Opinions

YOUNG OBSERVER | #Unmuted

YOUNG OBSERVER | #Unmuted

On the 16 September 2025, prime minister Elijah Tjitunga Ngurare announced through social media that “ministry of education, innovation, youth, sports, arts and culture and the ministry of health and social services entered a memorandum of understanding with the Namibia Training Authority (NTA) to facilitate TVET trainees repairing schools, clinics, construction of sanitation facilities, classrooms, etc. Other OMAs will follow suit.”  In 2024, the Namibia National Students Organisation (Nanso) launched a programme called Fix My School, which also aimed at partnering with technical and vocational training trainees to improve the dilapidated state of schools, which is a reality they discovered…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | Should Namibia consider mandatory paternity testing? 

YOUNG OBSERVER | Should Namibia consider mandatory paternity testing? 

It has been a dark and long week here in our beautiful Republic. From news of horrendous child murders in the growing battles for paternity to the ever-present gender-based violence cases, the question that has begged for response is whether it is time for Namibia to introduce mandatory paternity testing.  This has become a clarion call that is viewed as a redeeming act to prevent crimes often termed as passionate and also to safeguard men from the emotional trauma that comes with caring for children who are not theirs biologically.  In terms of benchmarking, it is important to highlight that…
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OBSERVER DAILY | Balancing experience and renewal in Namibia’s diplomatic corps

President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah’s latest round of ambassadorial appointments has ignited a lively national debate. All of the new envoys are seasoned diplomats, many of them retired, and their average age is noticeably high. For some Namibians, their appointment looks like a closed circle of trusted allies, an old guard rewarding loyalty and preserving networks built during the President’s long tenure as Minister of International Relations. For others, it is simply a pragmatic decision to deploy experienced professionals at a critical time for the country’s foreign policy. Both perspectives hold validity and underscore the intricate balance the President currently needs to…
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YOUNG OBSERVER | How young Namibians are making money online 

YOUNG OBSERVER | How young Namibians are making money online 

Online boutiques  From bags to shoes and clothes, young Namibians have taken on the fashion industry through the popular “order with me”. Below are some boutiques you can check out: @sassy_styles @ester_s_closet  Content creation  Whether it is a wedding, proposal or birthday party, you no longer have to hire a professional videographer to capture moments on your special day because you can simply have a content creator who is well equipped with the latest iPhone and a ring light. Not only do you get content in real time, but online SBWL’ers can also watch your day unfold on Instagram. Here…
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Capitalism being the root cause? Deal with it!

Capitalism being the root cause? Deal with it!

Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro Most recently, Yours Truly Ideologically stumbled on social media upon a video interview with an Afro-American granny-sister, Samaria Bailey, now 75-years-old, reminiscing about her childhood. When as a child she was made to follow her mother, who had a bag on her back, in the cotton field during the days of slavery. A bag in which the little Bailey had to throw in cotton picked from the field. The interesting thing about her is that in her reminiscence she found nothing wrong with this, nor with her mother and/or parents, enslaved as they were by the American system…
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Every Namibian voice matters: a call for a media support bill to strengthen rural coverage

Every Namibian voice matters: a call for a media support bill to strengthen rural coverage

Hidipo Hamata In Namibia, the right to information is guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution, which ensures freedom of expression and the press. Likewise, many newspapers, including The Namibian, Namibian Sun, and Confidénte, struggle to report from rural areas due to limited resources. Covering town councils, urban crime, and government announcements is far cheaper than sending reporters hundreds of kilometres to remote communities, where roads are poor, fuel is expensive, and audiences are small. Consequently, rural issues remain underreported, investigative journalism suffers, and newsrooms increasingly rely on press statements, Facebook posts, WhatsApp messages, or court documents instead of original…
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Emotions live in the body 

Emotions live in the body 

Sybille Lindner Have you ever felt your shoulders pull up when you got a fright or your belly pull tight when you thought you had forgotten something important? Have you ever felt a current of restlessness in your legs when you really wanted to do something fun, or your heart expanding with joy when you realised someone had thought of you for your birthday? These experiences are so innately part of being human that we often forget that they are part of us every day. Our feelings and emotions are not just happening in our brains – they are felt…
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The burden of being a single mother and lessons for co-parenting 

The burden of being a single mother and lessons for co-parenting 

Monika Shafuda  Being a single mother is two-way traffic – meaning that you have to juggle household responsibilities alone, work and childcare and carry the weight of two parents at the same time. In Namibia we have brave women who endured the hardship of raising children alone, not simply because it is what they want, but because it appears to be caused by many circumstances which are sometimes uneasy to mitigate, such as untimely death, cultural norms, and laws like protection orders and divorce, just to mention a few. While the road of single motherhood is filled with love and…
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OBSERVER DAILY | NHE: Now or never to deliver on the dream of affordable housing

For decades, the National Housing Enterprise (NHE) has been the government’s principal vehicle to meet one of Namibia’s most pressing social needs: decent and affordable housing. Yet the promise of shelter for all has repeatedly been deferred. Backlogs have grown. Informal settlements have multiplied. The gap between aspiration and reality remains a national embarrassment.  With the ink now dry on a five-year collaboration agreement between the NHE and the Roads Contractor Company (RCC), the message is unmistakable: it is now or never for the NHE to prove that it can deliver on its founding mandate. The agreement signed this week…
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From crisis to hope: How genomic research could turn the tide on prostate cancer in Namibia 

From crisis to hope: How genomic research could turn the tide on prostate cancer in Namibia 

Uvatera Maurihungirire Prostate cancer is the most common cancer affecting men in Namibia, with an alarmingly high rate of 63.8 cases per 100 000 men. In Sub-Saharan Africa, this number is predicted to at least triple by 2040. This means that prostate cancer has now overtaken other leading malignancies in Namibia, including breast and cervical, making it a critical public health concern that requires urgent attention. Despite this, many men are diagnosed only when the disease has advanced, which limits treatment options and reduces survival rates. Why are the numbers so high? Several factors contribute to the high prostate cancer…
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