New Era

‘It wasn’t me’

… Shiimi distances himself from Shivute appointmen­t

- ■ Maihapa Ndjavera - mndjavera@nepc.com.na

Finance minister Iipumbu Shiimi has refuted reports that he influenced the appointmen­t of his former central bank colleague Sam Shivute as substantiv­e chief of the Namibia Revenue Authority (NamRA).

Shivute was yesterday unveiled as the new NamRA commission­er.

Shiimi, who was appointed finance minister in March this year following a stint as Bank of Namibia governor, yesterday denied interferin­g in the recruitmen­t process of the new NamRA head. He said an independen­t recruitmen­t agency handled the process to ensure fairness.

“An independen­t interview panel, chaired by the deputy chairperso­n of the NamRA board and consisting of profession­al and experience­d individual­s from different profession­al background­s, conducted the interviews,” explained Shiimi.

“As a portfolio minister, I have every confidence in the process undertaken and I accepted the recommenda­tions and advice from the board as presented.”

Shiimi noted Shivute was unanimousl­y

rated as the top candidate among the three interviewe­d candidates and was recommende­d for appointmen­t as commission­er.

According to him, Shivute subsequent­ly met the security vetting requiremen­ts, paving the way for his official appointmen­t. NamRA was establishe­d to assist the finance ministry with revenue collection as well as the enforcing of tax rules, among others. Shiimi said the revenue collection reform was taking long simply because due processes have to be followed.

He said the current Inland Revenue systems are running until the last day when NamRA takes over as the tax administra­tion agency of the country.

Shivute, who left his lucrative banking services director position at the central bank, is not new to the business of revenue collection.

Between 2013 and 2014, Shivute was seconded to the Inland Revenue as an acting commission­er for a period not less than 18 months.

Shiimi indicated NamRA will constitute a transforma­tion of the current department of Inland Revenue and the Directorat­e of Customs and

Excise into a new semi-autonomous revenue agency outside the public service.

“Before day one of NamRA, which will be determined and announced to the public in advance, the NamRA Act (Act No. 12 of 2017) will not be in force – and NamRA, as an institutio­n, does not yet exist.

Until such date, tax, customs and excise functions and the day-to-day operations will continue to be provided by the Department of Inland Revenue and the Directorat­e of Customs and Excise under the Ministry of Finance as it has been the case,” stated Shiimi.

On his part, Shivute said a stronger revenue service and customs administra­tion was a fundamenta­l cornerston­e of an effective state and key enabler in the government’s ability to fund expenditur­e and provide for its people. “NamRA will serve efficientl­y with the passion to positively impact the livelihood­s of every Namibian. It will serve in the best interest of all Namibians and it will carry out its mandate without fear and favour,” said Shivute, who is also a renowned motivation­al speaker.

 ??  ?? ‘Above board’… Finance minister Iipumbu Shiimi said he did not influence the appointmen­t of Sam Shivute as new NamRA boss.
‘Above board’… Finance minister Iipumbu Shiimi said he did not influence the appointmen­t of Sam Shivute as new NamRA boss.

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