



Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:32Fandiya aka Agamichie,
Read more, wesfa0ttam:
https://erena.org/ኣምባሳደር-ኤርትራ-ኣብ-ፈረንሳ-ሃ ... 1wwclkEz8Ihttp://awate.com/paris-new-york-tale-tw ... diplomats/Gedab News learned that Hanna Simon, the Eritrean ambassador to France, has been recalled back to Asmara, but she “is reluctant to return.”
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:23Fake news.... coming from ድርባይ አጋመ![]()
Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:20Fandiya aka Agamichie,
Look at the latest defector, another used condom. You don't see that in Namibia. Fesssam.
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:16ገልጣም low IQ agame. Do what you know best Just keep sûcking baboons dîck. I know you loving it.
Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:10How could you comprehend? You're dummy, remember? Donkey i.e. ahiya can't fugure that Namibia ventured in the right direction, while Eritrea under your aggamiddo dictatorship ventured in its distructive, nightmarish trip for the last few decades. And the result is not obvious for the dumbasses like yourself. Denqorro.
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 16:32Typical agameWoch persona. No shame at all. Sûcking Susan Rice’s dîck is one thing but I don’t know what you sûcking of Namibian donkey baboons’ backward folks dîck will do to you. As the sys goes like “old habit...die...”
የህንክ የባረቀብህ ድምባዣም [deleted]
Your source is a trash like your agame tplfists’ skinny arse.
Loser agame![]()
![]()
Try again![]()
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 18:34ስው ቁጠር ሉት ራሱን አንድ አለ::![]()
![]()
Fake news from tabloid blogs. give me real and trusted sources not a bunch of trash blogs.
ቆዳር እጋመ::
Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:32Fandiya aka Agamichie,
Read more, wesfa0ttam:
https://erena.org/ኣምባሳደር-ኤርትራ-ኣብ-ፈረንሳ-ሃ ... 1wwclkEz8Ihttp://awate.com/paris-new-york-tale-tw ... diplomats/Gedab News learned that Hanna Simon, the Eritrean ambassador to France, has been recalled back to Asmara, but she “is reluctant to return.”
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:23Fake news.... coming from ድርባይ አጋመ
Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:20Fandiya aka Agamichie,
Look at the latest defector, another used condom. You don't see that in Namibia. Fesssam.
Fed_Up wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:16ገልጣም low IQ agame. Do what you know best Just keep sûcking baboons dîck. I know you loving it.
Awash wrote: ↑01 Aug 2019, 17:10How could you comprehend? You're dummy, remember? Donkey i.e. ahiya can't fugure that Namibia ventured in the right direction, while Eritrea under your aggamiddo dictatorship ventured in its distructive, nightmarish trip for the last few decades. And the result is not obvious for the dumbasses like yourself. Denqorro.![]()
http://www.nbc.na/news/over-250-000-reg ... vote.21688Over 250 000 registered to vote
Thursday, 1. August 2019 - 13:43
The Electoral Commission of Namibia (ECN) has registered 256 564 eligible Namibian voters. A total of 255 830 Namibians registered in the country while 734 registered at diplomatic missions abroad during the supplementary registration period from 8 to 27 July 2019.
The commission is consolidating the voters' registration data in terms of voters who have turned 18-years-old since 2015, those who have moved to other constituencies and voters who applied for duplicate cards.
A provisional voters' register will be prepared and displayed at designated venues countrywide and abroad from 2 to 6 September for all eligible registered voters and political organisations to inspect and object against the inclusion of the name of any person(s) on the national register that is not entitled or qualified to be registered as a voter.
After the conclusion of the objection period, the number of registered voters recorded during the supplementary registration of voters might change following the ruling by a magistrate.
News
http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-0 ... 276297.htmNamibia to relaxe visa regulations to boost economy: minister
Source: Xinhua| 2019-08-01 22:42:20|
WINDHOEK, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) -- Namibia has committed to relaxing visa requirements in order to boost local economic growth, a government minister said Thursday.
Speaking at a media briefing, Trade Minister Tjekero Tweya said there had been indications that the current visa requirement was harmful to Namibia's economic growth.
"It is indicated that the current visa requirement can deprive Namibia from tourist spending, Foreign Direct Investment and New Business Opportunities," he said.
He said that cabinet had directed the Ministry of Home Affairs and Immigration to make concerted efforts to implement recommendations regarding business and residence visa regulations.
