Brave Warriors in a must-win clash against Botswana

The national senior football team “Brave Warriors” lost their second match of the Council of Southern African Football Associations (COSAFA) Cup against Eswatini and are in a do-or-die situation against Botswana on Tuesday.

The 2023 Senior Council of Southern Africa Football Associations (Cosafa) Cup is underway in Durban, South Africa. Namibia is drawn in Group A alongside Botswana, Eswatini and host nation South Africa.

In their second match at the championship, the Brave Warriors opened the scoring in the 34th minute through a brilliant free kick by Absalom Iimbindi but lost the match 2-1. Their hopes of qualifying for the next round of the competition are almost impossible.

Two goals in a space of three minutes from Eswatini in the first half turned the game on its head just before halftime. Sifiso Matse equalised for Eswatini and then almost immediately his teammate Bongwa Matsebula had them in front and they managed to hold on for the win.

With the defeat on Saturday afternoon for the Brave Warrior, this means that South Africa who won their match against Botswana earlier in the day heads the group with four points and will meet Eswatini next. Eswatini has three points, the same number as Botswana. Namibia has one point and is bottom of the group.

In an interview after the match, the Brave Warrior’s head coach Collin Benjamin said they dominated possession in the first half but failed to capitalise on their advantage.

“We got ourselves influenced by the players of Eswatini. They knew what they wanted and used that to their advantage and despite us taking the lead we did not put authority on the game which Eswatini did,” he said.

Benjamin added that his team got knocked on the day but they need to stand up and dust themselves off for their next encounter.

“We are looking at this new generation of players that we have to give time so that they can also grow to the standard we want them to be,” Benjamin said.

Only the top team in each pool qualifies automatically for the semi-finals of the Cosafa Cup along with the best-placed runner-up, so there is little margin for error. Namibia’s next match against Botswana will be at 18h00 on Tuesday at the Moses Mabhida Stadium.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

IPC World Para Championships kick off in Paris

International Paralympic Committee (IPC) President Anderson Pierson has called on athletes to break world records while competing at the 2023 Paris World Para Athletics Championships.

Over 1,300 athletes from 107 nations will be competing in 168 medals events at the 2023 IPC World Para Athletics Championships, underway in the French capital from 08 to 17 July.

The 10th edition of the 2023 Paris World Para Athletics Championships will make history as the Para Athletics World Championships kicked off at the Charlety Stadium on Saturday.

Speaking during the opening ceremony, Pierson said for the first time, the world champs take place in a place that will be hosting the Paralympics Games the following year, and this is an opportunity for athletes to familiarise themselves with the venue and conditions of the city that will be hosting one of the biggest, events in the world.

“This allows athletes to learn and break records as they prepare for the Paralympics Games. Some of the athlete’s journey to the 2024 Paris Paralympic Games begins here. I, therefore, call on all of you to take this time and opportunity to enjoy yourselves while competing at these championships as you prepare for the 2024 Paris Paralympic Games,” he said.

Namibian athletes competing in the 2023 IPC World Para Athletic Championships are T11 male sprinters, Ananias Shikongo, Kinda Chris, and Alfredo Bernado, T11 female sprinter Lahja Ishitile, and T12 sprinter Lahja Ipinge, T13 sprinter Johannes Nambala, T47 sprinter Bradley Murere, T37 sprinter Petrus Karuli, and T44 sprinter Denzel Namene.

The athletes are accompanied by their guides, Even Tjiuiju, Hatango Murere, Kelvin Goagoseb, Philipus Paulus and Sem Shimanda.

The management team consists of Jean-Paul Schmidt who heads the delegation, team manager Michael Hamukwaya, Ruan Mocke (physiotherapist), Letu Hamhola (head coach) and Naomi Schmidt (assistant coach).

Ishitile and Karuli are the first athletes competing in the T11 and T37 400 metres (m) and 100m respectively on Sunday evening.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

NamPol holds campaign against drug use at Otjiwarongo

The ‘No to drugs’ national police campaign, successfully took place at Otjiwarongo in the Otjozondjupa Region on Saturday.

The campaign aimed at creating public awareness on the dangers and consequences of drug use was jointly organised by the Otjozondjupa and Khomas regional Namibian Police Force (NamPol) officers as a community outreach programme on drug law enforcement.

The event which started with a street procession was held at the DRC informal settlement sports field under the theme ‘Cleaning Otjiwarongo from illegal substances’.

In a speech read on his behalf, NamPol Inspector-General, Lieutanant-General Joseph Shikongo said the youth of the country should join the efforts of the police in the fight against drug trafficking, distribution and selling in order to make the country peaceful and safe.

Shikongo said as of January to June this year, about 77 suspects were arrested in connection with drug-related crimes in the Otjozondjupa Region on charges of possession and/or use of cannabis, mandrax, cocaine powder and crack cocaine.

He stated that out of the 77 suspects who were arrested, 71 are men and six were women.

“Countrywide in June alone this year, a total of 153 suspects were arrested for dealing in the same drugs which carried an estimated value of more than N.dollars 617 000,” he said.

