Namibia Minute.
Monday, 8 June 2026
Namibia’s news, on the hour · Est. 2026
Monday, 8 June 2026
Windhoek—:—London—:—New York—:—Beijing—:—
Namibian press · Place

Africa

2018-02-022026-06-08

In coverage

Verbatim sentences from the source article.

  1. June 2026
  2. The Namibian

    Private healthcare is growing across Africa. Good.

    Private and Public Healthcare Can Work Together
  3. The Namibian

    The Yango Group has announced the launch of Yango Tech in Africa, expanding the company’s presence in the region with a portfolio of artificial intelligence (AI) and digital infrastructure solutions for businesses, city authorities and public-sector organisations.

    Yango Group Launches Yango Tech in Africa: Scaling AI and Digital Infrastructure
  4. May 2026
  5. The Namibian

    Evidence from across Africa shows that poorly implemented cashless transitions create backlash and inequality.

    Cashless Parking Chaos Shows Why Inclusion Must Come First
  6. The Namibian

    Despite its tiny geographic footprint and population of just six million people, Singapore’s economy is bigger than those of Africa’s economic giants – Nigeria, Egypt and South Africa, which house up to 220 million people.

    Namibia Can Match Singapore’s Economic Miracle
  7. Windhoek Observer

    Across Africa and elsewhere, poorly managed reforms have sometimes enabled exploitation by elites and commercial interests.

    Chiefs, customs and the cost of standing still
  8. The Namibian

    The founding president of independent Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah, sounded a warning to Africa during the historic summit that gave birth to the Organisation of African Unity in Addis Ababa in 1963.

    OPINION: Have African leaders betrayed the dream of 1963?
  9. The Namibian

    For much of that history they were church-linked, with mission schools and private universities taking root across Africa.

    Private Education Is Not The Enemy
  10. Windhoek Observer

    Staff Writer Namibia has maintained its position as the second-ranked startup ecosystem in Southern Africa after South Africa, according to the 2026 StartupBlink Global Startup Ecosystem Index (GSEI).

    Namibia keeps second place in Southern Africa startup rankings
  11. The Namibian

    NAMIBIA has dropped nine places to 94th globally and slipped from 8th to 10th in Africa in the StartupBlink Global Startup Ecosystem Index 2026, despite continued growth in the country’s startup sector and improving business conditions.

    Namibia drops in Africa, global startup rankings
  12. The Namibian

    Africa’s crisis is often blamed on others. China exploits Africa.

    China, the West, Gaddafi and the Crisis of African Order
Opinion

Private and public healthcare sectors should complement, not compete

The News

An opinion piece argues that growing private healthcare in Africa is not evidence of state failure but rather meets patient demand for speed and reliability that stretched public systems cannot guarantee. The piece notes that non-state providers have long filled gaps in healthcare access, particularly in rural and township communities, and suggests the focus should be on why Namibians increasingly choose private care.

4 June 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 4 June

  1. Private and public healthcare sectors should complement, not compete

    An opinion piece argues that growing private healthcare in Africa is not evidence of state failure but rather meets patient demand for speed and reliability that stretched public systems cannot guarantee. The piece notes that non-state providers have long filled gaps in healthcare access, particularly in rural and township communities, and suggests the focus should be on why Namibians increasingly choose private care.

    4 June 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 2 June

  1. Yango Group launches AI and digital infrastructure service in Africa

    Yango Group has announced the launch of Yango Tech in Africa, offering artificial intelligence and digital infrastructure solutions to businesses, city authorities and public-sector organisations across sectors including mobility, healthcare, financial services and retail.

    2 June 2026 · The Namibian

Sunday 31 May

  1. Windhoek cashless parking system sparks confusion and exclusion

    Windhoek's rollout of a cashless parking system requiring KPI-issued or bank cards has caused confusion and frustration among motorists, many of whom lack access to these payment methods. The article argues that rapid digital transitions without adequate consultation disproportionately affect those outside the formal banking system.

    31 May 2026 · The Namibian

Saturday 30 May

  1. Singapore's economic transformation offers lessons for Namibia

    The article compares Singapore's transformation from a poor, resource-scarce nation in 1965 to one of the world's wealthiest economies today, suggesting Namibia can learn from Singapore's approach to governance and development despite different challenges.

    30 May 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 26 May

  1. Namibia must balance tradition with communal land reform progress

    An opinion piece argues that while traditional leaders' concerns about communal land reform deserve respect, Namibia cannot allow defence of custom to obstruct economic transformation. The article contends that current customary systems leave communal land residents trapped in poverty, unable to use land productively or secure financing, and vulnerable to inconsistent allocation practices.

