What a bunch of useless black leaders in that country.
Turn on CC in order to read the subtitles when the journalist interviews native Namibians.
Namibian people are the most disadvantaged Africans when it comes to land rights. I hope they will listen to Julius Malema and forcefully take the most fertile lands from the wazungu land thieves.
Germans and their cousins the British and their friends the French are the scum of the earth. Without them, the Earth would be a much better place. Naomba Malema akiingia kazi aroll into that biotch and purge those Nazi sympathizers.
hao watu wako hali mbaya saidi kuliko black South Africans.
It is still a white controlled country the entire economy is under their control locals are beggers on their own country
Mpaka some racist wanauza nazi memorabilia huko. Wanaonyesha blacks wa huko vile hao ni wanyonge na hawawezi do kitu yoyote.
nilisoma mahali they are looking up to SA. if SA succeeds in land repatriation wanafanya ivo ivo
Oh noo, what a pitty. I sympathies with them
i have a namibian pal,ananiambia eti ma Boers wale walinyag’anywa land south africa ,walikaribishwa namibia nakupewa mali bure .It’s working well in some sectors considering world bank has given the locals a bunch of millions to start fish farming …with free land ofcourse after waone wazungu wako ndani.Dont forget ,namibia is one of the poorest states in africa,nothing comes out of it except tourism
Africans…when will we ever stop being shithole people?:D:D:D:D:D:D
Wrong!!!
Namibia is mineral rich Diamonds, copper, oil and the big one Uranium!!!
not in quantifiable extent,uranium yes,but not enough to be raided for or start a civil war
Wrong again!
I distinctly remember one of my teachers telling us that Namibia would never be independent due to the existence of uranium deposits and the cold war.
The west did not want communist USSR (which supported SWAPO) to lay its hands on on any nuclear material.
Uranium in Namibia - World Nuclear Association
[SIZE=7]Uranium in Namibia[/SIZE]
(Updated May 2018)
[ul]
[li] [/li][li]Namibia has two significant uranium mines capable of providing 10% of world mining output. A larger mine is coming into production.[/li][li] [/li][li]Its first commercial uranium mine began operating in 1976.[/li][li] [/li][li]There is strong government support for expanding uranium mining and some interest in using nuclear power.[/li][/ul]