Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Ex-Botswana president Keitumile Masire dies

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GABORONE — Former Botswana president Sir Ketumile Masire has died. He was 91.

Reports yesterday indicated that Masire died on Thursday night after he was hospitalis­ed last weekend in a critical condition.

In a statement posted on Facebook, the Botswana government said: “This is to confirm that our beloved Former President Sir Ketumile Quett Joni Masire has passed away. May His Soul Rest in Peace and his family and the nation as a whole be comforted.” Masire was the president of Botswana from 1980 to 1998. He led various diplomatic initiative­s in Africa, including chairing a panel that investigat­ed the 1994 Rwanda genocide, and co-ordinating the Inter-Congolese National Dialogue.

Meanwhile, South Africa’s High Commission to Botswana, Mdu Lembede, has reportedly said that Sir Masire was instrument­al in the fight against apartheid in South Africa.

According to SABC, Lembede said Masire “created a passage for freedom fighters”.

“He did not only do it for South Africans. It’s on the record that he did it for the region. I mean all the leaders from countries around the region, at one stage or the other, they went through Botswana, whether it Sam Nojuma from Namibia, Samora Machel in Mozambique, they all came here.

“And they were taken care of, and he was the person in the forefront, and he was seeing to it that people are safe,” Lembede was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, in a statement yesterday, the Nelson Mandela Foundation said it was saddened by the passing of Masire.

“We have lost another great leader in Sir Ketumile Masire, a teacher who cared deeply about youth developmen­t to the very end.”

e foundation quoted what Mandela said during a state banquet for Masire on April 23, 1996: “Our country has much to learn from Botswana — both from your towering successes and your efforts to deal with the difficulti­es. All these attributes have made Botswana, and you Mr President, a natural and capable leader of the region’s collective efforts towards growth and developmen­t, within the framework of Sadc. We also value your leadership in the region’s efforts to promote peace and stability on our sub-continent and further afield.” Masire was the president of Botswana from 1980 to 1998. He led various diplomatic initiative­s in Africa, including chairing a panel that investigat­ed the 1994 Rwanda genocide, and co-ordinating the Inter-Congolese National Dialogue.

“In all these spheres, South Africa stands ready to work with Botswana and other neighbours to attain the best for our peoples.

“In his honour, the Nelson Mandela Foundation will continue to work with the Sir Ketumile Masire Foundation through the “Caring4Gir­ls” Initiative in Botswana, and Mandela Day Libraries in an effort to deepen work he was passionate about to further youth developmen­t,” read the statement. — AFP

Tunisian representa­tive Walid Doudech told the council the final text had been subject to “intense negotiatio­ns” and thanked the EU for enabling the “crucial compromise”.

A Western diplomat close to the negotiatio­ns said the EU had preferred finding a compromise to pushing through an investigat­ion sure to be boycotted by Kinshasa.

The negotiatio­ns “were not easy. But it was better to find a balanced solution with the participat­ion of the country,” the diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity.

DRC ambassador Zenon Mukongo Ngay told the council his government would “accommodat­e the investigat­ive team on its soil,” but stressed the experts would only provide “technical and logistic support” and that “the Congolese judiciary will maintain the leadership in the investigat­ion”.

The violence in the Kasai provinces erupted in September when security forces moved in against followers of a tribal chieftain Kamwina Nsapu - who had been killed a month earlier - rebelling against the increasing authority of the central government. — AFP

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