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  • BTA Expresses Delight at Raguin’s Incredible Run

    BTA Expresses Delight at Raguin’s Incredible Run

    Botswana Tennis Association (BTA) vice president Nonofo Othusitse has expressed the association’s delight at  Ntungamili Raguin’s historic achievement at the Australian Open Junior Championships 2026. 

    “This is a performance exceeding all expectations. We are in awe of Ntungamili’s incredible displays at his maiden Grand Slam,” Othusitse said of Raguin’s fairytale run. 

    “With this performance, his life has completely changed, and he has shone a light not only on Botswana but on Africa as a whole.” 

    Raguin, who is number 75 in the junior rankings, will be looking to proceed to the quarterfinals when he takes on Luis Guto Miguel of Brazil in a last 16 encounter tomorrow. 

    The young ace booked his place in the last 16 after a hard-fought 6-2, 3-6, 6-4 victory over 15th seed Gavin Goode of the United States at Melbourne Park on Tuesday morning. 

    In his debut tournament at the Junior Grand Slam, Raguin won the opening set in emphatic fashion, sending a clear message that rankings counted for little on the court. 

    The 17-year-old slowed down slightly in the second set, allowing Goode to level the match with a convincing win. 

    However, the third and decisive set turned into a tense battle of nerves and endurance, with Raguin demonstrating remarkable mental strength to clinch it 6–4 and seal a memorable victory. 

    Tuesday’s win marked Raguin’s second at the tournament. In the opening round played on Sunday, he defeated Dimitar Kisimov of Bulgaria 7-5, 1-6, 6-4 in another three-set encounter. 

    The performance highlighted the work of his technical team, led by coach Killian Sinclair, whose preparations ensured the teenager was ready for both tactical challenges and physical endurance. 

    Raguin’s victory over Goode marked his fourth win against a top-30 opponent in the past two weeks, a statistic that has thrilled tennis followers.

  • Government Sets Aside P97M for FMD Interventions

    Government Sets Aside P97M for FMD Interventions

    Government has approved the Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) response plan for immediate implementation with P97 million allocated for urgent interventions.
    This was revealed by acting Minister of Lands and Agriculture, Mr David Tshere on Tuesday when addressing the public on government’s FMD preparedness control.
    Also, the minister announced an initiative toward a shared financial responsibility model, with the Business Botswana having pledged P1 million already.
    The National Development Bank has been appointed to administer funds contributed by the private sector development partners and members of the public.
    As the FMD outbreaks in South Africa and Zimbabwe continued to pose a risk of incursion into Botswana, Mr Tshere noted that Botswana’s intention was to ensure that FMD was controlled at a regional level, adding that the transition moved away from a government-driven model to one that actively involved communities, farmers and the private sector.
    As such, he called on Batswana to partner with government in controlling the disease including providing financial support amid prevailing fiscal constraints.
    As part of mitigation efforts, he said government had established a Foot and Mouth Disease Command Centre, chaired by the Office of the President to coordinate inter-ministerial responses. 
    The centre operates a call centre with both a toll-free line and a WhatsApp contact, he said. 
    Furthermore, he said community participation would be central to disease prevention and control efforts, including regulating livestock movement through kraaling and herding animals away from high-risk areas.
    Mr Tshere said response teams had been deployed along border areas to restrict the movement of cattle from South Africa and Zimbabwe into Botswana.
    “Movement restrictions have been imposed in border villages in Ramotswa, Borolong, Kgatleng, Bobirwa, Tutume and the North East District. Disease surveillance has been intensified in these areas, with livestock movement permitted only for animals destined for slaughter and subject to authorised movement permits,” he said.In a move to reduce the risk of FMD transmission, he said the holding period for stray cattle had been reduced from three months to 14 days, adding that unclaimed stray cattle would be slaughtered at the Botswana Meat Commission abattoir, with proceeds directed towards FMD control measures.
    Mr Tshere said government continued to enforce strict veterinary protocols for livestock that strayed into neighbouring FMD-affected zones.
     As of January, he said 48 cattle had been destroyed after crossing into South Africa and Zimbabwe.
    Mr Tshere highlighted that compensation of P700 would be paid to cattle owners and P200 for goats if animals cross into red zones or show signs of FMD.
    The exercise, he said, was being carried out in collaboration with the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture, cattle producers and non-cattle producers.
    Mr Tshere emphasised that FMD posed a severe threat to agriculture due to its high contagiousness and environmental resilience. 
    He also encouraged dikgosi to use mophato systems to help control the spread of FMD, citing Bobirwa as an area where the approach had yielded positive results.
    A dedicated communication team has also been established to disseminate information, while sensitisation through kgotla meetings has already been conducted in villages including Ramotswa, Borolong, Mochudi and Tutume Districts.

