The Scotsman

Namibian president dies in hospital during cancer treatment

- Margaret Neighbour

President Hage Geingob has died while receiving medical treatment, his office has announced.

The namibian presidency said Mr Geingob's medical team at Lady Pohamba Hospital did its best to help him, but he died with his wife, Monica Geingos, and children by his side.

He had been president since 2015 and was set to finish his second and final term in office this year. His deputy, vicepresid­ent Nangolo Mbumba, has now been sworn in as acting president to complete the term, as allowed by the constituti­on.

Elections are set for November. A government statement said Mr mbumba will lead Namibia until March

21 next year, when the election winner takes office.

Mr Geingob was undergoing treatment for cancer. The 82-year-old had a colonoscop­y and a gastroscop­y on January 8, followed by a biopsy, his office said last month.

He returned home on january 31 from the united states, where he had undergone a twoday trial of "novel treatment for cancerous cells ", according to his office. In 2014, he said he had survived prostate cancer. Mr Geingob 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.

After spending nearly three decades in exile in neighbouri­ng Botswana and the US as an anti-apartheid activist, mr ge in gob returned to Namibia as its first prime minister from 1990 to 2002. He also served in the same capacity from 2008 to 2012.

Soft-spoken but firm on advancing Africa's agenda as an important stakeholde­r in world affairs, mr ge in gob maintained close relations with the US and other Western countries.

But, like many African leaders, he also forged a warm relanamibi­an tionship with China, refuting claims that Beijing is aggressive­lyassertin­g economic influence over countries in Africa as a form of colonialis­m.

Namibia, which is on the south-western coast of Africa, enjoys political and economic stability in a region ravaged by disputes, violent elections and coups. However, the country's opposition slammed Mr Geingob last year for endorsing disputed elections in Zimbabwe.

Condolence­s from various African leaders poured in on Sunday.

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