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Botswana's Boko faces a vote of no confidence

by Staff reporter
8 hrs ago | 867 Views
Oppos­i­tion parties are pre­par­ing a Motion of No Con­fid­ence against Pres­id­ent Advoc­ate Duma Boko, cit­ing his hand­ling of Bot­swana's col­lapsing health­care sys­tem and other failed prom­ises. The move, announced by Bot­swana Con­gress Party's (BCP) Kesitegile Gobot­swang, comes in the wake of Boko's recent sur­prise visit to Prin­cess Mar­ina Hos­pital in Gabor­one, a visit crit­ics warn risks being dis­missed as polit­ical theatre rather than genu­ine inter­ven­tion.

Gobot­swang accused the Pres­id­ent of fail­ing Bat­swana, say­ing: "He declared a pub­lic health emer­gency without first famil­i­ar­ising him­self with the real­it­ies on the ground."

The BCP polit­ical leader told The Mid­week Sun that the oppos­i­tion will table the motion when Par­lia­ment resumes this year. "We know people say we do not have the num­bers, but we will not be deterred; our charge sheet will be rock solid. We want Bat­swana to know how this Pres­id­ent has failed the nation."

The threat of par­lia­ment­ary action has sharpened scru­tiny of Boko's unan­nounced hos­pital tour, his first since assum­ing office in 2024. While sur­prise inspec­tions are often praised for expos­ing the real­it­ies of pub­lic insti­tu­tions, crit­ics argue that in the midst of a declared health emer­gency, sym­bol­ism is not enough.

Dif­fer­ent polit­ical lead­ers argue that Bot­swana's health­care sys­tem remains in crisis months after the emer­gency declar­a­tion, adding that medi­cines are scarce, patients are told to buy their own band­ages, syr­inges, and even lifesav­ing drugs for chronic con­di­tions.

Sur­ger­ies are post­poned due to short­ages of con­sum­ables and equip­ment. Hos­pital phar­ma­cies oper­ate on lim­ited stock, for­cing patients to turn to private out­lets daily.

Health work­ers at Mar­ina, speak­ing anonym­ously for fear of vic­tim­isa­tion, expressed mixed feel­ings about the visit. They wel­comed the Pres­id­ent's pres­ence but ques­tioned its tim­ing and format. "If the Pres­id­ent really wanted to under­stand our struggles, the visit should have been announced. We have no time to hide any­thing. We are in a crisis. We are per­ish­ing."

They argued that a planned visit would have allowed staff to present doc­u­ment­a­tion, stat­ist­ics, and pro­cure­ment records to demon­strate the full scale of the crisis. "What will he find when he sneaks in? He will find us sit­ting. Not because we are lazy, but because we have noth­ing to work with."

Patients con­tinue to queue from mid­night, hop­ing to be seen by doc­tors the next morn­ing.

Many wait the entire day only to return home unseen. Oth­ers leave without med­ic­a­tion because the phar­macy has closed by the time their turn arrives. In the Emer­gency Depart­ment, patients some­times wait more than 48 hours due to staff short­ages and lack of beds, with some sleep­ing on the floor.

Mar­ina increas­ingly relies on Sir Ketu­mile Masire Teach­ing Hos­pital, but even that arrange­ment is strained. Ambu­lances are insuf­fi­cient, trans­port delays are com­mon, and when doc­tors leave Mar­ina to attend duties else­where, patients are left unat­ten­ded.

The sur­prise visit has rather served to ignite polit­ical debate across the spec­trum. Big­gie Butale, Pres­id­ent of the Bot­swana Repub­lican Party (BRP), warned against redu­cing the visit to a pub­lic rela­tions exer­cise: "It should not be about pic­tures.

Bat­swana want real action, and they want it now. Today, patients buy their own med­ic­a­tion. Tomor­row they will

be told to bring their own beds."

The Bot­swana Demo­cratic Party (BDP) said the visit came late. Sec­ret­ary Gen­eral Kentse Ram­midi noted it was unfor­tu­nate that the Pres­id­ent only vis­ited Mar­ina months after declar­ing an emer­gency, but added it is never too late.

"We will be mon­it­or­ing what hap­pens after this visit. We want patients

to be assisted." He urged Boko to extend vis­its to other pub­lic health facil­it­ies nation­wide.

The wider con­cern among the polit­ical rivals remains clear; that unless the visit trans­lates into tan­gible reforms, it risks being dis­missed as a polit­ical stunt, a ges­ture that shifts focus from the real health crisis grip­ping the nation.

Source - online
More on: #Boko, #Botswana, #Vote
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