OTJIWARONGO, 21 April 2026 - Nearly 1 000 mandrax tables were allegedly discovered in a goods delivery truck on the Otjiwarongo-Outjo road on Tuesday. Three parcels of cannabis were also allegedly found in the same truck. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 21 April 2026 - ReconNamibia Assistant Operations Manager, Muundu Kasera. (Photo by: Molly Weyulu) NAMPA
KAPAKO, 21 April 2026 - The Kapako Constituency in the Kavango West Region has launched targeted youth tourism workshops aimed at promoting job creation and enterprise development, with leaders calling for practical action, skills development and the sustainable use of natural resources. (Photo by: Lylie Joel) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 21 April 2026 - Industry leaders pose for a photo at the 2026 Upstream Oil and Gas Local Suppliers Workshop. (Photo: Contributed)
WINDHOEK, 21 April 2026 - Attendees of the 2026 Upstream Oil and Gas Local Suppliers Workshop pose for a photo. (Photo by: Molly Weyulu) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 20 April 2026 - President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah (centre) pictured together with a delegation from the Omaludi organising committee and the Minister in the Presidency, Charles Mubita (far left) at the State House. (Photo by: Edward Tenete) NAMPA
WINDHOEK, 20 April 2026 - High Court Judge Claudia Claasen on Monday convicted Mechthilde Karomo on two counts of murder and a charge of arson following a fatal shack fire that claimed two lives in December 2022. (Photo by: Eba Kandovazu) NAMPA
RUNDU, 27 April 2025 - Tuhingireni residents spokesperson Sarafina Shifafure speaking during a community meeting last year. (Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
(FILES) Algerian writer Kamel Daoud poses during a photo session at the 26th "Les Correspondances" literature festival in Manosque, southern France, on September 25, 2024. The Franco-Algerian writer Kamel Daoud announced on April 22, 2026, that he had been sentenced to three years in prison without parole and a fine of five million dinars in Algeria, where he was being prosecuted for his novel "Houris," winner of the 2024 Goncourt Prize. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)
(FILES) This illustration photograph taken in Lille, on May 10, 2022, shows capsules of nitrous oxide, also called "laughing gas", displayed on a table. The Antoine Alleno Association told AFP on April 22, 2026, that it will be taking legal action against companies marketing colourful nitrous oxide canisters, which they accuse of catering a misuse of the gas. (Photo by Denis Charlet / AFP)
(FILES) Algerian writer and journalist Kamel Daoud attends a press conference at the Gallimard publishing house in Paris on December 11, 2024. The Franco-Algerian writer Kamel Daoud announced on April 22, 2026, that he had been sentenced to three years in prison without parole and a fine of five million dinars in Algeria, where he was being prosecuted for his novel "Houris," winner of the 2024 Goncourt Prize. (Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier discovers the exhibition during his visit of the memorial site of the former Closed Youth Detention Centre (Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof Torgau - GJWH) in Torgau, eastern Germany on April 22, 2026. According to the memorial site, the closed youth detention centre used to be the only closed residential care facility in the GDR, where young people were to be re-educated into "socialist personalities" within just a few months. During the course of GDR history, approximately 135,000 children and young people were forced to go through socialist re-education practices in youth work camps and special children's homes. Historical traces at the memorial site are visible in the former solitary confinement cells and courtyard. (Photo by Jens SCHLÜTER / POOL / AFP)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier looks at an old medicine ball displayed under the topic 'sport as a punishment' during the exhibition at the memorial site of the former Closed Youth Detention Centre (Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof Torgau - GJWH) in Torgau, eastern Germany on April 22, 2026. According to the memorial site, the closed youth detention centre used to be the only closed residential care facility in the GDR, where young people were to be re-educated into "socialist personalities" within just a few months. During the course of GDR history, approximately 135,000 children and young people were forced to go through socialist re-education practices in youth work camps and special children's homes. Historical traces at the memorial site are visible in the former solitary confinement cells and courtyard. (Photo by Jens SCHLÜTER / POOL / AFP)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier tours the exhibition at the memorial site of the former Closed Youth Detention Centre (Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof Torgau - GJWH) in Torgau, eastern Germany on April 22, 2026. According to the memorial site, the closed youth detention centre used to be the only closed residential care facility in the GDR, where young people were to be re-educated into "socialist personalities" within just a few months. During the course of GDR history, approximately 135,000 children and young people were forced to go through socialist re-education practices in youth work camps and special children's homes. Historical traces at the memorial site are visible in the former solitary confinement cells and courtyard. (Photo by Jens SCHLÜTER / POOL / AFP)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (L) and Manuela Rummel, Director of Educational Programs at the Memorial, take a tour of the exhibition at the memorial site of the former Closed Youth Detention Centre (Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof Torgau - GJWH) in Torgau, eastern Germany on April 22, 2026. According to the memorial site, the closed youth detention centre used to be the only closed residential care facility in the GDR, where young people were to be re-educated into "socialist personalities" within just a few months. During the course of GDR history, approximately 135,000 children and young people were forced to go through socialist re-education practices in youth work camps and special children's homes. Historical traces at the memorial site are visible in the former solitary confinement cells and courtyard. (Photo by Jens SCHLÜTER / POOL / AFP)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier (C) and President of Saxony's State Parliament Alexander Dierks (R) listen as Manuela Rummel, Director of Educational Programs at the Memorial, gives explanations during a tour of the exhibition at the memorial site of the former Closed Youth Detention Centre (Geschlossener Jugendwerkhof Torgau - GJWH) in Torgau, eastern Germany on April 22, 2026. According to the memorial site, the closed youth detention centre used to be the only closed residential care facility in the GDR, where young people were to be re-educated into "socialist personalities" within just a few months. During the course of GDR history, approximately 135,000 children and young people were forced to go through socialist re-education practices in youth work camps and special children's homes. Historical traces at the memorial site are visible in the former solitary confinement cells and courtyard. (Photo by Jens SCHLÜTER / POOL / AFP)