Kasama Highway in Lusaka, Zambia, is location to be unveiled in honour of the leisurely Namibian president Hage Geingob on Friday, according to Zambian media.
Worn first lady Monica Geingos has confirmed her attendance on the ceremony, bringing up that Geingob never uninterested in telling everybody that Zambia turned into his second house.
Geingob lived in Zambia where he headed the United Countries Institute for Namibia in Lusaka from its inception in 1976 till his return to Namibia from exile in 1989.
“As the first prime minister of a newly independent Namibia, Hage ensured Namibian government vehicle registrations were ‘GRN’ as a nod to the ‘GRZ’ plates in Zambia. If you ever wondered where ‘One Namibia, One Nation’ came from, it was inspired by Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda’s independence slogan of ‘One Zambia, One Nation’,” Geingos says.
Zambian flesh presser Joseph Kalimbwe describes Geingob as no longer lawful a Namibian president, but a son of Lusaka “who formed a long line of Southern African Development Community presidents who lived in our city and spoke our language.”