Honorific-Prefix: | Honourable |
Peya Mushelenga | |
Birth Date: | 1 September 1975 |
Birth Place: | Oshigambo, Oshikoto Region |
Alma Mater: | University of Namibia University of South Africa Open University of Tanzania University of London Eastern and Southern African Management Institute University of the Western Cape |
Office: | Minister of International Relations & Cooperation |
Term Start: | 9 February 2024 |
President: | Nangolo Mbumba |
Office2: | Minister of Information and Communications Technology |
Term Start2: | 21 March 2020 |
Term End2: | 9 February 2024 |
President2: | Hage Geingob Nangolo Mbumba |
Term Start3: | 8 February 2018 |
Term End3: | 21 March 2020 |
President3: | Hage Geingob |
Successor3: | Erastus Uutoni |
Predecessor3: | Sophia Shaningwa |
Office4: | Deputy minister of International Relations and Cooperation |
Term Start4: | 21 March 2010 |
Term End4: | 8 February 2018 |
President4: | Hifikepunye Pohamba Hage Geingob |
Successor4: | Christine ǁHoebes |
Samuel Abraham Peyavali "Peya" Mushelenga (born September 01, 1975 in Oshigambo, Ovamboland) is a Namibian politician and poet. He is broadly educated, holding fourteen academic qualifications from seven different universities.
A member of SWAPO, Mushelenga has been a member of the National Assembly of Namibia since 2005. He has served cabinet in several ministerial roles and is the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation since 9 February 2024.
Peya Mushelenga was born at Oshigambo in the Oshikoto Region of northern Namibia. He attended Oluno Senior Secondary School until 1992 and then entered the University of Namibia (UNAM).
Mushelenga has accumulated fourteen university degrees in his career; the New Era daily called him "Namibia's most avid scholar".[1] He graduated with:[2]
Mushelenga is an admitted legal practitioner (attorney) of the High Court of Namibia.[2]
After his first degree at UNAM Mushelenga worked as teacher at Nehale Senior Secondary School in 1996. He then worked for Government until 1998, and thereafter joined NamPower.[2]
He became active in the Namibia National Students Organisation in the 1980s and eventually became a high-level organizer for the SWAPO Party Youth League, being elected to the Central Committee and National Executive of the SPYL in 1997 and 2002. He had recently led the big delegation of 250 SWAPO Party Youth League leaders to Sochi Russia, to attend the 19th World Festival of Youth and Students, the event organized by World Federation of Democratic Youth WFDY and the Russian government. Also in 2002, he was elected to the SWAPO Central Committee as its youngest member (re-elected in 2007 and 2012).
Mushelenga became a member of Parliament of Namibia in 2005. In 2010, he was appointed deputy minister of Foreign Affairs.[3] In a major cabinet reshuffle he was promoted to minister of Urban and Rural Development on 8 February 2018.[4] [5] On 21 March 2020, Mushelenga was appointed minister of Information and Communication Technology.[6]
In 1980, South African security forces killed Mushelenga's sister and injured other relatives during a raid on their family home in the former bantustan of Ovamboland.
A book of poetry entitled Nando Na Li Toke, written in the Ovambo dialect of Ndonga, was published by Gamsberg MacMillan in 1996.[7]