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Dubai
November 15, 2024
World

Botswana’s new president sworn in after historic election upset

Botswana’s new president took office yesterday in a whirlwind transfer of power following elections that saw a historic defeat handed to the party that had governed the diamond-rich country for nearly 60 years.Human rights lawyer Duma Boko, 54, was sworn in during a closed session at the office of the chief justice three days after elections which booted the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) out of office.Boko later delivered an acceptance speech and press briefing that was broadcast live on state television and touched on some of his campaign pledges, such as more than doubling the minimum wage to 4,000 pula ($300) and introducing universal health insurance.The president said he wanted to secure investor confidence as well as ties with mining companies active in Botswana while exploring ways to diversify the diamond-dependent economy, a measure seen as critical to stabilising the country’s finances.A public inauguration ceremony would be held in due course, he said. The presidency is “a responsibility one approaches and accepts with humility, with some trepidation and feeling. I dare not fail. I dare not disappoint.” Outgoing president Mokgweetsi Masisi conceded defeat earlier in the day after overnight results from Wednesday’s general election showed that his party — in power since independence from Britain in 1966 — would not win enough seats in parliament to be able to form a government.Boko, who has spent three decades in opposition politics fighting to dislodge the BDP, praised the peaceful handover as an example of democracy in action.“What has happened today takes our democracy to a higher level,” he told the independent Mmegi newspaper. “It now means we have seen a successful, peaceful, orderly democratic transition from one regime to the next and this happened in full view of every citizen of this country with their full participation and endorsement.” The BDP’s defeat was a major blow for Masisi, 63, who was elected in 2018 and had been confident of securing a second term. “We got it wrong big time in the eyes of the people,” Masisi conceded.“We were really convinced of our message. But every indication, by any measure, is that there’s no way that I can pretend that we’re going to form a government.”

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