Saturday 26 December 2015

Syndicate of organized crime, operating in the Namibian Police Force?

Chris Jacobie

Thursday, September 24, 2015 - 08:15
NAMIBIA is a great country. In comparison with a globe in turmoil and leadership under siege by citizens battling them at all fronts, the Namibian nation is blessed.
It is therefore extremely difficult for any Namibian to cast doubt on the commitment or integrity of its police force.
However, when the rank and file are being caught red-handed for various crimes, ranging from stock theft, fraud, rape, murder and drug-dealing the long arm of the law is amputated, because the communities they are supposed to serve are running the risk of being robbed and raped instead.
Lawless police and criminal actions by members of the force have reached the point where it will be a crime of complicity to keep quiet.
The crimes that are committed by police officers must raise the suspicion that a syndicate of organized crime is operating in the force. The road to hell is paved with good intentions and it is undeniable that the vast majority of the common members of law enforcement are true to the call of duty.
Unfortunately, policing is not like a democracy where the good intentions of the majority will prevail, but rather like a crate of apples where the bad one spoils the rest.
Insomuch as the role of city police, traffic police, security companies, reservists and community and neighbourhood watches should be appreciated, the sheer scale of policing outside the national police force must seriously be questioned.
Any additional proof needed to convince the government and political leadership that there is a crisis of trust in the national police will rather be a confirmation of a catastrophic failure of police duty.
There are statistics on police incompetence that are so tragic that it is difficult to comprehend and should be impossible to explain. The Inspector-General of Police, Lt-Genl Sebastian Ndeitunga, is arguably one of the most loyal commanders any police officer can wish for, but is seems to also be his weakest point.
The rank and file have no problem abusing his loyalty to their own criminal advantage and will continue doing so as they calculated that the risk of being caught by a fellow officer is well worth taking.
Some of the most shocking facts are:
More than 2 000 members of the Namibian police force are under investigation by the internal discipline unit and others are suspended or waiting trial for crimes like murder and armed robbery, while dozens are not yet caught.
Even the suspension of police members has reach criminal proportions with the Minister of Safety and Security, Genl Charles Namoloh, hinting that corrupt police file cases against colleagues to block their promotion, because nobody can be considered who is investigated.
A city police officer who appeared as a murder suspect but was free on bail, is now in custody with his lover, also a member of the force, for a second murder after being accused that they murdered the officer’s wife.
A police chaplain was caught near Hochfeld by the neighbourhood watch on poaching charges and the past weekend two police officers were caught, also by a neighbourhood watch, stealing sheep.
Police and law enforcement officers involved in stock theft and illegal hunting can hardly be any worse.
In an astonishing display of corruption, an Angolese man was found guilty of dealing in drugs after he was arrested with cocaine worth N$2,6 million and cash to the amount of N$21 600, which disappeared while in police custody. It now means that 2,6kg of a drug that is sold in grammes is back on the streets, but this time through corrupt police officers who stole the evidence, because of its value in the drug market.
The facts of the case must sent a shiver down the spine of every reasonable Namibian. The facts are: Police caught a drug dealer and then robbed him of his drugs, and knowing who the buyers and users are, could now deal in it.
In any circumstance that points to organised crime on the grandest scale.
There is no better protection for crime than having the drug lords in the police itself.
The proliferation of security companies with poorly-trained guards that are a danger to society and paid slave wages with no job security are on the rise and so are the crimes committed by them growing as they abuse their positions to commit or plan crimes with the knowledge of corrupt policemen and women.
When every second citizen does not feel more secure in spite of ever increasing private and governmental policing initiatives the nation is at war with itself.
For the force to be respected the police have to respect themselves first.
Unfortunately this appears not to be the case as they are the puppets of criminals who even issue orders from the holding cells to policemen and women who belong in custody with them.
Crime intelligence is needed and if it is not available it must be recruited.
Unlike Hollywood where the bad guys win, in Namibia it is time for the majority of the good citizens to win and the bad guys to lose

