Dirk Mudge
Dirk Frederik Mudge (born 16 January 1928) is a Namibian retired farmer and politician. He served in several high-ranking positions in the South African administration of occupied South-West Africa, was the chairman of the 1975–1977 Turnhalle Constitutional Conference, and co-founded the Republican Party as well as the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance.
At Namibian independence Mudge was a member of the Constituent Assembly and 1st National Assembly until he retired in 1993. Mudge is the founder of Namibia's Afrikaans daily Die Republikein and its publisher Namibia Media Holdings. He served on the board of directors until 2008.
Early life and education
Dirk Mudge, a White Namibian, was born on the farm Rusthof near Otjiwarongo. He is a farmer by profession.[1] In 1947 he graduated from Stellenbosch University with a Bachelor of Commerce, whereupon he worked as an accountant in Windhoek. Between 1951 and 1960 he farmed with cattle.[2]
Political career
Until the 1975–77 Turnhalle conference
In 1955 Mudge became a member of the National Party (NP), an apartheid-promoting institution that led South Africa between 1948 and 1994. He joined the Legislative Assembly in 1961 as one of seven members elected to represent South-West Africa's White citizens in the Parliament of South Africa. In 1965 Mudge became a member of the Executive Committee for South West Africa and thus a high-ranking administrator of the occupied territory. He held this position until 1977.[2]
When AH du Plessis, the leader of the South-West African branch of the National Party, was appointed Minister in 1969, Mudge acted in his position as leader of the NP. At that time he began to disagree with NP's views on the future of South-West Africa. He forged a friendship with Herero Chief Clemens Kapuuo, discussed plans for a self-governed South-West Africa with then-Prime Minister John Vorster, and became one of the driving forces behind the 1975–77 Turnhalle Constitutional Conference.[2]
The Turnhalle Conference was an attempt to win over a broad spectrum of the indigenous population by means of small reforms and compromises, and thus make them cease their support for the armed resistance waged by SWAPO at that time.[3] Its aim was also to cement the separation of the South-West African ethnicities by making the future state of Namibia, a constitution of which was drafted at the Turnhalle conference, a confederation of bantustans.[4] Mudge served as chairman. As a result of the conference, many of the participating delegates agreed to aggregate their small, ethnically defined parties into one bigger body that was able to form a counterbalance to SWAPO.[5] Mudge founded the Republican Party (RP) shortly before the Turnhalle proceedings finished. The RP joined when on 5 November 1977 the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance (DTA) was founded with Clemens Kapuuo as first president and Dirk Mudge as chairman.[6]
At that time Mudge founded Die Republikein, until today the only Afrikaans daily, as mouthpiece of the RP. He also established Democratic Media Holdings (today Namibia Media Holdings), the publishing agency of the newspaper.[6][7]
In interim governments of South-West Africa
The subsequent 1978 South-West African legislative election was won by the DTA by a landslide, which claimed 41 of the 50 seats. Although these elections were the first multi-racial elections in the territory of South-West Africa[8] there was "widespread intimidation",[9] not least by the presence of South African troops in the north of the territory.[10] The United Nations Security Council declared these elections "null and void".[11] On 1 July 1980 Mudge became the chairman of the Council of Ministers of the resulting government.[12]
The Council resigned in 1983, and the administration of South-West Africa was executed by the South African occupiers again.[13] In September 1983 the Multi-Party Conference (MPC) was established which consisted of 19 "internal" (that is, South-West African) parties.[14] After considering his options, Mudge agreed to become the DTA representative on this conference, although he had hoped for a different outcome of its proceedings:[8]
As in the past, they [proposers of the MPC] did not have any problems in convincing members of the DTA and other parties to participate, seeing that there would be financial benefits involved. I found myself standing alone in the DTA and, much against my will, I agreed to participate – provided that the MPC confine itself to a discussion on constitutional proposals, and that an interim government would not be considered. I should have known better. It did not take long before the possibility of another interim government was raised and strongly supported by virtually every member of the MPC.
