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/ 13 October 2005
The Central Bank of Botswana increased the bank rate 25 basis points to 14,50% on Thursday. This came as the Central Statistics Office announced an increase of 10% in year on year (y/y) inflation at the end of September — the highest rate since April 2003 (10,8%). The bank warned of further increases in inflation.
Beers is aiming to increase its core earnings by 30% to -billion by stimulating demand and pushing up prices, reports the Antwerp Diamond High Council, in its Antwerp Facets magazine. It also aims to raise the value of the group to -billion by 2009. While it did not disclose current value, it provided a figure of ,3-billion when the firm was taken into private hands four years ago.
Botswana’s police commissioner said on Tuesday that officers had fired rubber bullets to disperse a group of about 35 Bushmen protesting their eviction from ancestral lands in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. The Basarwa tribesmen had been trying to break through blockades and enter the reserve on Saturday, police commissioner Edwin Batshu said.
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/ 21 September 2005
Botswana is embroiled in a new controversy over the fate of its San Bushmen after the government decided to close down part of the Kalahari game reserve, prompting clashes. British-based Survival International last month accused the government of shutting down the reserve as part of a stepped-up campaign ”to remove the Bushmen and end their way of life”.
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/ 3 September 2005
Botswana’s government on Friday announced the temporary closure of southern and central parts of the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, saying this is necessary to contain an outbreak of contagious disease that endangers wildlife. But Survival International said the real reason is to restrict the movement of Basarwa tribesmen.
Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has turned down an offer from former Mozambican leader Joaquim Chissano to mediate between the Zimbabwe government and the opposition, the former president said on Wednesday. ”President Mugabe said clearly there is no need [for] such talks,” Chissano told reporters.
The 13-member Southern African Development Community (SADC) is facing mounting international pressure to act against Zimbabwe, where the destruction of townships and markets has left an estimated 700 000 people without homes, livelihoods or both, according to a United Nations assessment.
A dinner party at the home of the South African deputy high commissioner to Botswana was ruined when guests were seriously assaulted in a robbery in Gaborone on Thursday. ”They [the dinner guests] were very badly assaulted and burnt with an iron,” said High Commissioner Eunice Komane.
Botswana has started providing anti-retroviral drugs to soldiers in an effort to mitigate the impact of HIV/Aids on its armed forces. The programme, described as "a key watershed in safeguarding the security of the nation", is expected to target an estimated 5 000 infected soldiers and their dependents.
Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa on Tuesday began a three-day state visit to Botswana to develop trade and economic cooperation between the Southern African neighbours. Botswana’s ambassador to Zambia, Zibani Nthakhwane, said the main focus of the visit will be trade and developing the first road link between the two neighbours.
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/ 27 February 2005
A dozen HIV-positive women donned flowing evening gowns and glittering jewellery in Gaborone, Botswana, on Saturday to compete in a beauty pageant aimed at fighting the stigma that still surrounds the deadly virus in this Aids-ravaged Southern African country. Botswana has one of the world’s highest rates of HIV infection.
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/ 1 February 2005
Botswana’s fight against HIV/Aids will be funded at least until 2009, the Merck Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have pledged. In 2001, each gave -million to be spent over five years, and although there is no actual cut-off date, there are fears that funds will dry up in 2006.
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/ 19 January 2005
A San Bushman appealed to Botswana’s High Court on Wednesday to overturn an eviction order and allow him to live in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, describing it as the land of his great grandparents. Matsipane Mosetlhanyane was testifying in a watershed land-claim case in Botswana.
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/ 12 January 2005
Russia’s state-controlled diamond company Alrosa has set a target of ,8-billion in diamond sales over 2005 and ,2-billion of that will be in rough diamonds, said Antwerp Facets, a news service for the Diamond High Council in Belgium. Should all these goods be exported, the figure will rival that expected of Botswana, the world’s leading diamond producer and exporter of rough diamonds.
South African Minister of Minerals and Energy Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka wants diamond producers to retain a sizeable proportion of rough diamonds in the countries in which they were mined. She was echoing remarks by the Botswana government where Debswana has been pressured to promote job creation in secondary industries.
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/ 2 November 2004
Festus Gontebanye Mogae was inaugurated on Tuesday for his final term as President of Botswana. He promised his government will remain committed to globalisation and regionalisation, and that economic policies are unlikely to change, but there will be improved implementation of government policies and projects.
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/ 1 November 2004
President Festus Mogae’s party scored a landslide electoral victory in Botswana, winning a new mandate in the Southern African country that it has ruled since independence in 1966, results showed on Monday. Mogae’s Botswana Democratic Party won 44 of the 57 seats in Parliament.
