Section A (Answer all the questions)
Question 1
Read the following case study and answer all the following questions.
(38 marks)
A LABOUR arbitrator's order's [reinstatement] for the dismissed CEO of the Namibia
Students Financial Assistance Fund (NSFAF).
Judge Herman Oosthuizen upheld an appeal by the fund against labour arbitrator Memory
Sinfwa's order for Nghiwete's reinstatement as NSFAF chief executive in a judgement
delivered on Friday. However, Oosthuizen found that Nghiwete's dismissal as chief executive
officer of the fund in February 2020, before the conclusion of a disciplinary hearing in which
she was charged, was unfair and without a valid reason. Oosthuizen ordered that the fund
must pay Nghiwete the monthly salary she would have received from the time of her dismissal
until mid-July 2021, which was when Sinfwa's arbitration ruling was made.
Nghiwete was suspended on full pay in April 2018 and continued to receive a salary package
of about N$185 000 a month for nearly two years until she was dismissed. On Sinfwa's order
for Nghiwete's reinstatement, Oosthuizen found that the employment relationship and trust
between the fund and Nghiwete had broken down. He noted that Nghiwete had made it clear
she did not trust the fund's board, while senior employees of the fund testified during the
arbitration hearing that they had problems with Nghiwete's management style, did not trust
her and that her reinstatement would not be in the best interest of the fund.
The employment relationship between the fund and Nghiwete has been non-existent since
April 2018, when she was suspended as chief executive, Oosthuizen stated. He added that
given the nature of the soured relationship between Nghiwete and the NSFAF,the arbitrator's
order for her reinstatement was not reasonable. Following her suspension, Nghiwete was
charged in a disciplinary hearing which, after several postponements, was scheduled to take
place in early January 2020. She faced charges ranging from maladministration and conflict of
interest to insubordination and financial mismanagement.
However, the hearing scheduled in January 2020 was postponed again after a psychologist
booked Nghiwete off for three months in December 2019. After her disciplinary hearing did
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