News Release Ver. 2-NISO_17042020


News Release Ver. 2-NISO_17042020



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Namibian Informal Sector Organisation
P.O.BOX 26582
WINDHOEK
Email:jvkandenge@yahoo.com
Cell: 0811299662
Tell: 061214800
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
16 April, 2020
Contact: J.V. Kandenge (Mr)
Secretary-General
Precautionary measures during COVID-19 lockdown in Namibia
The Namibia Informal Sector Organisation (NISO) has been working with the informal economy in
Namibia as its constituency since Independence, and has decades of experience advocating for the
informal economy in the country. By informal economy, we refer to the hawkers, informal traders,
market traders, home-based businesses, subsistence farmers, and many other sectors earning a
living outside of ‘formal’ employment; which according the Namibia Statistics Agency, represent
almost half of those who are employed in the country today.
In these challenging times, when the whole world is affected by a new and deadly virus which has
wreaked havoc on even the most developed and well-resourced countries, we stand ready to work
collaboratively with the Government of the Republic of Namibia, municipalities, businesses, health
professionals and regulators, other civil society actors, and all Namibians in keeping the highest
levels of hygiene and safe practices, including social distancing. We are committed to ensuring that
our members are responsible, and considerate towards the health and well-being of themselves and
the public that they serve. Our confidence in our constituency’s respect for the law and awareness of
the need for good order in these trying times convinces us of the need to proactively engage with our
government and the other sectors of society to protect business owners, their families, clients, and the
Namibian public at large from the deadly coronavirus pandemic.
Many people living in lower income areas purchase their traditional food and goods from local outlets,
such as cuca shops, street traders, and home-based businesses. These have been disrupted in this
lockdown period, denying low-income residents cost-effective food sources which suit their family
budgets, and at the same time denying income to the informal traders. These economic activities will
be severely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and the national economic slowdown that is
expected
In this light, traders need to be engaged and assisted to comply with sanitary precautions to avoid
COVID-19 spread. Through the networks of the Namibia Informal Sector Organization (NISO) and in
coordination with the National Alliance for Informal Settlement Upgrading and other key stakeholders
in government, we are proposing a “training of trainers” strategy consisting of the following objectives:
All official correspondence should be addressed to the Secretary General
Address: ERF 589 Cleopadra Street, Dorado Park, Windhoek
Directors: Mr. Elias Jeja (Chairperson), Mr. Josef V. Kandenge (Secretary General),
Mr. Sam Haukongo, Ms. Fransiska Tjatindi, Mrs. Gerhardine Katupose, Mr. Michael
Heita, Ms. Paulina Nuule and Ms Maria Johannes

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1.
To disseminate credible/official information about COVID-19 prevention and the
implications for street/informal trade.
(more...)
2.
To train informal economy traders in preventive sanitary measures and to clearly identify
those who have undergone training for coordination with authorities.
3.
To distribute sanitary material (masks, sanitizers, etc.) to protect traders and customers
during lockdown.
This will be implemented through capacitating a network of volunteer trainers across all regions, in
collaboration with local authorities, to identify training venues such as municipal markets and trading
corridors that meet the required COVID - 19 requirements and precaution standards. Our proposal is
to have the volunteer trainers trained by health professionals from the Ministry of Health, health
inspectors from the municipalities, and other professionals who are involved in health and wellness.
The informal economy committees will be trained and will continue mobilizing communities and
supplying them with sanitary material for themselves and trainees. A network of trader leaders will be
formed, through which sanitary material and printed information about COVID-19 prevention can be
distributed in the weeks following the training.
We wish to demonstrate through this proposed strategy, which we have already submitted to the
Ministry of Trade and Industrialisation, the Ministry of Health and Social Services, other government
agencies, as well as various partners and stakeholders, that informal economy traders are aware of
the circumstances we face as a society, and are serious about playing a constructive and responsible
role in keeping Namibia safe, and minimising risks to the health and well-being of the public.
To this end, NISO is also proposing a code of conduct that will be simplified in bullet point form on a
one-page document, and publicly displayed at various trading points, and which must be adhered to.
The code should set strict preventative measures for the handling of goods or products. Preventive
sanitary measures include:
e ensuring that cleaning services increase sanitization operations more regularly, especially
after use of toilet facilities and infrastructure;
e operators of transportation services (taxis, buses, etc.), should be required to ensure personal
hygiene, and to clean vehicles at least twice a day or directly after use (especially cleaning of
door handles and interior sanitization);
e social distancing while queuing for services;
e prioritizing customers at higher risk (e.g. elders, pregnant women):
e reduce customers’ touching of merchandise;
e cleaning of surfaces, installation of ‘tippy taps’, etc.
We are in communication with other stakeholders, and we will continue to proactively work with and
receive advice from our partners and the authorities, as we strive to keep Namibians safe and work
for our mutual benefit.
In light of that commitment, we request the Government to assist informal businesses by allowing
them to resume their economic activities, within the requirements of optimal hygiene and the
regulated social distancing, so that those in the informal economy, and their dependants, are spared
the hardship that comes with loss of income during the lockdown currently being enforced. Our
commitment is to continue to sensitize our constituents to trade responsibly, and to co-operate with
All official correspondence should be addressed to the Secretary General
Address: ERF 589 Cleopadra Street, Dorado Park, Windhoek
Directors: Mr. Elias Jeja (Chairperson), Mr. Josef V. Kandenge (Secretary General),
Mr. Sam Haukongo, Ms. Fransiska Tjatindi, Mrs. Gerhardine Katupose, Mr. Michael
Heita, Ms. Paulina Nuule and Ms Maria Johannes

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the authorities in their legitimate efforts to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. We make a
public appeal for an amendment to point 4.9 of the ‘Guidelines and Regulations for 21-day Lockdown’,
which stipulate that:
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“All open markets, informal trading activities, shebeens, bars, pubs and nightclubs will not be
permitted to operate during the lockdown period.”
We give our assurance that we can and will develop strategies for open markets and informal trading
activities to continue operating, while complying with health measures to combat COVID-19. We look
forward to an empathetic response from the government and other stakeholders.
With regards
J.V. Kandenge (Mr)
Secretary-General
ENDS
All official correspondence should be addressed to the Secretary General
Address: ERF 589 Cleopadra Street, Dorado Park, Windhoek
Directors: Mr. Elias Jeja (Chairperson), Mr. Josef V. Kandenge (Secretary General),
Mr. Sam Haukongo, Ms. Fransiska Tjatindi, Mrs. Gerhardine Katupose, Mr. Michael
Heita, Ms. Paulina Nuule and Ms Maria Johannes