The MPC suggested in its April 1985 Bill of Fundamental Rights and Objectives the establishment of a Transitional Government of National Unity (TNGU). South Africa followed this suggestion three months later,[15] setting up a forced coalition government under the leadership of the DTA (22 seats) but including five smaller parties of eight seats each.[16]
The TNGU was chaired by its ministers on a round-robin basis, changing every three months. Mudge as Minister of Finance took the rotating chairmanship in 1986 and in 1988.[17] However, as president of the largest party in the TNGU, Mudge was the de facto leader of the government, and within the DTA, Mudge's Republican Party was seen as the driving force.[18]
After Namibian independence
In November 1989 Dirk Mudge founded the Democratic Media Trust of Namibia, an agency funding newsprinting in Namibia with the mission to "promote a free and independent media in Namibia". For the establishment of this trust, money was used that was originally meant to fight SWAPO in the 1989 independence elections. The trust owned Democratic Media Holdings which in turn owned John Meinert Printing, Namibia's biggest newspaper printing works. By 2007 the trust had sold its remaining stakes in the printing industry and became a charity dedicated to education and development. Mudge was chairman of the Board of Directors of the trust until 2008.[7][19]
Mudge gained a seat on a DTA ticket in the 1989 election to the Constituent Assembly of Namibia[20] which became independent Namibia's first National Assembly. Despite Mudge's public resentment of SWAPO values and tactics, founding president Sam Nujoma appointed him to Cabinet as first Minister of Finance,[2] probably in order to contain insecurity among the white population.[21]
Legacy
The effect of Mudge's political involvement on the progress of Namibia's independence is controversial. While on the one side he had been lauded for bringing about a multi-party political system and multi-ethnic elections, [22] others see him as having delayed independence of the territory, prolonged the suffering of the indigenous population, and entrenched racial segregation.[23]
Family
Dirk Mudge retired from politics in April 1993[12] and returned to his farm Ovikere near Kalkfeld in Namibia's Otjozondjupa Region.[2] He is married to Stienie Jacobs. They have five children, sixteen grandchildren and seventeen great grandchildren. Mudge is the father of fellow politician Henk Mudge who succeeded him as leader of the Republican Party.
References
Notes
- ↑ "The Struggle for Namibia" in Time magazine, 24 April 1978
- 1 2 3 4 5 Hopwood, Graham (2007). "Who's Who, Mudge, Dirk Frederik – Retired politician". Guide to Namibian Politics. Namibian Institute for Democracy (NID). Retrieved 28 October 2014.
- ↑ Napierala, Nils (2010). Namibia zu Zeiten des Kolonialismus und der Mandatsherrschaft [Namibia During the Periods of Colonialism and Foreign Administration] (in German). GRIN. p. 16. ISBN 3-640-74284-2. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- ↑ Shamuyarira 1977, p. 262–263.
- ↑ Kangueehi, Kuvee (22 October 2004). "DTA 'Down but Not Out'". New Era (via rehobothbasters.com). Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- 1 2 Dierks, Klaus. "Chronologie der Geschichte Namibias, 1977" [Chronology of Namibian History, 1977] (in German). klausdierks.com. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
- 1 2 "Our History". Namibia Media Holdings. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
- 1 2 Mudge, Dirk. The art of compromise: Constitution-making in Namibia (PDF). Konrad Adenauer Foundation. p. 126. Retrieved 23 September 2014.
- ↑ Okoth, Assa (2006). A History of Africa: African nationalism and the de-colonisation process [1915–1995] 2. East African Publishers. p. 195. ISBN 9966253580.
- ↑ Dierks, Klaus. "Chronology of Namibian History, 1978". klausdierks.com. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
- ↑ "Democratic Elections in Namibia. An International Experiment in Nation Building" (PDF). National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. June 1989. p. 12.
- 1 2 Dierks, Klaus. "Biographies of Namibian Personalities, M". klausdierks.com.
- ↑ Unhappy Holiday in Time Magazine, 31 January 1983
- ↑ Dierks, Klaus. "Chronology of Namibian History, 1983". Retrieved 29 October 2014.
- ↑ Dierks, Klaus. "Chronology of Namibian History, 1985". klausdierks.com. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
- ↑ NDI 1989, p. 13.
- ↑ List of TGNU leaders worldstatesmen.org
- ↑ Biography: Herman Animba Toivo ja Toivo about.com, last accessed 29 October 2014
- ↑ Poolman, Jan (4 July 2012). "DMH founder turns to charity". The Namibian.
- ↑ "Namibia Rebel Group Wins Vote, But It Falls Short of Full Control", in The New York Times, 15 November 1989
- ↑ Schille, Peter (10 April 1989). "Es wird kein Halleluja ausbrechen" [No Hallelujah is gonna break]. Der Spiegel. SPIEGEL-Reporter Peter Schille über Namibia am Beginn seiner Unabhängigkeit, Teil II [Spiegel reporter Peter Schille on Namibia at the onset of independence, part II] (in German) (15/1989).
- ↑ Mudge, Henk (19 October 2007). "30 Years of the Republican Party". New Era.
- ↑ Mubita, Charles (12 June 2015). "Dirk Mudge and Political Pedagogy". New Era.
Literature
- Shamuyarira, NM (April 1977). "The Lusaka Manifesto Strategy of OAU States and its Consequences for the Freedom Struggle in Southern Africa" (PDF). The African Review (Michigan State University) 2 (2).
- "Democratic Elections in Namibia. An International Experiment in Nation Building" (PDF). National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. June 1989. p. 12.