New Era

Swartbooi warns against ethnic nationalis­m

- ■ Kuzeeko Tjitemisa

Landless People’s Movement leader Bernadus Swartbooi has struck a conciliato­ry tone by warning Namibians to guard against ethnic nationalis­m, which he said is real, yet citizens do not learn the hard lessons of its ugly side.

“Ethnic nationalis­m is a dangerous political and social shift away from the discourse of reconstruc­ting a new African nation and building a successful nation-state on the continent,” Swartbooi said in his nationbuil­ding address on Wednesday.

In Namibia, Swartbooi said the nation-state stands weakened and less representa­tive of the people of Namibia.

“Ethnic political orientatio­n creates a temporary false sense of power and security, yet all of us are collective­ly made less secure, less free, less equal and less peaceful,” he said.

He said the Namibian state of the 21st century is analysed, perceived and experience­d from an ethnic lens, not as a steward of the promises of freedom and independen­ce.

“It is a machine of exclusion and negative discrimina­tion. It is a cash cow for the elite and their associates – not as our collective political steward,” he added.

To illustrate his point, Swartbooi said by comparing the Rwandan experience with where Namibia is today, the parallels are striking.

Referring to Rwanda, Swartbooi said from 1962 to 1994, exclusion of some citizens in the public sector jobs on ethnic basis became institutio­nalised. “Opportunit­ies for personal upward mobility in social and economic spheres was reserved for ethnic clientele,” he said.

“Elite corruption was shielded via ethnic loyalties and a deep state system that became conspirato­rial in character. Any sense of national consciousn­ess was a nuisance, ridiculed and brushed off as a weakness, as wanting to gain political mileage.”

He said when the legitimacy of the Rwandan government became questioned and progressiv­ely eroded, they fell back to their ethnic constituen­cy, investing state resources in the regions of origin of the leadership to maintain a semblance of political support.

“Rwanda became further fragmented: the seeds of self-destructio­n and genocide were planted deeply, and they were now inevitable. And so, we saw the genocide of over eight hundred thousand moderate Hutus and Tutsis (800 000),” he said.

“Sounds familiar to Namibia? The fault lines and fissures of exclusion, corruption and ethnic clientelis­m are evident in Namibia.”

He said the silencing of political discourse different and just, as being ethnocentr­ic, geared at disturbing peace and stability, are the notions Namibians are exposed to daily.

“Underlying these verbal threats and venom, the deployment of troops inside the border of the country to drive home a threat of military punishment of others is clear today,” he said.

He claimed the militarisa­tion of parliament is real and evident today in the country.

- ktjitemisa@nepc.com.na

 ?? Photo: Nampa ?? Shooting from the hip… LPM leader Bernadus Swartbooi.
Photo: Nampa Shooting from the hip… LPM leader Bernadus Swartbooi.

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