WINDHOEK, 28 October 2025 - Nampa’s Board Chairperson, Ndeuhala Katonyala-Lewis. (Photo: Contributed)
MARIENTAL, 27 October 2025 - The Real Madrid Soccer Clinic is underway in Mariental. It started on Monday and ends Friday. (Photo by: Charmaine Boois) NAMPA
MARIENTAL, 27 October 2025 - Representatives from the Real Madrid Sports Clinic pictured with local teachers and the Hardap Region's Director of Education, Innovation, Sports Arts and Culture, Paulus Lewin, during the official opening of the Real Madrid Soccer Clinic in Mariental on Monday. (Photo by: Charmaine Boois) NAMPA
MARIENTAL, 27 October 2025 - The Real Madrid Soccer Clinic is underway in Mariental. It started on Monday and ends Friday. (Photo by: Charmaine Boois) NAMPA
AMINUIS, 25 October 2025 - Ovambanderu Chief Tjozohongo II Nguvauva pictured during the commemoration of the Ovambanderu community’s forced migration from concentration camps to Aminuis. (Photo by: Zebaldt Ngaruka) NAMPA
AMINUIS, 27 October 2025 - Ovambanderu Chief Tjozohongo II Nguvauva pictured with Deputy Minister of Industries, Mines and Energy Gaudentia Krohne, Omaheke Governor Pijoo Nganate, and the Ovambanderu leadership during the commemoration of the Ovambanderu community’s forced migration from concentration camps to Aminuis. (Photo by: Zebaldt Ngaruka) NAMPA
AMINUIS, 27 October 2025 - Ovambanderu Traditional Authority Chief Tjozohongo II Nguvauva (C) flanked by Zebald Tjozongoro (L) and Kaitjombiri Karjirua (R). (Photo by: Zebaldt Ngaruka) NAMPA
KATIMA MULILO, 27 October 2025 - Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Land Reform, Ruth Masake speaks during the official launch of the five-year National Sanitation and Hygiene Strategy. (Photo by: Michael Mutonga Liswaniso) NAMPA
Sead Biberovic, head of the NGO Urban-IN, poses for a photo in the city of Novi Pazar, South-western Serbia, on October 22, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem, (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
People stand still silently for 16 minutes before the blocked university, paying tribute to the 16 victims in the city of Novi Pazar, South-western Serbia, on October 22, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem. (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
A student walks past a stencil reading, "You have blood on your hands!", in the city of Novi Pazar, South-western Serbia, on October 22, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem, (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
Activist Predrag Vostinic of the civic group Lokalni Front poses for a photo in the city of Kraljevo, Central Serbia, on October 21, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem. (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
People walk past a WWI monument at the main square in the city of Kraljevo, Central Serbia, on October 21, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem. (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
A woman walks past a WWII monument in the city of Kraljevo, Central Serbia, on October 21, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem, (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
People walk past the county building in the city of Vranje, Southern Serbia, on October 20, 2025. Serbia is preparing to mark the first anniversary of the Novi Sad tragedy, which sparked some of the biggest protests in its history — a year that left the country deeply changed and polarised. The train-station collapse in the country’s second-largest city, which killed 16 people just months after renovation, became a symbol of entrenched corruption — bringing hundreds of thousands to the streets under the "bloody hand" stencil that became its emblem. (Photo by Andrej ISAKOVIC / AFP)
(FILES) Visitors dance at the Ubisoft stand during the Paris Games Week fair in Paris, on October 23, 2024. The 14th edition of the Paris Games Week, the most significant event in the sector in France, returns on October 30, 2025, to the Porte de Versailles in a new format, celebrating an industry regaining its confidence. (Photo by Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP)