While we can appreciate the “no business as usual” and hands-on style approach of our new president and some in her administration, Namibia desperately needs more selfless leaders in both public institutions and state-owned enterprises.
I recently heard a powerful parable during a church service that perfectly illustrates Namibia’s current situation. A man who had died was taken on a journey to both hell and heaven.
First, he was shown hell.
It was a beautifully decorated room with tables overflowing with delicious food. Yet, the people there were thin, miserable, and angry.
He then went to heaven, where he found the same situation: a room with tables full of food.
However, the people in heaven were happy and well-fed.
The man soon discovered the reason for the stark contrast. In both places, the people had to eat with very long forks, which made it impossible for them to feed themselves.
The people in hell were starving because they only tried to feed themselves, but the people in heaven were able to eat because they fed each other across the table.
POLITICAL PARABLE
The moral is clear: in hell, people are selfish and only think about themselves, which is a form of corruption. In heaven, people care for one another and help each other.
The priest concluded by suggesting that this self-centredness is the reason so many people live in poverty while a few are rich.
This parable reflects what’s happening in Namibia today.
Despite our abundant natural resources, only a select few enjoy them.
The majority face unemployment, poverty, poor services, a lack of basic healthcare, and inadequate infrastructure.
We have scandals like ‘Fishrot’ and ‘Fuelrot’. Yet others, like ‘tender rot’ and ‘nepotism rot’, lurk beneath the surface.
This fuels a belief that our nation is like the people in the parable of hell where a chosen few think only about their own stomachs.
If Namibia is to truly break free from this cycle of suffering, the country desperately needs a new kind of leadership, one built on a foundation of core principles.
PATIENCE IS NOT INFINITE
Firstly, we need leadership that prioritises action over rhetoric, ensuring leaders are judged by tangible results and measurable change, not just their promises.
Secondly, a leadership which enforces accountability, not impunity, where everyone is subject to the same laws without exception, and corruption is never left unpunished.
Thirdly, it must be a leadership rooted in public service, not self-service, treating public office as a sacred trust to uplift the people and regarding corruption as nothing less than an act of treason against them.
Fourthly, it must champion unity over division, consciously rising above tribalism, nepotism, and partisan politics to guarantee that the essential pillars of justice, healthcare, and education are distributed fairly to every citizen.
The patience of the Namibian people is not infinite.
We watch with growing frustration as some of our leaders and the elite live opulent lifestyles. Their children attend expensive schools while the children of the poor go hungry.
We see the elite jet off to foreign hospitals for the best medical care while our local clinics lack even the most basic supplies.
We endure their empty slogans while our collective future is auctioned off to the highest bidder.
DIGNITY FOR ALL
Enough is truly enough. True liberation isn’t just about the absence of colonial flags.
It’s about the tangible presence of dignity, the ubiquitous availability of opportunity, and the unwavering assurance of justice for every single citizen, regardless of their background.
It’s about leaders who understand that power is a temporary loan from the people, a trust that must be repaid with genuine and sustainable progress.
Namibia, a nation freed from the shackles of apartheid, desperately needs this kind of selfless leadership.
This isn’t a call for a specific person, but a fervent demand for action-driven leadership that will dismantle the structures of internal colonisation that still plague our nation.
The urgent question is: Who among our current leaders will rise to meet this monumental challenge?
If no one is willing to answer the call, the more profound question becomes: when will the people, in their collective wisdom and righteous indignation rise up and demand it?
The time for true liberation, for dignity and prosperity for all, is now.
- Faustinus Shikukutu is a teacher and a resident of Kavango East. The views expressed here are his own.
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