Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mineworkers Union of Namibia (MUN) 8,000: 1986 Namibia Financial Institutions Union (NAFINU) 4,500: Namibia Food and Allied Workers Union (NAFAU) 12,000: 1986 Namibia National Teachers Union (NANTU) 16,000: 1989 Namibia Public Workers Union (NAPWU) 25,000: 1987 Namibia Transport and Allied Workers Union (NATAU) 4,000: 1988 Namibia Music ...
The Namibia National Labour Organisation (NANLO) is one of three national trade union centres in Namibia.NANLO was established in 2014 by Evilastus Kaaronda.After campaigning against government corruption, Kaaronda in 2012 was dismissed as general secretary of the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW), the national centre aligned to SWAPO, the country's ruling party.
The Namibia Food and Allied Workers Union (NAFAU) is a trade union in Namibia affiliated with the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW). In 2020 it had a self-reported membership of 15,000. [ 2 ] NAFAU's organizational strongholds include the fishing industries around Walvis Bay and Lüderitz .
It plays a leading public role in the Namibian political space and is an ally of the ruling South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) government. [1] The MUN was established in 1986. It is affiliated with the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW) national trade union center and had about 8,000 members in 2017. [2]: 23
The Namibian Financial Institutions Union (Nafinu) is a trade union in Namibia, [1] [2] representing workers in the financial sector. It has its headquarters in Windhoek. It is affiliated with the National Union of Namibian Workers, the Namibian national trade union centre close to SWAPO, Namibia's ruling political party. [3]: 23
The Namibia Transport and Allied Workers Union (NATAU) is a trade union [2] in Namibia. Founded in Keetmanshoop in June 1989, NATAU is an affiliate of the National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW) and the International Transport Workers' Federation .
The Namibian state runs and owns a number of companies such as Transnamib and NamPost, most of which need frequent financial assistance to stay afloat. [5] [6]There is a number of agencies and authorities established by acts of Parliament that can be considered government organisations:
After obtaining the approval of the South African government, the administration engaged Dr Coenraad Beyers to design the arms. The design was finalised in 1961, taken into use in 1963, and registered at the Bureau of Heraldry in 1964. The arms were discontinued when South-West Africa was reconstituted into a three-tier system of government in ...