Russian Prime Minister announced today that starting from April 9, Russian Federation will lift travel curbs on flights to 52...
Namibia
Breaking news from Namibia – Travel & Tourism, Fashion, Entertainment, Culinary, Culture, Events, Safety, Security, News, and Trends.
Namibia Travel & Tourism News for visitors. Namibia, a country in southwest Africa, is distinguished by the Namib Desert along its Atlantic Ocean coast. The country is home to diverse wildlife, including a significant cheetah population. The capital, Windhoek, and coastal town Swakopmund contain German colonial-era buildings such as Windhoek’s Christuskirche, built in 1907. In the north, Etosha National Park’s salt pan draws game including rhinos and giraffes.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) released 2021 safety performance data for the commercial airline industry showing strong improvement in...
US travel ban that effectively banned almost all non-U.S. citizens, who had recently been in South Africa, Botswana, Eswatini, Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, was heavily criticized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and southern African leaders as ineffective and severely damaging to local economies.
The UK Government has said that UK ministers will sign off on a decision today, Tuesday, December 14, 2021, to remove the 11 countries on England's "red list" of travel restrictions effective 4:00 am, Wednesday December 15, 2021.
New Russian government ruling effectively cancels all earlier exceptions for the diplomatic passport holders, travelers on business visa, and some other categories of visitors.
The expansion of the 'red' list was necessary due to the detection by South African scientists of a new COVID-19 variant in the southern Africa region, according to the PM's Office.
Citizens of Russian Federation will be able to enter Namibia without visa and remain there for 90 days every 6 months.
The African ministers through the UNWTO summit pledged that African member states would work together to establish a new narrative for tourism across the continent.
The troubled carrier had been losing money for years, even before the COVID-19 pandemic
Plans by the Namibian Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism (MEFT) to capture and sell off 170 of the last...
According to the reports from Namibia, a former German colony, a man named Adolf Hitler has won local election in...
On 4 November 2020, the Secretary General of the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO), Zurab Pololikashvili, officially launched Namibia’s...
The Secretary-General of the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) has paid a first visit to an African Member State since the...
As from 01 September 2020, Namibia re-opens the Hosea International Airport to international tourists. This is a targeted initiative for...
Two leading Africa safari tour specialists in Germany have filed a legal application with the Berlin Administrative Court for a...
The Namibia Ministry of Education, Arts, and Culture signed by the acting minister Martin Andjapa issued this urgent directive for...
Germany is widely spoken in Namibia and both family and tourism between Germany and Namibia are an important currency earner...
Scott Garrett no longer leaves the country without his Global Rescue membership card in his wallet. Garrett’s incredible story about...
Port Management Association of Eastern and Southern Africa expands horizon for African Tourism Board
The Port Management Association of Eastern and Southern Africa (PMAESA) with members in 9 African Countries joined the African Tourism...
Namibia’s hunting community has now been forced into silence by its own government.
The country’s Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET) has released a memorandum that prohibits the posting of hunted dead animals on social media. The memorandum calls the practice of taking pictures of hunters posing with trophies, not of hunting itself, “unethical”, raising concerns as to what exactly the Namibian government is trying to hide?
Namibian Tourism Ministry brushes off questionable killing of desert elephants