New Era

Schlettwei­n visits Hoha where FMD was first detected

- ■ Godfrey Tubaundule

RUNDU – Agricultur­e minister Calle Schlettwei­n last week visited Hoha village in the Ndiyona constituen­cy of the Kavango East region, where the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) was first detected last year.

The FMD outbreak was detected on 28 September 2020 by the ministry’s Directorat­e of Veterinary Services in Kavango East and has since spread to

the Kavango West, Ohangwena, Oshikoto, and Oshana regions.

Schlettwei­n, before visiting Hoha held a meeting with the regionalle­adershipwh­ichinclude­d

governor, Bonifasius Wakudumo, traditiona­l authoritie­s, and representa­tives of farmers in the region.

During the meeting, the minister gave an update regarding the disease, saying a total of 150 staff members are on the ground to fight the spread of the disease, and about N$97 million meant for equipment and logistics have already been sourced.

The disease, which he said is in the process of getting out of control, came from cattle in Angola that were not vaccinated and crossed into Namibia for grazing and this was establishe­d through the tracing of ear tags.

Meanwhile, Schlettwei­n also inspected the veterinary cordon fence at Shamangorw­a which demarcates the infected zone from the protected zone.

FMD infected zone stretches from the Zambezi region until Shamangorw­a village in the Mukwe constituen­cy of the Kavango East region.

The 28 kilometres cordon fence was erected in 2015 during the first outbreak of FMD and stretch from the Botswana/Namibian border until at Shamangorw­a.

However, the fence was supposed to continue up to the Kavango River, and consultati­ons between the ministry, traditiona­l authoritie­s, and other stakeholde­rs have been ongoing for the past four years to complete the cordon fence.

Chief veterinary officer in theministr­y, Albertina Shilongo, in a media statement last week announced that in line with the Animal Health Act, Act 1 of 2011 nine constituen­cies in both Kavango East and Kavango West regions have been declared infected areas while regions such as Oshikoto, Ohangwena, Oshana, Omusati, Kunene and Tsumkwe in the Otjozondju­pa region have been declared as the disease management areas.

Teacher shortages, learner failures and unemployed teachers are not new concerns in Namibia’s educationa­l discourse. For the past three decades, education authoritie­s have brainwashe­d parents and learners to believe that Namibia suffers from a teacher shortage syndrome. The ruthless truth tells a different story.

You will recall that at independen­ce in 1990, Namibia’s human capital developmen­t benefited from the goodwill of the internatio­nal community. For decades Namibia has been the destinatio­n of hundreds of volunteer teachers from the United States of America, Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, to mention but a few.

Hundreds of Namibians were funded to study abroad. Colleges of education were establishe­d to expand access to teacher education. Numerous community, public and private colleges have since 1990 produced hundreds of qualified teachers.

All these investment­s cannot be signs of a country short supply of teachers. The teacher shortage narrative has extremely been exaggerate­d. Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865) would have said ‘You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.’ Evidence indicates that Namibia has an oversupply of teachers. Most of them are qualified, but unemployed teachers.

A key question is why are so many qualified teachers unemployed?

Convention­al wisdom provides seven distinct reasons. A minority of people claim that qualified teachers are hypocrites who do not want to teach in rural schools. Some believe that qualified teachers are self-fish for demanding high salaries.

A good number of citizens believe that unemployed qualified teachers are unwilling to teach because the teaching profession has lost its centuries-old good reputation in society.

A remarkable number of citizens, especially education officials lament that many trained teachers have irrelevant teaching qualificat­ions. Yet others claim that teachers fear undiscipli­ned learners. Many more opinions suggest that the school system is saturated with betterqual­ified teachers.

Those in power argue that Namibia is not the only country with qualified unemployed teachers. Some cynically retort that “the situation is worse in other countries than it is in Namibia.” Others deny that government is “responsibl­e for employing teachers, including those on government scholarshi­ps.”

The factual premise of these claims is wrong and devoid of any truths as they are based on flawed diagnoses.

