Skip to main content

SAFLAND Rewards UNAM Entrepreneurs

SAFLAND Property Group was again one of the proud sponsors of the entrepreneurial competition organised by UNIBIS during the annual Cultural Festival at the University of Namibia (UNAM). The company supported the competition with cash prizes as well as trophies and was also part of the judging panel. More than 50 teams from UNAM participated and exhibited their goods and services during the Cultural Festival of 2013.

Said Desmond van Jaarsveld, managing director of SAFLAND Property Group: “The SAFLAND Property Group has renewed sponsorship of UNIBIS, the business society and platform for commercial students at the University of Namibia. We believe in developing young entrepreneurs and future business leaders and are proud of the winners. We wish them well with their future endeavours.” 


(Photograph: Michelle Nehoya (left) and Kallie van der Merwe (right) from the SAFLAND Property Group hand over of the first prizes to Ms. Atutishi Monika (middle) from UNAM.  She was the overall winner of the entrepreneurial competition organised by UNIBIS during the annual Cultural Festival at UNAM.)  

SAFLAND is the largest commercial property developer in Namibia, responsible with partners Frontier Property Trust, Atterbury and Demushuwa for the development of The Grove Mall of Namibia, and also with Frontier Property Trust for developing Gwashamba Mall in Ondangwa and Town Square Shopping Centre in Otjiwarongo, both already open and trading.




(Photograph: Left Mr. Ranga Haikali, Chairperson of Safland Property Group and right, Dr. Itah Kandjii-Murangi, Dean of Students at UNAM.)

For more information, please contact Mr. Desmond van Jaarsveld: (+264) 61 254 972, e-mail: desmond@safland.com . 


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

PRESS RELEASE: Insight Namibia Magazine Celebrates 100th Edition (September 2013)

In a magazine market known for its fly-by-nights and flash-in-the-pans, Insight Namibia cc marks its 100th monthly edition with the September 2013 issue . The first edition appeared in September 2004 and throughout the last nine years, Insight maintained its position as Namibia's premier current affairs magazine . Originally started and currently based in Windhoek, Namibia, the magazine's founders, Robin Sherbourne, David Lush and Tangeni Amupadhi,  journalists in their own right, at the time (2004) wrote that Insight was 'born out of a feeling that Namibians yearn for more than just hard news.' Readers were promised a publication that went beyond the daily headlines and covered 'the story behind the story' . The magazine was not started with a bank loan; the pioneers pooled their savings to get it off the ground and to this day, that same financial discipline, has ensured that Insight has never taken a loan to cover its operating, printing and overhead cos

Tattoo: Ethiopian Coptic Cross (Meskel) Design

     C hristianity arrived on the shores of southern Africa approximately 600 years ago, and unbeknownst to the bright-eyed European missionaries who disembarked from sodden ships at the Cape of Good Hope, it had been practiced on the African continent, and flourished as an independent religion for almost 1,000 years before, in Ethiopia. Today, the oldest Christian faith on the continent, rumoured to be closest in resembling early Christianity, is the Ethiopian Coptic Church (or the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church).      The cross is the popular universal symbol of Christianity and across the world, in every Christian community, it remains within the parameters of a simple design (+) , almost 2,000 years old. The Ethiopian Coptic Church is the only known Christian community that produces a remarkable version of the cross, called ''meskel''; even more remarkable, this development occurred independent of the influence of European Christianity. Meskel patterns and des

RECYCLE NAMIBIA FORUM: 6th Schools' Recycling Competition

The Recycle Namibia Forum (RNF) is once again inviting schools to participate in the 6 th Schools Recycling Competition (SRC) which commences on 1 March 2014 . Prizes for the top three schools with the most collected recyclables, includes N$10 000 as first prize sponsored by Namibia Breweries Limited, N$5 000 for second prize sponsored by Collect-a-Can and a third prize of N$2 500 from Plastic Packaging.  There will be additional prizes for the best performing school in the Khomas, Coastal and Northern regions. (Photograph: Eleanor Savage - f, Jonathan Wepener - b and Alex Hawala - r, of  the Windhoek International School Environmental Club) RNF chairperson Patricia Hoeksema comments: “The winner of the 2013/14 competition will be announced in Windhoek on the 12 th of March 2014. In total, 52 schools participated last year i.e. 2013/ 2014. To date, the schools have in total collected just more than 108 tons of recyclables , which consisted of 29 tons of glass, 9 tons