Quantcast
Channel: Namibian Sun
Viewing all 36395 articles
Browse latest View live

Rape tops the crime list

$
0
0
Rape tops the crime listRape tops the crime list ELLANIE SMIT

Five rape cases were reported at the weekend, including a gang rape of a woman in Karibib.

According to the police, a 28-year-old woman was raped by two men in the Usab informal settlement in Karibib at about 23:30 on Saturday.

The woman was allegedly drinking with the two men at a shebeen when they forced her to go to an abandoned house and then took turns raping her. The two suspects also assaulted another man who tried to rescue her.

Both suspects, aged 28 and 42, have been arrested.

In another incident a nine-year-old girl was raped on Thursday at Nkata Village in the Kavango West Region by a boy, 15.

It is alleged that the boy dragged the girl into the bush and raped her. Police spokesman Inspector Slogan Matheus said the boy was released into the custody of his parents.

It was also reported that a 10-year-old girl was raped by a 49-year-old man at Nyikama village in the Kavango West Region on several occasions in September.

Matheus said the rapes occurred at different places such as the bush around the village, and sometimes at the girl’s house.

The suspect has been arrested.

In another incident on Thursday evening, a 16-year-old girl was raped by a man at Ohadiwa-Onamukulo village in the Ohangwena Region.

The man allegedly approached the girl and proposed that she should be his girlfriend, which she rejected. The man then pushed her to the ground and raped her. He has been arrested.

In another incident early Saturday morning in Agaat Street, Kuisebmond, a 42-year-old woman was raped by an unknown man.

The man apparently emerged from an unfinished building that is under construction.

Matheus said the victim was walking home when a man wearing a red jacket with a cap covering his face came out of the building, grabbed her by the neck and dragged her inside the building and raped her.

The suspect then took the woman’s wallet that contained her personal documents, which were later found in Kuisebmond area.

The suspect is still at large.

Maturity prevailed - SPYL

$
0
0
Maturity prevailed - SPYL  Maturity prevailed - SPYL Youth League applauds education stakeholders The ruling party’s youth wing has praised the parties involved in renegotiating salary increases for teachers to end a two-day strike. KENYA KAMBOWE

The Swapo Party Youth League (SPYL) yesterday released a statement applauding the government and the teachers’ unions for breaking the deadlock in salary negotiations.

On Saturday, the government, the Namibia National Teachers Union (Nantu) and Namibia Public Workers Union (Napwu) reached an agreement that ended last week’s two-day strike which affected grade 10 and 12 national examinations and halted school operations.

Under the agreement teachers will receive a 9% salary increase next year. For the remainder of this year, salary adjustments for teachers in salary grades 15 to 13 will remain at 10% and for grades 12 to 5 it will remain at 5%. For grades 4 to 1A, it remains at 4%.

The increase will be backdated to April 2016.

The 9% increase for next year will not only be for teachers but for all government employees.

“We are informed that the agreement was reached after President Hage Geingob intervened. The agreement was also made possible due to the maturity displayed by all stakeholders involved to ensure that the Namibian child is offered an opportunity to go back to school,” said the statement issued by SPYL spokesperson Neville Itope.

“We are well aware of the president’s effective and powerful negotiation skills ever since the liberation struggle, and when he chaired the Constituent Assembly in 1989,” the statement further read.

SPYL said the future of the Namibian child depends on end-of-the-year examinations and that education is a key element in the development of the country.

The youth wing also urged all stakeholders in the education sector to forgive one another and continue working together in achieving the country’s national goals.

“Let us have the interest of the Namibian child as a priority, above all other priorities,” the statement read.

The two-day strike last week resulted in the postponement of grade 10 and 12 national examinations to 31 October and 1 November.

Rundu schools to have water reconnected today

$
0
0
Rundu schools to have water reconnected todayRundu schools to have water reconnected today The Ministry of Education has allocated funds to pay off the N$1.9 million owed to the Rundu town council after the water supply of 29 schools was disconnected last Monday.

This was confirmed yesterday by the Kavango East deputy director of education, Fanuel Kapapero, who said the directorate would settle the water bill by the end of the day.

The amount owed to the council was N$1 946 321.08.

“The head office has transferred the amount, we have the money and we will settle the amount now. The water should be on tomorrow,” Kapapero stated.

Kapapero described last week''s situation water shortage at schools as terrible. Some schools had to release the children as early as 10:00 because there was no water.

According to a report by the Namibia Press Agency last week, the schools were among the many defaulters who owed the council N$43 million, which in turn is owed to NamWater.

The council is under pressure as it has not been honouring its water payment agreement with NamWater. The town council also plans to disconnect water supply to government offices.

Contacted for comment, Rundu chief executive officer Romanus Haironga said once the water bill was settled the council would reconnect the water.

“If they will pay today we will reconnect tomorrow. They must pay our money and reconnection fees,” Haironga said.





KENYA KAMBOWE

'Nothing for us without us' – OvaHerero, Nama

$
0
0
'Nothing for us without us' – OvaHerero, Nama'Nothing for us without us' – OvaHerero, Nama First-ever exhibition on German colonialism opens Descendants of the victims of genocide have marched in Berlin to demand their direct involvement in reparations talks. CATHERINE SASMAN

More than 50 OvaHerero and Nama descendants of victims of the 1904–1908 genocide participated in a protest march in Berlin, Germany, on Sunday to express their displeasure at being excluded from discussions between the two governments on restorative justice.

They consisted of OvaHerero and Nama from South Africa, Botswana, the USA, Canada, Britain and Germany and were joined by activists based in Germany.

The protesters were waving banners reading: “It cannot be about us without us” and “The government of Hage Geingob is a denier of the OvaHerero and Nama people’s genocide”.

The groups have consistently demanded to represent themselves directly in the talks, but their request has so far been denied by the Namibian government.

The protest march was preceded by a civil society congress entitled ‘Restorative Justice After Genocide’ occasioned by the Global Reparation Day on 12 October held as part of the United Nations Decade for People of African Descent aimed at open dialogue among the descendants of colonised peoples and former colonialists, as well as networking with civil society initiatives.

These events coincided with the opening of a special exhibition entitled ‘German Colonialism: Fragments Past and Present’ at the German Historical Museum which opened on 14 October and continues until May next year.

The exhibition deals with all former German colonies, the anti-colonial struggle and post-colonial periods of neo-colonialism, and the transition from formal to informal empire.

The museum stated that the exhibition examines the colonial ideology founded on the belief of a European superiority. It presents more than 500 objects from historical, ethnological and natural history collections as well as paintings, graphics, everyday objects, posters, documents and photographs.

Delegates at the Restorative Justice congress, however, criticised the museum for reportedly having excluded formerly colonised peoples in reference to issues of African-German history.

Civil organisations Berlin Postkolonial and the NGO alliance No Amnesty on Genocide said the museum had drawn up the concept of the exhibition largely without the involvement of African experts and reportedly also refused to invite OvaHerero and Nama representatives in Berlin to deliver a speech at the opening.

Another comment was that the exhibition, if transferred to Namibia, would be sufficient for a truth and reconciliation commission on the 1903 to 1908 war.

Matron ‘whips’ learners at GT hostel

$
0
0
Matron ‘whips’ learners at GT hostel Matron ‘whips’ learners at GT hostel KENYA KAMBOWE

A grade 12 learner at Gabriel Taapopi Secondary School wants one of the hostel matrons to face disciplinary action after she allegedly hit learners with a plastic pipe on Friday morning.

The learner who spoke to Namibian Sun said the incident happened in the early morning hours when the matron locked the entrance of the hostel block and started beating the learners for being in the block at that time.

Talking in the presence of her guardian, the learner said she did not understand why the matron would beat them in order for them to leave the block.

“She was not even aiming where she was hitting us, as long as she hit you on your body that’s what happened,” the learner claimed.

“I want the school to take this matter seriously because our parents did not send us to school to be whipped,” the learner added.

School principal Sakaria Eelu confirmed the incident, saying that he was at the school when the incident happened and that he took it up on the same day.

Eelu said the matron explained to him that she did it because the learners did not want to follow her instructions.

“The matron told me that after telling the learners to move out of the rooms in order for the cleaners to come in and clean the rooms, some learners did not comply with the instruction and because she was carrying a pipe, she used it,” he said.

“There was no sign that anyone was whipped apart from those who fell down because of running around to avoid being beaten,” he added.

Allegations were also made that the matron allegedly slapped one of the cleaners in the presence of the learners on the same day. Eelu said he was informed of that incident but both the matron and the cleaner denied it when he asked them about it.

The matron could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Thousands protest wildlife sale

$
0
0
Thousands protest wildlife sale Thousands protest wildlife sale ‘Hands off our endangered marine animals’ Pressure is building on the government to reject the proposed sale of endangered marine animals to Chinese zoos. JANA-MARI SMITH

Pressure is mounting on the Namibian government after more than 11 890 people across the globe signed a petition protesting the sale of live marine mammals to China.

An online petition, which by yesterday had attracted 9 629 signatures, and a local petition with 2265 signatures, were handed to fisheries officials on Friday following a peaceful march in Walvis Bay, attended by 100 people.

In addition to the petitions the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources has been bombarded by hundreds of protest letters over the past month, from Namibia and abroad, underlining the devastating impact granting the permit could have on Namibia’s marine ecosystem as well as its reputation as a leader in conservation.

Numerous international news organisations have covered the proposal by a Chinese company to capture and export endangered marine species, including dolphins and African penguins, for breeding purposes and for Chinese marine zoos.

Among many other issues, the facts that the Chinese proposal’s scientific claims are false or questionable and that the request demands a higher number of endangered species than actually exist along the coast, have attracted widespread criticism.

In a letter addressed to minister of fisheries and marine resources Bernhardt Esau, attached to the petitions, the Earth Organisation Namibia said the Chinese proposal had raised alarm bells in Namibia and internationally.

The letter also points out that all the company applied for are protected under international trade agreements and are listed as endangered.

Moreover, Namibia cannot independently make a decision on whether to sell the marine animals.

“These marine wildlife are shared migratory species and do not belong to Namibia alone.”

