More Than N$200 Million Is Waiting. The Question Is: Will You Claim What Is Yours?

For years I have spent my time tracing people.

Not criminals. Not missing persons.

People who are owed money.

Sometimes it is an insurance benefit. Sometimes a pension payout. Sometimes an estate distribution. Sometimes money that has been sitting untouched for years because nobody knew it existed.

What continues to surprise me is not how much money is unclaimed in Namibia.

It is how little the public knows about where to look.

During my work as a tracer of beneficiaries and policyholders, I discovered that more than N$200 million is believed to be lying unclaimed at the Office of the Master of the High Court alone. Add to that unclaimed insurance benefits, pension fund benefits, deceased estate distributions and other forgotten payments, and the amount becomes staggering.

The money belongs to ordinary Namibians.

The problem is that many people never receive the information.



The Information Exists – But It Is Hidden in Plain Sight

Every week, government notices are published in the Namibia Government Gazette.

These notices contain valuable information about:

  • Deceased estates
  • Insolvent estates
  • Company liquidations
  • Trustee notices
  • Estate distributions
  • Legal notices
  • Public announcements

For decades, the information has been publicly available.

The challenge is that finding it has often been difficult.

Many people do not know where to search. Others do not have the time to go through hundreds of gazettes. Some simply do not know that a family member’s name may appear in a notice connected to money or an estate.

As a result, assets remain unclaimed while families struggle financially.

A Typical Story

Imagine that your grandfather worked for a company many years ago.

He passes away.

An insurance policy or pension benefit remains unpaid because no beneficiary comes forward.

Years pass.

The records still exist.

The money still exists.

But nobody claims it because nobody knows where to look.

This is not an unusual situation.

I have seen cases where beneficiaries were completely unaware that funds existed in their name.

In some cases, the amount is modest.

In others, it can change a family’s circumstances significantly.

Why I Created the Gazette Lookup Service

After spending years helping people locate information, I realised that access to information was the biggest obstacle.

That is why I started compiling and digitising Namibia’s Government Gazettes.

What began as a simple project has grown into a substantial searchable database.

The collection currently covers thousands of gazette entries and continues to expand as older gazettes are digitised.

The aim is simple:

To make it easier for ordinary Namibians to discover information that may affect them or their families.

You can search the gazette lookup service here:

GRN Gazette Lookup ServiceAttachment.tiff

Why People Should Check

Many people assume that if money belongs to them, somebody will contact them.

Unfortunately, that is not always how the system works.

Addresses change.

People move.

Employers close down.

Family members pass away.

Records become outdated.

The responsibility often falls on the beneficiary to come forward and prove entitlement.

That is why a simple search can be worthwhile.

You may find:

  • A deceased estate involving a relative.
  • An estate distribution notice.
  • Information that assists with a claim.
  • Evidence that helps trace a long-forgotten benefit.
  • A lead worth investigating further.

I Can Help

Finding a name is often only the first step.

Understanding the notice, locating supporting documentation, identifying the correct office and following the claims process can be confusing.

This is where my experience as a tracer can help.

I have spent years working with beneficiaries, estates and unclaimed monies, helping people navigate the process and understand what information is required.

No genuine beneficiary should lose out simply because they did not know where to look.

The Bottom Line

More than N$200 million may be waiting at the Master of the High Court.

Millions more may be sitting elsewhere in unclaimed benefits and estates.

The money already belongs to someone.

The real question is whether that person knows it exists.

If there is even a small chance that you, a family member or a deceased relative may have unclaimed funds, it may be worth spending a few minutes searching.

After all, if it is yours, why not claim it?

Search the Gazette Lookup Service:
https://shorturl.at/f6R21Attachment.tiff

Need assistance interpreting a notice or tracing a possible claim? Contact Milton Louw for guidance and support.

Remembering Andimba Toivo ya Toivo – 9 Years Later

Today marks nine years since Namibia lost one of her greatest sons — Herman Andimba Toivo ya Toivo. A man whose courage was loud, but whose humility was even louder.

Andimba never saw nation‑building as speeches or slogans.

For him, it was simple, disciplined, everyday work:

  • Stand for justice, even when you stand alone.
  • Treat your enemy as a future neighbour.
  • Build a country where no child feels forgotten.
  • Leave anger behind so the next generation can walk lighter.

Sixteen years on Robben Island could have broken him.

Instead, they sharpened him.

He walked out without bitterness, carrying only one mission:

to help build a Namibia where dignity is not negotiable.



Those who knew him will tell you — he didn’t talk about leadership, he lived it.

He believed that a nation is built not by the loudest voices, but by the most consistent hands.

Hands that lift others.

Hands that forgive.

Hands that keep working long after applause has faded.

Today, we honour his life, his discipline, and his unshakeable belief that Namibia’s strength lies in her people — all of them.

May we continue his work.

May we raise our children with the same courage.

And may we remember that the freedom he fought for is a responsibility we must carry forward.

Rest in power, Tate Andimba.

Your fire still lights our path.

More Than N$200 Million Is Waiting. The Question Is: Will You Claim What Is Yours?

For years I have spent my time tracing people. Not criminals. Not missing persons. People who are owed money. Sometimes it is an insuranc...