Botswana Guardian

Tsabong abbatior takes shape

To diversify Tsabong economy into game farming & hunting

- Keletso Thobega

The P161 million state- of- the- art Tsabong multi species abattoir is taking shape and is anticipate­d to be completed in April 2023.

According to Hendrick Jacobs of the Kgalagadi district council, the project is 70 percent complete. He attributed delays on the project to various issues including the variations of electrical components and delay in supply of steel. Constructi­on is progressin­g well on other aspects and the contractor is currently working on constructi­on of the abattoir access road.

The anticipati­on is that once it is fully operationa­l, the abattoir will contribute to a vibrant meat industry on the backdrop of the opening up of the game industry, after Government lifted the hunting ban to allow locals to contribute to game farming and slaughteri­ng. This developmen­t forms part of a bigger scope to open up the farming and game sector and wildlife industry in the southern area. Farmer, Thabiso Tlotse noted that the abattoir will open up the industry and make it possible for locals to participat­e in the local economy. “The lifting of the hunting ban has made it easier for locals to take part in economic activities and make good money from game farming. The hope is that there will be a protection of rare species animals and that local hunters will comply with the limits set for them to hunt game,” he said. In the past few years, wildlife tourism has contribute­d to employment creation and economic developmen­t in Tsabong and has also increased the community’s sense of pride in their culture and preservati­on of local culture because of wildlife tourism. Generally, the protected areas in the Tsabong area are underpinne­d by conservati­on, tourism, and community developmen­t goals. Niche forms of nature- based tourism, such as wildlife tourism and ecotourism, have been associated with protected areas and have been argued to draw the majority of internatio­nal tourists to Southern Africa. In a paper on citizen participat­ion in the Kalahari district of 2021, research author Refilwe Lekgau, notes that local community participat­ion in wildlife tourism and conservati­on projects of the Kalahari is generally low and positive economic benefits of wildlife tourism are not seen by the entire community.

He further states that Botswana’s developmen­t and conservati­on efforts to end non- commercial hunting and promote cattle farming are interprete­d by San communitie­s as policies of forced assimilati­on into mainstream Tswana culture and society.

“Cattle production and beef consumptio­n are promoted as a developmen­t approach that is rendered ‘ modern’ in contrast to supposedly ‘ primitive’ hunting practices. Neverthele­ss, top- down policies that facilitate the continued abolition of subsistenc­e hunting are justified along ecological and conservati­on lines without fully engaging with localised environmen­tal and social effects of a widespread transition away from game meat and towards cattle production.”

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