Has BCP really won GCC poster war?

BCP posters
BCP posters

The Botswana Congress Party (BCP) may be celebrating moral victory against the Gaborone City Council (GCC) on the poster war. But is there really sense of achievement on the part of the opposition party?

Last week’s out of court settlement, with the council agreeing to pay BCP P13 000, is a refund for costs incurred in the urgent application in which GCC lost. The deal is that the BCP has to remove the posters at traffic lights and withdraw their counter-sue against the council.

This week’s decision arose from a four months battle, which started when the GCC officials took a dramatic decision to ban political posters last May. The BCP had always maintained that they council based its action on the poor understanding Road Traffic Act Cap 69.  It all started on May 31, when the GCC ordered political parties to remove their campaign posters from streetlights in the city, giving the BCP, on the eve of their manifesto launch, sleepless nights.

Editor's Comment
Gov’t must rectify recognition of Khama as Kgosi

While it is widely acknowledged that Khama holds the title of Kgosi, the government’s failure to properly gazette his recognition has raised serious concerns about adherence to legal procedures and the credibility of traditional leadership. (See a story elsewhere in this newspaper.) Recent court documents by the Minister for Local Government and Rural Development, Kgotla Autlwetse, shed light on the intricacies of Khama’s recognition process....

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