Windhoek, 26 February - Commissioner of the Namibia Revenue Agency, Sam Shivute at the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare at the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Education, Innovation, Sports, Arts and Culture, Sanet Steenkamp. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- President of the Popular Democratic Movement, McHenry Venaani. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Information, Communication and Technology. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Information, Communication and Technology, Emma Theofelus. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Finance, Ericah Shafuda at the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
Windhoek, 26 February- Minister of Finance, Ericah Shafudaat the tabling of the 2026/27 Appropriation Bill. (Photo by Eba Kandovazu). NAMPA
French Ecologist senator Guy Benarroche reacts during a press conference on the law proposal aimed to extend protection for whistleblowers against drug trafficking, proposed during the Les Ecologistes Party's parliamentary ‘niche’, at the Senate in Paris on February 26, 2026. The text proposed by Bas-Rhin MP Sandra Regol aims to enshrine in law a ‘mechanism for protecting individuals who report the influence of criminal networks’. Protection for victims, witnesses and informants already exists ‘within a judicial framework’, but the aim is to extend it to individuals outside this framework. (Photo by Anna KURTH / AFP)
French anti-drug activist Amine Kessaci speaks during a press conference on the law proposal aimed to extend protection for whistleblowers against drug trafficking, proposed during the Les Ecologistes Party's parliamentary ‘niche’, at the Senate in Paris on February 26, 2026. The text proposed by Bas-Rhin MP Sandra Regol aims to enshrine in law a ‘mechanism for protecting individuals who report the influence of criminal networks’. Protection for victims, witnesses and informants already exists ‘within a judicial framework’, but the aim is to extend it to individuals outside this framework. (Photo by Anna KURTH / AFP)
View of a landslide after heavy rainfall in the Tres Moinhos neighborhood in Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, on February 26, 2026. Despair hung over two cities in southeastern Brazil on February 25 as rescuers and residents searched for 21 people missing after torrential rains unleashed flooding and landslides that killed at least 46. (Photo by Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP)
French Ecologist senator Guy Benarroche (L) and French anti-drug activist Amine Kessaci attend a press conference to detail the law proposal aimed to extend protection for whistleblowers against drug trafficking, proposed during the Les Ecologistes Party's parliamentary ‘niche’, at the Senate in Paris on February 26, 2026. The text proposed by Bas-Rhin MP Sandra Regol aims to enshrine in law a ‘mechanism for protecting individuals who report the influence of criminal networks’. Protection for victims, witnesses and informants already exists ‘within a judicial framework’, but the aim is to extend it to individuals outside this framework. (Photo by Anna KURTH / AFP)
View of a landslide after heavy rainfall in the Tres Moinhos neighborhood in Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, on February 26, 2026. Despair hung over two cities in southeastern Brazil on February 25 as rescuers and residents searched for 21 people missing after torrential rains unleashed flooding and landslides that killed at least 46. (Photo by Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP)
French anti-drug activist Amine Kessaci looks on during a press conference on the law proposal aimed to extend protection for whistleblowers against drug trafficking, proposed during the Les Ecologistes Party's parliamentary ‘niche’, at the Senate in Paris on February 26, 2026. The text proposed by Bas-Rhin MP Sandra Regol aims to enshrine in law a ‘mechanism for protecting individuals who report the influence of criminal networks’. Protection for victims, witnesses and informants already exists ‘within a judicial framework’, but the aim is to extend it to individuals outside this framework. (Photo by Anna KURTH / AFP)
View of a landslide after heavy rainfall in the Tres Moinhos neighborhood in Juiz de Fora, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, on February 26, 2026. Despair hung over two cities in southeastern Brazil on February 25 as rescuers and residents searched for 21 people missing after torrential rains unleashed flooding and landslides that killed at least 46. (Photo by Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP)
French anti-drug activist Amine Kessaci looks on during a press conference to on the law proposal aimed to extend protection for whistleblowers against drug trafficking, proposed during the Les Ecologistes Party's parliamentary ‘niche’, at the Senate in Paris on February 26, 2026. The text proposed by Bas-Rhin MP Sandra Regol aims to enshrine in law a ‘mechanism for protecting individuals who report the influence of criminal networks’. Protection for victims, witnesses and informants already exists ‘within a judicial framework’, but the aim is to extend it to individuals outside this framework. (Photo by Anna KURTH / AFP)