Moreover, the letter points out that many of the species are either in decline, rare or endangered.

Removing them from the ecosystem would be in conflict with the Namibian constitution, the authors argue.

The constitution states that “all wildlife must be maintained on a sustainable basis for present and future generations as an inheritance to our children”.

Following the march on Friday, participants under the banner ‘Namibians Against Plundering of Our Seas’ presented the more than 210 pages of signatures to Steven Ambambi, a senior fisheries official.

The group’s slogan is: ‘Our Silence – Our consent’.

Ambambi promised to forward the petitions to the minister of environment and tourism, Pohamba Shifeta, as well as fisheries minister Esau.

On Friday, when the signatures numbered 9 070, an overview showed that more than 2 100 signatures originated in France, followed by 1 458 in Namibia and 1 199 from South Africa.

Close to 1 000 signatories were from Germany, followed by the USA with 659 signatures and the UK with 548 signatures.

Citizens from Switzerland, Belgium, Canada, Australia and Hong Kong also signed the petition. The petition has also made the rounds in New Caledonia, Mexico, Israel and Romania.

Apart from South Africa, the only other African country represented was Angola, with two signatures.

According to recent news reports, the demand for captive animals has exploded in China despite increasing recognition internationally of the harm wild animals suffer in captivity.

The country reportedly has 39 marine parks and 14 more are under construction.

No appeals lodged in conservancy judgement

$
0
0
No appeals lodged in conservancy judgementNo appeals lodged in conservancy judgement JANA-MARI SMITH

As the court-ordered deadline for removing fences and vacating illegally occupied land in the Na#Jaqna Conservancy inches closer, none of the 22 respondents in the case has yet lodged an appeal.

Ten respondents last week notified the conservancy of their intention to appeal the High Court decision in the Supreme Court, despite the fact that the deadline for an appeal was 11 October. So far, none of the respondents has lodged the appeal.

In the landmark September decision, High Court Judge Shafimana Ueitele ordered a group of 22 illegal settlers to vacate the land and remove fences within two months of the judgment.

The battle by the local San community to force out illegal settlers had been dragging on for close to a decade, and the High Court judgment was seen as a precedent-setting moment for the conservancy.

In a press statement, members of the Na#Jaqna conservancy management committee said the judgment had restored what is “rightfully ours and sends a strong message to all exploited communities in Namibia”.

The community said they would not be intimidated by the unhappy respondents and would report any attempts at intimidation to the police and their lawyers.

“We are of the opinion that their appeal is out of time,” Willem Odendaal of the Legal Assistance Centre (LAC), who has worked on behalf of the conservancy for a decade, said yesterday.

“However, if they were to go ahead and submit their appeal, they would need to ask for condonation from the judge,” he explained.

Odendaal explained that even if the respondents filed an appeal, the court order instructing them to vacate the land and remove fences would remain in force.

“This can only be done with permission of the court, since it is already a court order, so only the court can decide how this order can be stayed, motivated by reasons for requesting this by the applicants.”

Google hawks hardware in real-world 'showroom'

$
0
0
Google hawks hardware in real-world 'showroom'Google hawks hardware in real-world 'showroom'Digital companies compete in bricks and mortar The global tech company is testing the waters with its first physical retail operation in the US. It''s not exactly a store, but the Google “showroom” that opened on Thursday in New York is the internet giant''s first real-world shop and a step onto terrain where rival Apple has excelled.

The success of the temporary storefront Google opened in the trendy Soho neighbourhood could help the California-based company decide whether to follow Apple''s lead and operate its own brick-and-mortar retail operation.

The New York pop-up shop will be open through the end of this year, and let people get their hands on new Google devices such as Pixel smartphones which began shipping on Thursday in a direct challenge to Apple''s latest iPhones.

“This is not even a testing ground, just an extension of the launch,” Google spokeswoman Chrissy Persico said at the showroom opening event.

“We want people to come in and experience the products.”

Google early this month took on rivals Apple, Samsung and Amazon in a new push into hardware, launching the in-house designed Pixel smartphone and a slew of other devices showcasing artificial intelligence prowess.

By producing both the phone hardware and its Android software, Google is making a more direct assault on Apple and its tightly controlled ecosystem.

The pop-up shop also displayed Google''s freshly unveiled Daydream View virtual reality headset, a modular wi-fi system, and a Home virtual assistant that will challenge the Amazon Echo device.

Nothing is sold at the Google shop, but the staff directs potential customers to the company''s online store or telephone operators who can take orders for products.



''Big battle''

A wall in the shop is decorated with an artful arrangement of blue, red, yellow and green blocks, arranged to display the internet company''s trademark colours.

Only 30 or so visitors ventured into the pop-up store for its opening morning, a lean showing in comparison to mobs typically drawn to new Apple stores.

Apple has a shop in Soho, too, and many more across the country and around the world.

As differences on the hardware side of premium smartphones have faded, competitors have increasingly stressed “experiences” such as smoothly accessing content or services.

“I am interested in technology, so I just hang out in stores,” Columbia University student Ravi Lakshmanan told AFP in the Google shop. “There is going to be a big battle of platforms and it''s going to be interesting to watch.”

