Namibia established ties with Palestine on 19 November 1988.[3]
Some organizations in Namibia called for an end to relations with Israel due to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The National Society for Human Rights of Namibia called for the ending of relations in 2002 due to "the persistent denial, by the State of Israel, of the inalienable right to self-determination for the people of Palestine".[4] During the 2008–09 Gaza War, opposition parties SWANU and the Namibian Democratic Movement for Change called for the severing of relations.[5]
A number of op-ed's were written criticizing Israel and Namibia's relationship with it. In January 2008, Alexactus Kaure, a Namibian academic and writer, wrote an op-ed piece published in the state-run New Era newspaper which criticized Namibia's relations with Israel, calling them controversial and comparing them to relations with apartheid South Africa.[6] A year later during the Gaza War, Herbert Jauch, head of research and education at Namibia's Labour Resource and Research Institute published an op-ed in the New Era calling Israel's actions "...an act of cold-blooded murder and a crime against humanity", while calling for the international isolation of Israel.[7]
Namibia condemned Israeli attacks on Palestinian worshippers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in East Jerusalem in May 2021.[11]
During the Israel–Hamas war, Namibia called for a ceasefire.[12] Namibia was critical of Germany for defending Israel at the International Court of Justice against the charges of genocide of Palestinians bought by South Africa.[13] President Hage Geingob urged Germany to reconsider its intervention.[14] Namibia has supported South Africa's case.[15]