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Matundu-Tjiparuro rejects LPM’s genocide money distribution system Traditional authorities analyst Kae Matundu-Tjiparuro says any proposal on how to distribute reparations funds among the descendants of the Ovaherero and Nama genocide victims remains moot until Germany acknowledges that it is paying reparations. This comes after Landless People’s Movement (LPM) leader Bernadus Swartbooi, over the weekend said his party is currently developing a system similar to how Germany paid Jewish Holocaust survivors through organisations, including direct payments to survivors, as well as compensation for lost properties. The Holocaust was the genocide of European Jewish people from 1941 to 1945. Germany acknowledged that genocide and paid reparations. Matundu-Tjiparuro argues that there is currently no balance of power between Namibia and its former coloniser. He says Germany has maintained its stance that it is not paying reparations but development aid to the value of N$18 billion over 30 years, nullifying the need for direct payments to descendants of the victims. “In Namibia’s case, there are no reparations to talk about. Germany is giving bilateral aid for developmental projects to Namibia. Is there something wrong with this, no. Germany has been giving aid to Namibia since independence. There exist modalities already for how these payments will be disbursed. So as long as there are no reparations on the table, there is no need for designing new payment methods,” says Matundu-Tjiparuro. Swartbooi branded the N$18 billion the German and Namibian governments agreed to as paltry, adding that the lowest cost for reparations should be around 10 billion euros (about N$204 billion). “The Jewish community received funds through organisations similar to what we envision for our own people – a large, registered trust, for instance, in New York or London, that invests the money on the stock exchange. “These funds would be managed by qualified professionals and overseen by reliable trustees, ensuring individuals receive direct payments while the capital continues to grow. We are developing a similar system and have already initiated discussions with companies in New York to facilitate this process,” said Swaartbooi. The 1904 to 1908 massacres are now widely accepted to be the 20th century’s first genocide, where about 65 000 of 80 000 Ovaherero and at least 10 000 of 20 000 Nama people were imprisoned in concentration camps. The majority died of diseases, abuse, and exhaustion under an extermination order issued by Germany. “It must be understood that the reparations claim against Germany for the mass killings of the Nama and Ovaherero communities committed during the German colonial period is grounded in international laws and conventions.” Swartbooi recommended that affected genocide victim descendants negotiate directly with the German government, and that the European nation issue a guarantee never to repeat any act of genocide against the Nama and Herero people, as it did for the Jewish people. The German government has pledged more than one billion euros in development aid over 30 years to benefit the descendants of the two targeted tribes, while stressing the funding should not be seen as payment of reparations in a joint declaration statement reached between the two governments. The bulk of the money is expected to go towards projects relating to land reform, rural infrastructure, water supply and professional training for communities of the Ovaherero and Nama descendants in the Hardap, //Kharas, Omaheke, Kavango East and West, Erongo and Otjozondjupa regions. However, the affected communities have rejected the joint declaration and the N$18 billion over 30 years offer. The post Matundu-Tjiparuro rejects LPM’s genocide money distribution system appeared first on The Namibian.

#Namibia #GenocideReparations #Ovaherero #NamaGenocide #LPM

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Opposition parties absent from Namibia’s first official genocide day Several opposition parties were noticeably absent from the official commemoration of Genocide Remembrance Day held on Wednesday to honour the victims of the 1904-908 Ovaherero and Nama genocide. Political parties such as the Independent Patriots for Change (IPC), the Landless People’s Movement (LPM) and the United Democratic Front (UDF) did not send representatives to the event. IPC national chairperson Brian Black says the party was not present at the event because the descendants of the victims of the genocide were excluded. Black says IPC believes the descendants of the victims of the genocide should be leading the negotiations on genocide reparations, while the government must just be a facilitator. He adds that the second reason was that the invitation they received was sent to the party’s national spokesperson, Imms Nashinge, who is the leader of IPC in parliament but not the leader of IPC. “So, you can’t exclude our leader and expect us to be there.” Asked why Nashinge did not attend the event when he received an invitation, Black responds, “You can phone him and ask why he didn’t attend.” LPM spokesperson Lifalaza Simataa says the party could not attend because the party president, Bernadus Swartbooi, and other party leaders were doing a public lecture on genocide at Gibeon. “Honourable Swartbooi was the one leading the public lectures, so much of the team was at Gibeon. They were engaging on the importance of genocide remembrance and building the gap between that and the people so they can understand what reparation means and also have insight to our court case. That’s what the LPM team was doing,” he says. He also says he was not sure if the party received an invitation from the government at all. One Africa on Wednesday reported that Swartbooi accused the government of pushing a one-sided narrative and refusing to unify the commemoration days observed by the Nama on 12 April and Ovaherero on 2 October. “This 28 May date was meant to bring all of us together but that’s not the language being used,” Swartbooi was quoted as saying. Meanwhile, UDF spokesperson Mabasen Narib says the party’s no-show at the event should not be interpreted as a boycott, adding that the party is busy with by-elections at Sesfontein, Grootfontein and the Kanjamab constituencies scheduled for 17 June. “That requires our leadership to be on the ground because our president was the councillor of Sesfontein constituency. He needs to be on the ground to campaign for the candidate that we have fielded for the upcoming by-election. Our focus was on the elections, which is why we were not there,” he says. Narib says the party will speak on the Genocide Remembrance Day next week. Those from opposition parties who were present at the event were Popular Democratic Movement leader McHenry Venaani, George Kambala of the Affirmative Repositioning and former Swanu of Namibia parliamentarian Usutuaije Maamberua. Namibia on Wednesday commemorated its first-ever Genocide Remembrance Day to honour more than 100 000 Ovaherero and Nama people who were killed by German colonial forces between 1904 and 1908. Speaking at the commemoration event in Windhoek, president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah recounted the atrocities committed by the German colonial government under its policy of extermination and genocide. “We should also find a degree of comfort in the fact that the German government has agreed to offer an apology to the affected communities and the Namibian people in general. We may not agree on the final quantum, but that is part of the complex negotiations we have been engaged in with the German government since 2013,” she said. The post Opposition parties absent from Namibia’s first official genocide day appeared first on The Namibian.

