Also known as: High Court judge Beatrix de Jager · Justice De Jager · judge Beatrix de Jager · judge De Jager · De Jagger · Acting judge Beatrix de Jager
High Court judge who publicly warned of an unsustainable workload and inhuman conditions affecting judicial capacity.
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July 2026
Windhoek Observer
High Court Judge Beatrix de Jageris expected to hearthe matter on 28 July
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“High Court Judge Beatrix de Jager is expected to hear the matter on 28 July, when witnesses will be called to testify and be cross-examined before the court determines the facts.”
High Court Judge Beatrix de Jagerpostponed delivery of her judgement to 17 Marchciting excessive workload and personal health concerns
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“De Jagger recently laid bare the strain on Namibia's courts through a court order. "A day has 24 hours. I am a human," the judge said when postponing the delivery of a judgement. She postponed the delivery of her judgement to 17 March, refusing to sacrifice her personal health because of work pressure.”
High Court judge Beatrix de Jagerdeclared in a public court ordershe would not sacrifice her health for an impossible workload
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“In the same week, High Court judge Beatrix de Jager declared in a public court order that she would not sacrifice her health for an impossible workload.”
Judge Beatrix de Jagerstatedshe is human with a 24-hour day and will not sacrifice personal health due to work pressure
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“"A day has twenty-four hours. I am a human," judge Beatrix de Jager stated on Tuesday last week, when she postponed the delivery of a judgement in a case involving a tender dispute.”
Judge Beatrix de Jagerstatedthe system's expectations are inhuman due to unreasonable workload from workforce shortage
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“"The system's expectations, which, to date, have provided no relief despite the current unreasonable workload brought about by the crisis workforce shortage, are inhuman."”
Four witnesses have filed statements in the High Court contradicting the Namibian Police's version of events surrounding the arrest of former Spitzkoppe tour guide Melvin //Areseb, who is suing the police and three officers for N$2.8 million over an alleged assault while in custody. Police officers deny assaulting //Areseb or witnessing any assault, claiming only reasonable force was used after he became aggressive following questioning about a reported domestic violence incident.
Four witnesses have filed statements in the High Court contradicting the Namibian Police's version of events surrounding the arrest of former Spitzkoppe tour guide Melvin //Areseb, who is suing the police and three officers for N$2.8 million over an alleged assault while in custody. Police officers deny assaulting //Areseb or witnessing any assault, claiming only reasonable force was used after he became aggressive following questioning about a reported domestic violence incident.
Four witnesses have filed statements in the High Court contradicting the Namibian Police's version of events in a N$2.8 million assault lawsuit filed by former Spitzkoppe tour guide Melvin //Areseb against the police and three officers over an alleged assault during his arrest on 22 August 2025. Police officers deny assaulting //Areseb or witnessing assault by colleagues, while the officers claim only reasonable force was used after the plaintiff became aggressive during questioning about a domestic violence incident.
The Labour Court has referred a dispute between state-owned Namcor Petroleum Trading and Distribution and its former managing director Imms Mulunga back to arbitration, after ruling that an arbitrator wrongly dismissed the case in June. Mulunga was dismissed in August 2024 after being found not guilty in a disciplinary hearing, and Namcor subsequently referred claims against him for breach of contract and financial losses to the Labour Commissioner in October 2024.
The High Court has placed Linden Beef Close Corporation under final liquidation after the company failed to appear at a winding-up hearing. The company owes Bank Windhoek approximately N$28.4 million in debts from loan and credit facility agreements entered into between 2022 and 2024.
Eighteen inmates at Windhoek Correctional Facility have sued the head of educational services after their daily study hours were reduced from six to two, arguing the decision violates the Correctional Service Act's rehabilitation objectives and was made without proper written directive or consultation.
Memos from the Office of the Judiciary and Ministry of Justice confirm severe budget shortages: the legal aid travel budget is depleted and legal aid counsel must seek to postpone out-of-station hearings; magistrates are barred from travelling outside duty stations for cases between 15 March and 15 April. Chief Justice Peter Shivute warned that underfunding and staff shortages threaten judicial capacity, with civil judges' workload rising 60% despite fewer cases being filed.
The High Court's civil bench saw case load surge from an average of 384 cases per judge in 2024 to 614 in 2025, prompting judge Beatrix de Jager to declare publicly that she would not sacrifice her health for an impossible workload. The Namibian editorial argues that government prioritizes resource allocation to natural resource distribution and military recruitment over supporting the judiciary, risking constitutional democracy.
An opinion piece by legal practitioner Advocate Richard Metcalfe argues that centralising all High Court cases in Windhoek creates an unsustainable caseload for judges and calls for opening High Court divisions in Swakopmund, Walvis Bay, Keetmanshoop and Rundu. Metcalfe also flags delays in implementing a new Magistrates' Courts Act, governance issues in the Magistrates' Commission, and security threats to judicial officers as symptoms of a broader crisis in the judiciary.
Judge Beatrix de Jager postponed delivering a judgement to protect her health, citing an unsustainable workload and workforce shortage that she described as "inhuman." Chief Justice Peter Shivute confirmed that judges are under immense pressure, with civil judges managing an average of 614 cases each in 2025, and called for urgent judicial appointments and support.
Dâuredaman Chief Zacharias Seibeb has filed a review application at the High Court challenging his removal by President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah in November under the Traditional Authorities Act. Seibeb claims he remains the duly recognised chief and seeks to be re-gazetted, with the court ordering both parties to submit documents and affidavits by specified dates in coming months.