Honorific-Prefix: | The Honorable |
Libertina Amathila | |
Office: | Deputy-Prime Minister of Namibia |
President: | Hifikepunye Pohamba |
Term Start: | March 2005 |
Term End: | March 2010 |
Predecessor: | Hendrik Witbooi |
Successor: | Marco Hausiku |
Office1: | Minister of Health and Social Services |
President1: | Sam Nujoma |
Term Start1: | 1996 |
Term End1: | 2005 |
Predecessor1: | Nickey Iyambo |
Successor1: | Richard Kamwi |
Office2: | Minister of Regional and Local Government and Housing |
President2: | Sam Nujoma |
Term Start2: | 21 March 1990 |
Term End2: | 1996 |
Predecessor2: | position established |
Successor2: | Nickey Iyambo |
Birth Name: | Libertina Inaviposa Appolus |
Birth Date: | 10 December 1940 |
Birth Place: | Fransfontein, Kunene Region |
Nationality: | Namibian |
Spouse: | Ben Amathila |
Party: | SWAPO |
Profession: | Medical doctor |
Occupation: | Politician |
Libertina Inaviposa Amathila (née Appolus, born 10 December 1940)[1] is a Namibian physician and politician. She was the Deputy-Prime Minister of Namibia from March 2005 to March 2010.[2]
Amathila was born in Fransfontein, Kunene Region. Under the SWAPO Nationhood Programme, she received a scholarship to study medicine in Poland and graduated from the Warsaw Medical Academy in 1969, becoming Namibia's first female doctor. She later worked in SWAPO refugee camps.[1] [2]
At SWAPO's 1969 consultative congress in exile in Tanzania, Amathila became deputy secretary for health and welfare on the SWAPO central committee and director of the SWAPO Women's Council. Immediately prior to independence, she was a SWAPO member of the Constituent Assembly, which was in place from November 1989 to March 1990,[3] and since independence in March 1990 she has been a member of the National Assembly of Namibia. She was Minister of Regional and Local Government and Housing from March 21, 1990, to September 12, 1996, at which point she became Minister of Health and Social Services,[4] serving in that position until becoming Deputy-Prime Minister of Namibia on 21 March 2005.[1] [2]
In September 1999, she was elected for a one-year term as chairperson of the World Health Organization's Regional Committee for Africa, and on May 15, 2000, she elected as the president of the 53rd Session of the World Health Assembly.[5] She received the tenth highest number of votes - 363 - in the election to the central committee of SWAPO at the party's August 2002 congress.[6]
She retired from politics on the 20th anniversary of Namibia's independence, on 21 March 2010.[7]
Amathila received the Ongulumbashe Medal for Bravery and Long Service in 1987,[1] and she was the 1991 recipient of the Nansen Refugee Award.[2]
In 2002 she named the street Brückenstrasse in Swakopmund after herself.[8]
Amathila is married to fellow politician Ben Amathila.