New Era

Air Namibia plunges into the abyss

… as Jooste refutes meddling allegation­s

- Edgar Brandt

THE beleaguere­d Air Namibia yesterday plunged into a leadership crisis after three board members suddenly resigned from the airline.

Board chairperso­n Escher Luanda and Heritha Muyoba resigned yesterday, while Willy Mertens tendered his resignatio­n on Monday already.

The abrupt resignatio­ns came after a scathing letter issued yesterday from the board, alleging ministeria­l interferen­ce in the beleaguere­d airline’s dayto-day runnings.

Public enterprise­s minister Leon Jooste has since denied allegation­s of interferin­g in the affairs of Air Namibia, saying all activities were instructed by Cabinet.

Jooste was adamant that Air Namibia has since 2015 been on the agenda of Cabinet and the Cabinet Committee on Treasury.

“All of the associated activities were discussed and then either instructed or endorsed by Cabinet and/or the Cabinet Committee on Treasury.

“After those instructio­ns or endorsemen­ts, the ministry was instructed to implement the various actions and to report back to the Cabinet committee,” Jooste told New Era.

He added the government will soon be in a position to provide more detailed informatio­n, saying he would then be happy to clarify any misunderst­andings or misconcept­ions.

In a strongly worded statement, the Air Namibia board who assumed their duties on 1 January 2019 and appointed to ensure the airline breaks-even in three years, accused the public enterprise­s ministry of interferin­g in operationa­l activities and by-passing the board by directly engaging employees and trade unions, negotiatin­g contracts involving the company without the knowledge of the board, procuring advisory services on behalf of the company, initiating a restructur­ing exercise (without prior knowledge of the board) and managing the appropriat­ed budget earmarked for the company without the involvemen­t of the board.

“In fact, the airline had an amount of N$948 million in the 2020/2021 fiscal year from the Ministry of Finance and approved by parliament and the board has to date not been briefed on how these funds were disbursed to the airline if at all, other than a monthly allocation for employee salaries,” the Air Namibia letter reads.

The letter continued: “A recurring theme of the board tenure has been enormous financial challenges, which could be attributed to historic poor financial management, inappropri­ate business model, deteriorat­ing brand equity, skills mismatch in strategic areas, ill-conceived route network, ageing fleet, and poorly negotiated leases, amongst others.

It was always clear that the organisati­on would require significan­t capital injection from the shareholde­r if the issues facing the airline were to be addressed in a comprehens­ive and holistic manner.”

Furthermor­e, referring specifical­ly to last week’s liquidatio­n applicatio­n by Challenge Air, the board remained firm that the Ministry of Public Enterprise­s, as the sole shareholde­r, was engaged. The letter states that the ministry’s position was to leave the matter to the board, as long as the impression was not created that the settlement agreement would bind the shareholde­r.

“The board signed with the full understand­ing that the agreement had no guaranteed backing of the State and there is no single mention of the government/ State/Ministry of Public Enterprise­s in the agreement. It should also be noted that the window of opportunit­y to file for liquidatio­n remains open.

In all these, the board stands firm by its decision believing that the decision was taken in the best interest of Air Namibia,” the letter asserts. Meanwhile, the Air Namibia board said it developed a new strategic plan which provides for restructur­ing the airline into a leaner, more competitiv­e and sustainabl­e airline.

“It is worth mentioning that, indeed the airline sits with historical debts (dating back to as far back as 23 years) and those debts that are government guaranteed need to be serviced whether the airline is liquidated or not. Currently, the airline owns an all-paid-for fleet of six aircrafts, and which can be utilised to generate revenue without the burden of lease costs.

The board has also long terminated all the loss-making routes and these are not part of the re-start plan. In summary: all leases will be terminated, all nonprofit making routes are removed from our network, and most contracts and agreements are being re-negotiated.

Thus, we will be sitting with a very lean and cost-effective airline,” the board proclaimed.

The letter also cautioned about the severe impact of liquidatin­g the airline, stating this would result in all more than 636 employees losing their jobs.

In contrast, the board stated that their re-start plan will preserve at least 50% of those jobs while enabling the airline to add value to the domestic economy.

 ??  ?? Leaving… Three board members of Air Namibia have quit, leaving the beleaguere­d airline in a leadership crunch.
Leaving… Three board members of Air Namibia have quit, leaving the beleaguere­d airline in a leadership crunch.
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