    26 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Sunday 24 May

  1. Have African leaders fulfilled 1963 independence vision?

    An opinion piece questions whether African leaders have acted as a unified front to address the continent's problems as envisioned by Ghana's founding president Kwame Nkrumah at the 1963 founding summit of the Organisation of African Unity, and examines whether Africa has gained true control of its mineral wealth or remains dependent on external powers.

    24 May 2026 · The Namibian

Saturday 23 May

  1. Private education's rise fills gaps in Namibian schooling

    An opinion piece argues that private education has historically complemented public schooling in Namibia and across Africa, and that families increasingly choose private schools because they seek accountability and predictable standards, even though the public system's failings—not private schools—are the real issue.

    23 May 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 21 May

  1. Namibia ranks second in Southern Africa startup ecosystems

    Namibia maintains second place in Southern Africa's startup ecosystem rankings after South Africa, ranking 94th globally and 10th in Africa according to the 2026 StartupBlink Global Startup Ecosystem Index, though it dropped nine places globally from 2025 despite recording 8.2% ecosystem growth.

    21 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Wednesday 20 May

  1. Namibia drops to 94th in global startup rankings

    Namibia has dropped nine places to 94th globally and slipped from 8th to 10th in Africa in the StartupBlink Global Startup Ecosystem Index 2026, with annual ecosystem growth of 8.2% falling below the global average. The country retained its position as southern Africa's second-ranked startup ecosystem behind South Africa, and Windhoek remains its only city ranked in the world's top 1,000 startup ecosystems.

    20 May 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 19 May

  1. Africa's crisis rooted in weak institutions, not foreign interests alone

    An opinion piece argues that while foreign powers do pursue their interests in Africa, the deeper problem is Africa's lack of disciplined structures, weak institutions, and fragmented leadership that allow resources to be negotiated away, and that Africa must stop waiting for rescue and instead build order.

    19 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Africa must process minerals locally, assert resource ownership—PM Ngurare

    Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare called on African countries to stop exporting raw minerals and instead process them locally to create jobs and achieve economic independence. He said Africa must assert ownership of its resources without fear and develop its own technology infrastructure.

    19 May 2026 · The Namibian

Friday 15 May

  1. WHO representative urges investment in safer walking and cycling

    World Health Organization country representative Dr Richard Banda called for urgent investment in safer walking and cycling infrastructure, stating that road crashes continue to claim lives and leave many with permanent injuries in Namibia and across Africa. He said pedestrians and cyclists are among the most vulnerable road users due to poor infrastructure and unsafe conditions, and called for stronger law enforcement, lower speed limits in pedestrian areas, and improved emergency response systems.

    15 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Wednesday 13 May

  1. Vice President urges Africa to increase intra-continental trade

    Vice President Lucia Witbooi called for stronger economic cooperation between African countries, saying African economies have traded more with the rest of the world than with one another. She urged businesses and governments to work together to drive industrialisation, innovation and intra-Africa trade, citing the African Continental Free Trade Area as a major opportunity to transform Africa into an integrated market.

    13 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Namibia pushes for permanent UN Security Council seats for Africa

    Namibia's trade and international relations minister, attending a ministerial meeting in Nairobi, reaffirmed Africa's demand for two permanent seats on the UN Security Council, together with additional non-permanent seats, as part of the Committee of Ten's push for UN system reform.

    13 May 2026 · New Era

  3. Namibia targets local marine processing, aims end raw exports by 2030

    Vice President Lucia Witbooi announced that Namibia will end the export of raw marine products by 2030, aiming instead to process, package and brand marine products locally. Under the sixth National Development Plan, the government wants 60% of marine products to undergo secondary and tertiary processing inside the country by 2030, supported by investments in infrastructure and skills development including a proposed Franco-Namibian Marine Institute.

    13 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  4. EU extends strategic partnership with Namibia to 2030

    The European Union has extended its strategic partnership roadmap with Namibia to 2030, with new investments focused on renewable energy, critical raw materials and industrial development. Bilateral trade between Namibia and the EU reached N$17.6 billion in 2025, with Namibian exports to European markets supporting more than 46 000 jobs across the country.

    13 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Tuesday 12 May

  1. President pays tribute to late founding leader Nujoma

    President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah said the late founding president Sam Nujoma's legacy continues through the democratic Namibia he helped build and in young Namibians' dreams, marking what would have been his 97th birthday. Nandi-Ndaitwah described Nujoma as one of Africa's respected liberation leaders and a lasting symbol of pan-Africanism.

    12 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Monday 11 May

  1. Former Botswana president Festus Mogae dies at eighty-six

    Former Botswana president Festus Gontebanye Mogae, aged 86, died in Gaborone over the weekend. Namibian President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah and current Botswana President Duma Gideon Boko paid tribute to Mogae as a distinguished statesman and principled leader whose presidency strengthened regional cooperation through SADC.

