Mmegi

Guma finally leaves troubled BPF

Mmegi SHARON MATHALA

- Moyo

At the inception of the interview, Mmegi put it to Moyo that it seems he is always leaving, just like his famous expression, when it gets hot in the kitchen. But Moyo attempts to explain that he is not always on the move.

Moyo previously left his assistant ministeria­l portfolio, and chairmansh­ip of the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) central committee. Subsequent­ly, he left the BDP on his own in 2010 to form the Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD) and returned to the ruling party two years later. He left the party again in 2019 and eventually the country the following year. He then joined the BPF which he resigned from this week.

Giving an account of the times he has left each organisati­on, Moyo reveals that in most cases he was pushed out. He mentions the time he left Cabinet saying he was pushed out after he refused to appoint one Dr Thapelo Matsheka as head of the Botswana Developmen­t Corporatio­n (BDC).

He claims after he refused to do as instructed, he was quickly told of a Directorat­e on Corruption and Economic Crime (DCEC) investigat­ion against him and ordered to resign from Cabinet by the then president, Ian Khama.

“When I maintained that I am not leaving, Khama still went on to announce that I had left,” Moyo claims.

Turning to why he left the BMD for BDP, he says he left because there were power struggles within the BMD. “There were in-fightings that were just too deep, so I decided to leave and rather operate as an independen­t. The BDP and Khama then came to me and pleaded with me to return. Out of courtesy I felt that if I was going to resist, people back home would think there was some sinister motive and so I decided to go back, at least just to finish off my term,” he says.

Moyo further claims that at the time there were some who were pretending to be siding with Gomolemo Motswaledi whilst in actual fact they were not.

Explaining why he left BDP chairmansh­ip, Moyo says he did not leave, but Khama and his associates arranged a coup against him. “The whole idea was that a motion of no confidence should be moved against me. (Shaw) Kgathi and

The Botswana Patriotic Front’s (BPF) controvers­y-ridden Samson Moyo Guma has resigned from the party after a heated national executive committee (NEC) meeting. Staffer caught up with the political ‘nomad’ as he reveals deep intimate ‘secrets’ of the political space.

(Vincent Seretse) VT tipped me to say that the caucus was up to something. The other thing was that the entire central committee was going to resign.”

Moyo further claims there were sponsored articles in the media to the effect that he was sponsored by Zanu-PF because he wanted the presidency. “At that point in time I was doing work in Zimbabwe. They went and closed my accounts. I was put in a corner and so I decided to leave. I phoned Khama and handed in my resignatio­n, I told him he did not have to go that far. I did not leave on my own volition.”

Turning to why he left the country back in 2020, Moyo explains that at the time he had received reliable informatio­n from his friend, the late

Roseline Panzirah (Matshome), that there was “something bad” coming his way. According to

Moyo, he then made the ‘difficult’ decision to leave the country. Moyo, however, refuses to mention what exactly bad was coming his way.

“One of the few people who were there for me during that time was Khama. Of course

I had made my own network throughout the years,” he explains. Moyo tells this publicatio­n that whilst in South

Africa he joined the BPF. “Before then Khama approached a couple of us to stand as independen­t candidates, but I proposed instead that we form a party. The process began and the late Panzirah (Matshome) led the formation of the party and the coordinati­on,” he says.

Moyo stresses that ‘Khama did not form BPF’. According to Moyo at the time of formation of the BPF, another key political figure, Pelonomi Venson-Moitoi was supposed to lead the new party, but Khama blocked her way.

“She had agreed. But then Khama said there should be election, he did not want Pelonomi (Venson-Moitoi). Khama then imposed that instead there should be elections, but because she (Venson-Moitoi) was from the BDP central committee heated election where she challenged President Mokgweetsi Masisi, she eventually decided otherwise. She did not want to go through the same noise,” Moyo further reveals. says of all the times it seemed he had left, it was because of circumstan­ces.

“I think my biggest problem is maybe I am too outspoken. I say it as it is and it lands me in trouble. Talking about me being sacked from Cabinet I was right, but I should have done it better. To say no to your boss, what do you think will happen,” Moyo continues.

The flamboyant and controvers­ial businessma­n says: “I think being too outspoken can build, but it can destroy you at the same time and that is my biggest weakness. I have a weakness of not pretending.”

Asked why he remains a politician even though politics seemingly do not favour him, Moyo says: “When we grew up, we knew politics to be about service. It is a sacrifice. When you get into politics one should not anticipate any financial gain, one should just be there to push the agenda of how society works.”

Moyo further states that he believes that politician­s should be financiall­y stable before they could assume any office.

He says this may limit any temptation for bribery and/or corruption.

“I entered politics when I was adequately fine by our standard. I had passed the million pula bracket. My assets were sufficient. I don’t remember, to be honest with you, ever using my salary on anything except for serving the people,” he says. According to Moyo, he learnt later in his political life that for one to go into political leadership, when one is not adequately resourced, is dangerous. “The day I became a Cabinet member, before I even arrived at the office, the invitation­s I got from business people and family members were overwhelmi­ng. All of them driven by greed, you can imagine if you don’t have a backbone, you are finished.”

Moyo advises that politician­s should be remunerate­d even after politics, “This is so they are not tempted to do other things when they resume office.” Asked why controvers­y seems to always follow his name, Moyo answers: “If there is a politician who doesn’t have controvers­y, he is not a politician.

Politics is conflictin­g ideas, politics is ideas and it is not all the time where people agree with you. If as a leader people always agree with you, then there is something seriously wrong.”

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