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/ 31 October 2004
Election officials in Botswana were counting ballots on Sunday following nationwide polls that were expected to see the party in power since independence remain at the helm of the Southern African country. President Festus Mogae’s Botswana Democratic Party is set to win a comfortable majority of the 57 seats in Parliament.
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/ 30 October 2004
With the gaze of the international community fixed on next week’s presidential election in the United States, little attention has been paid to the fact that Botswana is also scheduled to go to the polls this weekend. The fact that the ruling Botswana Democratic Party is widely expected to win has contributed to the low-key coverage.
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/ 29 October 2004
Batswana will vote on Saturday in the eighth general election since their country ceased to be a British protectorate in 1966. Opposition parties are fighting not to win — they have conceded that is not possible — but to unify a fragmented opposition that they hope will strengthen over the life of the next Parliament.
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/ 28 September 2004
Botswana’s appeal court on Tuesday upheld a ruling declaring a two-week strike by diamond miners illegal, leaving about 400 workers who were sacked during the industrial action with no prospect of being re-hired. ”We won the case and the union lost it with costs,” said Parks Tafa, a lawyer for the Debswana Diamond Company, the world’s leading producer by value of the precious stone.
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/ 23 September 2004
An anthrax outbreak that has killed close to 200 buffaloes, elephants and a hippo in Botswana has spread to Namibia, where it is posing a serious threat to livestock, officials said on Thursday. ”We have received reports that the disease has crossed into Namibia,” said acting wildlife district coordinator Obert Gwapela.
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/ 23 September 2004
A major hospital in Botswana is struggling to cope with the mounting pressure of staff and resource shortages, the HIV/Aids crisis and a high rate of road accidents. ”Sometimes we have 200% bed occupancy in the wards,” said Dr Howard Moffat, the hospital’s superintendent. The shortage of beds has resulted in patients sleeping on the floor.
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/ 20 September 2004
Botswana’s wildlife authorities have closed Chobe National Park to tourists after an anthrax outbreak that threatens buffalo and elephants in one of the country’s largest game reserves, a spokesperson said Monday. By Friday, game rangers had found the carcasses of 68 buffalo and one elephant in the park.
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/ 14 September 2004
Wage negotiations between workers at Botswana’s four diamond mines and mining company Debswana were settled on Monday on its terms, the company said at a press conference. Debswana did not agree to reinstate workers who had been fired for striking illegally at the beginning of a two week work stoppage.
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/ 11 September 2004
Wage negotiations between workers at Botswana’s four diamond mines and mining company Debswana deadlocked on Friday evening after 12 hours of discussion. ”It looks as if we talk again on Monday,” said Donald Lobotse, the secretary-general of the Botswana Mining Workers Union.
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/ 8 September 2004
Botswana’s diamond mining company and union leaders have failed to make any progress in wage talks as employers refuse to reinstate workers sacked during an illegal strike, officials said Wednesday. Debswana, a joint venture between the Botswana government and South Africa’s De Beers group, and the 6 000-strong Botswana Mining Workers Union were locked in talks the whole of Tuesday and decided to take a break until Friday.
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/ 6 September 2004
Botswana’s diamond miners, on strike since August 23, returned to work on Sunday although wage talks have not been finalised and will continue. The strikers reported for work on the advice of an international union movement based in Brussels. This move will not stop trials for contempt of court and on the legality of the strike.
Botswana’s diamond mines are still operational: 26 tonnes of explosives were detonated and blasted 150 000 tonnes of earth into the air — the dust rising 250 metres — which exposed more diamond bearing ore at Orapa mine. Orapa is one of the three diamond mines hit by illegal strikes over deadlocked pay award negotiations, now entering its second week.
An illegal strike in the world’s largest diamond producer, Botswana, entered a second week on Monday with the union saying that miners who have opted to stay on the job are overworked, resulting in two deaths. Thousands of workers in four mines run by Debswana went on strike a week ago.
An end to the illegal strikes at three of Botswana’s diamond mines was expected on Thursday, mining company Debswana said on Wednesday, but informal talks with the Botswana Mining Workers Union then snagged on the issue of the reinstatement of strikers who had been fired.
Botswana’s Debswana Diamond Mining Company and the Botswana Mining Workers’ Union are talking informally on a resolution to the three-day-old illegal strike at three mines. The strike could end before a contempt-of-court hearing against strikers and all union officials resumes on Thursday.