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Namibia halts all state funerals amid criticism of the high cost

Africa

Namibia halts all state funerals amid criticism of the high cost

The Namibian government has announced a temporary ban on state funerals amid criticism over the rising costs of these burials.

Only President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah has the power to exempt funerals from the moratorium, the government said.

Minister of Information and Communication Technology Emma Theofelus announced a Cabinet meeting earlier this week.

She said the moratorium would last until April 2026, while a review committee looks into the “criteria and processes associated with bestowing official funerals”.

Ms Theofelus told the BBC that a committee consisting of “no more than seven members” would be established to lead the review.

The government has not said whether the decision was related to mounting criticism of the increasing costs of the numerous state funerals, as reported by local media.

The BBC has asked the presidency for comment.

The Windhoek Observer, a privately owned publication, said calls for the moratorium had been made as far back as 2021 when the rising cost of official burials came under scrutiny, especially at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

It quoted Prime Minister Elijah Ngurare, who earlier this year revealed that official funerals had cost the government 38.4m Namibian dollars ($2.2m; £1.6m) in the 2024/2025 financial year.

By comparison, only 2.1 million Namibian dollars were spent during the 2022/2023 financial year, according to the news site.

The Observer said the state had spent 30m Namibian dollars on the funeral of the country’s founding President, Sam Nujoma, in February this year.

Nujoma, who died at the age of 95, led the long fight for independence from South Africa after helping found Namibia’s liberation movement, the South West Africa People’s Organisation (Swapo), in the 1960s. After independence, Nujoma became president in 1990 and led the country until 2005.

Adopted from BBC Africa News

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