Land |
The land reform
ministry's regional head in the //Karas region, Albertus Engelbrecht,
says shortages of transport and limited financial resources hamper
service delivery.
He said the
regional office has already depleted its operational budget of N$70 000
for the 2017/2018 financial year, of which the bulk was spent on vehicle
maintenance.
Engelbrecht stated
that the office, which is manned by 12 staff members, has only two
official vehicles. Officials are thus currently unable to travel to
resettlement farms in the region.
Furthermore, he
revealed that the budget of N$50 000 for subsistence and travel
allowance had been depleted, as well as the budget of N$40 000 that had
been earmarked for holding regional resettlement committee and land
board meetings.
The office spends on average N$6 000 to hold a meeting, and the region is required to meet six times annually.
"We don't want to
complain, but we are saying we need sufficient resources if we want to
successfully devolve to the //Karas Regional Council under the
decentralisation programme," he remarked.
The regional head
added that government did not acquire resettlement farms in the region
during the current financial year, although some commercial farmers had
offered to sell their farms.
"Of the 16 farms
government had acquired during the previous financial year, 10 were
bought in the //Karas region. Therefore, government has now perhaps
decided to focus on buying farms in other regions," he added.
The government has since the inception of the land distribution process bought 89 farms in the region to date.
Engelbrecht also
highlighted the invasion and illegal sub-leasing of state-owned farms,
unfilled positions of key staff, and the lack of human capacity-building
as some of the challenges the region faces.
"Although farm
invasions in the region are few, it is of great concern, and we are
working on a strategy on how to deal with it," he stated.
The Namibian reported that two farms in the region had been illegally invaded over the past two years by communal farmers.
They claimed they
had invaded the farms out of frustration at being landless after
submitting numerous applications for resettlement without success.
In both cases, the
land reform ministry has applied to the High Court for an eviction order
to have the illegal farm occupants, who on their part had filled
notices to defend them, removed.
The regional head
highlighted awareness sessions conducted in all traditional authority
areas, the performance management system implementation and the SATCo
dispute hearing and arbitration, which had cost taxpayers N$4 875, as
some of the achievements.
Engelbrecht then
recommended to the regional leadership to revive the constituency
development regional committee to enhance coordination and development
in the region, establish a geographic information system for improved
spatial planning, increase revenue-generation and/or collection for
//Karas, and assist in the signing of lease agreements by the //Karas
Regional Council.
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