Namibia gives e-hailing drivers 56 days to get permits or face impound

Namibia's rogue e-hailing apps just got a final 56-day lifeline before vehicles start getting towed.

Compliance ultimatum
  • Unregistered operators face impoundment after the September thirty deadline extension.
  • Yango InDrive Lefa drivers get twenty-eight days to secure permits, plus twenty-eight days for verification.
  • Transport Minister Veikko Nekundi stressed that public passenger permits and vehicle tests are required.
  • A meeting happened yesterday in Windhoek with Info Minister Emma Theofelus.
Permit progress snapshot
  • Roughly four hundred drivers grabbed permits by late twenty twenty-five.
  • Yango Namibia reports two ninety-three full approvals and three conditional.
  • The company backed nine hundred ninety-four applications total, with eight hundred eighty submitted.
  • One hundred fourteen wait on police clearance renewals.
Operator pushback points
  • Drivers complain that permit delays kill their daily income stream.
  • E-hailing firms demand faster processing and updated transport laws.
  • Platforms like Yango push proactive help for driver compliance.
  • Nekundi preps new public transport bill to crush illegal ops.
Government firm stance
  • Ministers insist all passenger transport follows strict legal rules.
  • Theofelus praises e-hailing benefits but demands full adherence.
  • Nekundi warns non-compliance will trigger harsh austerity steps soon.
  • Yango urges every driver to apply immediately for permits.
 

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