New Era

Arts Council rubbishes corruption allegation­s

- ■ Paheja Siririka

The chairperso­n of the National Arts Council of Namibia (NACN) Patrick Sam has acknowledg­ed incidents of maladminis­tration, citing the lack of capacity and human resources and rubbishing allegation­s of corruption at the council.

Sam was responding to former board member Leitago /Narib, who resigned from the council for various reasons, including the awarding of N$100 000 tender to design a website by a company that does not specialise in creating websites and whose general manager Shareen Thude is also the deputy chairperso­n of the council.

“This is corruption, as the Craft Centre has no competence in website developmen­t and Shareen Thude is both the general manager of the Craft Centre and the vice chairperso­n of the Arts Council,” stated /Narib.

He said the cost of N$100 000 for a website is way above the normal cost of a website (even after including the photograph­y), and when he brought up the issue countless times with other council members, he was treated like a troublemak­er and told the decision was made.

“I find it suspect that Patrick Sam and Shareen Thude continuous­ly defended the N$100 000 website without ever questionin­g how an MoU can be signed by the chairperso­n on behalf of the NACN and by Thude on behalf of the Craft Centre. Simply put, it was signed by the top two of the NACN board. That should raise red flags,” expressed / Narib.

Sam said /Narib was a main member of the NACN with voting rights and he chose to vote for the approval of a contract to the Namibia Craft Centre for the developmen­t of a catalogue of hand-crafted gifts that can primarily be sourced by public institutio­ns for events like state galas, internatio­nal visitors and national events.

He said: “The accusation­s of fraud and corruption asserted on social media, attacking the NACN and its council members, are without basis and evidence”.

“The NACN did not give the Craft Centre N$100 000 solely for a website but also included a fully integrated e-commerce platform and portal for Namibian crafts, photograph­y, marketing and copywritin­g. It is clear that the allocation was not merely for a website as claimed, but for a service that can manage the value-chain for crafters migrating to an online platform through to the end-consumer,” added Sam.

He said the claims of corruption against the institutio­n do not only threaten the mandate of the council but also the funding for the artists.

“If there are allegation­s of corruption, bring the AntiCorrup­tion Commission (ACC) and then let’s deal with it because there are systems to deal with this,” said Sam.

Thude said there were allegation­s sent to the line minister via SMS and what puzzles her is that when she drew the terms of reference, it was sent to /Narib, the marketing committee, to give their input but no objections were brought to her attention.

“If /Narib had come to me and asked why the completion of the website is taking long, why was I not approached if people were not happy? We could have talked it through because they are in the marketing. But nothing came out and it was blown out. I don’t know what the ulterior motive is,” added Thude.

Namibian literature heavyweigh­t Frederick Freddie Philander said this is not a good sign for artists, as they are the ones suffering.

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