of the biggest peeve.” He said that bad bosses (66%) was in third place, particularly those that were hyper-critical as well as micro managers. Lack of privacy also featured, with just over 50% citing that as an office downside.
Other strong office dislikes were dreary office spaces; long meetings; dress codes and working hours.
When asked about the best things about the workplace, the social aspect of meeting new people and becoming friends with certain colleagues topped the list of 80% of respondents.
Also favourable was the “learning and personal development” that the workplaces offered (61%), followed by “a place to make money” at 49%.
Filling out the remaining office positives were stimulation, sense of worth and contribution to society.
Andrews said that more businesses in South Africa were moving to address concerns such as those highlighted by the survey.
“Quiet spaces, places to make private calls and a trend towards more comfortable and relaxed spaces will improve the day to day office experience.”

NEWS24

Informant protection needed to break cartels

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Informant protection needed to break cartelsInformant protection needed to break cartelsLawmakers don’t appear keen to leave the door open for guilty-conscience whistle-blowers to spill the beans on their accomplices. Competition commission challenged without Namibia’s market competition watchdog is disadvantaged in its fight against organised cartels by lack of a policy clause allowing members of colluding firms to snitch on their accomplices.
Whereas countries like the US and South Africa have reported a number of successes in prosecuting illegally cooperating businesses using ‘leniency policies’, the immunity granted informants by such clause has remained a moot point for Namibian lawmakers.
This was among the issues discussed yesterday at the opening of the Namibia Competition Commission’s (NaCC) annual awareness drive, dubbed Competition Week.
“It seems abhorrent to advocate the protection of squealers or tattletales who themselves are a part of the criminal behaviour,” said Norman Manoim, chairperson of South Africa’s Competition Tribunal since 2009.
“The truth is, no hardcore cartels were caught in South Africa until 2004, when our own leniency clause was introduced,” said Manoim, who was the guest speaker at an NaCC breakfast meeting.
The idea of a leniency clause was endorsed to the rest of the world by the US, and he said he remained convinced of its effectiveness.
“It’s one thing to say cartels are bad. It’s quite another to bring in laws to fight it,” Manoim said.
“One argument against creating laws to fight it is that cartels tend to be unstable, and as companies collude to fix prices, some among them will intentionally undermine that pact to their own benefit – leading to their natural disbanding once this comes out.”
While this could work in theory, he said, reality has shown that instead of disbanding, illegal cartels often simply resort to punishing the mutinous member before reforming themselves to address identified weaknesses.
Citing the case of South Africa’s action against cement industry players around the year 2000, he said an initial investigation by the tribunal failed to turn up any evidence. After the regulator introduced its leniency clause, companies who came out against their peers helped uncover evidence of some N$15 billion to N$20 billion implicated.
In that sense, he said the distrust and suspicions evoked in cartel members around their partners and their chances of being reported, was a key benefit to introducing a leniency clause.
Yesterday’s discussions also dealt with questions of regionally operating cartels in southern Africa, something the NaCC said was enjoying attention between SADC member countries.
Some indications of cartel behaviour in the region, participants heard, had been suggested in particularly the sugar and cement industries.
In that regard, regulators in SADC have signed an agreement under which they share information on market structures and behaviour, and several working groups were started to tackle the task.
The NaCC’s Competition Week continues today with a conference at Arebbusch Lodge.
The minister of industrialisation, trade and SME development, Immanuel Ngatjizeko, is expected to deliver the keynote address at that event.

DENVER ISAACS

Logistics students off to Germany

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Logistics students off to GermanyLogistics students off to Germany

Four logistics students from the Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST) have been accepted to an exchange programme at Germany’s Flensberg University of Applied Sciences.
The four students are fully sponsored by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) as part of its ‘AktionAfrika’ programme.
The four students are Dofilia Kaloia, Maria Amupolo, Paavo Iileka and Jesaya Mwandingi.
“This is a huge opportunity for me and the other students, which we are grabbing with both hands,” Mwandingi said.
“Getting international exposure and experience in the field of logistics is something that I had always dreamt of and now it has become a reality.”