"We are recommending the introduction of an e-visa or visa at entry point at a low nominal fee, provision of easy access for work visa for highly skilled professional and sort after skills, and provision of easy access for residence visa for foreign pensioners," he said.
Namibia will also offer residence visa on the back of capital investment while business people with already established businesses in Namibia will be given multiple entry visa valid for five years.
https://hedgait.blogspot.com/2019/08/hu ... V27Shc&m=1HUMAN RIGHTS IN ERITREA 1955
THE Constitution of Eritrea, drafted by a United Nations Com- missioner, adopted by the Eritrean Constituent Assembly in July, 1952, and ratified in August by His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Ethiopia as Sovereign of the Federation, became effective with the withdrawal of the British administration in September of that year. Its basis is the separation of powers, subject to a limited power in the executive to control the legislature and appoint to the judiciary, and to a power in the judiciary to declare uncon- stitutional an executive order or a legislative act. The Constitution contains a list of fundamental human rights prescribed by the United Nations in its resolution of December, 1950, on the disposal of Eritrea, some of which (for instance the “ right to exercise any profession ”) are “ subject to the requirements of the law.” The list prescribed by the United Nations ends with the general provision that :
“The respect for the rights and freedoms of others and the requirements of public order and the general welfare alone will justify any limitations to the above rights”;
and the Constitution adds:
‘‘ The enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms
may be regulated by law provided that such regulation does not impede their normal enjoyment.”
All existing laws were continued in force by the Constitution, but ‘‘ in the event of a conflict between such laws and regulations and
this Constitution, the Constitution shall prevail.”
The idea of the citizen having any rights against the authorities being a startling innovation in Eritrea, resort to the Supreme Court in defence of constitutional rights has been rare, but five cases have arisen in the first two and a half years of self-government. The earliest case, decided in August, 1953, concerned the “right to freedom of opinion and expression,” a newspaper having been suppressed by the withdrawal of its licence to print just before the persons concerned had been acquitted of a criminal charge of seditious libel. Under an Italian law no one could print without a licence, and the court held that this provision was constitutional as a means of raising revenue and of keeping the authorities informed of the existence and locality of printing presses; but that it was unconstitutional as a means of controlling the press, and that the withdrawal of the licence for this purpose was therefore unlawful.
The next case arose in October, 1958, out of the “right to life, liberty and security of person ”: certain persons detained under extraordinary powers conferred on the executive by a British Proclamation (ordinance) issued when banditry was at its height in 1950, applied for orders in the nature of habeas corpus. These applications, however, were abortive, for the applicants were released before judgment was delivered.
In June, 1954, judgment was delivered in a case on the “ right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.” By an Italian colonial law of 1939, it was a criminal offence to hold a public meeting without seventy-two hours’ notice to the police, after which notice (although this was not directly in question) the police could forbid it for reasons of “public order, morality or health.” A meeting had been held, without giving such notice, so peacefully that the police had heard nothing about it till some time later, when a prosecution was instituted. It was plain that prima facie the Italian law was in conflict with the Constitution, and the question was whether it was saved by the general permission to regulate the fundamental freedoms. The President (a Scot whose judicial experience had been in India) held that it was not, but the other two members of the bench (respectively Italian and Eritrean) held that it was. They said that it must not be assumed that powers would be abused, and that laws giving powers are therefore not unconstitutional merely because of the possibility of abuse. It must be remembered that Italian courts dealing with administrative orders insist on their being speaking orders, stating the reasons in full-a mere recitation that ‘‘ for reasons of public order I forbid” will not do. If the order does not speak, or if the reasons recited do not bring it within the powers under which it purports to be issued, then not only will it be quashed (which would be of little use to those whose meeting had already been prevented) but disobedience to it is no crime.
In the same month of June was challenged a collective fine imposed by the executive under the same Italian law on a village whose inhabitants had persistently and anonymously victimised the tenant of an Italian landowner. The Supreme Court found that the law authorising such a fine did not conflict with any of the fundamental rights, and might be imposed by the executive to recoup the expense of stationing extra police, but could not be imposed by the executive as a punishment, since by the Con- stitution “ judicial power shall be exercised by ” the judiciary.