Another visitor, Ike McLaughlin, said he has flip-flopped between the rivals but is on Google''s side for now because he felt Apple was “playing it safe, when Google is taking risks and making a push in artificial intelligence”.

McLaughlin''s verdict echoes the concerns of analysts that Apple has not delivered a market-shaking new product since the death of visionary co-founder Steve Jobs in 2011.

But even if its market capitalisation has fallen below peaks hit in 2015, Apple remains the world''s most valuable company based on its share price.

For the financial year ending September 2015, Apple posted a net profit of US$53 billion (N$742 billion), double the figure posted in the last year of the reign of Steve Jobs.



NAMPA/AFP

Breweries assist state eye clinic

$
0
0
Breweries assist state eye clinicBreweries assist state eye clinic The Windhoek Central Hospital last week received an equipment donation from Namibia Breweries Limited (NBL), worth close to N$1 million.

The local brewer sponsored the hospital with a new, state-of-the-art Zeiss Visucam, used to evaluate patients affected by diabetic eye disease and age-related macular degeneration.

At a handover ceremony in Windhoek on Friday, NBL national marketing manager Rosemary Shippiki commended the Ministry of Health and Social Services, the hospital and the doctors who would use the equipment, for the work they did on a daily basis.

“Eye specialists Dr Helena Ndume and Dr Sven Obholzer are both strong beacons of hope, they provide hope for many Namibians with visual problems,” Shippiki said.

“They provide a new and meaningful life to all their patients whose vision they restore. We are proud and very happy to be able to add to the abilities of these doctors at the Windhoek Central Hospital Eye Clinic,” she said.

Accepting the donation on behalf of the Ministry of Health and Social Services, permanent secretary Dr Andreas Mwoombala thanked the company for the gesture and referred to the government''s difficulty in acquiring all the latest medical equipment needed to effectively treat patients.

“Namibia has many people with visual problems, and high technological equipment is very expensive,” Mwoombala said.

“This donation will go a long way in adding great value to the work this clinic does, and to the lives affected.”

Also speaking at the event was Dr Ndume, who emphasised the importance of private-public partnerships in achieving national development goals.

“We have been eyeing this machine for a long-time, but were unfortunately unable to afford it. With the realisation that government cannot do it alone due to the number of critical health matters and competing priorities on hand, we decided to take it a step further by approaching other entities for assistance,” she said.

DENVER ISAACS

Think stability, think entrepreneurial

$
0
0
Think stability, think entrepreneurialThink stability, think entrepreneurialNandi-Ndaitwah promotes self-starters The surest way to ensure Namibia''s wealth is redistributed fruitfully is for citizens to start their own businesses. Entrepreneurship can provide stability to any economy, of which the result will be job creation.

This was said by Deputy Prime Minister Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah in a speech read by the deputy minister of mines and energy, Kornelia Shilunga, at the opening of the 12th Helao Nafidi Expo on Saturday.

“Entrepreneurship stimulates equitable redistribution of wealth and income in the interest of the country despite the difference of tribe or dialect and geographical location,” she said.

Nandi-Ndaitwah said entrepreneurship is vital for Namibia because it can create wealth.

“Government has seen this as a realistic approach and thus it encourages its citizens, especially the youth and mostly women, to jump on the business wagon and own small, medium and large businesses,” Nandi-Ndaitwah said.

“Entrepreneurs are pioneers; they are innovators, inventors and leaders. They are problem solvers; they are also the ones who identify challenges and try to find solutions,” Nandi-Ndaitwah added.

She also talked about how entrepreneurship can rescue the local economy of the border town of Oshikango, where many businesses closed after losing Angolan customers due to that country''s economic problems.

She said it''s up to local people to take responsibility to come up with new business concepts and ideas to address the situation.

“The locals are the ones who should take up the responsibility of coming up with new business ideas and concepts,” she said.

“Create trade opportunities for yourself and welcome the competition with foreigners,” she added.

The Helao Nafidi Expo started on 21 October and was expected to end on 29 October but the date was extended to 2 November.

About 330 exhibitors are taking part this year, compared to 260 last year.

Helao Nafidi mayor Eliaser Nghipangelwa said he was satisfied with the support from the community.

“So far the outcome is good,” he said.

Namibian Sun also talked to a number of exhibitors who commended the organisers of the expo, saying that they did a great job.





KENYA KAMBOWE

This job will kill me - Gwede Mantashe

$
0
0
This job will kill me
- Gwede MantasheThis job will kill me - Gwede Mantashe Gwede Mantashe is ready to hang up his boots as ANC secretary general, because the job will kill him, he said at the weekend.

“It is too strenuous for me. I have done 10 years. It''s like 10 years in an oven. You can''t take it beyond 10 years. It''s too strenuous, it will kill me,” Mantashe told News24.

When asked if he would run for ANC deputy president, Mantashe answered: “I am not sure. I won''t be a secretary general, that much I know.”

Treasurer general was out of the question as his weakest point was raising funds, and deputy secretary general was too junior a position.

“There are two positions in top six that are open. It''s deputy president and national chair, that is all. No one has nominated me for either, so it will be very presumptuous of me,” Mantashe said.

