
Sam Nujoma was a co-founder of Swapo when it was formed as a liberation movement in 1960
The first president of independent Namibia, Sam Nujoma, has died at the age of 95 in the capital Windhoek, the country's current leader has announced.
Nujoma led the long fight for independence from South Africa in 1990 after helping found Namibia's liberation movement known as the South West Peoples' Organisation (Swapo) in the 1960s.
After independence, Nujoma became president in 1990 and led the country until 2005.
Nujoma had been hospitalised over the past three weeks with an illness from which he "could not recover", Namibian President Nangolo Mbumba said in a statement announcing the death with "utmost sorrow and sadness".
He "inspired us to rise to our feet and to become masters of this vast land of our ancestors," President Mbumba said.
Obituary: The revolutionary leader who liberated Namibia
He added: "Our founding father lived a long and consequential life during which he exceptionally served the people of his beloved country."
Nujoma retired as head of state in 2005, but continued to lead the party before stepping down in 2007 as president of the ruling Swapo party after 47 years at the helm.
Tears of joy as freed Thai hostages arrive home
‘We will stay and rebuild’: A young woman’s return to northern Gaza
Southport families 'try to find light in the dark'
Lasers, ladders and a leap: Photos of the week
Trump 'won't deport Harry' and tributes to Southport 'angels'
Woman stuck for 18 months on an NHS ward evicted from her hospital bed
Tourists leave after earthquakes rock Santorini, but resilient locals remain
'My university course made me who I am – now it's being cut'
17 things Trump and his team did this week
How Japan sparked Trump's 40-year love affair with tariffs
'We left pieces of our life behind': Indigenous group flees drowning island
The Big Yin and Malky: Rare Billy Connolly comic finds new home
Amanda and Alan's Spanish renovation
Idris Elba on the reality of knife crime
Let the mind games begin, Aussie style
Daisy May Cooper's twisted comedy
Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

More Stories
From Email to Case Study: What We Learned About Connecting Refugee Communities in Just One Year
Local Infrastructure, Lower Costs: How Peering Is Moving the Needle on Internet Affordability
On Global Accessibility Awareness Day, An Internet for Everyone Must Include Everyone