Of the 153 suspects, 148 were Namibians, three Zambians, and one each from Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Several residents of Otjiwarongo called for more similar public awareness activities on drug use, saying the substances are destroying households, marriages and the future of their school-going children, sisters and brothers.

Otjozondjupa Governor, James Uerikua and Otjiwarongo Constituency councillor, Marlayn Mbakera also attended the event.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

Hompa Sofia Mundjembwe Kanyetu designated as head of the Shambyu Traditional Authority

Hompa Sofia Mundjembwe Kanyetu was officially designated as the traditional leader of the Shambyu traditional authority in the Kavango East Region on Saturday.

Due to a drawn-out court squabble, recently settled by the Supreme Court in her favour, the Shambyu community has been without a state-recognized leader since the death of Hompa Angelina Matumbo Ribebe on 14 June 2015.

Minister of Information and Communication Technology Peya Mushelenga addressed the Shambyu people during the coronation ceremony as he also dealt with this issue during his tenure as Minister of Urban and Rural Development.

During his speech, Mushelenga made reference to the measures he took when he recognised Hompa Kanyetu stating that the journey was not easy and that he is happy the Shambyu people finally have a Hompa now.

High Court ruling regarding the appointment of a new head of the Shambyu community was overturned on appeal last month.

The Supreme Court ruled that Sofia Mundjembwe Kanyetu was appointed by the chiefs’ council in terms of the law and that the High Court wrongly found that the council had acted unlawfully by refusing an application from another candidate, Maria Ukamba Haindaka.

After the death of Hompa Matumbo Ribebe, a dispute arose between Haindaka and Kanyetu, who are both members of the royal family and can be designated as successors.

On his part, the Minister of Urban and Rural Development Erastus Uutoni said leadership succession disputes have been costly to the Namibian tax papers as the government has been incurring expenditures in commissioning investigations into resolving these disputes.

“These disputes are often avoidable if parties exercise tolerance and respect on laid down customary laws and traditional norms,” he said, stressing that disputes among members of the same royal group not only prolong the filling of the leadership gap but also create unnecessary disunity.

Uutoni said as Kanyetu performs her duties, the law requires her to do so in a manner that upholds national values, laws and policies, while closely working in solidarity with government at all levels.

Source: The Namibian Press Agency

Nakuru Donates Avocado Seedlings To Boost Agribusiness

Nakuru Governor, Ms. Susan Kihika, has rolled out an initiative to supply farmers with 63,000 avocado seedlings with an eye on regional and international markets.

As it seeks to unlock the untapped potential in the subsector running into billions of shillings, the devolved unit has disclosed that it will supply farmers in the 11 Sub-Counties with the seedlings free of charge as it seeks to promote agribusiness.

The avocados are expected to be ready in 16 months, when the fruits will be harvested for export.

County Executive Committee Member (CECM) in Charge of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries, and Cooperatives, Mr. Leonard Bor, said Ms. Kihika’s administration would collaborate with various stakeholders in laying the groundwork for exportation of the fruits once they are ready for market.

He stated, ‘The variety we are giving out is different from other types that begin to flower after five years. One avocado in the international market can fetch as much as Sh50. As a county government, we are preparing our farmers so that we can benefit from the global demand for the crop. After 16 months from the planting date, the avocado trees will be giving fruits.’

Speaking when he launched the distribution of 13,600 avocado seedlings to farmers in Kuresoi South Sub-county, the CECM indicated that the county will establish avocado purchasing, sorting, and packing bays as it seeks to tap into the international market.

The bays are expected to give farmers a direct market locally and abroad and eliminate brokers.

‘We want to focus on the regional and international market outlets instead of selling the crop to brokers at throwaway prices. Brokers buy the fruit for between Sh10 and Sh15 but reap huge profits at the expense of farmers,’ he said.

This is part of a grand plan by the county to help farmers tap into the East African and foreign export markets through value addition.

‘We have identified avocados as a potential income earner for our farmers due to the high demand both locally and internationally,’ he added.

Avocados rank as Kenya’s fourth-most important national fruit crop and have grown to represent 17 per cent of Kenya’s total horticultural exports.

Mr. Bor revealed that the devolved unit had put strategies in place to recruit more new farmers to grow the crop, adding that the acreage under the crop currently stood at over 5,000.

He said the devolved unit had successfully transitioned avocado farmers in Nakuru from subsistence farming and encouraged them to embrace high-value export markets.

‘In the current financial year, the county administration aims to distribute seedlings to more than 3,743 farmers in Kuresoi South Sub-county under the avocado seedling distribution program. The County is reinforcing sensitization to crop diversification, increasing income, and promoting food and nutrition security. The Department will continue to distribute avocado seedlings in other sub-counties during this rainy season,’ stated Mr. Bor.

The CECM said pests and diseases that afflict horticultural produce, particularly the False Codling Moth (Thaumatotibia leucotreta) (FCM), are classified by the EU as ‘quarantine pests or diseases, which effectively render agricultural produce from infested farms ineligible for the lucrative market.