He is however still ready to serve the party. He said Cyril Ramaphosa was secretary general before he became deputy president. Some in the party had been lobbying for him to take up the same position, Mantashe said.

Mantashe assumed his current position in 2007. He said his beard had become grey since then.

“Look at my beard in that picture [from 2007]. It is pitch black. Look how it is now. That is what this office does to you. Taking it beyond 10 years, it''s like committing suicide,” he said.

The ANC is trying to manage the run-up to its elective conference, scheduled for December 2017, to ensure it does not result in divisions, which could cost it support in the 2019 national elections.

It is hoping the qualities of nominees to replace President Jacob Zuma would come under scrutiny and that it would not descend into a popularity contest.

Rampahosa, African Union Commission chair Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, and National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete had all been named as possible successors to Zuma.

“If we allowed a stampede and everyone just says ''I am throwing my name in hat'' it will cause a messy competition. My own view is we should go back to the basic documents of the ANC,” Mantashe said.



NEWS24

Clinton leads Trump

$
0
0
Clinton leads TrumpClinton leads TrumpWhile Clinton has received several major newspaper endorsements, Trump got his first major thumbs-up, from The Las Vegas Review-Journal. Hillary looks to consolidate lead over Republican mogul With just over two weeks to go before Americans vote for a new president, Hillary Clinton - who has widened her lead over Donald Trump - is stepping up her efforts in key battleground states to consolidate her lead.

The Democratic former secretary of state, who is vying to be America''s first female president, leads the Republican real estate mogul among likely voters by 50% to 38%, according to a national ABC News poll.

That is her highest score since the start of the race to succeed Barack Obama in the White House.

“We are behind,” Trump''s campaign manager Kellyanne Conway admitted Sunday on NBC''s “Meet the Press,” nevertheless insisting that the race was not over.

At an evening rally in Naples, Florida, the 70-year-old Trump called on his supporters to turn out en masse to “get rid of Crooked Hillary once and for all,” using one of his favorite nicknames for his 68-year-old rival.

“Numbers are looking phenomenal in Florida. Don''t believe the media,” he insisted.

The Sunshine State is a key prize in the presidential race, one of several battleground states that are key for both candidates if they want to win on November 8. Most polls put Trump a few points behind Clinton there.

Conscious that winning the minority vote will help lead her to victory, the 68-year-old Clinton started her day Sunday at a mainly black church in Durham, North Carolina - another of the swing states up for grabs.

Obama won the southern state by a razor-thin margin in 2008, but lost it to Mitt Romney four years later. Team Clinton is pulling out all the stops to put it back in the Democratic win column.

Before a congregation that included Sybrina Fulton — the mother of slain unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin, whose death shocked America in 2012 — Clinton called for awareness of the “systemic racism” seen across the country.

“If we are honest with each other, we know we face the continuing discrimination against African-Americans and in particular young African-Americans,” she said.

“These conversations can be painful for everybody, but we have got to have them.”

She accused her Republican opponent of painting “a bleak picture of our inner cities” and ignoring the successes of black leaders “in every field and every walk of life.”

Clinton will return to North Carolina on Thursday with the woman who has emerged as one of her best campaign weapons - Michelle Obama. It will be their first joint rally for the former and current first ladies.

“Part of the great joy of being an American is to know that you can contribute to making things better for yourselves and for young people and for people who have been left out and left behind,” Clinton told a rally in Charlotte.

“Everybody has a role to play and the choice in this election really is about what you want, what you believe for yourself and your future,” she added, notably mentioning the need to respect women - an allusion to Trump''s woes over allegations of sexual misconduct.

The new ABC News poll said 69% of likely voters disapprove of Trump''s response to questions about his treatment of women, after a series of women alleged he either groped or forcibly kissed them in years past.

Trump has strongly denied those allegations, and on Saturday threatened to sue the “liars” who came forward with claims about his past behaviour.

Clinton is leading nationally in both two-way and four-way contests by an average of about six points, according to RealClearPolitics. She is also ahead in most of the crucial battleground states.

The 70-year-old Trump is clinging to an edge - but only a slight one - in traditionally Republican strongholds like Texas, where he has a three-point lead.

Team Clinton is gunning for a landslide win, using its momentum to push ahead in the battle for control of Congress. Both the Senate and the House of Representatives are now in Republican hands, and the Democrats would like to change that.

Clinton unleashed a pair of powerful surrogates on the campaign trail Sunday - her husband, former president Bill, in Florida, and the current president in Nevada.

“We''re not taking anything for granted at all,” campaign manager Robby Mook told Fox News Sunday. “You know, this is not over yet.”

“Mr Trump represents neither the danger his critics claim nor the magic elixir many of his supporters crave,” the paper wrote, adding he would instead shake up the US capital''s “political elites.”



NAMPA/AFP

Football used as political ball

$
0
0
Football used as political ballFootball used as political ball So Namibia''s so-called number one sport, football is facing a crisis and nobody seems to care.

At least that is the idea one gets when you hear the minister of sport telling administrators they must ask for a loan to get their activities going.

