Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05GABORONE243
2005-02-17 10:32:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Gaborone
Cable title:  

OPPOSITION PARTIES CONSIDER COOPERATION, AGAIN

Tags:  PGOV BC 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

171032Z Feb 05

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FM AMEMBASSY GABORONE
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 1721
INFO SOUTHERN AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY
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UNCLAS GABORONE 000243 

SIPDIS


SENSITIVE

AF/S FOR DIFFILY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV BC
SUBJECT: OPPOSITION PARTIES CONSIDER COOPERATION, AGAIN

REF (A) 04 Gaborone 1816 REF (B) 04 Gaborone 1606 REF (C) 04

Gaborone 1873 REF (D) Gaborone 56

UNCLAS GABORONE 000243

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SENSITIVE

AF/S FOR DIFFILY

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV BC
SUBJECT: OPPOSITION PARTIES CONSIDER COOPERATION, AGAIN

REF (A) 04 Gaborone 1816 REF (B) 04 Gaborone 1606 REF (C) 04

Gaborone 1873 REF (D) Gaborone 56


1. (SBU) Summary: Energized by growth in their share of
the popular vote in the October 2004 elections, Botswana's
opposition parties are debating with renewed vigor how
cooperation could embarrass, if not unseat, the ruling
Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) in 2009. In order to
achieve that objective, opposition leadership will have to
demonstrate a quantum shift toward a more pro-active,
practical style and map out a coherent strategy. Despite
residual suspicious attitudes toward the U.S., the Mission
will continue to reach out to opposition parties to
cultivate more informed views on the U.S. and its policies
in their growing ranks. End Summary.

--------------
OPPOSITION SUPPORT GROWING
--------------


2. (U) The results of the October 2004 elections have
inspired opposition parties to re-examine the importance of
solidarity with greater enthusiasm (Ref A). The Botswana
National Front (BNF),the biggest opposition party,
contested elections in partnership with the much smaller
Botswana Alliance Movement (BAM) and Botswana People's Party
(BPP). The BNF garnered 12 parliamentary seats, doubling
its previous number; BAM and BPP did not win any. The
Botswana Congress Party (BCP) lost its parliamentary seat
from Okavango but gained one from the Gaborone Central
constituency. Both the BNF and BCP significantly increased
their numbers of local council members.


3. (U) Although opposition parties won less than a quarter
of the seats in the National Assembly, they attracted 48
percent of the popular vote, up from 43 percent in 1999. In
twelve constituencies, a BDP candidate won with less than
half the vote, thanks to competition between opposition
parties. In two more, the combined opposition vote fell
short by fewer than 100 ballots. Both the BNF and the BCP
have unanimously acknowledged the need for cooperation if
they want to avoid, in the National Assembly of 2009, a
recurrence of their disproportionate under-representation.


4. (SBU) The response to these facts and figures on the
part of the ruling BDP has been mixed. Former party
Executive Secretary and now specially-elected MP Botsalo
Ntuane downplayed the likelihood that the opposition parties
will find a means to combine their support in the next
election. In contrast, Ntuane's successor as Executive

Secretary, Batlang "Comma" Serema, asserted that the BDP is

SIPDIS
in danger of losing the government. MP and former cabinet
minister Boyce Sebetela told the press "the numbers indicate
that the opposition is taking power. The writing is on the
wall." If, like Ntuane, the BDP over-confidently dismisses
the threat posed by a united opposition, it could find
itself with a significantly diminished parliamentary caucus
in five years.

--------------
EARLY SIGNS POSITIVE FOR OPPOSITION UNITY
--------------


5. (U) Initial indications of the likelihood that
opposition parties will devise a means of cooperation are
positive. Reports from Botswana Congress Party (BCP)
internal consultative workshops in January suggest that the
party leadership is leaning toward a pact-like arrangement
with the other opposition parties. Ironically, the BCP
declined to join a similar joint venture for the 2004
elections, arguing that the proposal emerged too late to act
upon it. The BNF has reiterated the imperative of
opposition unity and expressed its desire to work with the
BCP. Some in the Botswana Alliance Movement have spoken in
favor of merging all opposition groups into a single party.
Such a merger would have to include the BNF and BCP to make
an appreciable impact, but the BCP has already rejected the
notion.


6. (U) Hard feelings between members of the BNF and BCP,
stemming from their 1998 split, which contributed to their
resounding defeat in the 1999 election, could impede
attempts at unity. Competition for coveted positions at the
local level, however, poses a greater threat. A senior
leader in the BNF argued that shortsighted reluctance among
council candidates to make way for their colleagues from
other parties where the latter have an advantage could sink
efforts to cooperate. In the recent election, the Pact
failed to prevent incidents of such rebellion when it

consisted only of the BAM, BPP, and the much larger BNF.
Adding the BCP, which actually contested more constituencies
than did the BNF in 2004, would magnify this challenge.
Given Botswana's relatively small political class,
personalities and personality conflicts play a
disproportionate role in national politics. Whether or not
old grudges and unwillingness to make short-term sacrifices
frustrate attempts to forge opposition unity hinges on the
leadership within these parties.

--------------
CHARISMA, WHAT CHARISMA?
--------------


7. (SBU) Leaders within the two biggest opposition parties,
the BNF and BCP, have an indifferent record of creating and
exploiting opportunities to undermine support for the BDP.
BNF Secretary General and leader of the opposition in
parliament Akanyang Magama unwittingly but brilliantly
captured part of this problem by stating in a February 7
interview "I don't know about this charisma that people are
talking about." Former BNF leader Dr. Kenneth Koma, by
contrast, largely built the party on his ability to move a
crowd. Although the passing of Koma from the political
scene has liberated the BNF from his personality cult and
his ideological focus, the party's current leaders have not
similarly aroused and inspired supporters.


