MUN says it’s committed to job security of its membersPresident Kais Saied meets EBRD President

RUNDU: The Mineworkers Union of Namibia (MUN) said it is committed to job security for its members. General secretary and administrative head of MUN, George Ampweya in a media statement issued here on Monday wrote that MUN is committed, as it has been for the past 35 years, to defending and preserving its members' job security. 'This is part and parcel of our constitutional and legal obligations towards our members and is done well within our structural functionalities which include branch, region and national levels respectively,' Ampweya said. Ampweya said in May 2023 alone the union successfully concluded six court cases, which they are proud of. He added that although the union is being precluded by the Labour Act 11 of 2007, it insists on going as far as tendering representations even at the internal disciplinary hearing levels including all other aspects within the given sphere of its structures. 'This wide-ranging support is done with the oversight of the MUN head office, national executive commit tee and the office of our national president, as the situation demands,' he noted. Ampweya encouraged members to form part of its leadership structures to determine their own internal processes and governance in terms of the MUN constitution. This inclusion, he said, will allow them to help chart the direction forward and ensure that their needs are reflected in decisions and interventions. 'Ultimately, this contributes to a stronger labour movement and union where we all complement each other from branch, region and national, to avoid structural representation distortion,' he indicated. Source: The Namibia Press Agency President Kais Saied met, on Monday at the Carthage Palace, President of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Odile Renaud-Basso, who is visiting Tunisia from February 19 to 20. During the meeting, Saied stressed the importance of strengthening dialogue between Tunisia and the EBRD with a view to financing promising projects in Tunisia, particularly in the fields of renewable energy, new technologies, health, infrastructure and water desalination, "within the framework of a global vision that meets the aspirations of the sovereign Tunisian people", according to the Presidency. Saied, whose comments were quoted in the press release, also underscored the state's commitment to providing the necessary legal and legislative guarantees and a favourable climate to attract private investment and encourage Tunisia's partners to finance more diversified projects capable of boosting growth and development. The President underlined the State's support for entrepreneurship and business, saying t hat "the State attaches equal importance to supporting public services and enterprises, given their central role in the national economy and in the protection of fundamental human rights (health, transport, etc.)". At the end of the meeting, EBRD President Odile Renaud-Basso said that her meeting with the Head of State had focused on the main priorities, adding she would also be meeting members of the government in the coming days to discuss financing for businesses and very concrete projects for the country. Since starting operations in Tunisia in 2012, the EBRD has invested more than pound 2.1 billion in 69 projects in the country and supported more than 1,200 SMEs through technical assistance funded by the European Union. Source: Agence Tunis Afrique Presse