Balloti commits to ending makeshift school structures
NKURENKURU, 16 May 2025 - Deputy Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport, Arts and Culture, Dino Balloti, visited Nkurenkuru Combined School in the Kavango West region during his regional visit on Friday.
(photo: Lylie Joel)
NAMPA
NKURENKURU, 17 MAY (NAMPA) - Deputy Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Arts, and Culture, Dino Balloti, has reaffirmed the government’s commitment to ensuring that no child in Namibia attends school in makeshift structures.
Speaking at a regional briefing with the Directorate of Education Management in the Kavango West Region on Friday, Balloti highlighted the ministry's dedication to improving education and acknowledged the region’s resilience despite ongoing challenges.
“The commitment for the region is that we will not have learners going to schools in makeshift infrastructure. We will fix that, that I can tell you today. There’s no way, with a 24 billion budget, we will not be able to find 10 million to fix that solution,” Balloti stressed.
He noted that the education sector faces numerous challenges, many of which stem from the lack of prioritisation and balanced resource allocation.
“I'm just sharing the realities. How can we be painting a school in Windhoek while we have schools that are breaking down? These are the realities we face in schools, but we don't even talk about the dilapidated schools. Some schools are not even safe, and that's where our friends from the media will hold the government accountable. It's a question of balancing the resources. That's the challenge we face. This is not the Republic of Commerce – I say that everywhere I go, it's the Republic of Namibia,” said Balloti.
He further said that with the budget allocations within the Mid-Term Expenditure Framework, there is a pressing need for greater accountability.
“We can't allow months and years to pass once the budget has been availed. I am particularly concerned about schools lacking ablution facilities and access to water – these are real challenges. I believe we need to be more resourceful. Just because the budget is available does not mean we can be complacent,” he said.
“You can hold me accountable. Even if we don't build a football stadium, we will make sure that children are not going to school in makeshift infrastructures. It’s not acceptable that Bravo School, specifically serving a marginalised community, has been in a makeshift structure for six or seven years, it’s simply not good enough,” Balloti emphasised.
Balloti also expressed appreciation for private sector partners and government agencies that have chosen to invest in classroom construction and administrative infrastructure.
“I shall commend them and appreciate them. But the fact that the government built 50 classrooms in this region last year and yet did not prioritise 20 classrooms – which is all that was needed to resolve the makeshift situation – is not acceptable. I don’t know who is responsible, but we must all take responsibility. We cannot accept that in 2025, there are still learners going to school in makeshift infrastructure,” he urged.
Balloti further pledged a renewed seriousness in improving education, youth development, sport, and innovation.
“Just because resources are constrained doesn’t mean we cannot compete. Twenty-nine schools without proper structures are too many – and that is not going to continue,” he said.
(NAMPA)
JLN/HP
NKURENKURU, 16 May 2025- Deputy Minister of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sport, Arts and Culture, Dino Balloti, engaging the directorate of education's management at Nkurenkuru in the Kavango West region on Friday.
(photo: Lylie Joel)
NAMPA