8. (SBU) In a prior meeting with the Ambassador, Magama
presented himself as a reserved party man with policy views
heavily colored by outdated ideological debates. He failed
to clearly outline his vision for Botswana and a strategy
for expanding the BNF's support over the next five years.
Although Magama was able to restore some order to the BNF,
leadership with a different skill set, including crucial
intangibles like charisma, would contribute powerfully to
expanding the party's presence in BDP strongholds.


9. (U) The BNF's publicity secretary Mohammed Khan, who
possesses some of these qualities, has announced his
candidacy to replace Magama as party secretary general at
its triennial congress in July. Khan, who narrowly lost to
the BDP candidate in Molepolole North, has long played an
important role in the BNF and may well defeat Magama.


10. (SBU) Otlaadisa Koosaletse, President of the BCP, also
lacks charisma. The BCP prides itself in reaching out to
the disaffected youth of Botswana. Consequently, some argue
that a younger candidate would more aptly fit the party's
profile. Koosaletse himself has recognized the importance
of turning over the reins to a new generation within the
party but indicated his willingness to remain president for
another three-year term. If Koosaletse were to make an
early exit, however, it is not clear who would replace him.
Therefore it seems likely that Koosaletse will remain as
President of the BCP for another three years and use that
time to groom a cadre of younger leaders.


11. (SBU) The personal appeal of Vice President Khama puts
the opposition leaders at a particular disadvantage.
Although Khama is reserved and speaks only rough Setswana,
his background projects an aura of leadership. Former
Commander of the Botswana Defense Force, son of Botswana's
first president and paramount chief of the Bamangwato, Khama
fits the profile of a leader. Charismatic personalities
such as the BNF's Robert Molefhabangwe and the BCP's
Dumelang Saleshando do exist within the opposition. To
defeat the BDP, the opposition must develop such talent.

--------------
ATTACK BDP'S GOVERNANCE RECORD
--------------


12. (SBU) Opposition parties are already united in their
assessment of the issues on which the BDP is vulnerable.
Unemployment, poverty, unequal distribution of the benefits
of growth, and lack of accountability were key themes of the
2004 campaign and will remain relevant during the next five
years (Ref B). While opposition figures uniformly endorse
Vision 2016, the GOB's development objectives for the
nation's golden anniversary, they pillory the BDP for poor
implementation. Ephraim Setshwaelo, leader in the Botswana
Alliance Movement, articulated lack of transparency in
policy formation as an issue of popular concern. He cited
the uproar over the recently passed Abolition of Marital
Powers Act, especially complaints that the Government rode
roughshod over the House of Chiefs, ignored religious
groups, and failed to build support among constituents.
Setshwaelo depicted this incident as indicative of a growing

consensus that the BDP has taken its position of power for
granted.

--------------
BDP RIFT A WINDFALL FOR OPPOSITION?
--------------


13. (SBU) A third prong of opposition parties' nebulous
strategy for 2009 is to exploit the factional fighting
within the BDP. The BDP has never been as divided as it is
today (Refs C and D). A leading light of the BCP told
PolOff that the opposition parties are in contact with the
disaffected members of the BDP and are positioning
themselves to woo potential defectors. Their ability to do
this will rest on their success in forming a common front
and effectively mobilizing public discontent. Open
speculation by BDP Secretary General Daniel Kwelagobe about
the possibility of a resurgent opposition and a breakaway
faction of the BDP combining forces to dislodge the ruling
party suggests that this strategy is not unrealistic.

--------------
IMPLICATIONS FOR US INTERESTS
--------------


14. (U) An ascendant opposition likely has no significant
negative impact on U.S. interests in Botswana. Some BNF
leaders have publicly criticized the U.S. for its role -- or
lack thereof -- in the Israel-Palestine conflict, the war in
Iraq, and the U.S.' alleged domination of the UN, but many
within the BDP share the same misgivings. More
significantly, the socialist ideological background of the
BNF, and its spin-off party, the BCP, is gradually receding.
Whereas the BNF previously rejected privatization of state-
owned enterprises outright, they now recognize that
privatization and foreign direct investment have a role to
play in development. In short, the opposition parties have
come to terms with the changing world since 1989.

--------------
INSTITUTIONAL AND DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
--------------


15. (U) Certain institutional and demographic factors
beyond the control of the opposition parties have a
significant impact on their prospects in the medium to long
term. The campaign finance regime and first-past-the-post
system of representation favor the BDP. Although opposition
parties routinely assail this practice as unfair and
undemocratic, it is unlikely to change soon. But
demographic factors, particularly migration from rural to
urban areas and the gradual passing of the generation old
enough to vote in the early post-independence period, favor
the opposition. These trends mark the end of the BDP's
extended holiday in power and the beginning of an era in
which the BDP will have to earn each vote.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


16. (SBU) Continued growth in support for opposition
parties will fundamentally transform the role of opposition
leaders. Previously, these individuals acted as gadflies to
the government, ever vigilant to condemn policy mistakes,
maladministration and corruption but not necessarily bound
to identify and advance development solutions. Their
growing constituency -- among the youth and the urban
unemployed -- will require that they act as leaders, not
only of a political movement but also of the nation. As the
role of opposition parties changes, Mission will target its
outreach efforts, aiming to instill in this constituency a
better understanding of the U.S. and its policies.

HUGGINS


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