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Friday, 26 June 2026
Namibia’s news, on the hour · Est. 2026
Friday, 26 June 2026
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Namibian press · Person

Elvis Mboya

2025-05-112026-06-26

What’s been said

Key points drawn from coverage. Tap a point to see the original sentence.

  1. July 2025
  2. The Namibian

    Elvis Mboya is president of the Namibia-Kenya Chamber of Commerce and a former journalist

    Source

    Elvis Mboya is the president of the Namibia-Kenya Chamber of Commerce and a former journalist in Namibia and Kenya.

    How Namibia Can Replace Taxes With Mineral Revenue
  3. The Namibian

    Elvis Mboya is president of the Namibia-Kenya Chamber of Commerce

    Source

    Elvis Mboya is president of the Namibia-Kenya Chamber of Commerce and a former journalist in Namibia and Kenya.

    The President’s First 100 Days: A Bold Shift Toward Trade-Led Growth
Opinion

Africans' devotion to European football overshadows Africa Day celebration

The News

An opinion piece argues that while Namibia and other African cities marked Africa Day to reflect continental unity and achievement, thousands in Windhoek, Nairobi and Johannesburg instead filled public spaces celebrating Arsenal's English Premier League triumph, raising questions about identity priorities and neo-colonial influence over African football loyalty.

Why it matters

A Namibia Minute pick.

25 May 2026 · Namibian Sun

Monday 25 May

  1. Africans' devotion to European football overshadows Africa Day celebration

    An opinion piece argues that while Namibia and other African cities marked Africa Day to reflect continental unity and achievement, thousands in Windhoek, Nairobi and Johannesburg instead filled public spaces celebrating Arsenal's English Premier League triumph, raising questions about identity priorities and neo-colonial influence over African football loyalty.

    25 May 2026 · Namibian Sun

Saturday 14 March

  1. Namibia's Investment Bill Must Balance Foreign Capital and Local Benefit

    As Namibia finalises its investment promotion and facilitation bill in 2026, the government faces a balancing act: attracting global investors while ensuring meaningful economic participation for Namibians. The new law should use performance-based incentives to encourage value creation and job growth in strategic sectors like critical minerals and renewable energy, while maintaining policy clarity and ease of doing business to sustain investor confidence.

    14 March 2026 · The Namibian

Wednesday 21 January

  1. Namibia must harness digital marketing to attract investment

    An opinion piece argues that Namibia has natural resources, stable governance and skilled workforce but lacks coordinated digital marketing and storytelling compared to regional peers. The author calls for citizen-led content creation, institutional action from tourism and investment boards, and a focus on African markets first to boost visibility and investment.

    21 January 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 8 January

  1. Thirteen economic priorities for Namibia's investment competitiveness

    An analysis identifies 13 issues that could shape Namibia's investment future in 2026, including rebuilding investor confidence, streamlining regulations, reforming tax enforcement, modernizing business registration, and improving trade and digital infrastructure. The piece argues that Namibia must convert its natural resources and political stability into measurable economic performance and offer a clearer reason for foreign investors to choose it over regional competitors.

    8 January 2026 · The Namibian

Elvis Mboya — Namibian press coverage · Namibia Minute