Dr. Hage Geingob: From larger than life to immortality

Ambassador Lilian Onoh

Dr. Hage Geingob: From larger than life to immortality

Late Namibian President, Hage Geingob. (photo: Aljazeera)

By Lilian Onoh

In 2017, whilst heading the Nigerian High Commission in Jamaica, I was designated to be Nigeria’s first female High Commissioner to the Republic of Namibia.

To my surprise, I was amongst the first of the designated Ambassadors to receive my Agrément from my Host country and within short shrift, I was assigned a date to present my Letter of Credence to the late President, Dr. Hage G. Geingob, even before I set foot in Namibia.  I literally had 5 days between arriving in Namibia and presenting of my Letter of Credence – supersonic speed by any standard.

On entering the hall for presentation, the imposing figure of His Excellency dominated the room and he dwarfed everyone around him. During the long march to present my Letter, his face remained as stern as a Headmaster’s and I had to keep reminding myself that I wasn’t being dragged to the Principal for disobeying school rules.

But on reaching him and handing over my Letter of credence, the kindness behind the stern expression was clearly evident and no sooner had the formalities been dispensed with than the real, jovial man behind the foreboding mask broke through and I immediately felt I had come home to be received by family.  He laughed easily and genuinely from the heart.  After a lifetime of dealing with men in high political office, most of whom felt the only way to reinforce their power was to be totally miserable and unapproachable, this was such a joy for me. 

Any Ambassador will tell you that President Geingob’s welcome was not the norm.

Dr Geingob related with us in a manner that most other Heads of State and Government do not.  He was accessible.  He was straightforward. He was totally authentic.  We never had to wonder at the meaning behind his words.  And in a world where lies, double-speak and false facades are the norm, this was a whole new ball game – the very best anyone could wish for. Whether you agreed with him or not, he spoke from conviction.

And unlike many Heads of State and Government, he did not need handlers to guide him in discussions with Ambassadors – he was fully abreast of all our individual issues and was aware of all our areas of challenges.

Behind the scenes, he did everything possible to sort out things, whether the problem stemmed from the Namibian side or another side.  It was his personal intervention behind the scenes that ended the visa impasse between Nigeria and Namibia in 2019.  But he was large enough to give the glory of that achievement to others.

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In July 2018, he visited Nigeria for the funeral of Professor Adebayo Adedeji, who he called “a mentor and outstanding friend of the United Nations’ Institute for Namibia (UNIN) and Namibia”, making the arduous journey by road from Lagos to the Professor’s home town in Ogun State and paying his late friend the ultimate tribute. It was an outstanding act of remembrance by a serving Head of Government who could easily have sent a representative and that would have still been wonderful.  It spoke to the essence of who Dr. Geingob was.  He never forgot any good thing anybody had ever done, no matter how long ago. 

In Namibia, I also had the privilege of meeting the current U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, at a lunch held for her by the late President. In her moving tribute to President Geingob at the UN, Ambassador Thomas Greenfield narrated how His Excellency kept his promise to receive her in Namibia when he became President many years after the promise was made.  That was who President Geingob was – he never forgot and he always kept his word.

The one outstanding quality of the late President was his expansiveness.  He was the ONLY statesman I knew who understood the true cost of ethnic divisions across Africa.  He never understood the parochial mentality of so many, who could not stand others simply because of their nationality and their ethnicity despite all of us coming from one Continent and separated only by borders created by others who had nothing to do with us.  He was a Pan-African Statesman to the core of his being.

Over and over again, he repeated that the immigration restrictions imposed on fellow Africans was unwarranted.  He repeatedly and publicly lamented the fact that his own Immigration officials had continually dragged their feet on coming up with a plan and framework to ease movement between Africans along the same lines as was available to Western tourists coming to Namibia.  Without it, he, as President had nothing to present to Parliament to approve – a recognition of the democratic limits within which Presidents had to operate and an example of his total observance of the rule of law in governance.

In death, President Geingob left his mortal life with the same authenticity and transparency with which he lived.  He made his cancer diagnosis public knowledge within a day of the doctors confirming his diagnosis – the total antithesis of what we have witnessed in Nigeria over the years.

And in the honesty and transparency with which he handled his very short march from diagnosis to death, the President transitioned from merely great to one of the great Immortals and that which he could not achieve in life became an instant reality.  The tribal and racial lines in Namibia seemed to evaporate in a split second as the whole nation collapsed in unified grief, coming together with the unique clarity that occurs when the scales of familiar security are suddenly yanked away and children suddenly find themselves without the parent they took for granted.  For to him, almost everyone he met was viewed through the prism of a parent rooting for their child and wanting the best for them. 

In particular, he viewed all Namibians as his children – something that has echoed in almost every single tribute to him during the last three weeks. 

Even as a Representative of another country, I felt secure in the fact that my Host President was genuinely rooting for my success and that of all Ambassadors for in that success lay greater dividends for Namibia.  He genuinely had a global vision far ahead of his time and forged networks so vast that in death, he has been mourned like no other Head of Government in recent times save perhaps the late Queen Elizabeth.  The assemblage of so many Heads of State and Government for a funeral on African soil is to the best of my knowledge, second only to that of the great Nelson Mandela and speaks volumes of what a great man Africa lost.

The global outpouring of grief was probably a great shock to many Namibians, especially the youth, who did not fully understand how great he was until he died.  For this was when many of the younger generation, often disconnected from history, learnt that this man was the Chief Architect of the Constitution that gave them the freedom to insult him on social media and demand rights and privileges that many in other countries can only dream of.   In death, they discovered how incredibly respected he was across the globe and a country with less than two and half million people produced a son that commanded the global outpouring of grief that was all due to his personal, incredible ability to forge alliances around the globe.  Leaders from all over the world turned up – Qatar, Finland, Germany, Ghana, UK, South Africa, Zambia – over 27 World Leaders and dozens of Heads of International Organisations. 

In all our interactions with him, the one Constant was the former First Lady, Her Excellency, Mrs. Monica Geingob, who was one of the most down to earth persons on the earth, despite her awesome intellectual and personal achievements.  Her ease of interaction complemented His Excellency’s own and as an Ambassador, it was a true privilege and joy to have had a Host Head of Government and First Lady that were not only available but with whom we could relate as real human beings and simply be, without pretence.

Her grief can only be imagined. From experience, I know that no words of comfort can assuage her pain.  That can only come from the Living God of Hosts, our Father and Owner of Life, Jehovah, who gave his only Son Jesus Christ for our redemption.  He alone understands the full gamut of pain and loss and grief she feels, and it is to Him that I raise a prayer to comfort her and the children of His Excellency during this terrible time.  May she and the entire family take solace in the fact that His Excellency is in the arms of God our Father, in whom he believed.  For all the actions of His Excellency spoke of his true belief in God, a belief that guided his actions towards all he met and what he did.  He could not have been the Hage Geingob he was without an abiding faith and obedience to God.

And in death, God has honoured him even more than in life.  In death, he has entered eternal life; and on earth, he achieved the true immortality that comes when generations present and future reference the great President Hage Gottfried Geingob whenever Namibia is mentioned. 

For I believe that God has already welcomed His good and faithful servant, Dr. Hage Geingob, who completed the task God gave him on earth with distinction.

Having given his entire life for Namibia, in death, his sacrifice has immortalised him.

Go well, Mr. President.

  • Ambassador Lilian Onoh was Nigerian High Commissioner to the Republic of Namibia.
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