Your Excellency, Dr. Hage G. Geingob, President of the Republic of Namibia
Your Excellency, Dr. Nangolo Mbumba, Vice Presisent
Right Honourable Saara Kuugongelwa Amadhila, Prime Minister
Honourable Ministers
Senior Government Officials
Members of the Media
Ladies and Gentlemen
1. I thank Your Excellency for giving me the floor to provide further details on our national
COVID-19 preparedness and response generally, and on the amendments to the current
COVID-19 Public Health General Regulations in particular that will expire at midnight on
Wednesday. Before I provide some details on the latest amendments, I wish to share with
the nation some epidemiological data that will engender further understanding of where we
are coming from as a nation with respect to the COVID-19 pandemic, where we are
currently, and what data is telling us, going forward. At the end, I will bring clarity to
some topical issues of contemporary interest. As this presentation may take a while, I beg
in advance for your patience.
2. As at 13 December 2021, Namibia has recorded a total of 133 444 confirmed COVID-19
cases, out of the 819 721 samples tested. A total of 126 148 recoveries were reported,
translating into a recovery rate of 94.5%. This is a decline of 2.7% following the increase
in the number of cases reported in the last two weeks. Active cases have also drastically
increased by 95.2%. There are now 3 392 active cases in the country. A grim figure of
three thousand, five hundred and seventy-eight (3 578) COVID-19 deaths were recorded
since the beginning of the pandemic in Namibia in March 2020.
3. It is a source of great concern that the epidemiological trajectory has worsened as the
country has recorded more positive COVID-19 cases from 29 November 2021. In the past
two weeks, the number of positive cases has been doubling on daily basis. It reached the
highest number of cases of 1 041 recorded on 10 December 2021. From 16 November to
12 December 2021, the period of 27 days covering the current dispensations, a total of 47
130 samples were tested and 4 023 new confirmed cases were reported, giving a positive
ratio of 8.5%. This indicates an 83% increment as compared to the same period of 27 days
prior. The positivity ratio, which is the proportion of the positive cases out of the samples
tested increases from 1.9% to 8.5% over the same period. However, number of deaths
inversely were low totalling thirteen (13) during the last 27 days, as compared to twenty-
two (22) deaths reported during 27 days prior. This represents a decline of 69%. The
number of hospitalized cases remains reasonably low. We are continuing to monitor the
situation closely.
2