BDP must own up to governance failures- BRP
After nearly 60 years in power, the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), cannot escape political responsibility for the governance environment under which the alleged failures exposed by the forensic audit emerged.
In its Position Paper 2 on the National Forensic Audit Summary Report, the president of Botswana Republican Party (BRP), Biggie Butale, stated that the forensic audit points toward systemic weaknesses involving procurement oversight, contract management, public financial controls, state-owned enterprises and institutional accountability.
These conditions, he said, developed over extended periods under BDP governance.
“The BRP rejects any attempt by the BDP to portray the current situation as merely the actions of a few isolated individuals. Governance cultures are shaped from the top. Where institutions weaken, accountability erodes, and procurement systems become vulnerable over long periods, political responsibility inevitably follows,” Butale emphasised.
Butale stated that at the same time, the BRP is equally concerned by attempts from sections of the Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC) to weaponise the forensic audit process for narrow political gain rather than national institutional renewal.
Botswana does not need political theatre, selective outrage or revenge politics, he said, adding that the country requires calm, professional and constitutional governance reform rooted in evidence, legality and institutional strengthening. Said Butale, “the BRP therefore rejects both the historical complacency of the BDP and the increasingly populist opportunism visible within elements of the UDC. Botswana deserves better than both.”
Importantly, he said the BRP recognises that Botswana still remains comparatively stronger than many African countries in governance and anti-corruption rankings.
According to Transparency International, Botswana continues to rank among the better-performing African countries in terms of perceived public sector integrity and governance standards, he added.
The BRP has cautioned against exaggerated narratives suggesting Botswana has suddenly become a failed or exceptionally corrupt state.
Butale highlighted that in reality, many countries conceal governance failures rather than expose them transparently. He said the very existence of a forensic audit demonstrates that Botswana still possesses functioning accountability mechanisms and institutional openness.
“Firstly, all allegations supported by credible evidence must be investigated independently and professionally. Where sufficient evidence exists, prosecutions must proceed without fear or favour.
No individual — regardless of political status, office or influence — should be above the law. And the BRP believes the time for genuine accountability and national renewal has now arrived,” Butale said.
Senior government officials, he added, must however desist from driving an already overwhelmed populace into a frenzy by promising ‘Brutality and Devastation’ against perpetrators. He advised the Government to under promise and over deliver and not the converse.
“However, Botswana’s governance reputation — carefully built over decades — is now under significant pressure. For many years Botswana benefited internationally from perceptions of: political stability, institutional credibility, rule of law, prudent economic management and comparatively low corruption. This reputation contributed materially to investor confidence, sovereign creditworthiness and lower political risk perceptions internationally.”
He explained that ratings agencies and international investors closely monitor governance quality, institutional stability and corruption risk. The BRP therefore warns that poorly managed communication surrounding the forensic audit could create unnecessary economic anxiety, increase borrowing costs and weaken investor confidence at a time when Botswana’s economy is already under severe strain.