Mokalake must get real

The Minister of Lands and Housing, Lebonaamang Mokalake, is urging Batswana to build high-rise buildings for their dwellings because shortage of land continues to worsen.

Indeed, the minister is right because if handled carelessly, shortage of land could turn tribe against tribe in a hitherto peaceful nation.  It will begin with siblings bickering over real estate as traditional handing down of malapa and masimo is progressively disregarded by communities and tossed aside by modern tenure systems that are driven by greed.  In fact, the problem is already evident in urban villages, especially those near urban centres like Gaborone, Francistown and even Orapa.  Urban villages like Tlokweng, Mogoditshane, Gabane, Ramotswa and Mochudi near the capital and Shashe, Tonota, Chadibe, Borolong and Matshelagabedi on the periphery of Francistown are heaving under the weight of relative aliens of commuters who eventually settle in them for good.

But the situation in Gaborone was made worse early by the uneconomic use of space in the city.  For it boggles the mind to see two-roomed hovels in the middle of the city such as in the Main Mall and fallow land three times the size of a football field around there and beyond.  Some buildings that belong to the same government that Mokalake serves have been unoccupied for ages and serve only as a blot on aesthetics.  It is these buildings that are fit for demolition to create space for high-rise structures of the type envisioned by Mokalake, not villages like Ramaphatle.  Another absurdity about Gaborone is how new developments are still stunted at three storeys approved by the municipality and the Department of Town and Regional Planning while the minister cries out for skyscrapers elsewhere.  While we were told that standards at the new CBD included raising the skyline, we still see dwarf-like cubicles in what was promoted as a 21st Century, almost futuristic architectural precinct. At the same time, the BHC continues to build tiny single units after millions of pula were spent buying the land from dubious characters who amassed it in colonial times.

Editor's Comment
Closure as pain lingers

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