A/HRC/24/41/Add.1
56.
The Special Rapporteur also received information about the lack of participation of
indigenous groups in decisions related to natural resource extraction, a mainstay of the
Namibian economy. Decisions regarding extraction and development of natural resources
are largely managed from Windhoek, with few benefits going to communities affected by
these activities. Nama people informed the Special Rapporteur of inadequate participation
in planning and development of mineral extraction, especially diamonds, in the areas where
they live. Similarly, Himba of the Kunene Region noted that neither their communities nor
traditional leaders were informed about mining activities being carried out in their
traditional territories and grazing lands. Further, there is also strong opposition by Himba,
Ovazemba, Ovatue, and Ovatjimba peoples to the proposed construction of the Baynes
hydroelectric power project. The proposed dam would be constructed on the Kunene River
in an area that these various groups, and the Himba in particular, regard as their traditional
territory and that is connected to their livelihoods and to cultural practices associated with
ancestral graves.
C.
Education
57.
In 1990, the Government of Namibia inherited a national educational system defined
by apartheid policies, under which generations of black indigenous Namibians received an
education far inferior to that of the white minority. The effects of these discriminatory
educational policies continue to the present day, and disparities in learning outcomes persist
between blacks and whites. However, children in marginalized indigenous groups, in
particular the San and Himba, continue to face the greatest challenges with respect to access
to education and achievement levels.
58.
Since independence, a constitutional and policy framework has been put in place to
make education accessible to all Namibians. The 1990 Constitution requires that primary
education shall be compulsory and free (art. 20, para. 2). Significantly, within the first years
of independence, the then Ministry of Education, Culture, Youth and Sport developed the
Language Policy for Schools, which calls for the use of the mother tongue as the language
of instruction during the first three years of formal education, with a transition to English
thereafter.13 Further, the education sector receives the largest portion of the national budget.
59.
The Government also has specific policies and programmes in place to address the
educational challenges of what are considered vulnerable groups within Namibia. The
National Policy Options for Educationally Marginalised Children of 2000 recognized San
and Himba children as “educationally marginalized”, meaning that they experience
difficulties in gaining access to basic education, drop out of school prematurely, or are
“pushed out from the formal education system by the system itself”.14 In the National
Policy Options document, the Government proposes the use of “special efforts” to facilitate
greater access by marginalized groups to the education system and greater retention of such
groups in the system.15 It also provides several options for combating poverty and
discriminatory attitudes towards marginalized children.16
60.
For its part, the Division of San Development supports the development of early
childhood centres, as well as literacy programmes for San pensioners, and provides
scholarships for schools having a significant number of San learners, to offset costs. In
13
14
15
16
Namibia, The Language Policy for Schools: 1992–1996 and Beyond, p. 4; see also Namibia, The
Language Policy for Schools in Namibia, Discussion Document (2003), para. 2.4.
Namibia, National Policy Options for Educationally Marginalised Children, pp. 2-3.
Ibid., pp. 1 and 25.
Ibid., pp. 25-30.
15