Use our pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Namibia: Corruption Case - No Receipt for N$32 000 in Cash


The Namibian (Windhoek)
 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

The Namibian (Windhoek)

3 July 2008
Posted to the web 3 July 2008

Werner Menges

Senior Ministry of Environment and Tourism official Sackey Namugongo had no receipt to issue when he received a cash payment of N$32 000 in his office for his "assistance" to a gambling house licence applicant, it was testified in Namugongo's corruption trial in the Windhoek Regional Court yesterday.

Namugongo failed to give gambling house licence applicant Fillimon Erastus a receipt for a payment of N$32 000 in cash that Erastus handed over to him in his office on April 10 2006 - but he did provide Erastus with his bank account number so that further payments could be deposited into his account, Erastus testified on the second day of Namugongo's trial.

Namugongo, a Deputy Director in the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, is on trial on 20 charges of corruption and 20 counts of fraud.

He also faces alternative charges of theft, forgery and uttering.

He has pleaded not guilty to all 40 main charges he faces in the trial before Magistrate Sarel Jacobs.

His lawyer, Titus Mbaeva, declined giving a plea explanation to the Magistrate yesterday, but told the court that Namugongo's defence would become clear as the trial proceeded.

Erastus is the fifth witness to testify.

All four witnesses who have testified - the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Veterans' Affairs, William Amagulu, who was previously the Deputy Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Sonia Angermund, who is a Chief Control Officer in the Gambling and Casinos Division of the Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Vataapi Kauuova, who is a Control Officer in the same division and retired Deputy Director Chris Jansen, who had been in control of gambling and casinos division - told the Magistrate that a moratorium on the issuing of gambling house licences was in force in 2006.

This meant that the Ministry was not accepting or processing any new applications for such licences.

The moratorium has been in force since the start of 1997, and it is still in place, the court was told.

Namugongo is accused of having accepted a series of payments from people who applied for gambling house licences during 2006.

Erastus testified that during March 2006 he landed in Namugongo's office when he went to the Ministry of Environment and Tourism to make an enquiry about applying for a gambling house licence.

Namugongo told him that he had to complete a form and had to return this to him together with the building plans for the premises where he intended to set up gambling houses, Erastus testified.

He said he returned to Namugongo's office on April 10 2006.

He had money, from the bars that he has at Swakopmund and Okahandja, with him, he said.

After checking over his applications, Namugongo "informed me that for the assistance rendered I should give him 32 000 Namibia dollars," Erastus told the Magistrate.

He said he agreed and told Namugongo that he would be able to get the money.

Namugongo told him in return that since he was applying for three licences, the full amount to be paid for those licences would be between N$40 000 and N$60 000, Erastus said.

He told the court that after he had told Namugongo that he would be able to pay him the required amount, Namugongo asked him if he would be paying in cash or by cheque.

He told Namugongo that he would be paying with cash.

Namugongo then printed out a form that he was supposed to take along, and told him that he had to pay the rest of the money into Namugongo's bank account, Erastus said.

He said Namugongo also gave him his bank account number, as well as his business card, and told him that if there were any other business people that needed his assistance, he should give Namugongo's phone number to them.

Erastus said he handed Namugongo N$32 000 in cash on that day in his office.

"I handed the money over to him, into his hands," he said.

"He informed me that there was no receipt for the assistance that he rendered.

Relevant Links

He gave me the form, and also his business card," Erastus said.

Page 1 of 212


AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | Subscribe

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.

HOME
allAfrica.com


Relevant Links




'Sugar Daddies' And School Girls
Trevor Dongo Criticises Rights Association
Why Corruption is the Root Cause of Poverty
KRA to Help Musicians Fight Piracy
Irate Youths Attack Boat, Kill Lawmaker, Governor's Aides





Today's Most Active Stories