Mmegi

Democratis­ation of UDC

- KESITEGILE GOBOTSWANG*

The debate around the internal democratic processes of Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC) has ensued. This followed an article published in the Weekend Post newspaper of September 26, 2020.

The said article focused on statements attributed to some UDC members of Parliament calling for the democratiz­ation of the UDC.

Subsequent­ly, Moeti Mohwasa the Secretary General of the Botswana National Front (BNF) and the Publicity Chief of the UDC responded to the article suggesting that any move for a UDC Elective Congress was ill-advised.

Another con- tentious issue raised was in relation to growing chorus amongst UDC supporters and followers calling for disbanding of contractin­g parties to merge into one political entity. Any meaningful debate around these issues should be informed by the

UDC constituti­on of 2012, the revised constituti­on that is with the Registrar of Societies (that was itself an outcome of the Boipuso Conference) and the Ba Isago Conference Resolution. Ordinarily, public pronouncem­ents by key political actors often serve as reference points on major policy directions.

It is however amiss that in his response to the discourse, the Publicity Chief of the UDC deliberate­ly decided to ignore critical party documents and conference resolution­s.

The argument that an elective conference could disadvanta­ge contractin­g parties that are numericall­y weaker is baseless. In essence, the operationa­l UDC constituti­on promotes equity as opposed to equality.

There is a provision that details representa­tion and the process of selecting delegates from contractin­g parties to UDC congresses and/or conference­s. More specifical­ly, for every 750 members, a contractin­g party is entitled to one (1) delegate. This means that a party that has 749 members will not be represente­d at a UDC conference while a party with 200, 000 members will be eligible to send 285 delegates.

During the 2018 Constituti­onal Conference at Boipuso Hall a compromise was reached to waive the 750 member clause to accommodat­e Botswana Peoples Party (BPP). Consequent­ly, each party was allowed ten (10) delegates per constituen­cy. It is such give-and-take compromise­s that

glued the coalition together. Any suggestion that parties with numerical advantage will dominate others and sweep all the stakes at an elective conference is incorrect, far-fetched and a scare-mongering tactic by comrades who despise a truly democratic dispensati­on. It did not happen at Boipuso Hall and it will not happen in the near future as long as UDC remains a coalition. In fact it will be suicidal for any party to abuse its numerical strength to bully other partners.

Under the operationa­l UDC constituti­on, there is a transition clause that gives power to the National Executive Committee (NEC) that is made up of four (4) members from each of the contractin­g parties. Under the current set up, this translates into 12 members. Such power has been used to suspend or waive some sections of the constituti­on to accommodat­e new members or address obstacles that could be considered to be a hindrance to progress within the coalition. However, the founding members of the UDC never envisaged the transition clause to be a permanent feature in running the affairs of the coalition.

The critical question that we should be asking ourselves is ‘’In the spectrum of coalition or models of cooperatio­n, where does the UDC arrangemen­t fit?” Within our immediate environs, there are two cooperatio­n arrangemen­t that could be used as the basis of comparison being the African National Congress (ANC) and its alliance partners of COSATU and South African Communist Party (SACP) and the Botswana Federation of Public, Private and Parastal Sector Union (BOFEPUSU). In both scenarios participat­ory democracy is fully entrenched. In South Africa, members of the ANC alliance partners participat­e in the ANC elective conference where they send delegates. At UDC, none of the contractin­g parties has been afforded the same status as it prevails in the ANC. If there was such an entity then members of other contractin­g parties would deserve the right to elect the leadership of the vanguard party.

A closer examinatio­n of UDC arrangemen­t shows that the coalition is modelled around BOFEPUSU. At BOFEPUSU, there was never a question of numericall­y stronger unions dominating others in an election. Oh yes, they do have elections without fail. Today, Johannes Tshukudu who is the president of BOFEPUSU comes from Botswana Teachers Union. Before then, the president was Masego Mogwera from Botswana Public Sector Union.

It is disingenuo­us to pretend and even claim that the Ba Isago Conference did not pass a resolution calling on contractin­g parties to consider a merger of UDC contractin­g parties after the 2019 General Elections. When the resolution was tabled and adopted, none of the parties raised any objection. The expectatio­n was that each contractin­g party will debate the motion of a merger and report back on the decision they had taken at a UDC conference.

The reasons for a merger are compelling. First, there will be no fights over constituen­cy allocation­s and resources will be pooled together. Instead of running several offices, there will be one central office. Instead of printing party and UDC colours, there will be only one royal blue colour. A merger is more stable and builds confidence amongst voters as political parties will be truly united. But more importantl­y, it will entrench democracy by giving a right to elect leadership and representa­tives in wards and constituen­cies to the general membership.

The argument about protecting the soul of contractin­g parties is baseless because during the 2019 General Elections, we rallied behind an election manifesto based on social democracy. What was the soul that was protected? Obviously, there are people from different ideologica­l persuasion across all the contractin­g parties. It is fact within the UDC block that there are Communists, Socialists, Pan-Africanist­s, and Liberals as is the case within the constituen­t parties.

The era of an endless mandate of unelected selfimpose­d leaders at UDC must come to an end. It has served its purpose at its appropriat­e time. As a member of UDC National Executive Committee, I feel embarrasse­d to be part of such an imposition. This small group of leaders, twelve (12) to be precise, wield so much power over the majority of UDC members. It will take fearless and committed revolution­aries to dislodge such an undemocrat­ic arrangemen­t. In fact, some in the UDC NEC have used such powers to stall progress and delay change because they know their leadership positions are guaranteed. As they say power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

*Kesitegile Gobotswang (PhD) is Member of National Executive Committee, UDC, and SefhareRam­okgonani MP

Kwa Nokeng Oil site tour

Kwa Nokeng Oil management with Highway Technician­s

Kwa Nokeng Oil is the largest Citizen owned fuel and lubricants distributo­r in Botswana with branches in Phakalane, Maun, Tlokweng, Francistow­n, Martin’s Drift, Mamuno, Pandamaten­ga and Pioneer Border gate in Lobatse “This is a noble gesture in which you are giving back to the nation. We don’t see many businesses doing this. I was assured that it would not only be taking care of your clients but also some of us who will be travelling either through the Trans Kalahari or the A1,” Road Transport and Safety Director Modukanele said when expressing his appreciati­on of the initiative.

He further stated that the nation would appreciate. He added; “The road between Nata and Kasane is very dangerous with wild animals roaming around and normally during the holidays there are too many

He further said the vehicles would cement on the traveller’s minds that Botswana is a safe country. He stated; “While patrolling, these two vehicles will be in contact with and assisting some motorists at your own expense.” Modukanele further pledged for his department to be part of this ‘noble’ campaign and help get the nation to know Kwa Nokeng Oil.

Kwa Nokeng Oil’s Operations Manager, Sarel Petrus explained the functions of the equipment fitted to the recovery vehicles and led a tour of the Phakalane facility.

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