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| Esther Muinjangue, Namibia’s first woman to run for president, told AFP of her bid 'restore dignity' to the southwest African country (AFP Photo/HILDEGARD TITUS) |
Windhoek (AFP) - Calm and confident, Esther Muinjangue, Namibia’s first woman to run for president, says she feels a "wind of change" softly blowing through the southwest African country which goes to the polls on Wednesday.
From her
modest home in a quiet suburb of the capital Windhoek, Muinjangue spoke to AFP
about her bid to "restore dignity" to the country's 2.45 million
inhabitants -- struggling through an economic recession after nearly 30 years
of independence from South Africa.
"You
hear a lot of people complaining about the (ruling) SWAPO-led government,"
she said on Saturday, before heading into the final day of campaigning for her
National Unity Democratic Organisation (NUDO) party.
"There
was apathy among the youth," added the 57-year-old former social worker.
"But now you see at every rally... more and more young people coming on
board."
Namibia's
South West Africa People's Organisation (SWAPO) has remained in power since its
founder Sam Nujoma won the first democratic election in 1990, after decades of
guerrilla war against colonial rule.
But
President Hage Geingob, elected in 2014, has faced increasing disgruntlement
amid SWAPO's inability to redistribute wealth to the majority black population.
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Supporters
of Namibia's National Unity Democratic Organisation (NUDO) wear
traditional
Herero dress at a presidential campaign rally in Windhoek (AFP Photo/
HILDEGARD
TITUS)
|
'Empty
glass'
Namibia
"was like a full glass of water," said Muinjangue, but "the
first president brought it down half, the second drank further"
"So
when Hage took over we were already in the mess that we are in today."
Despite
vast mineral wealth, abundant fish reserves and a growing tourist industry,
Namibia remains the world's second most unequal country after South Africa,
according to the World Bank.
Low
commodity prices and drought caused the economy to slump in 2016, and Geingob
has come under fire for expanding his cabinet at the expense of other sectors.
Muinjangue
is campaigning on a promise to cull the bloated government and invest more in
education, health and affordable housing.
She said
Namibia has resources to take care of its needs, but corruption has taken root.
"Top
leaders... are selling the land, they are selling the country, they are selling
mines to foreigners."
NUDO won
just two percent of the vote in 2014, when SWAPO's Geingob swept to victory
with more than 87 percent.
But
Muinjangue was confident her party would perform better this time and that
disgruntlement with the regime could drive more voters towards the opposition
and break SWAPO's two-thirds parliamentary majority.
'Expecting miracles'
"We
are expecting a lot of miracles to happen this year," said Muinjangue.
As a member
of Namibia's minority Herero group and daughter of an exiled politician,
Muinjangue learnt to challenge the status quo against a backdrop of tradition.
"I
have never been conforming to the norms of my community," she said,
describing it as an environment "where women are expected to have their
places in the kitchen".
Wearing a
traditional Herero dress, Muinjangue spoke of women's empowerment, gay rights
and legalising abortion in Namibia.
Her ascent
to the NUDO presidency touched off a "paradigm shift" that prompted
members of the majority Herero party to question "their old way of
thinking".
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Namibia's
National Unity Democratic Organisation (NUDO) presidential candidate
Esther
Utjiua Muinjangue (C) campaigns on the streets of Windhoek (AFP Photo/
GIANLUIGI
GUERCIA)
|
'Same as
the Holocaust'
Aside her
new role as party leader, Muinjangue continues to fight for reparations for the
German-led slaughter of thousands of Herero and Nama people who rose up against
colonial rule in 1904-08.
Germany --
which controlled Namibia before South Africa took over in 1915 -- has so far
failed to officially apologise for the massacre and refused to pay any
compensation.
Muinjangue,
whose grand-father was "the product of a German soldier" and a Herero
woman, said the case deserves "exactly the same" treatment as the
Holocaust.
She blasted
SWAPO for being soft-handed in its negotiations with Germany.
While
Germany formally handed back Herero and Nama remains to Namibia in 2018, it
maintains bilateral aid makes up for compensation.
"Being
a social worker, social work is a value-based profession, and one value of
social work is social justice.
"So
for me it’s more about social justice. It’s more about why is the German
government treating our issue different from the issue of the holocaust - which
is exactly the same."




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