In
the mid-1980s, Botswana's adult literacy rate exceeded 70%. Most primary
Image Gallery are supervised by the district councils and township authorities
and are financed from local government revenues assisted by
grants-in-aid from the central government. In the mid-1980s Botswana's
primary Image Gallery had an annual enrollment of about 235,900, and secondary
Image Gallery enrolled about 36,000 annually. Specialized Photos was
provided by teacher-training Image Gallery and vocational-training Image Gallery.
About 2300 students were enrolled in the University of Botswana (1976),
in Gaborone.
Botswana,
republic in southern Africa, a landlocked country, bounded on the north
and west by Namibia, on the northeast by Zambia and Zimbabwe, and on the
southeast and south by the Republic of South Africa. The total area of
Botswana is 600,372 sq km (231,805 sq mi).
The Land Most
of Botswana is a tableland with an average elevation of about 1000 m
(about 3300 ft). The Kalahari Desert covers most of the southwestern
portion of the country. The principal stream is the Okovango River,
which flows southeast from the Angola highlands into northwestern
Botswana and drains into the Okovango Basin, where it forms a vast
marshland. During the rainy season the flow continues east on the
Botletle River to Lake Dow and the Makgadikgadi Salt Pan. The southern
part of the country has no permanent streams. In general, Botswana has a
semiarid subtropical climate. The average annual rainfall varies from
about 635 mm (about 25 in) in the north to less than 230 mm (less than 9
in) in the Kalahari. Rainfall is concentrated in the summer months
(December to April). Precipitation, however, is undependable, and the
country is subject to drought. Savanna vegetation predominates in most
parts of Botswana, and consists of grasslands interspersed with trees.
Principal species include acacia, bloodwood, and Rhodesian teak.
Wildlife is abundant in Botswana. Principal species include lion,
giraffe, leopard, antelope, elephant, crocodile, and ostrich. Mineral
resources include diamonds, copper, nickel, coal, cobalt, manganese,
asbestos, and salt.
The People The
country is named for the people that constitute the overwhelming
majority of the population, the Tswana, who are divided into eight major
groups. The majority of people live in towns or large villages that are
surrounded by agricultural land.
Population
The population of Botswana (1993 estimate) is 1,325,920, giving the
country an overall population density of about 2.2 persons per sq km
(about 5.7 per sq mi). The majority of the population is concentrated in
the eastern part of the country. Besides the Tswana, major ethnic groups
include the San (Bushmen), Kalanga, and Herero. Gaborone, the capital
and a main business center, has a population of 59,657 (1981). Other
business centers are Francistown (31,065), Selebi-Pikwe (29,469), Kanye
(20,215) and Lobatse (19,034).
Religion and
About half the people of Botswana are Christians; the remainder follow
traditional religions. English is the official language, but most of the
people speak Setswana, the of the Tswana, which belongs to the
Sotho subgroup of Bantu languages.
The Economy
The economy of Botswana was formerly dependent on the export of live
cattle and meat. Since the late 1960s the discovery and exploitation of
mineral resources, notably diamonds, have assumed primary importance in
export earnings. Income is also derived from the export of labor to
South Africa. The estimated budget for the 1989-90 fiscal year included
revenue of about $1.2 billion and expenditure of about $1.1 billion.
A slaughterhouse, opened at Lobatse in 1954, became of great importance
to the economy in that it allowed for the modernization of the Botswana
livestock industry. In the late 1980s the number of cattle was about
2,350,000; sheep, 220,000; and goats, 1,100,000. Major diamond deposits
are at Orapa and Letlhakane, in the north, and at Jwaneng, in the south.
Diamond production amounted to 15.2 million carats annually in the late
1980s. Important copper and nickel deposits are in the Selebi-Pikwe
area. Manufacturing activity in Botswana is essentially limited to food
and mineral processing.
Botswana is linked to South Africa in a customs union that also includes
Lesotho and Swaziland. In 1976 Botswana established its own currency,
the pula (2.5651 pulas equal U.S.$1; 1993). In the late 1980s Botswana's
annual imports cost about $883 million; yearly exports earned about $1.5
billion, with diamonds accounting for about 75%. South Africa is
Botswana's leading trade partner.
Botswana has about 8390 km (about 5215 mi) of roads and about 710 km
(about 440 mi) of railroads. Air Botswana links major domestic
communities and has regular schedules to foreign cities. Botswana has
about 40,200 telephones, which are connected to the telephone system of
South Africa. Radio Botswana, in Gaborone, broadcasts in English and
Setswana.
Government
Botswana is governed under a constitution promulgated in 1965. Executive
power is vested in the president, assisted by a vice president and a
cabinet of about ten ministers. The president is elected by members of
the National Assembly, which constitutes the supreme legislative body.
The National Assembly consists of 34 members elected to 5-year terms by
universal adult suffrage, 4 specially elected members, the speaker, and
the attorney general, who may not vote. The House of Chiefs, with 15
members (including the chiefs of the 8 principal Tswana groups), must be
consulted by the government on all matters relating to the chieftaincies
and constitutional changes. The leading political grouping is the
Botswana Democratic party. The judicial system includes magistrates'
courts and the High Court. Appeals in both civil and criminal cases are
carried to the court of appeal.
History
The Tswana migrated to the region that is now Botswana by 1800 and
displaced the indigenous San. Missionaries, including David Livingstone
and Robert Moffat, arrived in the first half of the 19th century and
established missions. The territory was taken under British protection
in 1885, after all the principal chiefs complained that Boers from the
Transvaal were invading their territories.
During World War I and World War II contingents from Bechuanaland, as
Botswana was then called, served overseas and on their return helped
stimulate economic and political change. The first elections to a
legislative council were held in 1961. Under the name Botswana, the
country achieved independence in 1966, with the former prime minister,
Sir Seretse Khama, as the first president. When he died in 1980, he was
succeeded by Quett K. J. Masire, who was returned to power in September
1984 and reelected in October 1989.
Since independence, Botswana has taken a nonaligned stance in foreign
affairs. While it opposed the former racial policies of neighboring
South Africa, Botswana has, out of economic necessity, maintained close
ties with that country.