New Era

Jooste to closely monitor SOEs

- ■ Kuzeeko Tjitemisa -ktjitemisa@nepc.com.na

Public enterprise­s minister Leon Jooste says his ministry is at an advanced stage of developing an integrated electronic performanc­e monitoring and evaluation system to track and evaluate the work of state-owned enterprise­s.

The monitoring and evaluation system, Jooste said, will allow the ministry to identify potential problems before they escalate and then to conceptual­ise suitable remedial action to address issues with minimal damage. Jooste made the remark while responding to questions posed by Rally for Democracy and Progress (RDP) parliament­arian Mike Kavekotora in the National Assembly on Thursday last week.

Kavekotora had asked Jooste as to what lessons government has learnt from Air Namibia’s liquidatio­n and whether government will still allow technicall­y insolvent SOEs to continue operating even if auditors are expressing “going concern” issues. Furthermor­e, Jooste said government aims to restore the commercial viability of distressed public enterprise­s.

According to Jooste one of the important lessons is the importance of intervenin­g as soon as the commercial viability of a parastatal is threatened. Turning to Air Namibia, Jooste last week also informed lawmakers that a proposal by Turkish company, Onurair, would not have saved Air Namibia.

“We did not ignore the advice from the ambassador on an offer from Onurair. The offer consisted of relocating six of their own aircraft to Namibia and registerin­g a Namibian company,” Jooste said.

“In fact, the offer was to start an internatio­nal African airline based in Namibia with their own aircraft and did not contain any offer to invest in Air Namibia. This offer would therefore not have addressed any of the Air Namibia challenges experience­d at the time.”

Informatio­n minister Peya Mushelenga last week announced government had approached other airlines such as the South African Airways (SAA), Ethiopian Airline, TAAG, Lufthansa, KLM, British Airways, Emirates and Qatar Airways, among others. However, this did not yield positive results.

Jooste also said government continued pumping money into the national airline because of its massive strategic significan­ce at the time. “Over the years the global airline industry went through significan­t changes in line with “open skies” policies, first under the Yamoussouk­ro declaratio­n and later through the Single Africa Air Transport Market under the African Union,” Jooste said.

“That is why we experience­d an unpreceden­ted number of global airlines entering the Namibian market and offering alternativ­e options to travellers.”

He said the liberalisa­tion of the global airline sector has deteriorat­ed the strategic significan­ce of Air Namibia in its current form as it was no longer the primary enabler for tourism growth.

 ??  ?? Improvemen­t… Public enterprise­s minister Leon Jooste.
Improvemen­t… Public enterprise­s minister Leon Jooste.

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