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Namibia President Hage Geingob dies in hospital while receiving cancer treatment

Published:Sunday | February 4, 2024 | 12:08 PM
Namibia's President Hage Geingob returns after delivering a speech during celebrations marking the 75th anniversary of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, on November 12, 2021. Namibian president has died in a hospital where he was receiving treatment, his office said Sunday, February 4, 2024. (Juilen de Rosa/Pool Photo via AP, File)

WINDHOEK, Namibia (AP) — Namibia's president and founding prime minister Hage Geingob died Sunday at age 82 while receiving treatment for cancer, and the southern African nation quickly swore in his deputy to complete the term in office.

Geingob played a central role in what has become one of Africa's most stable democracies after returning from a long exile in Botswana and the United States as an anti-apartheid activist.

He was the country's third president since it gained independence in 1990 following more than a century of German and then apartheid South African rule.

He had been president since 2015 and was set to finish his second and final term this year.

His deputy, Vice President Nangolo Mbumba, was sworn in as acting president in the capital, Windhoek, to complete the term as allowed by the constitution.

Elections are set for November.

A government statement said Mbumba will lead Namibia until March 21 of next year, when the winner takes office.

The presidential office said Geingob died in a local hospital with his family by his side. He had returned to Namibia last month from the United States, where he underwent a trial two-day “novel treatment for cancerous cells,” according to his office.

In 2014, he said he had survived prostate cancer.

Soft-spoken but firm on advancing Africa's agenda as an important stakeholder in world affairs — “the exclusion of Africa from the Security Council is an injustice,” he once said in a United Nations address — Geingob maintained close relations with the US and other Western countries but also, like many African leaders, forged a warm relationship with China and other powers.

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