  • Letsholathebe Records Improved Medical Supplies

    Letsholathebe Records Improved Medical Supplies

    Letsholathebe Memorial Hospital in Maun is showing signs of recovery as availability of medicines including essential ones and other medical supplies has improved from 15 per cent to 30 per cent, with another consignment expected before the end of this week.
    This was revealed by the hospital superintendent, Dr Lebogang Mokotedi during Minister for State President, Defence and Security, Mr Moeti Mohwasa’s tour of the hospital on Tuesday. 
    “Drugs availability and other medical commodities have gradually improved this year as compared to last year and we are expecting more orders before the end of the month.Despite the shortage, we have been trying our level best to offer quality services with the little we had,” revealed Dr Mokotedi.
    It was reported in December that the hospital was experiencing shortage of drugs and non-drug commodities and that inconsistent supplies of the required commodities affected patient management, especially those requiring to be assisted on emergency basis.
    By then, vital drugs were reported to be at 75.5 per cent, essential drugs at 63.9 while necessary drugs remained at 52.1 per cent with an order fill rate of 21 per cent from the Central Medical Stores.
    She also apprised the minister that they had ensured the security of medicines in the facility as all medication storage was restricted to only authorised personnel. 
    To further strengthen security, she stated that their intention was to install alarms and CCTV cameras in drug storage areas.
    Regarding feeding of patients, she said it also remained a serious challenge due to financial constraints citing that they operated under a tight budget where allocation of funds for food services was limited.
    Another challenge was shortage of ambulances as only six out of 18 were functional, saying the shortage affected the flow of referrals to both Francistown and Gaborone.
    Dr Mokotedi also reported a shortage of medical specialists, among them a surgeon, a gynaecologist and a physician, explaining that currently they were operating with one gynaecologist, whose services patients waited 24 to 26 months to access.
    Despite the challenges, she shared some of their achievements citing that facility recently underwent refurbishment for both the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and the theatre to improve service delivery.
    The ICU, which was officially opened last year August had not been fully operational due to structural anomalies and equipment issues.
    Currently, the hospital management has procured equipment and awaiting staff and its functionality was hailed as a major milestone for the hospital, enhancing critical care capabilities for Maun and surrounding districts.
    “The introduction of this unit is a significant upgrade to the hospital’s capacity to handle critically ill-patients locally. We now need a doctor who will man the unit,” Dr Mokotedi said.
    In addition, she informed the minister that a new haemodialysis unit was also introduced, which was being operated on a public-private partnership basis.
    For a long time, patients had to travel long distances to as far as Francistown to access kidney health services and Dr Mokotedi praised government efforts to bring quality health services including highly specialised ones.
    For his part, Minister Mohwasa praised employees of the hospital for their resilience and high level of commitment in delivering quality services despite working under difficult conditions.
    He appreciated that staff had demonstrated resilience and a strong sense of moral duty to maintain quality patient care in the face of several challenges, which include drug shortages.
    Mr Mohwasa assured the hospital management that the Ministry of Health was working around the clock to address the challenges at hand so as to improve service delivery. 
    He said the ministry was working hard to address the issue of shortage of medicines by ensuring that they reached every hospital and clinic across the country on time.
    Mr Mohwasa admitted that there was shortage of drugs, which he partly blamed on corruption by suppliers and an inefficient procurement system.
    He emphasised that government was however working tirelessly to improve the efficiency of the medicine supply chain.
    The minister and his entourage toured some sections of the hospital including the pharmacy, some laboratories, and specialised units to appreciate challenges.
    He also visited the outpatient department where he interacted with patients queuing for services. 

