- FR PUNES AG 08-REG-1-X07.21 (688)
- Subsubseries
- 1974-1992
Part of Secretariat Records
16 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Secretariat Records
4 information sheets maps
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Secretariat Records
Namibia - Instrument of Ratification - International Convention against Doping in Sport
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Secretariat Records
Instrument of Accession, 1 page.
Namibia - Ratification of the UNESCO Constitution
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Audiovisual archives
English transcription: Namibia (formerly called South West Africa) was a German colony in the late 19th century. In 1918 at the end of the First World War the territory was taken over by the League of Nations and administered under a mandate system, as a sacred trust for the indigenous people by the Union of South Africa. In 1947, the Government of South Africa refused to place the territory under the United Nations Trusteeship System along with other former mandated territories in Africa. In defiance of numerous UN decisions the South African Government continues to refuse to withdraw from Namibia. It has imposed its policy of apartheid and will not allow the UN Council for Namibia to take over and guide the territory towards independence. The African township of Katutura, four miles from Windhoek the capital and main industrial centre. By the late 1960s all blacks had been forcibly moved out of Windhoek and resettled in Katutura.
Description: It is an image of a town, presumably Katutura. There is a sign signifying the boundary of the town.
Location: Katutura.
Part of Audiovisual archives
English transcription: Namibia (formerly called South West Africa) was a German colony in the late 19th century. In 1918 at the end of the First World War the territory was taken over by the League of Nations and administered under a mandate system, as a sacred trust for the indigenous peoples by the Union of South Africa. In 1947, the government of South Africa refused to place the territory under the United Nations Trusteeship System along with other former mandated territories in Africa. In defiance of numerous UN decisions the South African Government continues to refuse to withdraw from Namibia. It has imposed its policy of apartheid and will not allow the UN Council for Namibia to take over and guide the territory towards independence. Everyone in Namibia is told where he may or may not live and where he must not go without special permission. In this system of frontiers within frontiers Africans are restricted to tribally separated reserves euphemistically called "homelands" by the proponents of South Africa's policy of separate development. The opponents of that policy talk satirically of the semi-desert areas assigned to the various African peoples as Bantustans or more scornfully as separate little pieces of chicken run.
Description: Dans une plaine deserte, traversée par des poteaux électriques, une clôture avec grillage et une pancarte bilingue qui indique la réserve Soromas et interdit le passage.
Part of Audiovisual archives
French transcription: Conférence internationale de soutien au people namibien en lutte pour son indépendance. HQ Salle I Fontenoy.
Description: The stage of UNESCO's main conference room. A meeting is in session the presiding officers, accompanying persons, and UNESCO staff members are seated at, behind, and to the far end of the podium; and a gentleman is adressing the assembly from a speaker's rostrumr (and being filmed from the front of the audience). Two name plates canb be read Argentina, and Antigua and Barbuda.
Republic of Namibia - Full Powers
Part of Secretariat Records
Copy.
Part of Secretariat Records
Part of Secretariat Records
Staff training in the Namibian Broadcasting Corporation
Part of Secretariat Records
UNESCO-DANIDA FIT Coop 510-NAM-60; Project description; budget breakdown
Part of Secretariat Records
Plan of operation, Annex I rev., Annex II Budget.