Football flying towards another turbulence
Tuesday, July 15, 2025 | 330 Views |
The storm is threatening to return after the calm following the weekend's Botswana Football League Annual General Assembly in Palapye. What had appeared a routine meeting of the 16 shareholders of the top flight turned into a fractious meeting with calls for the suspension of chief executive, Bennett Mamelodi, the headline grabber. The league has been here before and is not new to the controversy but it is how the board will navigate the ship out of the murky waters. Some clubs are still baying for the chief executive's blood and it was not just an episode, as the raucous from the Palapye meeting is expected to echo into the distance. Eyes are on the board on how it handles the situation, as proponents of the motion to remove Mamelodi might not rest until the mission is complete. The honeybadger mentality within football is widely documented, and this might be another saga that will rumble on.
The BFL, fresh from what was a competitive season, now comes face-to-face with a Herculean task and cannot undermine the rumblings, irrespective of their origins. The incident might test and stretch the Peter Kesitilwe-led board's crisis management skills, where the ostrich approach of burying the head in the sand is not an option. Just as the clubs gathered in Palapye, away from the capital city's madding crowd, reports emerged that Matebele had failed to submit work permits for their foreign coach and players for the past season. How this was allowed to unfold baffles the mind, where governance issues should be a top priority. The expectation is that full registration can only be processed at the end of submission of all required documentation, work permits included. But it appears someone slept on the job and it cannot be entirely Matebele's fault that there is this loophole. It is like walking through immigration controls without a passport.
According to both the acting director of Veterinary Services, Kobedi Segale and acting Lands and Agriculture minister, Edwin Dikoloti, the virus currently raging through the North-East mostly likely first entered the country during the festive season.From the “unprecedented” number of cases picked in testing last week, it is likely that cattle and other livestock could have been infected last year, without being reported.Animal health...