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Monday, 11 May 2026
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Monday, 11 May 2026
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Person

Henning Melber

Also known as: Melber · Political analyst Henning Melber

Political analyst who has criticized Namibian government appointments and fiscal policies, including commentary on deputy minister posts and the public wage bill.

2018-03-092026-05-11

In coverage

Verbatim sentences from the source article.

  1. September 2024
  2. April 2024
  3. June 2023
  4. May 2023
  5. This section is indeed a “treasure trove” of facts, as narrated by political scientist Henning Melber in the foreword.

    The Namibian

    Timely and engaging ‘Fishrot’
  6. April 2023
  7. He added: “Unfortunately, the Anti-Corruption Act is deficient in this regard, and such decisions are left to the whims of politicians.” Political analyst Henning Melber said the manner of Noa’s reappointment is likely to erode public trust.

    The Namibian

    Noa pleads not to be replaced
  8. September 2018
  9. • REINHART KÖSSLER and HENNING MELBERHuman remains kept by German institutions as part of their colonial loot were repatriated to Namibia at the end of August 2018 – the third time this has been done.

    The Namibian

    Genocide Remains: Germany Still Has Work To Do…
  10. March 2018
Opinion

Swapo's authoritarian populism rooted in liberation struggle mentality

The News

An opinion piece argues that Swapo, like other former liberation movements in government, has failed to deliver on promises and uses patriotic narratives of its struggle history to justify remaining in state control, drawing parallels to critiques of post-colonial African governments by Frantz Fanon and Angolan author Pepetela.

Why it matters

Opinion analysis of Swapo's authoritarian populism rooted in liberation mentality examines governance patterns affecting national political trajectory.

26 April 2026 · The Namibian

Sunday 26 April

  1. Swapo's authoritarian populism rooted in liberation struggle mentality

    An opinion piece argues that Swapo, like other former liberation movements in government, has failed to deliver on promises and uses patriotic narratives of its struggle history to justify remaining in state control, drawing parallels to critiques of post-colonial African governments by Frantz Fanon and Angolan author Pepetela.

    26 April 2026 · The Namibian

Wednesday 8 April

  1. New deputy minister posts draw criticism over budget costs

    Political analysts have criticised president Nandi-Ndaitwah's appointment of seven deputy ministers, saying the move will cost the government nearly N$1.7 million annually and reverses earlier cost-saving pledges. Critics including analyst Henning Melber argue the appointments signal inadequate planning and a centralisation of power, while raising concerns about the appointees' ability to effectively balance parliamentary, executive, and regional council duties.

    8 April 2026 · The Namibian

Friday 20 March

  1. Namibia at 36: Liberation promises betrayed, inequality persists

    An analysis marking Namibia's 36 years of independence contrasts the jubilation of 1990 with present-day inequality and governance failures, arguing that the liberation movement's slogans of "Solidarity, Freedom, Justice" have been compromised by elite self-enrichment and a persistence of class-based oppression under continued Swapo rule.

    20 March 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 10 March

  1. Presidency denies Riruako State House visit recognition as paramount chief

    The Presidency clarified that Hoze Riruako's meeting with President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah should not be interpreted as recognition of him as paramount chief of the OvaHerero Traditional Authority, saying the matter remains before the courts and the executive cannot decide issues under judicial adjudication. The traditional authority has been disputed between Riruako's and Mutjinde Katjiua's factions.

    10 March 2026 · The Namibian

Friday 27 February

  1. State House reviews mansions granted to retired presidents

    President Nandi-Ndaitwah is reportedly pushing to end the practice of allocating state-funded mansions to former presidents, preferring instead to accept a portion of benefits for her own retirement home. The review of the Former Presidents' Pension and Other Benefits Act will also examine extending benefits to vice presidents, amid criticism that such perks are excessive given widespread hardship among ordinary Namibians.

    27 February 2026 · The Namibian

Monday 23 February

  1. Government wage bill risks crowding out development spending

    Opposition shadow minister Michael Mwashindange warns that the government's growing wage bill—now covering 119,000 civil servants—crowds out development and infrastructure spending while increasing borrowing pressure. Political analyst Henning Melber suggests the government faces a strategic dilemma between downsizing the public service and risking electoral support, and should instead focus on attracting private-sector investment.

    23 February 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 17 February

  1. President calls for African sovereignty, climate action at AU summit

    At Ethiopia's 39th African Union Summit, President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah advocated for Africa to remain a sovereign partner rather than a battleground for competing global interests, and called for continental investment in water infrastructure and climate solutions. She reported that Namibia's youth unemployment programme has disbursed N$62.3 million to 140 projects creating about 722 jobs, though analysts cautioned that strong speeches must be accompanied by measurable policy implementation results.

    17 February 2026 · The Namibian

Sunday 15 February

  1. Germany backtracks on colonial accountability as new government sidelines Namibia

    Germany's commitment to reckon with its colonial past in Namibia has weakened significantly under the new CDU/CSU-SPD government, which mentions colonialism only briefly in its coalition agreement and makes no reference to Namibia. A newly appointed state secretary for culture dismisses adding colonialism to official memory culture as "dangerous relativism," citing the Holocaust as the singular reference point for German state ethics.

    15 February 2026 · The Namibian

Wednesday 28 January

  1. Namibia faces choice between multilateralism and unilateral alignments

    An opinion piece argues that Namibia must openly debate and declare its foreign policy position amid global tensions, cautioning that the country's current alignment with Russia and China—despite rhetoric of non-alignment—could jeopardize trade benefits and put it at odds with multilateral principles that facilitated its independence. The author contrasts Namibia's closed policy discussions with South Africa's public commitment to strengthening the UN-based multilateral order.

    28 January 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 20 January

  1. Political analysts question value of new Swapo think tank

    Political analysts say the government is overloaded with overlapping committees and advisers that duplicate work and delay service delivery. Critics argue the new Swapo think tank, comprising 37 appointed members, lacks independence and will produce little meaningful output, while a defending analyst says such bodies can help the party and government reassess decisions and plans.

    20 January 2026 · The Namibian

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