The latest decision arose out of a law passed by the Eritrean Assembly in 1953, regulating the forensic profession. This law absolutely disqualified any person who had ever ‘‘ been convicted of any delict by any court in Eritrea,” and a declaration of uncon- stitutionality was sought by a practitioner licensed by the British administration after he had been convicted of and fined for a petty offence which was nevertheless classified by the Penal Code as a delict. Judgment was’ delivered in February, 1955, that the provision did not offend against the right that “retroactivity of penal law shall be excluded,” which must be construed as referring only to laws imposing punishments in the strict sense. It did of course prima facie infringe the ‘‘ right to exercise any profession )’
-indeed the whole Act was a prima facie infringement of that right-but the right is expressly “ subject to the requirements of
It was held that the “requirements of the law
the law.” must themselves, to be constitutional, conform to the general conditions which “ alone will justify any limitations to the above rights ,,; and accordingly, although the regulation of the forensic profession is prima facie justified as eminently in the public interest, “ the criterion to which the law in question,” said the Italian judge’s leading judgment, “has resorted to obtain a particular standard relation to the end to be attained ... The provision attacked ... of morality among those admitted to the profession is excessive in since it makes no distinction (as it should) between a delict deserving serious moral obloquy ... and a delict which is the result only of unintentional negligent conduct, constitutes an unlawful limitation of a fundamental freedom.”
The resolution of the United Nations was greeted with consider- able derision in learned quarters when its contents became known; but it has proved the hands of an independent judiciary to be not a useless weapon in the defence of liberty.
J. A. CLARENCESMITE.*
https://www.africanews.com/2019/08/03/n ... -terminal/Namibia inaugurates new port terminal
DIBIE IKE Michael7 hours ago
Namibia’s president, Hage Geingob has inaugurated a new $200 million dollars port terminal at Walvis Bay, an extension that will double the country’s port capacity from 350,000 containers to 750,000 per year.
The inauguration ceremony was held on the 40- hectare platform reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean.
“Namibia has now joined countries such as Australia, Brazil, Dubai and the Netherlands in the utilisation of reclaimed land for port expansion,” said Geingob.
Namport director, Nangula Hamunyela said the terminal not only increases Namport’s assets to N$7,6 billion dollars, but also launches the company’s goal to become a logistics hub for the southern African region...
https://m.guardian.ng/life/five-interes ... -not-know/5 Interesting Facts About Namibia
BY MODUPEOLUWA ADEKANYE03 AUGUST 2019 | 11:30 AM
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https://www.namibian.com.na/81856/read/ ... wapo-cardsTaxi union leader threatens to tear up his Swapo cards
News - National | 2019-08-10by Terttu Newaka
NAMIBIA Transport and Taxi Union (NTTU) leader Werner Januarie has threatened to destroy his Swapo membership cards if he does not get satisfactory answers from president Hage Geingob at a town hall meeting of the president that he plans to attend next week.
“If I don't get any satisfactory answer at the town hall meeting, I will tear both my Swapo cards up to prove that I don't need to be associated neither affiliated to any idiot in order to succeed in life,” January said at a press conference in Windhoek on Thursday...
https://www.observer.com.na/index.php/n ... 40-percentSwapo list shuffle begins, youth demand 40 percent
09 August 2019 Author Magreth Nunuhe
With less than three weeks left for the Swapo Party to elect members at the Electoral College for the National Assembly, top party members vying to be re-elected are playing their cards close to the chest and have not revealed whether they will stand for re-election.
Prominent Swapo veteran politicians, who have already served three terms and are still in the Swapo structures, are mum or are refusing to comment on whether they will stand for re-election when the leadership race to Parliament starts on 2-3 September at the Electoral College (The Pot).
Currently, 85 people represent Swapo in the National Assembly based on the number of seats won at the 2014 national elections. The results of the vote in the Electoral College for the 2019 Pot will produce a list of elected members in numbered order poised to fill Parliamentary seats won by the Swapo party at the national general elections in November.
Approached for comment on whether he would stand for re-election, veteran politician and Minister of Labour, Industrial Relations and Employment Creation, Erkki Nghimtina said that he would reserve his comment as it is a personal matter.
Other veteran politicians of the party, including Speaker of the National Assembly, Peter Katjavivi; Minister of Safety and Security, Retired Major General Charles Namoloh and former Minister of Presidential Affairs, Immanuel Ngatjizeko who reportedly missed 100 sessions of the National Assembly due to ill-health, could not be reached for comment to establish if they would stand for re-election.
The Swapo Secretary-General, Sophia Shaningwa, refused to answer questions as to whether any members gave indication not to stand for re-election, saying that it was an internal matter and abruptly declared that, “journalists would not get information from her.”