While such a response might be understandable given the fact that the ministry has been underfunded for a number of years, the casual manner of the remark makes it sound as if the crisis football is facing is just a laughing matter.

On numerous occasions this paper has pointed out that football''s inactivity has a far-reaching effect on various sectors of Namibia.

From small-time business women selling kapana at matches to professionals who supplement their income by providing services to football teams, to those who are fully employed in football.

Never mind the business teams bring when they play matches in different towns.

The economic downturn is far-reaching, without a doubt.

But what has been the response? Silence from those at the top.

This leads one to think that maybe there is a political agenda at play.

Is it possible that there are some that are hoping to use this crisis as a way to force regime change?

Is it possible that the arrogance of football administrators, who often feel that they deserve the biggest slice of the pie despite doing very little to justify that, has reached a level where it can no longer be tolerated?

If so, then maybe it is time for these agendas to be put in the public domain, instead of where it has been at present, which is silent murmuring and speculation.

Everybody is aware of the adage that a new broom sweeps cleaner, but the longer you take to buy the broom, the dirtier the house becomes.

So if we are genuine about having the best interest of the game at heart, now is the time to act and to make voices heard.

Unless that happens soon, the football loving public will continue to grow despondent. And it would be harder to instil confidence once more.

Shot of the day

$
0
0
Shot of the dayShot of the day IN REMEBERANCE: A woman puts in place a white rose representing one of the 86 victims on October 15, 2016 in Nice, south eastern France during a national tribute to the deceased people of the July 14 terror attack when a truck ploughed into crowds celebrating Bastille Day, killing 86 and injuring more than 400. Photo: NAMPA/AFP

Exile kids receiving training in Zambezi

$
0
0
Exile kids receiving training in ZambeziExile kids receiving training in Zambezi About 251 struggle kids have been enrolled at the Simon Mutumba Police Training Centre in the Zambezi Region for civic and vocational training.

The Office of the Prime Minister announced in a statement at the weekend that the struggle kids left last week for Zambezi with the first training programme to concentrate on civic affairs for two months and the remainder four months on vocational training.

According to the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister, Nangula Mbako, this group will be the second to receive training in the field of motor mechanics, plumbing, welding, building and construction, electrical installation and electronics. Mbako also said that 54 children of the liberation struggle were studying at the Namibian Institute of Mining and Technology (NIMT) in Arandis.

“The committee is still in the process of identifying more sustainable training centres for the remaining children of the liberation. Government is therefore appealing to those who have not yet accepted the Governments offer to seize the opportunity which is being implemented to solve their plight,” Mbako said.

Mbako added that there were all round efforts to employ and train youth from varying backgrounds, and that the training of the struggle kids was target intervention, adding that “the initiative to assist the children of the liberation struggle is not the only programme addressing the youth skills development in the country”.



Keith Vries

Border official accused of abusing his position

$
0
0
Border official accused of abusing his positionBorder official accused of abusing his positionCorrupt officials under ACC loop The Namibian border official is accused of permitting visitors, who had overstayed their legal limit, to exit and enter without facing arrest, among others. A Namibian border official and six Zimbabwean nationals remain behind bars in Katima Mulilo following an investigation by the Anti-Corruption Commission into alleged corrupt practices.

According to a recent press statement, the commission launched an investigation in late September following a tip-off that Namibian border official Kingsley Gwala had corruptly abused his position as an immigration official.

The ACC stated that Gwala was stamping Zimbabweans'' passports “in order to indicate that they exited and entered the border post in order to extend their status as visitors to Namibia whilst they were never physically present.”

Gwala is also accused of permitting visitors, who had overstayed their legal limit, to exit and enter without facing arrest.

The ACC investigation resulted in the arrest of five Zimbabwean nationals and Gwala himself.

During the probe into Gwala, the investigators discovered that he had been convicted of fraud in 2007 while employed at the Ministry of Justice. He was sentenced to 18 months'' imprisonment or a fine of N$3 000.

Although Gwala was dismissed from the ministry, he applied for a position as a border patrol officer, keeping quiet about his fraud conviction. On 18 October, Gwala and his co-accused brought a bail application before Katima Mulilo magistrate Ko Muyeghu. Muyeghu dismissed the application and ordered them to remain in custody until their next court appearance on 5 December 2016.

The ACC is investigating charges of corruption as well as offences under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act.



HOME AFFAIRS ACCUSED ON THE RUN

Meanwhile, the ACC has asked for public assistance in tracing two people accused of multiple counts of fraud, bribery and document falsification.

Arrest warrants were issued for Fillipus Fillipus and Elizabeth Shiwoshange Daniel, both wanted in connection with a completed investigation in which eight people face 17 charges of fraud and multiple charges of bribery. The charges relate to falsification of documents at Home Affairs.

Fillipus is a 25-year-old man whose last known address was Erf 45 in Okahandja''s Five Rand location. He was previously employed at Visser General and Packaging at Okahandja.

Daniel is believed to hail from the Omatwandiva or Okalongo area, the ACC press statement says.

The other six accused were arrested and appeared in the Okahandja Magistrate''s Court on 6 June. Their case was postponed to November 24. All of them were granted bail.

