Scandal claims 2 scalps
NAMIBIA: MINISTERS RESIGN AFTER ALLEGED CORRUPTION IN FISHING
Wikileaks exposes possible bribes paid by Icelandic company for access to country’s shores.
Two Namibian ministers resigned following a Wikileaks report exposing alleged corruption in the fishing industry, released as the country readies for a presidential election.
Iceland-based multinational fishing company Samherji is suspected of bribing senior Namibian officials for continued access to the country’s shores, according to documents published by Wikileaks on Tuesday.
Fisheries Minister Bernard Esau and Justice Minister Sakeus Shanghala resigned on Wednesday, presidential spokesperson Alfredo Hengari said.
They stepped down “following press and media reports in which allegations of corruption have been made against” them, he added.
Samherji has denied any wrongdoing, saying it had “nothing to hide”.
The scandal surfaced during the last leg of campaigning for presidential elections on November 27, in which incumbent Hage Geingob is vying for a second five-year term. Wikileaks said Namibian authorities have been investigating the case for almost a year.
The whistleblower was tipped by Samherji’s former country director Johannes Stefansson, who came forward to testify about the company’s activities.
He cooperated with the police and anticorruption authorities, Wikileaks said.
“We are deeply shocked that
This is not how we do business
Stefansson not only admits being involved in illegal activities, he is now also making allegations against colleagues,” said Samherji chief executive officer Thorsteinn Mar Baldvinsson in a statement.
“This is not how we do business. This is not Samherji.”
Fishing is one of Namibia’s key economic sectors, second to mineral mining.
The vast southern African country is second in aridity to the Sahara desert, with mobile dunes and sandy plains stretching along its 1 500km.
That coast is home to a vibrant fishing and fish processing industry that has contributed to about 20% of export earnings since 1990.