  • Kedikilwe Highlights Necessity to Prioritise Needs

    Kedikilwe Highlights Necessity to Prioritise Needs

    Member of Parliament for Serowe West, Mr Onalepelo Kedikilwe has implored constituents to assess the country’s competing needs in order to make informed decision during a looming Constitutional Court referendum.

    Speaking during a kgotla meeting in Marulamantsi ward in Serowe on Tuesday, Mr Kedikilwe said it would be amiss for him to influence constituents to vote against or in favour of the establishment of the ConCourt.

    Therefore, he said assessment of the country’s competing needs would inform constituents to make an appropriate decision. when casting a ballot during a referendum, pointing that it was every individual’s right to universal suffrage.

    Furthermore, he said universal suffrage guarantees voting rights to all adult citizens, regardless of gender, race or socio-economic status, thus he noted influencing them would be an infringement of the said rights.

    He said their ‘yes or no’ for the establishment of ConCourt was dependent on assessment of competing needs, hence the need to prioritise pressing issues. Mr Kedikilwe said it was paramount to consider prioritising pressing issues such as health and education sectors were bedevilled with challenges and needed urgent attention.

    For his part, Headman of arbitration Kgosi Onkemetse Magola of Marulamantsi concurred that there was a lot of competing needs in the area that needed urgent attention.

    He said Marulamantsi ward that fell under the catchment area of Mannathoko Primary School in Serowe was too far from the school for pupils more especially beginners and therefore expressed the wish to have standard one to three classes established in the area.

    Also, Kgosi Magola decried that over 50 children in Marulamantsi were not schooling and have become street children. He underscored that his area of jurisdiction was facing economic challenges and should be given similar treatment as other abodes of Basarwa people descent such as Malatswae, Mmashoro and Dimajwe.

    To this end, he said such categorisation would accord Marualamantsi residents an opportunity to substantially benefit from special dispensation programmes.  

    However, constituents were of the view that pressing issues needed urgent attention and therefore should precede ConCourt. They emphasised that they were not against the idea to establish the ConCourt but hinted its timing was off.

    Residents requested for a clinic in the area, arguing that there was too much congestion in other health facilities where they accessed services. Constructing a clinic in Marulamantsi would also spare residents time and distance they to endured in search of medical services, they said adding that a plot for the facility was readily available at Sebabi ward.

    On other issues, a resident Ms Barulaganyi Kgaogano decried some irregularities in awarding tenders for bread supply in schools. She also complained about delay in payments after supplying bread, which she noted, did not argur well with business.

    Ms Kgaogano is of the view that renumerations for people engaged either on attachment or internship basis at various government ministries should be commensurate with their qualifications because ‘they performed similar tasks as their permanent and pensionable counterparts’.

  • School Feeding More Than a Meal

    School Feeding More Than a Meal

    School feeding is a powerful, multi-sector investment that strengthens education systems, improves child wellbeing and support local economies.

    This was said by African Union Senior Education Policy Officer, Dr Caseley Stephens, during the 11th African Diaspora Scientific Federation breakfast meeting in Gaborone recently.

    He explained that well-designed school feeding programmes improved health and welfare outcomes, reinforced social protection systems and built community resilience, while increased school attendance and retention.

    “It connects nutrition, health and education in one powerful strategy. It contributes directly to human capital formation and long-term economic productivity,” Dr Stephens added.

    He further highlighted that school feeding aligned with the African Union Agenda 2063, particularly Aspiration One, which envisioned a prosperous, inclusive and sustainable Africa driven by its people.

    He further said the holistic impact of school feeding was precisely why its relevance continued to grow across AU member states.

    Deputy Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Child Welfare and Basic Education, Mr Steve Botlhasitse said school feeding programmes were central to Africa’s development agenda.

    Mr Bothasitse stressed that access to meals was a key retention tool, warning that learners were more likely to miss school when food was unavailable.

    “If learners are not given meals in our schools, they will somehow miss school,” he said.

    As such, he urged stakeholders, including the Ministry of Local Government and Traditional Affairs and the tourism sector to adopt a proactive approach to sustaining school feeding programmes.

    “We must plan ahead and find solutions to ensure that meals are nutritious, safe and accompanied by clean water and good hygiene practices is essential,” he said.

    Extending an invitation to the business community, Mr Bothasitse said partnerships could help strengthen systems, scale effective practices and build resilience so that every school, in every community, could reliably provide safe and nutritious meals.

