San (Bushmen) were the aboriginal inhabitants of what is
now Botswana, but they constitute only a small portion of the
population today. The Tswana supplanted the San, who remained as
subjects. Beginning in the 1820s, the region was disrupted by the
expansion of the Zulu and their offshoot, the Ndebele. However, Khama
II, chief of the Ngwato (the largest Tswana nation), curbed the
depredations of the Ndebele and established a fairly unified state.
A new threat arose in the late 19th cent. with the incursion of Boers (Afrikaners) from neighboring Transvaal.
After gold was discovered in the region in 1867, the Transvaal
government sought to annex parts of Botswana. Although the British
forbade annexation, the Boers continued to encroach on native lands
during the 1870s and 80s. German colonial expansion in South West Africa
(Namibia) caused the British to reexamine their policies, and, urged on
by Khama III,
they established (1884–85) a protectorate called Bechuanaland. The
southern part of the area was incorporated into Cape Colony in 1895.
Until 1961, Bechuanaland was administered by a resident commissioner at
Mafikeng, in South Africa, who was responsible to the British high
commissioner for South Africa.
Britain provided for
the eventual transfer of Bechuanaland to the Union of South Africa; in
succeeding years, however, South Africa's attempts at annexation were
countered by British insistence that Bechuanaland's inhabitants first be
consulted. The rise of the National party in South Africa in 1948 and
its pursuit of apartheid
turned British opinion against the incorporation of Bechuanaland into
South Africa. Although Bechuanaland spawned no nationalist movement,
Britain granted it internal self-government in 1965 and full
independence as Botswana on Sept. 30, 1966. Shortly after, Botswana
became a member of the United Nations. Seretse Khama,
grandson of Khama III, was elected the first president, and served
until his death in 1980, when he was succeeded by Dr. Quett Ketumile
Joni Masire.
In the period after independence, the
country generally maintained close ties with its white-ruled neighbors
and refused to let its territory harbor guerrilla operations against
them. Prior to Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, however, Botswana became
a refuge for guerrillas. In the years before a multiracial government
was established in South Africa, Botswana was the target of South
African reprisals.
Despite the increased importance
of mining in the Botswanan economy, unemployment has been a problem
since the 1970s, as subsistence farming has become less profitable and
migrant workers have returned from the South African mines in search of
work. By 1997, Botswana also had one of the highest rates of HIV
infection (25%). On the political scene, the Botswana National Front, an
organization acting on behalf of labor, has grown in popularity since
independence, but elections in 1989 and 1994 again gave the ruling
Botswana Democratic party (BDP) a majority in the national assembly.
President
Masire resigned in 1998 and was succeeded by his vice president, Festus
Gontebanye Mogae. Mogae won election to the presidency in 1999, after
the BDP retained its hold on the national assembly. The BDP remained in
power after the Oct., 2004, national assembly elections, and Mogae was
subsequently reelected president. In Apr., 2008, Mogae resigned and was
succeeded as president by Vice President Seretse Khama Ian Khama, son of
Botswana's first president.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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