After some of the ideas he came up with during his campaign, his
latest offerings are a bit of a disappointment.
THE man who has variously been described as a 'clean,
straight-talking, man of the people' sometimes does go off the deep
end.
Education and enlightenment are important to him, by his own
admission, and a bit of homework may temper his sometimes
outrageous statements! In his unsuccessful bid for Swapo nomination
for the presidency, Angula raised the valid issue of parastatals
draining Government coffers and yet, in a reversal in Parliament
this week, he exhorted the Minister of Information to allocate more
money to the State-owned news agency, Nampa, despite is N$2-million
shortfall in the last financial year! His arguments for the
increase were at best, weak, and at worst, ludicrous.
In a nutshell, Nampa should get more money simply because they
'need to convey local stories from a Namibian perspective to the
international world' because Namibia is, in his view,
'misunderstood' and 'misinterpreted'.
I surmise he would now support a similar argument for
financially padding other parastatals, such as Air Namibia, because
they are, after all, our national carrier, and this has seemed in
the past to be the guiding principle for throwing good money after
bad into something which was badly managed.
Ditto Nampa.
And when the Minister alleges that Namibia is 'bombarded with
propaganda from around the world' he should realise that the
conduit for most of this is his precious Nampa itself, to which
local media are virtually forced to subscribe.
So perhaps the Minister would like to re-visit his views on the
above subject.
Then Angula 'did his thing' in Parliament, complaining, on
deadline day for tax returns, that he'd never received his PAYE
form.
I would think that's up to the employer (his Ministry in this
case) to provide, and he heads the very same.
Last year MPs complained they didn't know how to fill out their
tax returns, and Government promised them DIY workshops in this
regard; and accounting officers in the various Ministries were
similarly 'taught' how to comply with tax laws earlier this year,
but ignorance appears to be bliss in this case.
Most loyal, law-abiding citizens know that tax returns are
obligatory each year, so why does the Minister only wake up in a
panic on D-Day? It would have been more constructive if he'd
pointed out in Parliament a while ago that PAYE forms hadn't yet
been received.
He could have done a bit of homework before shouting the odds,
and imagine the impact of this story when Nampa puts it out to the
rest of the world to 'improve our image'.
People abroad who read it must surely think our MPs are
foolish.
Finally Angula aimed his sights at the Attorney General who made
some good points on the paternity leave question in Parliament when
she rebuked many fathers for not knowing, or neglecting their
children.
Angula challenged Pendukeni Iivula-Ithana to 'give me one
example of a father who doesn't know his child'.
I really hope she rises to this and gives him the evidence he
plainly refuses to acknowledge.
I must admit I find it disturbing that a man of Angula's calibre
does a volte face on the issue of parastatals; denies widespread
male neglect of children they father; and exhibits such ignorance
of the laws of the land by failing to wake up on the issue of his
PAYE and tax return a bit earlier in the day.
Especially in view of his implication that funnelling more money
to an ailing parastatal is suddenly going to improve Namibia's
image abroad, as well as ensuring that less 'propaganda' comes into
the country, his comments are unfounded and unhelpful, and, knowing
that the Minister is a person who usually prides himself on being
'educated' and 'enlightened', he himself could have a positive
impact on our international image if he but made sure of his
facts.
THE man who has variously been described as a 'clean,
straight-talking, man of the people' sometimes does go off the deep
end.Education and enlightenment are important to him, by his own
admission, and a bit of homework may temper his sometimes
outrageous statements! In his unsuccessful bid for Swapo nomination
for the presidency, Angula raised the valid issue of parastatals
draining Government coffers and yet, in a reversal in Parliament
this week, he exhorted the Minister of Information to allocate more
money to the State-owned news agency, Nampa, despite is N$2-million
shortfall in the last financial year! His arguments for the
increase were at best, weak, and at worst, ludicrous.In a nutshell,
Nampa should get more money simply because they 'need to convey
local stories from a Namibian perspective to the international
world' because Namibia is, in his view, 'misunderstood' and
'misinterpreted'.I surmise he would now support a similar argument
for financially padding other parastatals, such as Air Namibia,
because they are, after all, our national carrier, and this has
seemed in the past to be the guiding principle for throwing good
money after bad into something which was badly managed.Ditto
Nampa.And when the Minister alleges that Namibia is 'bombarded with
propaganda from around the world' he should realise that the
conduit for most of this is his precious Nampa itself, to which
local media are virtually forced to subscribe.So perhaps the
Minister would like to re-visit his views on the above subject.Then
Angula 'did his thing' in Parliament, complaining, on deadline day
for tax returns, that he'd never received his PAYE form.I would
think that's up to the employer (his Ministry in this case) to
provide, and he heads the very same.Last year MPs complained they
didn't know how to fill out their tax returns, and Government
promised them DIY workshops in this regard; and accounting officers
in the various Ministries were similarly 'taught' how to comply
with tax laws earlier this year, but ignorance appears to be bliss
in this case.Most loyal, law-abiding citizens know that tax returns
are obligatory each year, so why does the Minister only wake up in
a panic on D-Day? It would have been more constructive if he'd
pointed out in Parliament a while ago that PAYE forms hadn't yet
been received.He could have done a bit of homework before shouting
the odds, and imagine the impact of this story when Nampa puts it
out to the rest of the world to 'improve our image'.People abroad
who read it must surely think our MPs are foolish.Finally Angula
aimed his sights at the Attorney General who made some good points
on the paternity leave question in Parliament when she rebuked many
fathers for not knowing, or neglecting their children.Angula
challenged Pendukeni Iivula-Ithana to 'give me one example of a
father who doesn't know his child'.I really hope she rises to this
and gives him the evidence he plainly refuses to acknowledge.I must
admit I find it disturbing that a man of Angula's calibre does a
volte face on the issue of parastatals; denies widespread male
neglect of children they father; and exhibits such ignorance of the
laws of the land by failing to wake up on the issue of his PAYE and
tax return a bit earlier in the day.Especially in view of his
implication that funnelling more money to an ailing parastatal is
suddenly going to improve Namibia's image abroad, as well as
ensuring that less 'propaganda' comes into the country, his
comments are unfounded and unhelpful, and, knowing that the
Minister is a person who usually prides himself on being 'educated'
and 'enlightened', he himself could have a positive impact on our
international image if he but made sure of his facts.