    “Your backing in school feeding programmes is an investment in Africa’s future workforce and communities,” he said.

    Also addressing the meeting was Acting Deputy Permanent Secretary, Ms Veronica Mochotlhi, who traced the evolution of Africa’s school feeding agenda, noting that it gained momentum following a 2016 study visit to Brazil focused on home-grown school feeding models.

    She said the initiative linked local farmers to school feeding programmes, boosting nutrition, education and local economies. Ms Mochotlhi said following that engagement, African heads of state resolved to establish the Africa Day of School Feeding, which debuted in Niger as an annual event.

    She noted that the 2025 Africa Day of School Feeding was commemorated in the Central African Republic under the theme: A Decade of Nourishment: Celebrating the Past, Securing a Just Future. 

    Looking ahead to 2026, she said the focus would be on inspiring action, sharing knowledge, identifying barriers and co-creating solutions to strengthen school meal policies, governance and financing.

    She added that each year should highlight progress, discuss challenges and mobilise support to scale up these programmes so that they reached every child in Africa.

    Meanwhile, Botswana is set to host the 11th African Diaspora Scientific Federation commemoration on February 28. 

  • Road Projects Priority – Salakae

    Road Projects Priority – Salakae

    Government has priotitised the construction of roads connecting villages with production units.

    According to Minister of Transport and Infrastructure Mr Noah Salake, some of the roads incorporated in the National Development Plan (NDP) 12 was the tarring of the Rasesa-Lentsweletau-Diphuduhudu road and the Lentsweletau-Medie road. 

    Addressing Lentsweletau residents recently, Mr Salakae also confirmed that one of the roads in need of attention included the 47km Metsimotlhabe-Kopong-Lentsweletau tarred road, which was considered for resealing. 

    Earlier on, Lentsweletau/Lephepe Member of Parliament, Mr Tshenolo Bogatsu had raised a concern on the status of roads in his area of jurisdiction. He said the road network in the constituency was dominated by gravel roads, which affected economic prospects, among other things.

    Mr Bogatsu cited the Kopong-Gaborone North road and Kopong-Bokaa road as some of the projects, which could have been incorporated in NDP 12, as they served as linkages between production areas 

    He said the Kopong-Bokaa road had the potential to spur economic growth by linking villages in production areas with other economic drivers and enabled residents to create employment or establishing businesses along the route. 

    However, he said he was hopeful that with the potential to reopen the Medie Coal Mine in the near future, the area’s economic activities would get desired injection for growth and improve livelihoods.

    As such, he called on government to consider expanding the railway line infrastructure by constructing a railway line connecting Medie mine with the main line in Artesia. He said the railway line could be an alternative route for transporting coal to reduce damages on the road by trucks on the Letsweletau-Medie road.

    For his part, Medie/Kweneng Ward councillor, Mr Letsholathebe Legodi shared the same sentiments with the area MP on the state of Lentsweletau-Medie road. 

    He said trucks, which used to ferry coal from Medie mine, impacted the road surface, adding that dust from the road was equally a health hazard to the community, a challenge to crop production as well as general being of the environment.

    Mr Legodi said motorists and public transporters were also affected by the status of the road, adding that the Medie-Kweneng gravel road was in need for regular grading to improve its current condition.

    Lentsweletau Village Development Committee chairperson, Mr Charles Mathupi appealed to Minister Salakae for provision of funding to patch potholes, instal streetlights and remarking of the Lentsweletau-Kgope and Lentsweletau-Dikgatlhong roads.

    Mr Mathupi also said there was need for the construction of a bus rank in Lentsweletau.

    He further said while there was shortage of public transport along the Lentsweletau-Gaborone route, the Department of Road Transport Services had indicated that it was not possible to issue new permits for the route as all time slots were taken. 

  • Poor Contract Management Delays Projects

    Poor Contract Management Delays Projects

    Failure to enforce contractual guidelines by relevant officials has contributed to the slow pace of developments in Kgalagadi North, says the area MP.

    Mr Reason Lekutlane said delayed projects under local and central governments continued to hinder socio-economic development in the district.

