Otumborombonga- Omuyaruke Joseph Seadog Kaseehunde Kuhanga wari epanga na kangamwa.
Ovinamwinyo vya Zombouvapa mavitu onyota yondama ndjapwire
Ozoumbouvapa- Ovatuta mbenwisa mondama mave ningirirwa oku kengeze nambano nai ondama tji ya pwirire.
Manage your money better
The Bank of Namibia’s latest economic outlook expects the Namibian economy to fall into a deeper contraction during 2020, mainly due to the devastating impact of Covid-19 across all sectors.
Impact of repo rate cuts on local economy
Some of the measures governments have put in place during the Covid-19 pandemic include the cutting of repo rates to provide some short-term relief to borrowers.
Buy local, minister urges
Industrialisation minister Lucia Iipumbu has commended local retailers for accommodating local produce on their shelves and thus contributing to the Buy Local, Grow Namibia initiative.
Taking stock of the major goals of education for all
Education for all was coined at the 1990 World Bank Conference in Jomtien, Thailand, which calls for the promotion of Western-style primary education in Africa, in the process robbing the African child of his or her indigenous knowledge and language, promoting what Brock-Utne calls ‘the recolonization of the African mind (Brock-Utne, 2000).
Ethnic stereotyping and the danger of a single story
One positive take away from Covid-19 is that it has “forced” us to stand together as Namibians.
Return to face-to-face learning – fears, anxieties and prospects
The sounds of the siren indicating different times and periods at a boarding school near where I stay has become part and parcel of our daily lives.
Standing in solidarity with women
In many Namibian cultures, reproduction is seen as a central aspect of women’s role and society expects that any women in their reproductive age should be able to give birth to a child.
Namibia towards a knowledge-based society
The goal of basic education is to empower learners to actively participate in making Namibia society a knowledge-based society.