    11 May 2026 · New Era

Friday 8 May

  1. Opinion: South African xenophobia masks unaddressed economic inequality

    An analysis argues that violence against African migrants in South Africa is a symptom of deeper economic frustration, but misplaced anger that diverts from the core issue of unequal wealth ownership and economic control since the end of apartheid.

    8 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Wednesday 6 May

  1. Namibian choreographers invited to JOMBA! digital platform

    Namibian choreographers and film-makers are invited to submit productions to the 2026 JOMBA! Digital Open Horizons platform, a screen-dance showcase held during South Africa's annual JOMBA! Contemporary Dance Experience in Durban from 27 August to 8 September, which seeks experimental choreography across Africa.

    6 May 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 5 May

  1. Namibia's oil discoveries offer chance to build local refining capacity

    Recent oil and gas discoveries in the Orange Basin, with an over 80% exploration success rate, position Namibia to avoid reliance on imported fuel and build local refining capacity—a lesson highlighted by recent fuel price shocks tied to Middle Eastern conflicts.

    5 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Namibia's creative economy requires inclusive support for all workers

    An opinion piece argues that Namibia must recognize and support its grassroots creative workers—photographers, filmmakers, and others working without formal employment—as essential to building a thriving creative economy, rather than waiting for individual talent to emerge.

    5 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Sunday 3 May

  1. President affirms Namibia's press freedom commitment on World Press Freedom Day

    President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah reaffirmed Namibia's commitment to press freedom on World Press Freedom Day 2026, noting the country ranks 23rd globally and second in Africa for media freedom. She emphasized the responsibility of government, media, and citizens to safeguard a free press amid misinformation and geopolitical tensions, and called for continued journalistic professionalism and integrity.

    3 May 2026 · Informanté

Thursday 30 April

  1. Namibia ranks 23rd globally in press freedom, second in Africa

    According to the 2026 World Press Freedom Index, Namibia ranked 23rd out of 180 countries globally and second in Africa, rising from 28th position in 2025 with a score of 76.97. The country performs strongly in security and legal framework but faces economic pressures on independent media, though journalists operate with constitutional protections despite occasional political pressure and verbal attacks from officials.

    30 April 2026 · The Namibian

Monday 27 April

  1. Twelve deaths from malaria in Omusati region in 2026

    Twelve people died from malaria in Omusati region in the first four months of 2026, with the region recording 7,410 confirmed cases out of 57,180 nationally, according to statistics released by Omusati governor Immanuel Shikongo during World Malaria Day commemoration. Countrywide, 61 people have died and 3,067 were hospitalised, with the governor describing the figures as alarming.

    27 April 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 23 April

  1. Clean energy transition necessary for Namibia's economic resilience

    Fossil fuel dependency exposes countries to geopolitical shocks and rising prices that erode household budgets and strain economies; accelerating clean energy adoption through renewable sources and green technologies can address both climate instability and cost pressures while creating jobs and strengthening energy security. The article argues that developing nations require greater international financing support to enable this transition.

    23 April 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Namibia leads continental efforts addressing youth unemployment

    President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah commissioned a new National Governing Council of the African Peer Review Mechanism, with Namibia tasked to spearhead efforts tackling youth unemployment across Africa. The country's approach involves youth development funding, apprenticeships and education support, though Namibia itself faces a youth unemployment rate of around 44.4% according to census-based figures.

    23 April 2026 · New Era

Wednesday 22 April

  1. UN votes slave trade a crime against humanity, boosting Namibia reparations calls

    The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution on 25 March recognising the transatlantic slave trade as a crime against humanity, with 123 votes in favour and 52 abstentions. Namibian subject experts say the vote bolsters local calls for justice regarding colonial-era genocide and reparations, and could pressure countries such as Germany to reconsider responses to demands of Namibians affected by the 1904 to 1908 genocide.

    22 April 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 21 April

  1. Swapo marks 66 years; leaders warn history cannot secure future

    On Swapo's 66th anniversary, party leader Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah stated that while the party's liberation struggle history is important, it alone cannot carry the party forward as people now expect tangible improvements in jobs, housing, healthcare, and education. Political analysts noted Swapo's waning electoral support over recent elections due to corruption and declining leadership quality, though the party remains the country's strongest with functional regional structures.

    21 April 2026 · New Era

Monday 20 April

  1. Former ambassador Emvula chairs Namibia's peer review council

    President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah appointed former ambassador Wilfried Emvula as chairperson of the National Governing Council of the African Peer Review Mechanism in Namibia, with ten members inaugurated for a term to January 2030. The council, established under the APRM Statute, will provide strategic oversight and ensure transparency in governance reforms aligned with Namibia's development plan and Africa's Agenda 2063.

    20 April 2026 · The Namibian

Africa — Namibian press coverage · Namibia Minute