Pakalitha Mosisili | |
---|---|
3rd Prime Minister of Lesotho | |
In office 17 March 2015 –16 June 2017 | |
Monarch | Letsie III |
Preceded by | Thomas Motsoahae Thabane |
Succeeded by | Tom Thabane |
In office 29 May 1998 –8 June 2012 | |
Monarch | Letsie III |
Preceded by | Ntsu Mokhehle |
Succeeded by | Tom Thabane |
Personal details | |
Born | Waterfall,Basutoland (now Lesotho) | 14 March 1945
Political party | Basotho Congress Party (1967–1997) Congress for Democracy (1997–2012) Democratic Congress (2012–2019) |
Spouse | Mathato Mosisili |
Children | Thato Mosisili Rethabile Mosisili Kekeletso Mosisili Maile Mosisili |
Education | University of Botswana,Lesotho and Swaziland (BA) University of Wisconsin,Madison (MA) University of South Africa (BA) Simon Fraser University (MEd) |
Bethuel Pakalitha Mosisili (born 14 March 1945) is a former Mosotho politician who was the fourth prime minister of Lesotho from May 1998 to June 2012 and again from March 2015 to June 2017. [1] He led the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) to a near-total victory in the 1998 election,and under his leadership the party also won majorities in the 2002 and 2007 elections. While serving as Prime Minister,Mosisili was also Minister of Defence.
Following the snap election held on 28 February 2015,he formed and led a coalition government. He was sworn in on 17 March 2015. [2]
Mosisili was born at Waterfall in Qacha's Nek on March 14,1945. He was educated at the Eagle's Peak High School,where he attained his Cambridge Overseas School Certificate in 1965. He did his primary schooling at Tebellong,Souru and Tsoelike and then pursued his higher education at the University of Botswana,Lesotho and Swaziland and graduated with a BA in Education. [3] Upon graduation in July 1970,he was imprisoned because of his political activism and was released the next year in November. He was a member of the Basotho Congress Party. [4]
In 1976,he attained his MA from the University of Wisconsin in the United States and then completed a BA honours program via distance education from the University of South Africa. In 1982,he graduated from Simon Fraser University in Canada with a Master of Education degree. [3]
In 1993,Mosisili was elected to parliament from the Qacha's Nek Constituency and became Minister of Education. [1] On April 14,1994,he was briefly kidnapped along with three other ministers by soldiers;a fifth minister,Deputy Prime Minister Selometsi Baholo,was killed in this incident. [5] Mosisili was appointed Deputy Prime Minister in late January 1995,while remaining Minister of Education; [6] on July 20,1995,he was named Minister of Home Affairs and Local Government instead,while remaining Deputy Prime Minister. [7] A new ruling party,the LCD,was formed in 1997 under the leadership of Prime Minister Ntsu Mokhehle as a split from the Basutoland Congress Party. On February 21,1998,Mosisili was elected leader of the LCD after Mokhehle chose to step down due to poor health. [1] [8]
After his party's victory in 1998 there were accusations of vote rigging and mass protests from the opposition parties,which culminated with their occupation of the grounds to the palace. In the ensuing debacle which saw the army,police and king complicit in an attempt to unseat his government,Mosisili had to resort to asking the regional grouping,Southern African Development Community (SADC),for an intervention to stem the imminent coup. To this end,joint force,consisting of South African and (later) Botswana troops,entered Lesotho on September 22,1998,to put down the mutiny and restore the democratically elected government.
New elections were eventually held in May 2002,which his party won,this after a major split led by his former deputy,Kelebone Maope,and Shakhane Mokhehle,the brother of the late founder of his party. On this occasion,Mosisili himself was elected to a seat from the Tsoelike constituency,receiving 79.2% of the vote;in his previous constituency,Qacha's Nek,Pontso Sekatle was the LCD candidate. [9]
In October 2006,Tom Thabane left the LCD and formed a new party,the All Basotho Convention (ABC),and 17 other members of parliament joined him;this left the LCD with a narrow majority of 61 out of 120 seats. On Mosisili's advice,King Letsie III dissolved parliament on November 24,2006,and a new election was scheduled for February 17,2007;they had previously been expected in April or May. [10] [11] The LCD won this election,taking 61 seats;the National Independent Party,allied with the LCD,won an additional 21 seats. [12]
Whilst attending a funeral in his home district of Qacha's Nek in late 2006,Mosisili gave a speech which quoted a Basotho idiom,"Se sa feleng sea hlola",meaning "anything that does not finish/end is not good". Some believed that he was referring to his term in office and his embattled political party.
