Windhoek — Namibia is estimated to have lost US$750 million (over N$5.8 billion) between 2000 and 2009 in illicit dealings such as trade mis-pricing, tax evasions, corruption, bribery and kickbacks.
Namibia has been placed on a global financial watchdog’s “gray list” due to its shortcomings in tackling illicit financial flows, a move that comes as the country courts foreign capital to try and ...
(MENAFN) Namibia's Drug Law Enforcement Unit seized illicit drugs of around 9.5 million Namibian dollars (USD 700,000) value from October 2018 to January 2019. Namibian Police spokesperson Deputy ...
Windhoek — Prime Minister Nahas Angula says government has always been suspicious of illicit financial flows in the country, and welcomes global efforts to fight the scourge. The premier was reacting ...
Heroes' Acre looms on a hill overlooking Windhoek, Namibia's tidy capital. Under a brilliant blue sky, a series of granite steps slope upwards in a wedge toward a triumphant bronze statue of an ...
Enhancing the information base on organised crime in Southern African countries is a prerequisite for a better understanding of the phenomenon and for more effective policy and operational decisions ...
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