The ACC would welcome any information on the whereabouts of the two missing accused. Anyone with information can contact Junias Iipinge, a senior investigator at the ACC, at 061 435 4000 or 081 271 9452.

JANA-MARI SMITH

Zungu of Na?aJaqna fights back

$
0
0
Zungu of Na?aJaqna fights backZungu of Na?aJaqna fights backA senior councillor of the !Kung traditional authority says San communities speak for themselves. Communities apparently without leaders Sarah Zungu, senior councillor of the !Kung traditional authority, has hit back at allegations that she instigated San communities in the Na?aJaqna conservancy area against the leadership of the authority.

The chief of the !Kung authority, Clony Arnold, has accused Zungu of inciting the San people living in the Omatako area against her leadership.

Arnold said this after various San communities in the former Tsumkwe West communal area had accused her and other leaders of the traditional authority of illegally allocating large tracts of land to primarily Oshiwambo-speaking Namibians.

She also took aim at the Omatako community, whom she referred to as the “Xhurus of Angola” and said they should return to Angola with Zungu where they can elect the latter as their chief.

Arnold also accused the Na?aJaqna conservancy office of mismanagement and embezzlement of funds and said there is no cooperation between the conservancy office and the local communities. Zungu is the former chairperson of the Na?aJaqna conservancy committee.

Zungu refused to comment on allegations regarding illegal land allocations but denied all other accusations levelled against her.

She was elected as a senior councillor in 1993, a position she still holds, but denied Arnold’s assertions that she wants to take over the reins as chief from Arnold.

She did, however, say that the !Kung community has essentially been without a leader since 2012 when the former chief, John Arnold, died in a car accident.

“If the head [the current chief Arnold] divides the nation as she does it will be very difficult to unite the people,” commented Zungu.

She stressed that the Omatako community “spoke for themselves” when they criticised the land allocations.

Zungu added that it was irresponsible of Arnold to propose that the Omatako community return to Angola.

“They [the Omatako community] did not come here yesterday. They have been here for a long time,” Zungu said.

According to an expert on San matters in the conservancy area, Professor Robert Hitchcock, many people living in the area were !Xun and Khwe San refugees, former SWATF/Koevoet soldiers, who had been resettled in the region by the former South African regime in the 1970s,and later in the 1980s by the former South West African transitional government.

In the early 1990s the new Namibian government continued with the relocation of these San communities into the area.

Of the allegations of mismanagement and embezzlement in the conservancy office, Zungu said the conservancy has a benefit distribution plan that is used to allocate generated funds.

“Anyone is welcome to the conservancy office to check the books,” Zungu countered.

GOVT ASKED TO INTERVENE

Giel Boshoff, who has been living in the area since the early 1970s and was given permission to farm in the Tsumkwe West area in 2011, has made an impassioned plea to the Namibian government to investigate and review all land allocations in the area.

He said since the recent flurry of land allocations by the traditional authority not fewer than six other people have settled on land that was previously apportioned to him by the late Chief John Arnold.

He proposed that President Hage Geingob institute an independent commission of inquiry to investigate each and every land allocation to stop the alleged uncontrolled capture of land.

Boshoff also expressed concern over the apparent reluctance by the Namibian police and the government forestry office to act upon charges of illegal land occupations and fencing, as well as the felling of protected trees.

Boshoff is a proponent of the government’s announcement in 2006 that small-scale agricultural resettlement farms be established in the area.

Hitchcock had noted that this announcement by the government came as a surprise to resident San who had worked hard to have the area declared a conservancy – in 2003 – which is communal land in which local people have rights over wildlife.

“I know the Na?aJaqna conservancy office and other factions are against this proposal but the proposed farms should be handed out for the preservation of the San’s land on condition that it only goes to the San. In that way they will be in control of their own land and their own lives and give the necessary self-pride of ownership that will bring them prosperity,” said Boshoff.

CATHERINE SASMAN

Lightning's leopard legacy lives on

$
0
0
Lightning's leopard legacy lives onLightning's leopard legacy lives on This week the N/a''an ku sê Foundation paid homage to Lightning, a rehabilitated female leopard rescued by the foundation in 2008.

In a press statement, the foundation said Lightning, refitted with a GPS collar this month, “has not only become the most successful N/a''an ku sê release study, but she also holds the record for being the world''s longest monitored free-roaming leopard.”

Since 2009, when she was released in southern Namibia, Lightning has provided important insights for the foundation''s researchers, particularly relating to human-wildlife conflict.

Caught by a farmer in 2008, the young female leopard came to N/a''an ku sê to be rehabilitated by Rudie and Marlice van Vuuren, well-known conservationists and the founders of the N/a''an ku sê Foundation.

According to the statement it took almost a year of medical care and specialised rehabilitation techniques for the young leopard to regain the peak physical condition necessary for a safe release back into the wild.

Then, in 2009, fitted with a GPS collar, Lightning was released on Kulala Wilderness Reserve in southern Namibia.

Data transmitted by her GPS collar ensured that contact was not completely severed, allowing the N/a''an ku sê team to track and monitor her movements, collecting data critical to the foundation''s human-carnivore conflict mitigation research.

