Editorial

OBSERVER DAILY | 552 learners, 12 trees, 0 Classrooms: Minister Steenkamp, where is the plan?

This past week, Namibians were once again confronted with an image that should never have existed 35 years after independence: children sitting under trees, trying to learn. The scene was Ndama East Primary School in Kavango East, where 552 learners, yes, five hundred and fifty-two children, are being taught under the shade of trees. Each tree is a “classroom”.  There are more than twelve such “classrooms”, manned by fourteen qualified teachers doing their utmost with nothing but chalk, voices, and hope. The man who brought this story to the national consciousness was not a government minister, not an education inspector,…
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OBSERVER DAILY | Namibia and the AfCFTA 

When the vice president Lucia Witbooi, travels to Algiers in September to represent President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah at the Intra-Africa Trade Fair (IATF2025), she carries more than a delegation badge.  She carries Namibia’s opportunity to shape its place in a continental market of 1.4 billion people, underpinned by the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). The fair, themed “A Gateway to New Opportunities”, is not just a showcase of trade. It is a laboratory for Africa’s economic future. The AfCFTA, established in 2018 and operational since 2021, is the largest free trade agreement since the formation of the World Trade Organisation.…
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OBSERVER DAILY | Diplomacy or Trade: Where is the Centre of Gravity?

Namibia’s diplomatic service has historically been framed around political solidarity, liberation credentials, and the maintenance of good neighbourly relations. These have been important foundations. But the times have changed. The 21st century demands that diplomacy be primarily economic. Today’s ambassadors should not only attend receptions and negotiate communiqués; they should be Namibia’s chief salespeople in foreign capitals. If the Ministry of International Relations and Trade is serious about trade, then returning diplomats should be evaluated not only on how many bilateral agreements were signed, but on whether they facilitated investment, opened markets for Namibian products, or created opportunities for Namibian…
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OBSERVER DAILY | “You Can’t Stand Next to the River and Wash Your Face with Saliva”

There is an old Nigerian saying that goes, “You cannot stand next to the river and wash your face with saliva.” In other words, when abundance is at your feet, it is an insult to go thirsty. That proverb captures perfectly where Namibia stands today. Our nation sits on fertile soil, blessed with rivers, rainfall, and arable land that has for too long been left underutilized. It is against this backdrop that President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah’s recent visit to the green schemes of the Kavango East Region takes on profound meaning. On Thursday, she walked the fields of Shadikongoro, taking in the sunflowers…
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OBSERVER DAILY | From scare Namibia to Air Namibia

When Air Namibia was grounded and liquidated in 2021, the decision was framed as bold fiscal discipline. After all, the airline had swallowed more than N$11 billion in government bailouts over two decades without ever finding sustainable profitability. To many, pulling the plug seemed the only sensible choice. But history has a way of exposing short-term decisions for what they truly are: costly miscalculations. Today, as President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah signals her government’s intention to reintroduce a national carrier, we are compelled to ask ourselves: was closing Air Namibia the right move? The answer is an emphatic no. In fact, the…
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DAILY OBSERVER | Prime minister’s kindness: time for a rethink?

Prime minister’s kindness: time for a rethink? When President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah took the oath of office, she pledged inclusivity and fairness as guiding principles for her administration. “No special treatment” was her rallying cry, meant to signal a new era in which the government would lead by example, not by exception. Yet, one long-standing tradition continues to sit awkwardly alongside that promise: the so-called prime minister’s kindness. This is the practice of allowing public servants to leave work early, sometimes at 10h00, sometimes at 14h00, on the eve of public holidays. The reasoning has always been straightforward: give workers a…
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DAILY OBSERVER | Steering Namibia’s Oil with an Unusual Crew

Namibia’s oil and gas sector is standing on the edge of history. For decades, we dreamed of “the big find,” and now that dream is reality. Oil is no longer a rumour off our shores, it’s here, commercially viable, and promising to change the face of our economy forever. But here’s the catch: how we manage this industry from day one will determine whether Namibia becomes a success story or just another African country that struck oil and ended up poorer for it. That’s why leadership matters. The people at the top set the tone, negotiate the deals, and decide…
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DAILY OBSERVER | Let Netumbo Be Netumbo

In Namibia, politics is as much a national pastime as it is the engine of governance. The moment a new president assumes office, our collective curiosity shifts into high gear. Who will be appointed to Cabinet? Which familiar faces will be retained, and which newcomers will find themselves elevated to positions of influence? For weeks, conversations across dinner tables, taxis, shebeens, and WhatsApp groups circle around the same subject: who’s next? Who are the new ambassadors?  This chatter is not unique to Namibia. In every democracy, the arrival of a new leader generates speculation, innuendo, and even misinformation. But in…
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OBSERVER DAILY | WHO IS CHECKING THE CHECKERS?

Namibia has always prided itself on being a nation rooted in law and democratic values. We boast a Constitution that is admired across the continent, and institutions that, at least in principle, should safeguard our democracy from the kind of arbitrary governance that has destabilised so many of our neighbours. Yet, every so often, we are reminded that even in Namibia, leaders sometimes forget that power is borrowed, not owned, and that authority must be exercised within the guardrails of law. The latest controversy surrounding Urban and Rural Development Minister James Sankwasa is a case in point. On 15 August, a…
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National Youth Council paralysis: Steenkamp and Balloti must act, not watch

The National Youth Council (NYC) has collapsed into paralysis. What was supposed to be the engine of young voices in Namibia is now a cautionary tale of dysfunction, governance failures, suspended directors without due process, missing financial reports, and youth openly defying ministerial appointees. The picture is one of decay, not leadership. Now, with minister Sanet Steenkamp and deputy minister Dino Balloti at the helm of the Ministry of Education, Arts and Culture, the country expects more than sympathetic statements and administrative tinkering. This is the moment for them to lead decisively, because NYC cannot continue like this. Dysfunction in…
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