Africa's Billionaires, Meet the richest Africans

There are 29 African billionaires this year, the same number as in 2014. While 2 tycoons – South African mining magnate Desmond Sacco and Moroccan real estatemogul Anas Sefrioui fell off the billionaire rankings this year, Mohammed Dewji of Tanzania makes his debut on the list with a fortune estimated at $1.3 billion. At 39, Dewji is the youngest billionaire in Africa. Dewji’s company, METL Group manufactures textiles and consumer goods and has annual revenues of more than $1.4 billion. Nigerian-born Femi Otedola, 50, rejoins the list of African billionaires after a 5-year hiatus with a $1 billion fortune. He owns  a controlling stake in Forte Oil, a publicly-listed energy distribution company in Nigeria.Folorunsho Alakija of Nigeria and Isabel dos Santos of Angola are the only two female billionaires on the continent.
Meet the 29 Africans who are worth $1 billion or more:
Aliko Dangote, $15.7 billion
Nigerian, Cement, Flour, Sugar
Falling stock prices and a recent valuation of the Naira might have dented his fortune, causing him to lose roughly $10 billion since last year, but Aliko Dangote is still the richest man in Africa. His Dangote Group is West Africa’s largest industrial conglomerate and has interests in cement production, flour milling, sugar refining and food and beverages.