Eventually, Lightning moved onto the Neuras Wine and Wildlife Estate, a N/a''an ku sê reserve and prime carnivore research site – and decided to call it home.

Approximately every two years the batteries of a GPS collar run dry, requiring collared cats to be trapped and re-collared in a bid to continue tracking their movements.

“Leopards are notoriously tricky to re-collar, their natural intelligence often preventing them from re-entering the confines of a capture cage. However, Lightning has seemingly realised that capture cages bring no harm, confidently entering them when her re-collarings beckon, thus having allowed the N/a''an ku sê Foundation to continue monitoring her movements for seven years – a recognised world record in the annals of big cat research,” the foundation stated this week.

One highlight of camera traps tracking her movement was the visuals of Lightning with cubs, the statement said.

Data records indicate that Lightning has never targeted livestock, a no-conflict status which researchers say can be attributed to a high number of free-roaming big cats in the wild, many of which are unfairly persecuted.

“Human-wildlife conflict is researched and subsequently tackled as intensively as possible, the scientific data resulting from the GPS collaring of wild carnivores providing a platform from which to systematically address the complex facets of conflict.

“Free-roaming carnivores face an ongoing battle in their quest to peacefully co-exist with man, the N/a''an ku sê Foundation constantly striving to facilitate this peaceful co-existence through tangible research findings.”

STAFF REPORTER

Pastor fights for bail

$
0
0
Pastor fights for bailPastor fights for bail ILENI NANDJATO

Pastor Moussongela Marcelino Pedro of the Mennonite Church appeared in the Ondangwa Magistrate’s Court yesterday on charges of rape, abortion and human trafficking.

Pedro is fighting to be released on bail following his arrest a few months ago. During yesterday’s bail hearing, Pedro accused the State of using trumped-up charges against him.

“I am going to plead not guilty to all these charges because this is a duplicate of the case I already faced in Windhoek,” he said.

“This was count number six of that case. There is a plot against me by a group of people who envy me. I have a radio in my prison cell where I am always hearing them calling for people to protest against my bail hearing.”

State prosecutor Dollen Gowases objected to the granting of bail.

“This case is in the public interest and if granted bail, the suspect might abscond. He also might interfere with State witnesses or commit similar cases while out on bail.

“We are also considering the seriousness of the offence and a possibility of a long imprisonment while the police investigation continues,” she said.

The 55-year-old Pedro could not tell the court how he came to Namibia. He said he was born in Cabinda, Angola, and moved to Namibia in 1991 with his wife.

“In 1994 I married a Namibian citizen, Ndamonongheda Penehafo Pedro, and we have been living in Eembidi village in Ondobe Constituency.

“Since I have a PhD in education I started a private school in northern Namibia and I started educating Namibian children, especially orphans,” Pedro told the court.

He said he is the founder of the Mennonite Brethren Community School at Omafo, which has 600 learners and 64 staff members.

“My absence has caused huge damage to my school. Learning is no longer taking place and government has withdrawn its subsidy to the school hostel,” he said. The bail hearing will resume this morning for cross-examination.

Appeal to assist gas explosion victims

$
0
0
Appeal to assist gas explosion victims Appeal to assist gas explosion victims ELLANIE SMIT

Ten people have died from the gas explosion that occurred recently at a farm near Dordabis, while a special humanitarian appeal has been issued for assistance to the family involved.

By yesterday the death toll stood at ten people that were killed in the explosion that occurred on Friday, 14 October in which 15 people were injured.

The explosion, which occurred on the farm Garib about 25km from Dordabis, injured 11 children and four adults, all members of the same family.

The incident occurred at one of the houses of the farmworkers when a gas cylinder inside the house exploded and the house burnt down.

Shortly after the injured were taken to hospital four children died and one of the women injured in the fire had a miscarriage. In the meantime four other children and one adult have died.

The gas cylinder apparently had not been used for over a year and was leaking.

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia (ELCRN) has appealed for assistance, moral support and prayers for the family.

According to a statement the church visited the family and assessed their immediate needs. Counselling was provided to traumatised family members.

The deceased were: Alinodro !Nau/Gawaseb (6), Henrico Plaaitjies (11), Bores Geibeb (11), Anna Geibes (5), Veronica Plaaitjies (36), Analien Geibes (12), Nicoleen Geibes (10), Bradley Jagger and a six-year-old girl.

Only one of the five survivors who are still in hospital is out of the ICU. The others are still in a critical but stable condition.

According to the statement ELCRN has opened a trust account for the family at Nampost Savings Bank. The account details are Witbeen Family Fund, smartcard account number: 34374333.

Funeral arrangements have not yet been announced.

Any donations are welcomed.

According to Uhuru Dempers of the ELRCN Desk for Social Development, the ministries of child welfare and education have pledged their support.

For enquiries, contact Pastor Maureen Dausas at the Dordabis Parish of ELCRIN on 081 311 0574, or Dempers at 081 252 5095, or family members Aletha /Gawases at 081 279 1377 and Yvonne Juman at 081 810 5133.
Viewing all 36395 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images