Namibia: Judgement On Withdrawal of UPM Parliamentarians in April

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Namibia: Judgement On Withdrawal of UPM Parliamentarians in April


Two former members of parliament of the United People’s Movement (UPM) will hear in three weeks’ time if they have succeeded with legal action to have their withdrawal from the National Assembly by the Popular Democratic Movement (PDM) declared unconstitutional and invalid.

Judge Boas Usiku postponed the delivery of his judgement on an urgent application that the UPM and two former parliamentarians of the party, Jan van Wyk and Frans Bertolini, filed against the PDM, following their withdrawal from the National Assembly to 19 April, after hearing oral arguments on the matter in the Windhoek High Court on Wednesday.

The UPM, Van Wyk and Bertolini are asking the court to declare the PDM’s decision to withdraw Van Wyk and Bertolini from the National Assembly on 5 March as unconstitutional and invalid.

They are also asking the court to declare the swearing-in of PDM members Loide Iipinge and Katrina Benz as members of the National Assembly is invalid and to set it aside, and to direct that Van Wyk and Bertolini should again be sworn in as members of the assembly.

Van Wyk and Bertolini became members of the National Assembly through the PDM’s list of candidates in terms of a cooperation agreement the UPM and PDM concluded before the national elections in 2019.

In a sworn statement filed at the court, PDM secretary general Manuel Ngaringombe says his party decided to remove Van Wyk and Bertolini from the National Assembly after the UPM formed an alliance with another organisation, National Empowerment Fighting Corruption (NEFC), around December last year, and after the UPM and NEFC announced near the end of February this year that they endorse the candidacy of Ally Angula in Namibia’s presidential election that is set to take place near the end of November this year.