Otjiwarongo Municipality owes staff N$30 million in back pay

A court already sided with the workers, yet Otjiwarongo Municipality is still sitting on over N$30 million in unpaid salary adjustments from a 2014 directive.

The original 2014 salary directive
  • A ministry letter told six municipalities to bump C4 salaries by N$7,475.
  • C4 was the lowest pay grade, sitting below the minimum entry level.
  • Only one technical-engineer role in the D band qualified for an upgrade.
  • No blanket promotion of D1 and D2 employees to D3 was authorized.
How management allegedly botched it
  • D1 and D2 bands got abolished and rolled into D3 instead.
  • C4 workers only saw roughly N$2,000 in adjustments.
  • Sem Tuaanda says he didn't even hear about the directive until 2017.
  • Shop stewards were never looped in to spread the word.
Court victory that means nothing yet
  • Workers dragged the municipality to the Labour Court in 2021.
  • Last year's ruling ordered full implementation and back pay.
  • Tuaanda, now retired, says his N$1.7 million remains unpaid.
  • Another anonymous employee claims the municipality owes them N$1.4 million.
Management's response and current stalemate
  • CEO Mberipura Hifitikeko called the employees unnecessary last Thursday.
  • Hifitikeko acknowledged the court award but cited an ongoing case.
  • Workers allege the previous CEO actively blocked C4 raises.
  • Ministry officials reportedly told staff to handle it internally.
 

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