‘We believe that it is valuable to invest in the early detection of pests, like the False Codling Moth (FCM), at the farm level and the prevention of their spread throughout the value chain.

Both large-scale and small-holder horticultural farmers in Kenya should interact with the experts and ask questions on the detection of pests and diseases,’ said Mr. Bor.

Mr. Bor said the devolved unit was collaborating with stakeholders in the avocado subsector to train farmers on enhancing the competitiveness of avocado value-added products.

The CECM said the venture, a partnership with the Avocado Society of Kenya (ASOK), mainly targets smallholder farmers, who are also being trained on export processes, quality planting materials, proper farming techniques, farm mechanization, accessing reliable market links, and affordable credit facilities.

He added that the county was keen on focusing on international markets instead of selling the fruit to middlemen at throwaway prices.

The CECM stated that Governor Kihika’s administration had embarked on diversification to promote the farming of avocados and macadamias alongside other traditional crops like coffee and potatoes.

‘We have mainly singled out the avocado crop as a potential income earner for our farmers due to the high demand both locally and internationally,’ said Mr. Bor.

The CECM indicated that the devolved unit and its partners were further sensitizing the farmers on the new avocado export regulations announced by the Horticulture Crops Directorate towards ensuring that Kenyan fruits are competitive in the global export market.

At least 15 firms have been cleared by Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Services (Kephis) to export avocados to China following a stringent inspection of their facilities. This is in addition to the fact that more than three million Kenyan smallholder farmers who grow avocados are expected to benefit from greater access to the Chinese market.

The partnership, Mr. Bor said, was critical in ensuring the success of a sustained campaign launched to revitalize avocado farming, adding that farmers have been trained on good harvest and post-harvest handling practices of the fruit and good manufacturing practices for smallholder processing.

The CECM was accompanied by Agriculture Chief Officer Kibet Kurgat, County Director of Agriculture Mr. Fredrick Owino, Keringet Ward Member of County Assembly Mr. William Mutai, and his Kiptagich Ward counterpart Ms. Rose Mutai.

He further said avocado value-addition, besides increasing the county’s export portfolio, was also targeted to reduce post-harvest losses.

‘Value addition and processing prolong the shelf-life of the produce and minimize post-harvest losses. It also offers more profit on the same produce and improves the nutrition and living conditions of those involved,’ the CEC added.

The CECM at the same time urged avocado farmers to join cooperative societies to boost their incomes and prevent their exploitation by middlemen, adding that through bulking, cooperatives have been able to reduce the cost of marketing and enable farmers to realize higher returns through the provision of a reliable and remunerative outlet for produce.

He appreciated the fact that the cooperative movement had evolved over the past two decades into a key cog that turns the wheels of the agriculture sector in Kenya by extending its business beyond the primary role of marketing produce for small-holder farmers and venturing into the provision of financial services.

The CECM also noted that cooperatives were the only structured channels through which the national and county governments could support smallholder farmers in value addition, accessing quality equipment and affordable credit facilities, and procuring superior seedlings, among other benefits.

On revised export regulations, Mr. Bor said most farmers were now aware that the Horticulture Crops Directorate had raised the minimum solid content for export avocados from 20 and 21 per cent for Fuerte and Hass varieties, respectively, to 24 per cent in order to comply with international standards.

About 70 per cent of avocado production is by small-scale growers who grow it for subsistence, local markets, and export.

Source: Kenya News Agency

1,500 People Attended Plateau Mission Hospital’s Free Medical Camp

More than 1,500 residents turned up for a free medical camp organized by the Gladys Boss Shollei Foundation in partnership with Lions International at Plateau Mission Hospital, Ainabkoi, Uasin Gishu County.

Uasin Gishu Women representative Gladys Boss Shollei, while addressing the media at the camp, said they saw it as a good idea to organise a free Medical camp that aims to provide essential healthcare services to the community.

‘The event is targeted to bring help to the residents and offer free consultation as well as free medication to those who are in need,’ she said.

The medical camp saw residents receive a wide range of medical examinations and tests, among them general surgery, Urology, Eye Screening, Mental Health, and General Medical Conditions.

‘We are grateful to our partners for providing free services as well as medication, as this will enable us to reach all members of the community, ‘said Shollei.

Shollei noted that there is a need to sensitize people to the need to go for check-ups and think about their health to avoid health problems.

She said that they have registered 58 patients suffering from cataracts, a prevalent eye disease.

‘We are collaborating with health specialists in creating awareness of mental health as we have realized that mental health affects a number of people. Being healthy is not all about physical health; mental health is very crucial as well,’ she said.

She added that many patients have come forward, families have brought members of their families who they say or suspect have mental illness, and they have gotten medication as some of this can be managed through medication.

‘Others might take more medication and long-term support with psychologists and counselors, and many have been able to receive that,’ she said.

‘We have also been able to sensitize the community that alcohol and drug addiction is an illness that can be treated with the right support,’ she added.

She further noted that the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) has historically had many challenges, but the government and the Ministry of Health have a clear focus on dealing with the issue, so people should purchase the cover as there is a need to plan for when they become sick as sickness is inevitable.

Source: Kenya News Agency