In a letter dated, 16 July, Shaningwa invited party regional coordinators to nominate candidates to 2019 The Pot, with deadline submissions set for today (9 August), while coordinators were also directed to observe the “Zebra-style” or 50-50 style of nominating three women and three men at all times.
The regional executive committees are to identify six delegates from each region to send to the Swapo Headquarters for vetting to the Electoral College.
Shaningwa also sent another communiqué to the CC members and party members in the National Assembly on 25 July requesting them to indicate in writing by 17 August their non-availability as candidates to the Electoral College.
The Swapo Party Youth League (SPYL) is seeking an uncompromising 40 percent representation to the National Assembly and according to SPYL secretary-general, Ephraim Nekongo, the resolution, which was taken at the youth congress in the Zambezi Region in 2017 still stands.
He said that they have not yet pronounced themselves on who they would field for The Pot, but they would definitely send young candidates between 21-36 years old.
However, Nekongo said that young people did not join the youth league just so they can go to Parliament, but “to serve our people” and added the process has been there in the Swapo party for youth to gradually take over.
Asked if he would stand when nominated to The Pot, Nekongo said it was not his ambition to do so even though he is an automatic candidate for the CC.
“But I will let you know if the young people want me,” he added.
Veteran Swapo politician and former Prime Minister, Nahas Angula said that he was one of the people who came up with the idea of The Pot and also supervised the first Electoral College.
He said he does not see a problem with the youth vying for 40 percent representation, but it has to be done in accordance with party rules, which includes building coalitions and alliances with other party wings.
However, he said that the issue of generational identity, “was not helping us as a country and party.”
The former Prime Minister stated that the youth was an important force, but with the country in crisis mode as regards to unemployment, recession, poverty and inequality, we need cool heads who will not use political office for self-benefit.
“We were there for self-sacrifice [in the struggle]. I am not sure if today’s youth are like that – if the youth is ready to sacrifice and are ready to build, then it’s fine,” he said.
When it comes to the unions, NUNW president, Phillipus Munenguni said that he will participate as long as rules and procedures of the party are followed.
He said that he does not know which unionists have been nominated for The Pot and referred further questions to the NUNW secretary-general Job Muniaro.
Muniaro said that they were going to field six members to The Pot, but also did not want to reveal the likely candidates.
Asked if he would stand if nominated to The Pot, he said that “it will be a decision for all of us to take”.
Napwu secretary general, Peter Nevonga declined to comment when asked if he would stand if nominated to The Pot, saying that the names of those who will stand will be given to the relevant office and not to the media first.
The Swapo Electoral College was at first slated for 25-28 July but was postponed to 2-3 September 2019 as regional coordinators pushed for an extension to get their houses in order.
Delegates qualify for The Pot when they hold ten years of uninterrupted party membership with up-to-date membership payments and a record of good conduct.
Swapo’s Electoral College includes 83 central committee members, 17 Members of Parliament who are not in the CC, six members from each of the 14 regions, five delegates from the Elders Council, ten women from the Women’s Council, six delegates from the SPYL and six members from the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW).
Party members nominate delegates from each of the 14 regions while all the Swapo regional co-coordinators automatically qualify for The Pot.
The Swapo vice-president, secretary-general and the deputy secretary-general are automatically picked as the top three on the National Assembly list, followed by ten individuals nominated by the party’s president.
The Electoral College elects the residual 59 persons who will complete the party’s National Assembly list though the final number of party members that will be sworn in as Parliamentarians will remain unconfirmed until after the November elections results.
In 2014, numerous veteran politicians, also referred to as the ‘old guard’, did not make it to the party list while others withdrew from contesting at the Electoral College.
Some of the old guards who failed to make the list were Petrina Haingura, late Rosalia Nghidinwa, Richard Kamwi, Albert Kawana, Hilma Nicanor, Jerry Ekandjo, Lempy Lucas, Uahekua Herunga, late Peter Iilonga, Paulus Kapia, Ben Amadhila and late Theo-Ben Gurirab.
Those who withdrew their names from the contest at that time included Libertine Amathila, Helmut Angula, Kazenambo Kazenambo, Armas Amukwiyu, Elijah Ngurare, David Hamutenya, Peter Nevonga, Clemence Kashuupulwa and Eric Endjala.
It is not clear if the old guard could face the same fate this year, but with the youth vying for 40 percent of the seats in the National Assembly, the 2014 scenario could repeat itself.