Hosted on MSN24d
Namibia's Shark Island: Europe's push for green hydrogen risks compromising sites of colonial genocideIn 1884, German colonizer Adolf Lüderitz annexed Namibia, intending to finance colonial rule through minerals. Between 1904 and 1908, German colonial forces killed approximately 100,000 people (80% of ...
In this special edition of the Street Debate Fatou Muloshi is in Windhoek, Namibia to speak to school students, teachers and historical experts about Germany’s brutal colonial history in Namibia.
Namibia is being urged to pause its plans to extend a port on Shark Island, a key site in its genocide and the likely location of human remains. When the southwest African nation was under German ...
Namibia, under the name German South West Africa, was a German colony from 1884 till 1915, when Germany's genocidal rule was ended by South African troops in the course of World War One.
Namibia’s president ... which took hold over the former German colony after World War I. Although Mr. Nujoma kept ties open with the West, he found an alliance of convenience in neighboring ...
The Goethe-Institut Namibia will host a vibrant cross-cultural musical collaboration on 11 March at 18:00, featuring German ...
Namibia will host the Global African Hydrogen Summit. The Namibian government has ambitions to turn the country into a leading producer of green hydrogen ...
In 1884, German colonizer Adolf Lüderitz annexed Namibia, intending to finance colonial rule through minerals. Between 1904 and 1908, German colonial forces killed approximately 100,000 people ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results