The ins and outs of the traditional cattle post

It appears there has been little or no research on the role of the traditional cattle post in Botswana and neither on its relationship with migrant labor to the South African mines, driven by the oppressive hut tax levied by the British colonial government against huts occupied by Batswana.

This was a complicated labor supply chain spurred by the symbiotic relationship between the British and the South African mine corporations.  It would appear the traditional cattle post in Botswana was not part of the supply chain, but it unwittingly became a holding ground for migrant workers to South African mines, according to some observers.

Records show that as more girls were sent to school after the introduction of western education in Botswana by Dr. David Livingstone in 1847, more boys lost out to serve as herd boys at the cattle post before enlisting to work at the South African mines and industries when they became of age.  Infect, physical appearance was a more determinant factor than age because only able bodied men were conscripted into the mine labor force. 

Editor's Comment
Batswana need to do better to stop FMD

It is a clear signal that the government’s purse is empty and that our own behaviour has left veterinary officials fighting with one hand tied behind their backs. We have been here before. During COVID-19, many of us thought we knew better. We ignored simple rules, we carried on as if the danger was someone else’s problem, and the virus took lives and left our economy on its knees. We are still broke from that experience. Yet now, with FMD...

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