Mashi Traditional Authority celebrates Tulikonge Cultural Festival
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The Mashi Traditional Authority celebrated the annual Tulikonge Cultural Festival over the weekend in Kongola.
The Mashi Traditional Authority celebrated the annual Tulikonge Cultural Festival over the weekend in Kongola.
A 50-year-old man, Fillipus Shavuka Nyanyukweni Hango, has died after attempting to rescue another man from a water well.
The Otjiwarongo Municipality says it will continue working hard to address road maintenance as it remains a vital component of infrastructure development for the town's thriving economy.
The Executive Director of the Namibian National Association of the Deaf, Paul Nanyeni, has described the initiative by the police to continuously learn basic sign language as commendable.
This comes after about 30 officers attended a five-day basic sign language course at Rundu recently.
To shape the future of vending activities in the Tukondjeni market, well known as Stop and Shop, the City of Windhoek engaged the vending operators in that area regarding their operations.
The city has instructed the Stop n Shop vendors to clean the marketplace by next Sunday.
The Deputy Minister of Information and Communication Technology, Modestus Amutse, officially launched Namibia Film Week, delivering a message of pride and celebration in the art of local storytelling.
Creatives in the film industry explored ways to approach filmmaking from a business perspective.
Some believe that the film industry in Namibia is finally being recognised as a legitimate field, and it's time to shift the perception that it cannot be pursued as a viable career.
To address water challenges faced by the people of the Kavango East Region, NamWater handed over the Kayengona and Shamvhura water supply river schemes to the residents of Rundu Rural and Ndiyona Constituencies yesterday.
98 Namibians who have been living in neighbouring Botswana for decades have returned to Namibia, their country of origin.
They were formally received at the Dobe Border Post in the Otjozondjupa Region by Namibian government officials.
Iyaloo Women's Investment Group is blaming the former striking fishermen for the company's reduced budget and cash flow.
About 200 former striking fishermen, known as Okapale fishermen, petitioned Iyaloo Women's Group in February, demanding jobs at sea and not in the factory.