Gaborone City Council | |
---|---|
Leadership | |
Mayor | |
Deputy Mayor | Oduetse Tautona,BDP since June 2022 |
City Clerk | |
Structure | |
Seats | 30 |
Political groups | |
Committees |
|
Elections | |
First-past-the-post | |
Last election | 23 October 2019 |
Next election | 30 October 2024 |
Motto | |
Kgetsi ya tsie e kgonwa ke go tshwaraganelwa | |
Website | |
Gaborone City Council |
The Gaborone City Council is the governing body of the city of Gaborone, Botswana. In terms of generated revenue, it is the wealthiest council in Botswana. [1] It is composed of 30 councillors representing the wards of Gaborone.
The Townships Act mandates the structure of local governments in Botswana. Because Botswana is a unitary state, the power of the local councils are delegated from the national level. The Ministry of Local Government, Land and Housing has a major influence in terms of personnel hiring and training, budgeting, and development planning. [2] Haskins Nkaigwa, mayor of Gaborone from 2011, has stressed the importance of more local autonomy. He advocates for a stronger city council with the power to determine budgets and hire and fire clerks and officers. [3]
The city clerk runs the Gaborone City Council and is head of the Chief Officers Management Team (COMT). The city clerk has various advisory committees and secretaries to aid with the job; these helping positions include the deputy clerk, the secretariat, the head of the treasury, the Self-Help Housing Agency, and the departments of engineering, health, fire, education, social and community development, building and architecture, [4] and an HIV/AIDS co-ordinator. [5]
The Gaborone City Council is in charge of providing services like sewage management [6] and street lighting [7] to its citizens, but the council depends on parastatals like the Water Utilities Corporation and the Botswana Power Corporation to supply the water and electricity respectively. [7] The GCC is also responsible for running public health clinics where the cost is less than one United States dollar. [8] The city council runs all the public schools in Gaborone, providing free education and free meals to students. [9]
The Gaborone City Council has seven committees:
The mayor and deputy mayor head the finance committee, making it the most important committee. [10] In all the committees, the mayor is also an ex officio member. The committees meet once a month. [11]
Elections to elect the city councillors are held around the same time as national elections. The most recent one occurred in 2009. The elections are administered by the Gaborone District Independent Electoral Commission. The mayor of Gaborone is elected yearly by the 35 councillors in a first-past-the-post system. Candidates are limited the councillors themselves. Like the mayor, the members of the committees are elected yearly by the 35 councillors from among the councillors. Since the citizens of Gaborone do not elect the committee members or the mayor directly, they rarely know who the candidates are until after the mayor is selected. This has led to unaccountability on the mayors part towards the electorate. [12]
An income tax called the Local Government Tax used to be the main source of income of the city council, but it was abolished. [13] Sixty percent of the city's budget comes from national government grants. [14] City councillors feel that because of recurrent obligations, they have little room to institute new solutions. [15] Every quarter, the GCC prepares financial reports for the national government. [16] The city council has a history of mishandling funds. In the third quarter of the 2011 fiscal year, the GCC withheld 6 million Botswana pula (US$756,000 as of June 2012) from private contractors. The funds were instead used to purchase trash compactors. The council has problems with collecting income as well; instead of receiving the forecasted P447,920 (US$56,500 as of June 2012) from parking fees, it only collected P3,300 (US$415 as of June 2012). [17]
Affiliation | Members | |
---|---|---|
Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) | 15 | |
Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD) | 11 | |
Botswana Congress Party (BCP) | 8 | |
Botswana National Front (BNF) | 1 | |
Total | 35 | |
Source: Mmegi [18] |
The 2012 election for mayor of Gaborone was contested when a councillor on the Gaborone City Council cut his ballot in half to vote twice. [19] When counting the votes on 15 May 2012, Agnes Seragi, the Gaborone City Clerk and presiding officer over the elections, realised that there were 36 ballot papers, one more ballot paper than the total number of councillors. Councillor Moloko accused Councillor Kwapa of cutting his ballot in half and putting two votes into the ballot box. Councillor Taunyane supported the accusation, noting that one of the ballot papers is indeed cut in half. As a result, the count was voided, and a new election followed immediately where Councillor Haskins Nkaigwa became mayor and Councillor Florence Shagwa became deputy mayor. [19]
|
|
Image | Mayor | Years of office | Political party | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Derek Jones | 1966–1968 | Independent | ||
Grace Dambe | 1968–1969 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Wellie Seboni | 1969–1974 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Rosinah Mannathoko (first term) | 1974–1976 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Clement Oliphant | 1977 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Rosinah Mannathoko (second term) | 1978 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Pelotelele Tlhaodi | 1979 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Serara Ketlogetswe | 1979–1984 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Botshabelo Bagwasi | 1984 | Botswana National Front | ||
Paul Rantao | 1984–1994 | Botswana National Front | ||
Ginger Ernest | 1994 | Botswana National Front | ||
Nelson Ramaotwana | 1999–2004 | Botswana National Front | ||
Harry Mothei | 2004–2009 | Botswana National Front | ||
Veronica Lesole | 2009–2011 | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Haskins Nkaigwa | 2011–2019 | Botswana Movement for Democracy | ||
Thata Father Maphongo | 2019– | Botswana Democratic Party | ||
Source: Botswana Guardian [20] |
Gaborone is the capital and largest city of Botswana with a population of 246,325 based on the 2022 census, about 10% of the total population of Botswana. Its agglomeration is home to 421,907 inhabitants at the 2011 census. Gaborone has per capita income of US$32,000 (PPP), the highest in Africa.
