Ebineng is not the villain

A few people, possibly more, in our society believe that ours is a society enveloped and submerged under a destructive cloud of negativity.

It is because of this negativity, they say, that we do not celebrate our heroes. In fact, we seem to have a collective inertia not to nurture any hero and we are only too happy to put to the axe anyone who wants to raise a finger from mediocrity. As the media we have been blamed for cheerleading the charade. We do not have the conscience nor the conviction to deny the charge. Like vampires we have on more than one occasion demanded that heads must roll and indeed in some instances heads rolled. Unfortunately, when this happened it was not just the heads that rolled, our national progress and psyche also took a tumble. Yesterday, the media announced that the Bokamoso Private Hospital boss had been fired. Even without the media passing judgement the callous and presumptious public square lot have already read the guilty verdict against Ebineng.

The picture in our sister publication- The Monitor- shows a morose, aloof looking Ebineng. No doubt this picture will obviously give fodder to the churlish presumptious public square as they roast and grill the Ebineng era. Of course people lost jobs at Bokamoso. Many Batswana were recruited overseas to come and work at this hospital. Our hearts go out to the expatriate professionals who were recruited to help set up this facility and now that dream seems to have all gone up in smoke. With Bokamoso we thought Botswana will be a regional health beacon but... In our view Kabelo Ebineng is a visionary and a hero who should be celebrated. This is the same man who has been at the helm of two of the largest medical Aid schemes under the Associated Fund Administrators (AFA) managers of Pula and BPOMAS schemes. It would be an understatement to say that Ebineng did a terrific job while managing the affairs of these two schemes. Elsewhere medical aid schemes are crumbling but under Ebineng's stewardship he grew AFA resources. Yes, the irony is that these resources were gobbled up by his grand project-Bokamoso.

Editor's Comment
Closure as pain lingers

March 28 will go down as a day that Batswana will never forget because of the accident that occurred near Mmamatlakala in Limpopo, South Africa. The tragedy affected not only the grieving families but the nation at large. Batswana throughout the process stood behind the grieving families and the governments of Botswana and South Africa need much more than a pat on the back.Last Saturday was a day when family members said their last goodbyes to...

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