RCC faces legal action over N$5m debt … as Nekundi labels the company ‘a mess’
Renthia Kaimbi The Roads Contractor Company (RCC) is facing mounting financial and governance pressures, just days after a stormy meeting where minister of works and transport Veikko Nekundi reportedly described the company as “a mess” and demanded answers from its leadership over a disclaimer audit opinion and widespread payment failures. In a letter dated 20 […]

Renthia Kaimbi
The Roads Contractor Company (RCC) is facing mounting financial and governance pressures, just days after a stormy meeting where minister of works and transport Veikko Nekundi reportedly described the company as “a mess” and demanded answers from its leadership over a disclaimer audit opinion and widespread payment failures.

In a letter dated 20 June 2026 addressed to RCC interim chief executive officer Dasius Nelumbu, Bruyns Legal Practitioners, acting on behalf of Dust Construction and Civils (Pty) Ltd, rejected the RCC’s purported rescission of a lease-to-own agreement for construction equipment as “factually incorrect, legally unsound” and “a desperate and mala fide stratagem to evade the RCC’s lawful and significant financial obligations.”
The law firm had given the RCC 48 hours from receipt of the letter to pay the full amount of N$4,969,345.23, warning that failure to do so would be taken as conclusive proof of commercial insolvency. The 48-hour deadline expired on Wednesday.
The firm said it holds instructions to “forthwith, and without any further notice, launch an application in the High Court of Namibia for the provisional winding-up of the Roads Contractor Company (RCC) Ltd.”


