• Blog
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact
  • Search

  • Archives

    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
  • Categories

    • Housekeeping
    • Worth Considering
    • Worth Discussing
    • Worth Distraction
    • Worth Knowing
    • Worth Reading
    • Worth Seeing

Link Banana

A Vaguely Intelligent Linkblog
« Zimbabwe’s (Maybe) Weapons
Puerto Rico’s Moment »

Botswana and Zimbabwe #

May 22nd, 2008 | In Worth Knowing 

Because I’m on a segue kick, Marian Tupy recently offered a comparison of Zimbabwe and Botswana. Though the comparison’s slightly insane — anything looks well-run when compared to a basketcase — it’s an interesting perspective on a country I rarely hear about. Some history of Botswana:

Botswana, previously the Protectorate of Bechuanaland, gained independence from Great Britain in 1966. Her new president, Seretse Khama, a descendant of the local Bamangwato chiefs, received his education at South Africa’s Fort Hare University and Oxford’s Balliol College. In 1948, he married a white woman, Ruth Williams, who clerked at Lloyds in London. Their marriage was political dynamite that was, at first, opposed by both the traditional chiefs in the Bechuanaland and by the government in South Africa, Botswana’s immensely more powerful southern neighbor whose white population had just elected a regime that wanted to increase racial segregation between whites and blacks. Fearing South Africa’s negative reaction, the British government banned the Khamas from the Protectorate for almost a decade.

The racial prejudice that the pair encountered from both sides of the racial spectrum proved to be formative. While most regimes in post-independence Africa sent their white populations packing, Khama and his successors strove for racial harmony. As a result, Botswana benefited greatly from the human and financial capital of her large white community, which totals 7 percent of the overall population. It is surely a sign of Botswana’s relative comfort with racial diversity that on April 1, 2008, Ian Khama, the first-born son of the country’s founder, took over the reigns of power in Botswana, thus becoming the first half-white leader of an African democracy.

Interested in similar content on Link Banana?

  • South Africa and Racism (March 12, 2008)
  • America’s Pets (April 28, 2008)
  • The China-Zimbabwe Arms Deal (April 22, 2008)
  • Race and the Social Contract (March 31, 2008)
  • In Zimbabwe, a $10 Million Dollar Bill (January 18, 2008)
Tags: botswana, economics, history, marian tupy, the american, zimbabwe

Via BuzzFeed

A david (b) hayes Production

Link Banana is powered by WordPress

THEME: Carter's Line by Ikiru Design

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)