    He made the remarks during a consultative constituency kgotla meeting in Maake recently, where he cited poor contract management by engineers and technicians responsible for overseeing projects, as being among reasons for inefficiency.

    Excessive leniency toward non-performing contractors, he said, had resulted in stalled projects and increased costs for government.

    “There are clear guidelines outlined in contracts, but our own personnel often become too lenient even when contractors are not complying. This ends up costing government and setting the district back,” he said.

    Mr Lekutlane expressed concern that prolonged project delays had negatively affected the livelihoods of residents while placing a heavy financial burden on government.

    To address the situation, the MPs constituency office is developing a programme aimed at strengthening project oversight, accountability and compliance.

    Beyond that, the MP said he had established a District Development Database that captured all ongoing and outstanding projects in Kgalagadi North. The database, will assist to track progress, identify challenges and in making informed recommendations to accelerate project completion.

    Mr Lekutlane underscored that projects that had stalled for more than six years should not exist because there were set procedures to be followed in dealing with contractors who failed to meet their contractual obligations.

    Responding to residents’ requests for two additional council seats for Maake wards, Mr Lekhutlane explained that the matter fell under the mandate of the Delimitation Commission and advised residents to present their case when the commission visited the village.

    Although the village’s population currently stands at about 500, a figure below the required 1,200 for a council seat, he noted that proximity to other villages could be considered.

    Turning to road infrastructure, the MP described the condition of the Lehututu–Maake road ought to be graded while awaiting tarring. It is such poor conditions that he said demotivated public officers to work in the area and contributed to service delivery challenges, including water, electricity and staffing shortages.

    Mr Lekutlane said more than 870 kilometres of roads in Kgalagadi North required upgrading, because improved road infrastructure was critical to uplifting communities and accelerating developments in the district.

    Village Development Committee chairperson, Mr Samuel Motlhaope, raised a concern that there was no dedicated ambulance that served the village, but currently relied on a double-cab van that was not suitable to transport patients.

    Mr Motlhaope said the vehicle serviced Maake and Hunhukwe, a situation that often left the former without transport during emergencies.

    He however commended the Hukuntsi District Council and Diamond Botswana for drilling a community borehole to provide water for livestock, a project that proved beneficial to the village.

  • Youth Central to Economic Reform

    Youth Central to Economic Reform

    Botswana stands at a defining economic crossroads, with leadership warning that the growth model which sustained the country for decades can no longer guarantee jobs, prosperity or stability.

    As global conditions tighten and the diamond industry undergoes structural change, the country is being urged to rethink its future, with young people cast as the central drivers of a new economic era.

    This was the message delivered by the Vice President and Minister of Finance, Mr Ndaba Gaolathe, when he addressed the Budget Pitso for Youth in Gaborone on Tuesday. He cautioned that both the global and domestic economies had entered what he described as a “new normal.”

    The Youth Budget Pitso was convened to ensure continued engagement and meaningful participation of young people in the national budgeting process. Mr Gaolathe said global economic growth was expected to slow, particularly in advanced economies that absorb a significant share of Botswana’s exports. At the same time, he noted that long-standing pillars of the domestic economy were weakening.

    Falling diamond prices, reduced production and the rapid expansion of lab-grown diamonds are steadily eroding the country’s traditional economic base.

    “In previous crises, Botswana experienced strong V-shaped recoveries. That pattern is no longer holding. We cannot continue to do the same things and expect different results,” he said.

    Although diamonds still contribute about 30 per cent of government revenue, the Vice President expressed concern that declining sales were weighing heavily on exports, foreign reserves and fiscal buffers. He said lab-grown diamonds now command approximately 20 per cent of the global market, intensifying competition and underscoring the urgency of economic diversification.

    Against this challenging backdrop, Mr Gaolathe pointed to Sub-Saharan Africa as a rare bright spot, projected to record positive growth over the next two years. He identified the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a critical opportunity for Botswana to expand domestic production, reduce import dependence and access regional markets through a more competitive export base.

    However, he warned that economic transformation would ring hollow if it failed to confront unemployment, particularly among young people. With youth unemployment estimated to be approaching 40 per cent, he described the situation as “unacceptable” and incompatible with Botswana’s development aspirations.

    “This cannot be the new normal. If our policies and budgets do not reduce unemployment, then we are failing,” he said.

