Tonota Chibuku traders to march on DC
Friday, January 27, 2012
They also resolved to march to the District Commissioner’s office, on a date to be set at their next meeting, to present a petition against the new law regulating the sale of beer. The meeting, which was presided over by Botswana National Front councilors Lemme Kgopa and Gaefele Sidombo, attracted more than 40 people from all the seven wards of Tonota South, the majority of who were women. Accusing government of insensitivity, they argued that by limiting beer trading hours, government was not only ruining the livelihoods of those concerned but interfering with their personal freedoms. The meeting poured water on government associating the myriad of social ills such as violent behavior, theft and acts of sexual abuse to alcohol abuse. As far as the meeting was concerned, even children from families where no alcohol is sold, commit crimes.
Nor did they accept the view that the sale of beer at home creates an environment which is hostile to children’s learning. Many of them even made reference to their own children whom they said hold respectable positions in society, despite having grown up in Chibuku-selling homes. The traders insisted that there was neither reason nor rhyme in the suggestion that they should relocate to beer depots when they have not been offered plots. "We can only relocate the sale of Chibuku if government allocates us plots for the depots it wants," said Mantho Ntshipe. She accused government of abusing people and asked the councilors to invite President Ian Khama to Tonota for a meeting with them. For he part, 56-year old Lelebemang Jarona, who said she has been staying at her mother’s plot because government has not given her a plot, wondered where government will get land for shebeens when it has failed to allocate business and residential plots to people who have long applied for them.
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