Johann Rupert & Family, $7.4 billion
South African, Luxury Goods
Rupert is the chairman of publicly-listed Swiss-based luxury goods outfit Compagnie Financiere Richemont , which owns brands including Cartier , Van Cleef & Arpels, Jaeger-LeCoultre and Montblanc. He also owns stakes in investment holding companies Remgro and Reinet. He also owns two of South Africa’s best-known vineyards, Rupert & Rothschild and L’Ormarins as well as the Franschhoek Motor Museum which houses his personal collection of over 200 antique vehicles.
South African, Diamonds
Oppenheimer cashed out of the diamond business in July 2012 when he disposed of his family’s 40% stake in his family’s diamond business, De Beers to Anglo American for $5.1 billion in an all-cash deal that marked the end of the Oppenheimer family’s multi-decade control of the diamond company. His E. Oppenheimer & Son entity controls investment arms Stockdale Street Capital and Tana Africa Capital, a joint venture with Singapore government-owned investment firm Temasek. Tana holds minority interests in African food manufacturers Promasidor and Regina Co.
Christoffel Wiese, $6.3 billion
South African, Retail
Wiese, a South African retail mogul, owns a 15% stake in Shoprite Holdings, a chain of low-price supermarkets with a presence across multiple African countries. He also owns a large stake in Pepkor, a private company that owns seven different discount fashion brands.  His other assets include Lanzerac Manor & Winery, a five-star hotel and a significant shareholding in Brait, a private equity firm.
Nassef Sawiris, $6.3 billion
Egyptian, Construction
Sawiris, Egypt’s richest man, is the CEO of Orascom Construction Industries (OCI), the country’s most valuable publicly-traded company. He plans to separate OCI’s construction unit from its chemicals and fertilizers business, and list the newly formed Orascom Construction in Egypt and the UAE in the first quarter of 2015. He also sealed a partnership last November with Abu Dhabi’s International Petroleum Investment Co. to develop a coal-based power plant in Egypt.
Mike Adenuga, $4 billion
Nigerian, Telecoms and Oil
The reclusive Nigerian billionaire is the founder of Globacom, Nigeria’s second largest mobile phone network which has about 27 million subscribers. He also owns Conoil Producing, an indigenous oil exploration company which holds the rights to some of Nigeria’s most lucrative oil fields. Notoriously private, Adenuga hardly grants Press interviews and travels around in with a retinue of bodyguards.
Mohamed Mansour, $4 billion
Egyptian, Diversified
Along with his two brothers, Yasseen and Youssef (also on FORBES’ billionaires list), Mohamed runs the Mansour Group which owns the world’s largest GM dealership.  The Mansour Group also owns the largest supermarket chain in Egypt, the country’s second largest real estate developer, Palm Hills, and the Philip Morris franchise in Egypt.
Nathan Kirsh, $3.9 billion
Swaziland. Real Estate
Nathan Kirsh, a Swazi national is the founder of Jetro Holdings, a cash and carry wholesaler of perishable and non-perishable food products, household goods, equipment, supplies and related goods for grocery retailers. Kirsch made his first fortune in Swaziland several decades ago when he founded a corn milling business in 1958. He subsequently expanded into wholesale food distribution in apartheid South Africa and commercial property development.
Isabel Dos Santos, $3.1 billion
Angolan, Investments
The oldest daughter of Angola’s president owns substantial stakes in a number of blue-chip Angolan and Portuguese companies such as Angolan mobile phone company Unitel , Angolan bank Banco BIC SA, Portuguese media giant ZON Optimus and Banco BPI. She is believed to hold many of these assets in trust for her father.
Issad Rebrab, $3.1 billion
Algerian, Diversified
Algeria’s richest man owns a controlling stake in Cevital, Algeria’s biggest family-owned conglomerate. Cevital owns one of the largest sugar refineries in the world with an annual output of 1.5 million tons. The group also has interests in sugar refining, port terminals, auto distribution, mining and agriculture.
Naguib Sawiris, $3.1 billion
Egyptian, Telecoms
Naguib Sawiris is the CEO of Orascom Telecom Media and Technology (OTMT). The company owns a 75% stake in Koryolink, North Korea’s only cell network. He is looking to acquire a 53% stake in French media company Euronews Television.
Youssef Mansour, $2.9 billion
Egyptian, Diversified
Youssef Mansour is a part owner of Mansour Group which owns Caterpillar dealerships in 8 African countries and General Motors dealerships in Egypt and Iraq, as well as supermarkets, McDonald’s and Philip Morris distribution.  He maintains a lower profile than his billionaire brothers Mohamed and Yasseen.
Koos Bekker, $2.3 billion
South African, Media
Koos Bekker who has run Cape Town-based media conglomerate Naspers since 1997 will be stepping down as CEO in April this year, and will be taking a year off to travel the world and explore new business opportunities for the company. He is expected to take over as chairman of the company from next year. Over a 17 year period, Bekker transformed the storied publisher into a new media powerhouse, with investments in China (Tencent), Russia (Mail.ru), Brazil (Abril) and other countries in Eastern Europe, Latin America and Africa. Refusing to take a salary, Bekker has traditionally been compensated via stock option grants that vest over time.
Othman Benjelloun, $2.3 billion
Moroccan, Banking
Othman Benjelloun is the CEO of BMCE Bank, one of the largest commercial banks in Morocco, with operations in at least 15 African countries. He is also the chairman of holding company FinanceCom which has interests in banking, insurance, and telecom in Morocco.
Yasseen Mansour, $2.3 billion
Egyptian, Diversified
Yasseen Mansour and his brothers Youssef and Mohammed run Mansour Group, a large Egyptian conglomerate which owns Caterpillar and General Motor dealerships, supermarkets, restaurant franchises, and Philip Morris distribution in Egypt.
Patrice Motsepe, $2.1 billion
South African, Mining
South Africa’s first and only black billionaire is the founder and chairman of publicly traded mining conglomerate, African Rainbow Minerals (ARM) which has interests in platinum, nickel, chrome, iron, manganese, coal, copper and gold. He also holds a stake in Sanlam, a publicly traded financial services company.
Stephen Saad, $2.1 billion
South African, Pharmaceuticals
Along with business partner Gus Attridge, Stephen Saadfounded Aspen Pharmacare in 1997. It is now the largest publicly-traded drug manufacturer on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Aspen is a supplier of branded and generic pharmaceuticals in more than 150 countries and of consumer and nutritional products in selected territories. The company has a market capitalization of $11 billion. Saad is the company’s largest shareholder.
Mohamed Al Fayed, $2 billion
Egyptian, Property
In 2010 Mohammed Al-Fayed sold his Harrod’s department store in London to Qatar Holding for a reported $2.4 billion and last July, he sold Fulham Football Club, which he acquired in 1997 to American billionaire Shahid Khan for a reported $300 million. He now owns the famed Hotel Ritz in Paris which he closed in August 2012 to start construction on what will be the hotel’s biggest redo since it was built in 1898 and also owns Cocosa, a U.K.-based discount fashion website.
Folorunsho Alakija, $1.9 billion
Nigerian, Oil
Nigeria’s first female billionaire built her fortune on oil. Nigeria’s former President Ibrahim Babangida awarded her company, Famfa Oil a lucrative oil prospecting license in 1996 – now OML 127, which is one of Nigeria’s most prolific oil blocks and produces as much as 200,000 barrels of oil per day on good days. Famfa Oil, which Alakija controls fully, owns a 60% stake in OML 127.
Onsi Sawiris, $1.8 billion
Egyptian, Diversified
Onsi Sawiris is the patriarch of Egypt’s wealthiest family, and founder of the eponymous Orascom conglomerate, which is involved in construction, telecoms and hotels. The companies are all run by his three sons- Naguib, Samih and Nassef, all billionaires.
Aziz Akhannouch, $1.7 billion
Moroccan, Diversified
Aziz Akhannouch is the largest shareholder in Akwa Group, a multi-billion dollar Moroccan conglomerate with interests in petroleum, gas and chemicals through publicly-traded Afriquia Gas and Maghreb Oxygene, as well as media, real estate development and hotels. His wife, Salwa Idrissi, runs a successful real estate development company in Morocco, and holds the Moroccan franchise for Gap, Zara, and Galeries Lafayette, among other fashion brands.
Allan Gray, $1.6 billion
South African, Investments
Moneyman Allan Gray founded Cape Town-based investment management firm, Allan Gray Limited in 1973, after earning his MBA from Harvard and spending eight years at Fidelity in the US. The company manages $34 billion, making it the largest privately owned asset manager in South Africa. He also owns Orbis Investment Management in Bermuda which manages $30 billion. Venerable philanthropist funds the Allan Gray Orbis Foundation which awards higher education grants to students in Southern Africa.
Miloud Chaabi, $1.3 billion
Moroccan, Diversified
Miloud Chaabi got his start in 1948 developing housing, then expanded through his privately owned Ynna Holding into hotels, supermarkets and renewable energy.  Chaabi has committed to building a university in Casablanca in partnership with Indiana State University.