    Mr Gaolathe added that the forthcoming 2026/2027 National Budget, anchored in the Botswana Economic Transformation Programme, would prioritise a private-sector-led, export-driven economy. This will be supported by targeted skills development, innovation and modern infrastructure aimed at creating sustainable jobs.

    “We have transformed before. This generation must now do it again,” he said.

    The message to the nation’s youth was both a warning and a call to action that Botswana’s future prosperity will depend not on past successes, but on the willingness to adapt, innovate and place young people at the centre of economic renewal.

    As the country confronts an uncertain global environment and the limits of its traditional growth engines, the choices made now in policy, investment and human capital will determine whether Botswana’s “new normal” becomes a story of resilience and reinvention, or one of missed opportunity.

  • Farmers unity panacea for FMD fight

    Farmers unity panacea for FMD fight

    Farmers unity panacea for FMD fight
    Robust government interventions, coupled with a united and proactive farming community through cohesive farmers’ associations, remain central to the fight against the spread and containment of Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD). Representatives of three farmers’ associations said in interviews on Saturday that recent FMD outbreaks in South Africa and Zimbabwe had caused considerable anxiety among farmers in Botswana.
    The disease was first reported in south Africa’s Waterberg District in Limpopo Province in December, prompting Botswana to heighten surveillance, particularly in border areas such as Tsabong, Good Hope, Ramotswa, Tlokweng, Kgatleng and Mahalapye.
    To date, there has not been a single reported incident of the disease spillage into the Botswana, due to the various interventions that include movement restrictions, high alert and vigilance due to the proximity of the Waterberg district to border villages, biosecurity advice, as well as deployment of vaccines.
    The FMD outbreak that has hit neighbouring Zimbabwe has compounded the matter and sent shockwaves and left farmers frightened across the breadth and length of Botswana.
    As of January, latest outbreaks were reported in the Mangwe district of Matabeleland South, near Botswana border. Fifty-four active cases have been reported thus far in the area, with infections linked to a stray buffalo.
    The twin outbreaks have sent shockwaves through Botswana’s cattle industry, a key contributor to national revenue through long-standing access to the lucrative European Union market.
    Farmers fear that failure to contain the disease using both traditional control measures and innovative approaches could cripple the industry, especially at a time when the country is grappling with resource constraints brought about by prolonged economic challenges.
    Southern District Beef Farmers Association vice chairperson, Mr Tiroyaone Mmereki, said existing farmers’ association structures should be fully utilised if the country was to prevail in the fight against FMD.
    He said the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture should routinely engage the Botswana National Beef Producers Union whenever disease outbreaks occur, as this would enable effective mobilisation of farmers through its affiliate structures.
    “The Botswana National Beef Producers Union would then be able to mobilise us as its bona fide affiliates to chart the way forward,” he said.
    Mr Mmereki called on farmers to take the lead in combating animal diseases by working closely with fellow farmers and relevant authorities, including the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture and the police.
    He also raised concern over the poor maintenance of cordon fences across the country, which he said posed a serious threat to disease control efforts.
    He noted that many fences had not been properly maintained for over a decade, allowing wild animals such as elephants to stray beyond their natural habitats and increasing the risk of disease transmission.
    He urged members of his association from Pitshane Molopo, Manyana and Lobatse through to Mabutsane, to work together and act as vigilant custodians of the cattle industry.
    Echoing his sentiments, C8 Beef Farmers Society chairperson, Mr Phokompe Pifelo warned that the deteriorating state of cordon fences could allow diseases to spread easily across zones.
    “This is also exacerbated by unavailability of patrols,” said Mr Pifelo, whose society covers farming communities from Makoro to Makoba.
    Last year, he said as a precautionary measure, the society partnered with the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture to repair a cordon fence in the Sese area, with the ministry providing resources while farmers contributed labour.
    Mr Pifelo emphasised that individual farmers must rise to the occasion and demonstrate commitment to safeguarding the industry, especially in light of limited government resources.