Armed men attacked Mosisili's residence on April 22,2009,apparently intending to kill him;three of the attackers,one of whom was reportedly a soldier,were killed by police,and Mosisili was unharmed. [13] Six people appeared before a South African court in July 2009 on charges of helping in the attempt. The Lesotho Communications Minister described the attack as a plot by South African and Mozambican mercenaries to stage a coup in Lesotho. [14]
Following the snap election held on 28 February 2015,he managed to form and lead a coalition government. Two years later,on 1 March 2017,he was defeated in a parliamentary vote of confidence,and an early election was expected to be held,although the opposition wanted Mosisili to step aside and allow Monyane Moleleki,Mosisili's former deputy turned rival,to take over. [15] Mosisili then advised King Letsie III to dissolve Parliament,and the King did so on 7 March,despite an opposition effort to obstruct the move. [16]
The election was held on 3 June 2017 and resulted in a victory for Tom Thabane and his party,the ABC,which won 48 seats against 30 for Mosisili's Democratic Congress. [17] A government statement on 8 June said that Mosisili had submitted his resignation to King Letsie but would continue in a caretaker capacity. [18] Thabane succeeded Mosisili as Prime Minister on 16 June. [19]
In November 2018,Mosisili announced his retirement from politics. The Democratic Congress held its elective conference in January 2019 and Mathibeli Mokhothu was elected as his successor. Mokhothu had served as a government minister in Mosisili's last cabinet. [20]
He is married to Mathato Mosisili. [4]
Lesotho,formally the Kingdom of Lesotho,is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. As an enclave of South Africa,with which it shares a 1,106 km (687 mi) border,it is the only sovereign enclave in the world outside of the Italian Peninsula. It is situated in the Maloti Mountains and contains the highest peak in Southern Africa. It has an area of over 30,000 km2 (11,600 sq mi) and has a population of about two million. It is the largest enclaved country in the world. Its capital and largest city is Maseru. The country is also known by the nickname The Mountain Kingdom.
The history of people living in the area now known as Lesotho goes back as many as 400 years. Present Lesotho emerged as a single polity under King Moshoeshoe I in 1822. Under Moshoeshoe I,Basotho joined other clans in their struggle against the Lifaqane associated with famine and the reign of Shaka Zulu from 1818 to 1828.
The Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) is a political party in Lesotho.
Thomas Motsoahae Thabane is a Mosotho politician who was the fifth prime minister of Lesotho from 2012 to 2015 and from 2017 to 2020. He founded the All Basotho Convention (ABC) in 2006 and led the party until 2022.
Monyane Moleleki is a Mosotho politician who served as Deputy Prime Minister of Lesotho,as well as Minister of Parliamentary Affairs,from 2017 to 2020. As a leading figure in the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD),Moleleki was Minister of Natural Resources from 1993 to 1994,Minister of Information from 1996 to 1998,Minister of Natural Resources from 1998 to 2004,Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2004 to 2007,and Minister of Natural Resources from 2007 to 2012. After breaking with the LCD,Moleleki served as Deputy Leader of the Democratic Congress and was Minister of Police from 2015 to 2016. He left the Democratic Congress and launched a new party,the Alliance of Democrats,in 2017.
The Lesotho People's Congress is a political party in Lesotho. It was formed as a split from the ruling Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) by that party's Lesiba faction after Deputy Prime Minister Kelebone Maope resigned from the government in September 2001,and it was registered on October 8,2001. Maope became the leader of the LPC;another leading member of the LCD,Shakhane Mokhehle,also became a leading member of the LPC. It gained 27 seats in the National Assembly through defections from the LCD. The new party closely identified itself with former prime minister Ntsu Mokhehle,the founder of the LCD,and used an image of his head as its party symbol. The LCD sought to prevent the LPC from using his head as its symbol,but on December 6 the High Court ruled in favor of the LPC. In the parliamentary election for the National Assembly held on 25 May 2002,the party won 5.8% of popular votes and 5 out of 120 seats. Maope was the only LPC candidate to win a constituency,but the party won four other seats through proportional representation. Maope and Shakhane Mokhehle did not include themselves on the party's list of candidates for proportional representation,expecting to win constituencies,but Mokhehle lost his constituency by nine votes,and therefore did not get a seat in the National Assembly.