Mohammed Dewji
Mohammed Dewji, $1.3 billion
Tanzanian, Diversified
Mohammed Dewji turned a trading house founded by his father into industrial conglomerate MeTL Group. He acquired government-owned manufacturing plants in the textiles and edible oils industries on the cheap and transformed them into profitable businesses using lean management style. He owns 75% of the group.
Samih Sawiris, $1.1 billion
Egyptian, Property Development
Samih Sawiris is the youngest son of Egyptian construction magnate Onsi Sawiris. His company, Orascom Development develops integrated towns and operates resorts in Egypt. He also owns a minority stake in construction company, OCI N.V., which was founded by his father Onsi and is now run by his brother Nassef.
Sudhir Ruparelia, $1.1 billion
Ugandan, Property, Banking
East Africa’s richest man is the founder of the Ruparelia Group, Uganda’s largest conglomerate with interests in property, banking, education, insurance and agriculture. It owns a chain of hotels, hundreds of commercial and residential property in Kampala, a country club, a chain of forex bureaus, two Highbrow secondary schools and Crane Bank, one of the Uganda’s top 3 commercial banks.
Femi Otedola, $1 billion
Nigerian, Gas Stations
Nigeria’s Femi Otedola returns to Forbes’ list of billionaires for the first time since 2009 following a sharp rise in the share price of petroleum marketing company Forte Oil, despite the drop in oil prices in 2014. Otedola is the controlling shareholder of Forte Oil, with a 78% stake. The company owns gas stations and fuel storage depots and manufactures its own line of engine oils.
Abdulsamad Rabiu, $1 billion
Nigerian, Diversified
Rabiu, 55, is the founder of BUA Group, a Nigerian conglomerate with interests in sugar refining, cement production, real estate, steel, port concessions, manufacturing, oil gas and shipping.  Rabiu used to work for his father, legendary Kano-based businessman, Isyaku Rabiu, before striking out on his own in 1988, importing rice, sugar, edible oils as well as steel and iron rods.
Rostam Azizi, $1 billion
Tanzanian, Telecoms
Tanzania’s second richest man owes the bulk of his fortune to his 35% stake in Vodacom Tanzania, the country’s largest mobile phone company with more than 10 million subscribers. He also owns Caspian Mining, a contract mining company that provides mining services to giants like BHP Billiton and Barrick Gold. Caspian Mining also owns several mining concessions for gold, copper and Iron ore in Tanzania. Other assets include a stake in Dar es Salaam Port in which he is a partner with Hutchison Whampoa and extensive real estate in Tanzania, Dubai, Oman and Lebanon.