Nampa News Photos

STAMPRIET, 25 November 2025 - Stampriet resident Katriena Rooi (59) says she will not vote on Wednesday, citing years of unresolved sanitation problems. (Photo by: Chelva Wells) NAMPA
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||NHOMA, 24 November 2025 - Kommsa Kaesie pictured together with some of his family members at ||Nhoma. (Photo by: Edward Tenete) NAMPA
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GOBABIS, 25 November 2025 - Community activist Lesley Pienaar. (Photo: Contributed)
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OSHAKATI, 18 November 2025 - NamPol's Oshana reginal commander, Commissioner Naftal Lungameni Sakaria, pictured during a media briefing here on Tuesday. (Photo by: Ester Hakaala) NAMPA
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WINDHOEK, 24 November 2025 - Representatives of Oonani and SocioPartners sign a cooperation agreement aimed at strengthening economic inclusion and community development in Namibia. (Photo: Contributed)
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RUNDU, 24 November 2025 - Electoral Commission of Namibia Kavango East Region Electoral Officer, Paulus Sifire. ( Photo by: Sawi Hausiku) NAMPA
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NKURENKURU, 24 November 2025 - The special voting for the 2025 elections, which took place nationwide on 23 November 2025, recorded a disappointing turnout across several Kavango West constituencies on Monday. (Photo by: Lylie Joel)
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KATIMA MULILO, 24 November 2025 - All ballot boxes were sealed and booked in at the Zambezi regional police headquarters after the Special Voting exercise on Monday. The boxes will only be booked out for counting on Wednesday after the Regional Councils and Local Authorities Elections.
(Photo: Michael Mutonga Liswaniso) NAMPA
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International News Photos

This aerial photo taken on November 26, 2025 shows flood waters surrounding residential buildings in Hat Yai in Thailand's southern Songkhla province, as severe flooding affected thousands of people in the country's south following days of heavy rain. A state of emergency was declared in Thailand's southern Songkhla province on November 25, as the meteorological department forecast more rain and possible flash floods this week. (Photo by Arnun Chonmahatrakool / THAI NEWS PIX / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te holds a press conference on "Action Plan for Safeguarding Democratic Taiwan and National Security" at the Presidential Office Building in Taipei on November 26, 2025. Lai said his government will propose $40 billion in additional defence spending over several years, as the democratic island seeks to deter a potential Chinese invasion. (Photo by I-Hwa Cheng / AFP)
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Taiwan's President Lai Ching-te holds a press conference on "Action Plan for Safeguarding Democratic Taiwan and National Security" at the Presidential Office Building in Taipei on November 26, 2025. Lai said his government will propose $40 billion in additional defence spending over several years, as the democratic island seeks to deter a potential Chinese invasion. (Photo by I-Hwa Cheng / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
(FILES) Dutch politician of the far-right Forum for Democracy (FvD) Lidewij de Vos delivers a speech during the presentation of the election manifesto and candidate list for the upcoming parliamentary elections in Zevenhuizen, near Rotterdam, on August 31, 2025. Staphorst, a Dutch municipality in the north of the country that has remained faithful to Calvinism, where hundreds of women still wear traditional dress on a daily basis, is also proof that the far right in the Netherlands is far from defeated. It was in Staphorst that the FvD party, a nationalist, climate-sceptic group that advocates for a "Nexit", or the Netherlands' exit from the European Union, achieved its best results. "At home, we're fans of the FvD," Irena Nobel, an 18-year-old resident, told AFP, convinced by the rhetoric of Lidewij de Vos, 28, the party's new figurehead. (Photo by Jeroen JUMELET / ANP / AFP) / Netherlands OUT
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(FILES) People vote for the Dutch elections in Staphorston July 9, 2010. Dutch voters cast ballots today for a new parliament with a centre-right party vowing to slash public spending ahead in the polls and an outspoken anti-immigrant party heading for a breakthrough. AFP PHOTO / ANOEK DE GROOT. All dressed alike, in blue headscarves and cardigans, pleated skirts, tights and black shoes, elderly women do their shopping on a Monday morning in a village less than two hours' drive from Amsterdam. This is a perfectly normal scene in Staphorst, a Dutch municipality in the north of the country that has remained faithful to Calvinism, where hundreds of women still wear traditional dress on a daily basis.
Staphorst is also proof that the far right in the Netherlands is far from defeated, despite Geert Wilders' narrow defeat in the October 2025 parliamentary elections, which were won by a very small margin by the centrists. (Photo by ANOEK DE GROOT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
(FILES) Women vote in the parlimentary Dutch elections in Staphorston on July 9, 2010. Dutch voters cast ballots today for a new parliament with a centre-right party vowing to slash public spending ahead in the polls and an outspoken anti-immigrant party heading for a breakthrough. AFP PHOTO / ANOEK DE GROOT. All dressed alike, in blue headscarves and cardigans, pleated skirts, tights and black shoes, elderly women do their shopping on a Monday morning in a village less than two hours' drive from Amsterdam. This is a perfectly normal scene in Staphorst, a Dutch municipality in the north of the country that has remained faithful to Calvinism, where hundreds of women still wear traditional dress on a daily basis.
Staphorst is also proof that the far right in the Netherlands is far from defeated, despite Geert Wilders' narrow defeat in the October 2025 parliamentary elections, which were won by a very small margin by the centrists. (Photo by ANOEK DE GROOT / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP
(FILES) A demonstrator protest with a cap reading "Trump, make America great again", during a national day of protest against the compulsory Covid-19 vaccination for certain workers and the mandatory use of the health pass called for by the French government in Nantes, western France on August 7, 2021. With Donald Trump’s return to power, the American radical right has launched an ideological offensive beyond its borders—particularly in France, where authorities are closely monitoring the influence of this nebulous movement as key elections approach. (Photo by Sebastien SALOM-GOMIS / AFP)
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(FILES) US Vice President JD Vance speaks during the 61st Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, southern Germany on February 14, 2025. With Donald Trump’s return to power, the American radical right has launched an ideological offensive beyond its borders—particularly in France, where authorities are closely monitoring the influence of this nebulous movement as key elections approach. The American administration itself has not hesitated to meddle in the affairs of the Old Continent. In June 2025, Donald Trump declared that Europe needed to take action against “out-of-control immigration.” A few months earlier, in February 2025, his vice president, JD Vance, had already launched a fierce attack on European countries in a high-profile speech in Munich. (Photo by Tobias SCHWARZ / AFP)
NAMPA / AFP