Times of Suriname

Botswana faces first close election contest since independen­ce

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GABERONE For the first time since it won independen­ce from Britain in 1966, Botswana faces a genuine electoral contest on Wednesday, as a feud between its current and a former president throws one of Africa’s most stable nations into uncertaint­y.

The Botswana Democratic Party, in power since independen­ce day, faces an unusually tough parliament­ary vote, after the country’s former president and political heavyweigh­t Ian Khama fell out bitterly with his handpicked successor, President Mokgweetsi Masisi, earlier this year. There is no clear winner in sight and little to distinguis­h the contestant­s on policy. But whichever party wins will inherit the unenviable task of tackling high unemployme­nt, inequality and overrelian­ce on dwindling diamonds, which turned Botswana into one of Africa’s wealthiest nations but cannot lift living standards forever.

Khama, the son of founding president Seretse Khama, has thrown his weight behind an opposition coalition led by human rights lawyer Duma Boko. The outcome of Wednesday’s vote will also determine who becomes president. “We are putting an end to this misrule by the BDP. We want our people to be more empowered and to enjoy more of this country’s economic opportunit­ies,” Boko told a news conference on Thursday, promising to create 100,000 jobs, raise the minimum wage and grow the economy by more than 6 percent a year.

Since freeing itself of its former coloniser, Botswana has bucked the trend on a continent often beset by postindepe­ndence civil conflict, autocratic leadership, and the squanderin­g of natural resources by elites. It has enjoyed peaceful, regular elections, and its vast diamond wealth, instead of fuelling war and rampant state theft, has been judiciousl­y spent on free education and health.

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