#Namibia #GenocideRemembrance #Ovaherero #NamaGenocide #Reparations

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Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen? - africanews.com Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen?  africanews.com

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #History #AfricanHistory

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Hitambo Virtual Academy calls for Genocide education Hitambo Virtual Academy calls for Genocide education NBC Online Thu, 05/29/2025 - 14:33

#GenocideEducation #HistoricalMemory #OvahereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #HitamboVirtualAcademy

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Namibia marks Herero and Nama genocide for first time with memorial day - Tamil Guardian Namibia marks Herero and Nama genocide for first time with memorial day  Tamil Guardian

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Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen? - MSN Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen?  MSN

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #HistoricalJustice #ColonialHistory

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Namibia: Genocide against the Herero and Nama commemorated - Vatican News Namibia: Genocide against the Herero and Nama commemorated  Vatican News

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #Commemoration #VaticanNews

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Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen? - MSN Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen?  MSN

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #History #HumanRights

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Namibia marks first national commemoration of Herero and Nama genocide - La croix international Namibia marks first national commemoration of Herero and Nama genocide  La croix international

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #HumanRights #HistoryMatters

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Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen? - africanews.com Namibia: how did the Herero and Nama genocide happen?  africanews.com

#Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #AfricanHistory #HumanRights

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Themeless Genocide Remembrance Day to be held at Parliament Gardens The National Genocide Remembrance Day will be commemorated on 28 May at the Parliament Gardens in Windhoek. This year’s event is taking place without an official logo or theme, the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology has announced. Delivering the seventh Cabinet decision-making meeting briefing on Thursday, information minister Emma Theofelus said preparations are well underway for the national commemoration. It honours the memory of the victims of the Herero and Nama genocide of 1904 to 1908. “Various regional governors have begun preparations on their end to ensure the participation of citizens from across the country to join us here in Windhoek on the 28th of May at the Parliament Gardens,” said the minister. According to Theofelus, regional communication on the commemoration will be coordinated by the respective governors’ offices. The keynote address at the event will be delivered by president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, who is also the commander in chief of the Namibian Defence Force Theofelus in the meantime called on Namibians from all walks of life to attend and honour the memory of those who lost their lives during one of the darkest chapters in the country’s history. “We thus invite all Namibians, all citizens, to come and mark this historic day with us, the commemorative National Genocide Remembrance Day, in memory of the Namibians we lost during the Herero-Nama genocide between 1904 and 1908. May their brave souls continue to rest in eternal peace,” she said. Cabinet also deliberated on the progress of the development of a national youth fund. Theofelus said Cabinet took note of the progress made and approved the common guidelines for the fund in principle. “Cabinet approved in principle the common guidelines that outline the national youth fund and directed the Ministry of Finance to review the guidelines before resubmission to the eighth Cabinet meeting for consideration and endorsement,” she said. In a related regional development, Namibia has been authorised to sign the agreement on the operationalisation of the Southern Africa Development Community (Sadc) Regional Development Fund. The decision is part of efforts to promote economic development and regional integration. “The rationale for Namibia’s participation in the Sadc development fund is embedded in the preamble of the Sadc Treaty of 1992, specifically article 26 (a), which provides for the establishment of the regional development fund. The objective is to mobilise resources from member states, development partners, and the private sector to support regional development and deepen regional integration,” said the minister. The post Themeless Genocide Remembrance Day to be held at Parliament Gardens appeared first on The Namibian.

#GenocideRemembrance #Namibia #HereroGenocide #NamaGenocide #Windhoek

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For Mimesis Magazine Issue #2: Let's Spoil! we present an essay by Nashilongweshipwe Mushaandja about the film Under the Hanging Tree (2023) by Perivi Katjavivi
#mimesismagazine #NashilongweshipweMushaandja #underthehangingtree #PeriviKatjavivi #namibiancinema #hererogenocide #namagenocide

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