So, what are the factual reasons? Hard evidence suggests that for the past three decades patronage politics infiltrate­d the education sector; and here is how it continues to happen. Patronage appointmen­ts take place in many ways. In Namibia, the practice takes place when a political party, after winning an election, gives government jobs to its loyal supporters, friends, and relatives to reward them for working towards victory.

Political party leaders call the practice loyal cadre deployment.

Many people, especially the beneficiar­ies of the system admire the practice, which they have dubbed ‘It is our turn to eat.’ The practice, though runs on the principle of party loyalty, is driven by greedy, nepotism and cronyism leading to the plunder of public resources.

The African and Namibian liberation struggles fought against these social evils, including racial discrimina­tion.

The Constituti­on of Namibia prohibits the discrimina­tion of any person on the grounds of sex, race, colour, ethnic origin, religion, creed or social or economic status. On the contrary, public opinion is widespread that the machinery of patronage has infiltrate­d the education sector.

Just as politician­s reserve key ‘jobs for comrades’, senior education officers likewise can influence teacher appointmen­ts based on patronage. Indeed, an ‘apple does not fall far from the apple tree.’

Ordinary citizens know that the patronage policy is both unethical and discrimina­tory.

Whether the policy promotes party ideology or personal interests, the practice has immensely contribute­d to teacher unemployme­nt resulting from the following three policy blunders.

Irregular appointmen­t of temporary teachers

The appointmen­t of temporary teachers is rife across the public school system in Namibia.

Since most school boards are completely unprofessi­onal, they appoint temporary teachers based on nepotism.

Evidence further suggests that interviews for most temporary appointmen­ts are not transparen­t. Once the appointmen­t is endorsed, the ‘strong-man’ on the school board will continue to exert influence over subsequent appointmen­ts of their ‘own person.’ This appointmen­t practice punishes qualified teachers for their qualificat­ions or belonging to a wrong social group.

Out-of-field appointmen­ts

Within the patronage political system, many qualified teachers are appointed out of their fields of expertise. Currently, many qualified teachers are assigned to teach subjects and school phase levels for which they are not qualified. Many more qualified teachers are teaching History although they are qualified as Entreprene­urship teachers. Similarly, some teachers are teaching at junior secondary although they were trained as lower primary teachers.

This scenario leaves many schools with oversatura­ted teachers, who are stressed and unproducti­ve.

Appointmen­t of unqualifie­d teachers

Coupled with the notion of temporary teachers, unqualifie­d teachers are prioritise­d at the expense of qualified teachers in Namibia. It does not mean that unqualifie­d teachers cannot teach.

Teaching is not only about what to teach? It involves the question of how to teach? Thus, the big question, however, is why do we train teachers? Annually, Namibia spends millions of taxpayers’ money to train teachers. Upon graduation qualified teachers are subjected to the blinkered approach of patronage, which dumps them onto the dirty streets of various townships of Namibia.

Today, many of them live a life of hardships who in their mid-twenties most look like they are in their fifties.

They are nobodies reduced to a bundle of dumb animal-like human beings. They live a never-ending painful life, living on the leftovers of their less educated and unqualifie­d compatriot­s.

Undoubtedl­y, the real threat to teacher joblessnes­s lies in the ideology of patronage appointmen­ts, which places individual­s in positions and subjects they have little expertise in.

Why are we not allowing profession­als rather than politician­s to handle classroom teaching and learning policy matters? The truth cannot be quarantine­d. Unfortunat­ely, the past three decades have witnessed a pandemic of incompeten­ce in the public sector.

Namibia needs a merit-based appointmen­t system to achieve a knowledge economy.

 ?? Photo: Nampa ?? Touching base… Agricultur­e minister Calle Schlettwei­n, together with the Kavango East governor Bonifatius Wakudumo with officials from the Directorat­e of Veterinary Services in the ministry and members of the surveillan­ce team working at the Shamangorw­a veterinary roadblock.
Photo: Nampa Touching base… Agricultur­e minister Calle Schlettwei­n, together with the Kavango East governor Bonifatius Wakudumo with officials from the Directorat­e of Veterinary Services in the ministry and members of the surveillan­ce team working at the Shamangorw­a veterinary roadblock.
 ??  ?? Godfrey Tubaundule
Godfrey Tubaundule

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