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Between the seventh and 13th centuries, parts of Botswana were populated by thriving agricultural communities. In the 14th
century, these communities came under the control of powerful Tswana dynasties originating in the region to the east, which
is now South Africa’s Gauteng Province. A further series of migrations followed the break-up of the main Tswana kingdoms,
the Hurutshe and the Kwena, from the late 17th century. These migrants were firmly established in the southern part of Botswana
and had established a powerful military state controlling hunting, cattle-breeding and copper mining by the 18th century.
The early 19th century brought another period of upheaval, as peoples from the north, dislocated by slavery and the collapse
of their local economies, moved to new territory. The Kololo were followed by the Ndebele. They were quickly succeeded by
British colonialists and Boer settlers. The local rulers, notably the Tswana King Sechele, who ruled between 1829 and 1892,
allied themselves with the British against the Boers. In a form of sub-contracted or privatised colonialism characteristic
of the British Empire, Botswana was eventually brought under British protectorate control in 1890, by the British South Africa
Company, who supervised the territory and which became known as Bechuanaland Protectorate.
The British intended to hand the territory over to the then Rhodesia but, for a variety of reasons, were unable to do so;
they were not prepared to cede it to South Africa. Thus, Botswana remained a British protectorate until independence in 1966;
Seretse Khama became the country’s first president, a position he retained until his death in 1980. The party that he had
led, the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), has dominated the country’s politics since independence, having won all six sets
of national elections held since then. The latest of these was held in October 2004 at which Festus Mogae won the BDP a new
five-year term by a landslide majority. The main opposition party, the Botswana National Front (BNF), has made substantial
progress against the BDP at local level – especially in urban areas – but the BDP’s overwhelming support in rural areas ensures
its continuing rule.
The government’s main domestic priority is to tackle the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Botswana’s infection rate, estimated at 20 per
cent of the total population, is among the world’s highest. Abroad, Botswana has benefited both politically and economically
from the advent of democratic government in Pretoria. Relations with its other neighbours are normally cordial, although Botswana
is beginning to feel the effects of the disintegration of neighbouring Zimbabwe, mainly in the form of thousands of migrants
who have turned to Botswana to escape food shortages and political repression.
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