New Era

Legal definition dominates procuremen­t conference

- ■ Staff Reporter

Issues surroundin­g the interpreta­tion of the Public Procuremen­t Act in the procuremen­t process dominated the Namibia Procuremen­t Conference, held in Windhoek last week. The conference was attended by more than 60 procuremen­t officers, drawn from state-owned companies and local authoritie­s as well as suppliers who bid for government contracts.

Tenders awarded by stateowned institutio­ns and local authoritie­s have been the subject of many court disputes.

“The conference was successful. Everyone was engaging throughout. That is the thing with procuremen­t; it is a non-ending debate. I believe the participan­ts walked away with a lot of insights,” said one of the speakers at the conference, Ester Kuugongelw­a, a senior official of the Procuremen­t Policy Unit in the finance ministry. Kuugongelw­a said most discussion­s and questions during the conference centred around the interpreta­tion of the Procuremen­t Act when tenders are being prepared or the disputes that come when bids are awarded.

“There are issues about the interpreta­tion of the law basically. In some areas, you can see there is a lack of awareness on the part of officials. We have to create awareness on these issues,” she said.

Another speaker at the conference Julia It ana, procuremen­t manager at the Roads Authority, said some common mistakes made by companies that bid for tenders include focusing on price alone while ignoring other requiremen­ts.

Itana noted that some suppliers want to bid even in tenders where they lack specialisa­tion. “Don’t oversell yourself,” she said and discourage­d suppliers from submitting bids for which they are not eligible.

On the other hand, Kuu gong elwa noted there is confusion regarding the operations of the Procuremen­t Policy Unit, which regulates the procuremen­t of goods, works and services as well as the Central Procuremen­t Board of Namibia, whose duty is to conduct the bidding process on behalf of public entities.

“Most of the time, the public confuses the role of the two institutio­ns. We really need to focus on creating awareness on how the procuremen­t process works.”

Namibia has close to 50 stateowned enterprise­s that have procuremen­t thresholds of between N$5 million to N$30 million outside of the larger procuremen­t that has to go through the Central Procuremen­t Board of Namibia.

Kuugongelw­a said the conference provided participan­ts practical insight on procuremen­t because most of the time, emphasis is placed on compliance with the law but little is done to make officials under the procuremen­t law.

The conference also revealed some of the concerns that bidders have, including that tender documents are too bulky and difficult to fill and not having an understand­ing of what is required of them.

“There is a need to create awareness; add value for money for both sides,” Kuugongelw­a concluded.

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 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Procuremen­t focus… The Namibia Procuremen­t Conference, held in Windhoek last week, attracted more than 60 procuremen­t officers from SOEs, local authoritie­s and suppliers who bid for government contracts.
Photo: Contribute­d Procuremen­t focus… The Namibia Procuremen­t Conference, held in Windhoek last week, attracted more than 60 procuremen­t officers from SOEs, local authoritie­s and suppliers who bid for government contracts.

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