ON THE RADAR WITH JUSTICIA (23 MARCH 2022)
1.Lawyers of the Belgian company, ChallengeAir, represented by Anicet Baum, have threatened to push TransNamib into liquidation should the state entity not settle its debt.
2. The son of the late Paramount Chief, Kuaima Riruako, says the Ovaherero people in the diaspora stand behind ousted Ovitoto chief Vipuira Kapuuo as the acting Paramount Chief.
3. A Kavango West Region secondary school, about 50 km west of Nkurenkuru, has been described as so unhygienic that the foul smell hangs around the corridors, and worms from the toilets infest the grounds.
The deplorable conditions have tor
4.Seaflower Pelagic Processing employees in Walvisbay say they have not been paid for three months and are concerned about their future.
5.A 28-year old Rundu man, who was em- ployed as a farmworker, admitted to psy- chiatrists that he killed his employer after he repeatedly called him a ‘Kaffir’. Nicolaus Hausiku claims he killed the farm owner in self-defence.
6. Windhoek high court dismisses the application for leave to appeal for Likius Valombola.
7. Namibia’s investment summit in Dubai.