How to save Botswana’s sparkling reputation
Botswana’s next president must tackle corruption and take on the intelligence service
WHEN Ian Khama steps down at the end of the month, after ten years as president, he will leave his country looking perky. Mr Khama has been lavished with praise as he makes a series of farewell sorties around the country. At a recent gathering of farmers, he was “gifted with 35 cattle, a bull, two sheep and goats, a horse, and shares worth 25,000 pula [$2,628] at Tlou Energy”, a coal-development company, according to the pro-government Daily News.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Under the surface it’s not all glitter”
Middle East & Africa March 10th 2018
- Saudi Arabia’s use of soft power in Iraq is making Iran nervous
- How to save Botswana’s sparkling reputation
- Ahead of a farcical election, Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi goes after the press
- Africans want to sell donkey skins. Western charities want to stop them
- Increasing debt in many African countries is a cause for worry
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