    He stated that acute shortage of resources from government called on the farming community to join efforts to curb threats poised by FMD and other enemies of a full-throttle beef industry.
    The views of the two associations were aligned with those of the TOTUMA Commercial Farmers Association.
    Its chairperson, Mr Stephen Pillar, said effective communication was equally critical in mitigating the FMD threat.
    “We stay informed and closely monitor developments so that we can share information with our affiliates,” he said, adding that the association, which represented farmers from Tonota, Tutume and Masunga, had established mechanisms to rapidly disseminate information on the disease.
    Mr Pillar said the association would urgently engage the Ministry of Lands and Agriculture to consider deploying patrols along the Botswana-Zimbabwe border, similar to operations in the Bobirwa District.
    “This would help curb disease spillover, especially given the prevalence of illegal border crossings in areas such as Maitengwe and other border villages in the North East,” he said.
    FMD outbreaks in Botswana date back to the 1930s, a history that prompted the country to establish local vaccine production through the Botswana Vaccine Institute.
    The use of effective vaccines, alongside other control measures, remains a cornerstone of Botswana’s FMD management strategy.
    FMD is a highly contagious viral disease affecting cloven-hoofed domestic and wild animals, including cattle, pigs, sheep, goats and deer. It is regarded as an economic disease due to its devastating impact on livestock production and trade.
    Over the years, Botswana has developed a comprehensive national FMD strategy based on passive and active surveillance, movement control, zoning, strategic vaccination, biosecurity, public education, awareness campaigns and robust legal frameworks.
    In Botswana, FMD is primarily transmitted to cattle from wild animals, particularly buffalo, in endemic areas, with outbreaks historically concentrated in the North West District due to livestock-wildlife interaction.

  • Budget 2026/27 pivots from diamonds to enterprise

    Budget 2026/27 pivots from diamonds to enterprise

    The 2026/2027 national budget, set to be presented before Parliament on February 9, will kickstart the process of transforming the country’s economy, guided by the Botswana Economic Transformation Programme (BETP) and the National Development Plan (NDP 12).


    This was revealed by Vice President and Minister of Finance, Mr Ndaba Gaolathe in his address during the Budget Pitso for general stakeholders’ consultation in Gaborone on Monday.
    Mr Gaolathe emphasised that the BETP was vital for restructuring the country’s economy into a more resilient system, where practical delivery and priorities translated into investment and employment.
    “BETP recognises that Botswana’s constraint is not the absence of ideas. It is execution, productivity and a growth structure that must now broaden beyond what the public purse and diamonds can sustainably support. BETP exists to ensure economic diversification is implemented in practice, sector by sector, project by project,” he added.
    He revealed that the economic model, which had sustained the country since independence, anchored on diamond revenue and government spending, had become unsuitable and made transformation imperative.
    “In plain terms, we are operating in a new reality. We must stabilise the economy and protect the vulnerable, while simultaneously repositioning the economy for diversification and jobs without assuming that public spending alone can carry that transition,” he said.
    The Vice President called on the private sector to reduce its reliance on government procurement and instead become enterprising and innovative in developing sustainable business solutions.
    “If we are serious about diversification, then we must be serious about a culture shift. Botswana cannot build a resilient high-income economy if too much private initiative is based around government contracts. No nation has diversified by treating public procurement as the main investment model,” he said.
    He added that Botswana needed to build an economy where entrepreneurs established factories that served households, firms competed effectively, value chains deepened and imports were substituted by domestic production and exports that generated foreign exchange.
    The Vice President also called on private financial institutions to join the state in the cultural shift through “financing that rewards productivity and funding models that back real value creation rather than short-term cycles.”
    He pledged that government would remain transparent about the current state of the economy while working toward long-term solutions.
    That, he said, included fostering a new culture where projects were completed on time and within budget and where opportunity was created through production and enterprise.
    For his part, secretary of Macroeconomic and Financial Policy at the Ministry of Finance, Dr Sayed Timuno, reiterated that the 2026/2027 budget served as a launchpad for NDP 12.
    Dr Timuno noted that according to World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) projections, global growth would remain subdued through 2026, which continued to adversely affect the domestic economy.
    He added that while the mining sector remained the main driver of growth, diamond prospects for 2026 remained abstract as lab-grown diamonds continued to pressure the natural diamond market.
    Senior policy advisor in the finance ministry, Ms Naledi Madala stated that the BETP would focus on bringing to life projects that had undergone rigorous labs in sectors such as agriculture, manufacturing, energy and tourism.