NIGHT NIGHT... Namibia's Veja Hinda knocked out South Africa's Bheki Ngcobo in round 1 of Extreme Fighting Championship (EFC) 134 in Johannesburg, South Africa this evening.
The fight was Hinda's second fight as a professional fighter.
Video: Contributed
Then whats the use of embassies and consulates in other countries!! Close them down because mainly VISAs are the main operations for these institutions.
Namibia and other Southern African countries may have to travel to Angola and South Africa for United States visa applications under a planned restructuring of U.S. visa services in Africa.
The U.S. Department of State has confirmed plans to reduce the number of visa-processing embassies and consulates in Africa from 50 to about 20 regional hubs.
Luanda, Cape Town and Johannesburg are listed among the locations expected to continue full visa-processing services.
If implemented, applicants from Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and other Southern African countries may need to travel to Angola and South Africa for visa interviews and related procedures.
The Department of State says visa services will continue in Africa and that the changes are meant to centralise processing in selected locations.
No final implementation date has been announced, and current embassy visa services remain in place until official changes are communicated.
Emil Xamro Seibeb
#NBCNews #nbcdigitalnews #nbcDSTV282 #nbcGOtv20 #nbcPlusApp
My fellow Namibians, just a bit of Clarification regarding the Plots for N$60,000.00 for People with an Income below N$5,000.00
Please be informed that we will be providing Unserviced Plots with an average size of 500m² in all 14 Regions.
DIVORCE MADE EASY: Divorce proceedings in Namibia will enter a new era from Wednesday, 3 June, with the implementation of the Dissolution of Marriages Act (DoMA), which abolishes the country's long-standing fault-based divorce system and replaces it with a framework centred on the irretrievable breakdown of a marriage.
In a guidance note issued on Tuesday, Judge-President Petrus Damaseb described the reform as one of the most significant changes in Namibia's family law history, aimed at reducing hostility between spouses, simplifying divorce procedures and promoting amicable resolution of disputes.
Under the new dispensation, spouses will no longer be required to prove traditional grounds such as adultery, cruelty, malicious desertion or other matrimonial offences to obtain a divorce.
Instead, courts will focus on whether a marriage has broken down beyond realistic restoration.
"The emphasis of the new law is no longer on identifying which spouse is morally blameworthy for the collapse of the marriage," the guidance note states.
The legislation introduces what is commonly known as a "no-fault divorce" system, although courts will still require evidence demonstrating that a marriage has irretrievably broken down before granting a decree of divorce.