STAFF REPORTER

Our Cinderella crops

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Our Cinderella cropsOur Cinderella cropsAfrica is unlikely to achieve its agriculture potential, or be prepared to deal with challenges like drought that climate change will make more frequent, unless we change our thinking about crop diversity, writes Maria Andrade award-wining scientist and board member of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). Diversification is key for food security Africa is a continent where, at least outwardly, we like to celebrate our diversity - the rich variety that can be found in our many cultures, languages, fashions, flora and fauna.
That’s why it’s perplexing to see such a large segment of the African population depending on a very small number of food crops, like maize, rice and wheat. And it’s more than just boring to the palate. It’s severely diminishing the quality of our diets and making our farming systems more vulnerable, especially during severe droughts like the one that hit southern Africa this year.
Meanwhile, there has been a lot of talk lately about how Africa’s agriculture sector is primed to become a new economic engine for a continent that has become too dependent on commodities like oil. Last week, heads of state and top officials from across Africa and around the world were in Nairobi for the African Green Revolution Forum, where there could be millions of dollars in new commitments for Africa’s smallholder farmers.
But Africa is unlikely to achieve its agriculture potential, or be prepared to deal with challenges like drought that climate change will make more frequent, unless we change our thinking about crop diversity.
For the last two decades, my work has revolved around developing and promoting nutritionally enhanced sweet potato. It has convinced me that, with the right approach, farmers will cultivate a wider variety of crops and consumers will embrace the new additions to their dinner table.
Africa is actually blessed with a wealth of crop diversity. Much of it - including sorghum, yam and cowpea - is native to the continent. But many other crop types have arrived via trade, like banana, pigeon pea and wheat from Asia, and beans, cassava and maize from the Americas. But rather than capitalise on this full basket of food options, we’ve bet too heavily on just a few crops.
Take the case of maize in eastern and southern Africa. Yes, it can grow in different farming environments and supply large amounts of calories. But the crop has weaknesses. It’s susceptible to drought and pests and its nutritional quality is mediocre.
And while recent research has delivered more resilient and nutritious maize varieties, these are not sufficient. The fact remains that in many regions, rising temperatures and increasingly erratic rainfall will cause maize yields to fall - by up to 22% in many areas and up to 60% in South Africa and Zimbabwe, according to a 2015 report from the Montpellier Panel.
There is a strong body of research showing that farmers are much less likely to suffer catastrophic losses from pests, disease or drought if they plant a broader array of crops.
Today, the devastation caused by outbreaks of lethal necrosis in maize and stem rust in wheat is greatly intensified by the lack of alternative crops. In Malawi, while drought ruined maize and bean crops this year, farmers growing naturally hardy, nutritional crops like chickpea and sweet potato fared much better.
If the benefits are so clear, then why don´t farmers just spontaneously diversify? The answer is that they may want to diversify, but often don’t due to policy and institutional barriers. When crops like maize started to dominate, governments and the private sector accelerated their takeover by providing subsidies, research and other support. Meanwhile, other potentially useful crops like cassava and sorghum were neglected, sometimes acquiring derogatory labels like the “poor man´s crop” or “crop for marginal lands”.
It doesn’t have to be this way. I’ve learned from my work with sweet potatoes that we can turn Africa´s “Cinderella crops” into the belle of the ball.
First, we need research that is focused on adding value to these crops and further enhancing their already natural resilience. In the case of sweet potato, we bred for higher levels of beta-carotene (the chemical precursor of vitamin A), better drought tolerance and virus resistance.
A second critical task: Farmers need a reliable source of healthy seed. This is not easy for crops typically ignored by local and multinational seed companies, especially if they are propagated with bulky and perishable plant parts like sweet potatoes. For sweet potato, we worked through local farmer networks and international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to achieve large-scale multiplication and dissemination of improved planting material.
Finally, marketing and branding, not something that comes naturally to researchers like myself, have to be part of the picture. We employed a variety of marketing and communications tools to make consumers aware of the many benefits of the sweet potato - as a staple food, animal fodder, snack and ingredient in processed foods.
The theme for the upcoming African Green Revolution Forum is “Seize the Moment” and I can’t think of a better time for influential leaders attending this meeting to make crop diversity a central part of their plans for African agriculture. Just as many will admire the colourful dress of west African attendees, they should also be embracing a larger mosaic of food crops for our farmers. I’ve already seen the good things that happen when a big colourful splash of orange-fleshed sweet potato is added to African farms and African diets.
– All Africa

*Maria Andrade, a plant breeder at the International Potato Centre, is among the four winners of the 2016 World Food Prize. She is a member of AGRA’s Board.

Power shift in Libya

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Power shift in LibyaPower shift in LibyaThe political power game in Libya has just become more complicated as a general with the backing globally recognised parliament, seizes an oil export terminal. General with political clout seizes oil terminal Libyan forces loyal to a powerful general say they have seized a third oil terminal from a rival militia in the east, giving the divisive leader a bargaining chip in negotiations with rival UN-backed authorities in the capital, Tripoli.
Forces led by General Khalifa Hifter said that they had seized the Zueitina terminal from a militia known as the Petroleum Facilities Guards, hours after capturing the nearby terminals of Ras Lanuf and al-Sidra.
Most of Libya’s oil exports went through the three terminals before the militia seized them more than two years ago.
Hifter’s army units urged the state-run oil corporation, which is based in Tripoli, to resume oil exports.
Libya drifted into chaos following the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed long-time dictator Muammar Gaddafi, and today is split between rival parliaments and governments in the east and west, each backed by a loose array of militias and tribes.
Hifter enjoys the support of the internationally-recognised parliament, which meets in the east. The parliament has refused to approve the formation of a UN-backed government in Tripoli, in the west, in part because of differences over Hifter’s future role in Libya.

US-led airstrikes
The capture of the oil terminals could strengthen Hifter’s hand, making it more difficult to ignore demands from him and others in the east for more clout in a power-sharing government.
The UN-brokwered presidency council — which is tasked with forming a unity government— said late Sunday that the takeover by Hifter’s forces is “contradicting the path of reconciliation and frustrating Libyans.”
The nine-member council is divided between supporters and opponents of Hifter. Martin Kobler, the UN envoy to Libya, expressed concern over the general’s seizure of the terminals.
Libyan forces loyal to the UN-backed government are currently battling a powerful Islamic State affiliate in the central city of Sirte with the help of US-led airstrikes.
The US and other Western nations view the UN-backed government in the capital as the best hope for unifying Libyans and defeating the extremist group.
Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni told reporters on Monday during a visit to Cyprus that Rome had agreed to a request from the Libyan unity government to send a military hospital, “which obviously will have its protection,” the Italian news agency ANSA reported.
Asked about media reports that some 200 Italian paratroopers could be deployed to protect the hospital, Gentiloni replied that more details will be announced later by the Italian defence minister.

NAMPA/AP
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