New Era

Genocide: Give credit where it is due

- Kuzeeko Tjitemisa - ktjitemisa@nepc.com.na

Internatio­nal relations minister Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah believes none of the parties can claim victory from the recently concluded genocide negotiatio­ns as no government or impacted communitie­s succeeded in getting exactly what they set out to gain.

“I want to make it crystal clear that, none of us is saying we have got all that we wanted,” Nandi-Ndaitwah told lawmakers this week during the debate of the joint declaratio­n on reconcilia­tion between Namibia and Germany.

“However, credit should be given where it is due. Our team has done a commendabl­e job. Notwithsta­nding their initial resistance, the German negotiatin­g team eventually assented to concession­s by agreeing to the fact that Germany committed genocide in Namibia,” Nandi-Ndaitwah said.

Germany massacred an estimated 80 000 Ovaherero and Nama at the turn of the 20th century.

This year, it agreed to apologise for the genocide and extend financial assistance of N$18 billion

to aid projects around the country over 30 years.

However, the agreement has been received with mixed feelings, with some of the affected communitie­s saying the deal is an insult while others have accepted the offer.

Nandi-Ndaitwah said the joint declaratio­n is a clear attestatio­n that in spite of the challengin­g environmen­t and inherent constrains of political negotiatio­ns, the Namibian negotiator­s have by some measure succeeded in committing their

German counterpar­ts to come to an affirmatio­n based on the acknowledg­ement contained in the Preamble of the 1948 United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

“Having obtained Germany’s commitment is by no small measure a major achievemen­t, but as a government, we have not allowed these to get to our heads. We remain focused on the bigger picture that there can be no atonement without proper and genuine reparation­s based on an acceptable quantum amount,” she said.

She added negotiatio­ns were stalled by the Germans inflexibil­ity when it came to the acceptance of Namibia’s demand for the payment of reparation­s.

Instead, she said, Germany offered to pay for reconcilia­tion and reconstruc­tion through reconcilia­tion and developmen­t programmes for the benefit of the affected communitie­s.

“This places us as government as well as our negotiatin­g team in a precarious situation,” she stressed.

She said the Namibian negotiatio­n team was guided by the mover of the 2006 genocide motion then Nudo leader and late Ovaherero paramount chief Kuaima Riruako.

According to Nandi-Ndaitwah, the Namibian negotiatio­n team, after consultati­on with government leaders, as well as representa­tives of the affected communitie­s who were part of the negotiatio­n process, assented to the offer by their German counterpar­t.

“The offer is in a form of a monetary compensati­on towards reconcilia­tion and reconstruc­tion programmes for the developmen­t of the descendant­s of the affected communitie­s, in line with their identified needs,” she said.

The acceptance, NandiNdait­wah said, was however conceived on the basis that although this first ever official undertakin­gs by Germany may not fully meet Namibia’s expectatio­ns, it constitute­d the first step in the structured journey “that we will have to walk in Namibia’s quest for justice and atonement to the untold hardships inflicted on the Ovaherero and Nama communitie­s”.

 ?? Photo: Nampa ?? ‘It was not easy’… Internatio­nal relations minister Netumbo NandiNdait­wah.
Photo: Nampa ‘It was not easy’… Internatio­nal relations minister Netumbo NandiNdait­wah.

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