RUNDU, 13 April 2025 - The battle for the top spot in the North East First Division Football League is intensifying, as all four leading teams are within striking distance of claiming the title. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 14 April 2025 - China's Ambassador to Namibia, Zhao Weiping (L) and President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah (R) pictured in Windhoek on Monday. (Photo by: Linea Dishena) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 14 April 2025 - Murder and stock theft convicts, Stockley Kauejao, Matheu Kakururume, Muvare Kaporo and Wilfred Kazeurua. (Photo by: Eba Kandovazu) NAMPA
SWAKOPMUND, 14 April 2025- Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Industries, Mines and Energy (MIME) Natangue Ithete, Deputy Minister Gaudentia Krönhe, Executive Director Ben Nangombe and Erongo Governor photographed with EDs and Managers in the ministry during the opening of the Ministry’s Annual Strategic Planning Retreat in Swakopmund on Monday. (Photo by: Isabel Bento) NAMPA
RUNDU, 14 April 2025 - Marketing officer of the Kavango East Annual School Tournament, Rosvitha Ghunongha. (Photo: Contributed)
Java-Java Girls FC is grieving the death of their star player, Fenney Naruses, who was among the six people killed in a brutal attack in Usakos on 05 April 2025. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 11 April 2025- Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare during a meet and greet with senior officials of the Ministry of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport, Arts and Culture. (Photo by: Linea Dishena) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 20 March 2025 - City of Windhoek Police joint military procession in Windhoek. (Photo by: Linea Dishena) NAMPA
(FILES) Harvey Weinstein appears at Manhattan Criminal Court on, April 9, 2025, in New York City. Disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein faces a retrial starting April 15, on rape and sex assault charges for which a previous verdict was overturned, forcing survivors who helped fire up the "MeToo" movement to testify against him once again. Weinstein's 2017 conviction by a jury was overturned seven years later by an appeals court that ruled the way witnesses were handled in the original New York trial was unlawful. (Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / POOL / AFP)
This aerial photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows a stupa at the Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by Suy SE / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This aerial photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows a stupa at the Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by Suy SE / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows tourists posing for a photo with Bou Meng (C), a survivor of the notorious S-21 prison where an estimated 15,000 people were tortured to death, at the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows a tourist laying a lotus flower to pay his respects to the victims of the Khmer Rouge regime at the Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows a tourist looking at skulls of victims of the Khmer Rouge regime at the Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows a Cambodian guide (2nd L) briefing tourists next to a mass grave of victims of the Khmer Rouge regime at the Choeung Ek Killing Fields Memorial in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE
This photo taken on March 28, 2025 shows tourists looking at portrait photos of victims of the Khmer Rouge regime at the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh. Survivors of the Khmer Rouge's bloody regime welcome a beefed-up Cambodian law that forbids denying the movement's atrocities, but rights activists and academics warn it could also stifle legitimate dissent. (Photo by TANG CHHIN Sothy / AFP) / To go with 'CAMBODIA-KHMER ROUGE-HISTORY-ANNIVERSARY-LAW,ANALYSIS' by Alexis HONTANG and Suy SE