Stable Botswana to vote in rare cliffhanger
Former president Ian Khama has shaken up the country's traditionally calm politics by dramatically renouncing his hand-picked successor Mokgweetsi Masisi.
Dumelang Saleshando, vice president of the Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC), addresses his supporters during a rally campaign for the general elections in Gaborone on October 19, 2019. Picture: Monirul Bhuiyan / AFP
Botswana votes on Wednesday in the most closely fought general election in the history of the southern African country, long known as one of the continent’s most stable democracies.
Former president Ian Khama has shaken up the country’s traditionally calm politics by dramatically renouncing his hand-picked successor Mokgweetsi Masisi.
Khama left the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) in May, accusing President Masisi — who had been his deputy until last year — of autocracy.
“I saw a general threat to our democracy… what we have now is a leadership which has become drunk on power,” Khama told AFP on Monday.
The bitter feud has threatened to fracture the BDP, which has governed the diamond-rich country since it gained independence from Britain in 1966.
The split came after the ruling party saw its share of the vote fall below 50 percent for the first time in the last elections in 2014.
It has faced an increasing challenge from a coalition of opposition parties, the Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC), which has added another group to its ranks since the last election.
“It’s the most contested election we have seen, and genuinely the outcome is in doubt to some extent,” said Botswana economic analyst Keith Jefferies.
“It’s possible that the BDP could be unseated.”
The UDC has received a boost from an unlikely source: Khama.
The opposition group was his fiercest critic when he was president, but Khama has urged voters in many regions to cast their ballots for the UDC in a bid to oust Masisi and the BDP.
Khama’s father co-founded the BDP and served as the country’s first president. He retains plenty of influence, particularly in the central region — a BDP stronghold — where he is a traditional chief.
The rift between the president and his predecessor started last year, when Khama resigned near the end of his constitutional limit of two five-year terms.
Khama handed the reins to Masisi in April 2018, 18 months ahead of the next election, as part of the BDP’s carefully crafted process for transferring power.
But Masisi quickly started reversing several of Khama’s key policies, including lifting his ban on elephant trophy hunting, infuriating his predecessor.
“Things we had put in place, he just wants to erase,” Khama told AFP.
“It’s a kind of tsunami which is affecting our democracy, which is undermining our democracy as (US President Donald) Trump is doing in his own country.”
Peter Fabricius, an analyst at the Pretoria-based think tank Institute of Security Studies, said “Khama is the wild card”.
“This is quite a close election and it could go either way,” he added.
Masisi told AFP that Khama’s policies had hurt the ruling party.
The BDP is “definitely going to perform far better” without Khama, Masisi said, predicting an “overwhelming victory, landslide”.
UDC leader Duma Boko was also confident, telling AFP: “I think we will win this election and we should”.
Voter Alice said: “It’s time for a new government, enough of the BDP”.
“Things are not right in our government… the corruption is just too much,” she told AFP, asking to be identified only by her first name to protect her job.
The unprecedented political drama has raised fears that Khama’s defection could unsettle Botswana after more than five decades of peace and stability.
But Masisi ruled out any such scenario, saying “we are never going to fight”.
“Botswana is never going to be in crisis if one person wins or the other doesn’t win, there will be another opportunity,” Masisi told AFP.
“I have already accepted the results whatever might come,” he said, adding that stability is in the DNA of Botswana’s people.
Khama agreed that their dispute would not shake the country’s calm, saying: “This is democracy at play.”
But past elections have never been this close. If the opposition wins, the country’s democratic credentials and reputation for good governance will face a new test — a peaceful transfer of power.
Analysts said a BDP loss would be unlikely to send people into the streets. However, they did warn that an unexpected landslide for the ruling party could spark opposition protests claiming the election was rigged.
Duma said at the weekend that the vote would not be free and fair because of unbalanced media coverage by the public broadcaster.
Nearly half of Botswana’s 2.2 million people are expected to cast their ballots in the parliamentary and local elections.
The BDP, UDC and two smaller parties will vie for 57 parliamentary seats. The party with the most seats chooses the president.
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