Namibia has said the deal agreed with Germany for €1.1bn ($1.34bn; £940m) in aid following the colonial-era genocide is "not enough", but it would "revisit and renegotiate" as funding is rolled out.
A week ago Germany issued a long-awaited apology for the murder of tens of thousands of Herero and Nama people.
The atrocities committed have been described by historians as "the forgotten genocide" of the early 20th Century, in what was then known as German South West Africa.
Land and livestock were confiscated. Survivors were placed in concentration camps and exploited for labour, sometimes sexually assaulted and in some cases used for medical experimentation.
Germany's apology resulted from the first negotiations of their kind by a former colonial power.
Campaigners say the impact of these atrocities endure to this day, and want the return of ancestral lands that were confiscated.
There are also calls for compensation to made directly to the victims' descendants, for fear the money won't reach those for whom it's intended.
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