Ntsu Mokhehle was a Lesotho politician. He founded Basutoland African Congress (BAC) in 1952. He founded Basutoland Congress Party in 1957 then later in 1997 founded Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD). He served as the third prime minister of Lesotho from 2 April 1993 to 17 August 1994 and from 14 September 1994 to 29 May 1998.
Ntlhoi Motsamai is a Lesotho politician who served as the first female Speaker of the National Assembly from 1999 to 2012. She was elected again from March 2015 to June 2017. Motsamai worked as a teacher before entering politics.
General elections were held in Lesotho on 17 February 2007. They had originally been scheduled to be held in April or May 2007. In October 2006,Tom Thabane left the ruling Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) and formed a new party,the All Basotho Convention (ABC),and 17 other members of parliament joined him. This left the LCD with a narrow majority of 61 out of 120 seats. On the advice of Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili,King Letsie III dissolved parliament on November 24,2006,and the election was scheduled for February 17,2007. The bringing forward of the date caused dissatisfaction amongst the opposition,which expressed concern that it would not allow sufficient time for campaigning and electoral preparations. It was believed that the election was called early due to the possibility that there would be further defections from the LCD,depriving it of its majority.
The All Basotho Convention is a political party in Lesotho. The party was formed in October 2006 and founded by Tom Thabane,a former minister in the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) led by the government of Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili. Nkaku Kabi has led the party since February 2022.
Pontso S. M. Sekatle is a politician and academic in Lesotho. Sekatle lectured at the National University of Lesotho from 1984 to 2001. In June 2001,she was appointed to the Senate of Lesotho,and on July 6,2001 she became Minister of Health and Social Welfare. She was a member of the Qacha's Nek constituency for third time with the win in the elections in 2012 and was appointed the Minister of Local government and Chieftainship Affairs.
Kelebone Albert Maope is a politician from Lesotho. He served in the Basutoland Congress Party (BCP) and Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD) governments during the 1990s before splitting from the LCD in 2001 to form his own party,the Lesotho People's Congress (LPC).
General elections were held in Lesotho on 26 May 2012. The incumbent Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili's newly formed Democratic Congress won a majority of single-member seats. He also won his seat by the second-largest margin of victory. However,they only had a plurality in the overall tally and coalition talks are taking place.
The Democratic Congress is a political party in Lesotho that split from the Lesotho Congress for Democracy. It is led by Mathibeli Mokhothu.
General elections were held in Lesotho on 28 February 2015 for all 120 seats of the National Assembly,the lower house of the Parliament of Lesotho,more than two years ahead of schedule due to the 2014 political crisis. Following mediation facilitated by the Southern African Development Community (SADC),King Letsie III on the advice of the incumbent Prime Minister Tom Thabane,dissolved the Eighth Parliament and called a snap election.
Mothetjoa Metsing is a former Deputy Prime Minister of Lesotho. He is a member and current leader of the Lesotho Congress for Democracy (LCD). He served in the government of Prime Minister Tom Thabane between 2012 and 2015. In 2014,he was involved in controversy over an alleged coup attempt against the prime minister that was eventually resolved over calls for an early election.
Early general elections were held in Lesotho on 3 June 2017 to elect all 120 seats of the National Assembly,the lower house of the Parliament. The elections were called more than three years ahead of schedule due to a successful vote of no confidence against the incumbent Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili.
Mathibeli Edwin Mokhothu is a Mosotho educator and politician who served as the Deputy Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Lesotho,as well as the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs,from 2020 to 2022. A member of the Democratic Congress,he is the party's leader and previous deputy leader. He was formerly the Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly before the party formed part of a coalition with the All Basotho Convention in May 2020. From 2015 to 2017,he served as the Minister of Gender,Youth,Sports and Recreation. Mokhothu is the MP for the Qhoali No. 68 constituency.
General elections were held in Lesotho on 7 October 2022 to elect all 120 members of the National Assembly,the lower house of Parliament.