"Fatshe leno la rona" is the national anthem of Botswana. The music was composed by Kgalemang Tumediso Motsete, who also authored the song's Setswana lyrics. It was adopted when the country became independent in 1966. Since independence, the song is sung occasionally during the country's important events such as Kgotla meetings, independence celebrations and other national events. The national anthem is highly respected to an extent that when it is sung movements are not allowed, people stand at attention, and security officers, like the police and soldiers, salute as a show of respect.
The Botswana National Front (BNF) is a social democratic political party in Botswana. It has been the main opposition party in Botswana since the 1969 elections.
A town council, city council or municipal council is a form of local government for small municipalities.
Air Botswana Corporation is Botswana's state-owned national flag carrier, with its headquarters located in Gaborone. It operates scheduled domestic and regional flights from its main base at Sir Seretse Khama International Airport. Air Botswana has been loss-making for several years, and there have been various attempts to privatise the company, and frequent changes to the corporation's management and board, so far without reducing the losses.
A municipal council is the legislative body of a municipality or local government area. Depending on the location and classification of the municipality it may be known as a city council, town council, town board, community council, rural council, village council, or board of aldermen.
Unity Dow is a Motswana lawyer, human rights activist, specially elected member of parliament, and a writer. She formerly served as a judge on the High Court of Botswana and in various Botswana government ministries. Born in the Bechuanaland Protectorate to a seamstress and a farmer, who insisted on their children obtaining an education, Dow grew up in a traditional rural village before modernisation. She earned a law degree in 1983 from the University of Botswana and Swaziland, though her studies were completed in Swaziland and University of Edinburgh, Scotland, as Botswana had no law school at the time. After her graduation, Dow opened the first all-woman law firm in Botswana and in 1997 became the first woman to be appointed as a judge to the country's High Court.
General elections were held in Botswana on 16 October 2009, alongside local elections, with early voting in 26 polling stations abroad taking place 3 October. The result was a tenth successive victory for the Botswana Democratic Party, which won 45 of the 57 elected seats in the National Assembly.
Linah Kelebogile Mohohlo was a Botswana banker and university chancellor. She was the first female Governor of the Bank of Botswana from 1999 to 2016. She was also the first female Chancellor of the University of Botswana, serving from 2017 to 2021.
There were estimated to be roughly five to six thousand Chinese people in Botswana as of 2009.
The Botswana Movement for Democracy (BMD) is a political party in Botswana, founded in 2010 by MPs and other politicians who parted ways with the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) due to differences with Ian Khama, the leader of the BDP and the President of Botswana at the time.
The Three Dikgosi Monument is a bronze sculpture located in the Central Business District of Gaborone, Botswana. The statues depict three dikgosi, or tribal chiefs: Khama III, Sebele I, and Bathoen I. The three dikgosi played important roles in Botswana's independence. In 1895, the three men traveled to Great Britain to ask Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonies, and Queen Victoria to separate the Bechuanaland Protectorate from Cecil Rhodes's British South Africa Company and Southern Rhodesia. Permission was then granted which made Botswana under direct British rule until its independence. There are six plinths giving information about Botswana's independence and struggles. A large coat of arms is featured in front of the three statues. A contract was given to North Korean company Mansudae Overseas Projects to build the monument, which resulted in disappointment from local sculptors. Some minority ethnic groups in Botswana see it as a decree of Tswana dominance.
Water Utilities Corporation (WUC) is a government-owned corporation that provides water and waste water management services in Botswana. The Board is appointed by the Minister of Minerals, Energy and Water Resources. The water supply is critically important in the arid or semi-arid environment of Botswana.
Mmamashia is a location in Botswana about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) north of the capital city of Gaborone that is the site of the Mmamashia water treatment plant and master balancing reservoir.
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Gaborone, Botswana.
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