Africa’s greatest challenge is not our diversity, it’s our fragmentation.
As long as we remain 54 separate markets, 54 currencies, and 54 immigration systems, we will continue to weaken ourselves while others grow stronger.
I can't resist the temptation to comment on what I saw on LTV yesterday.
For the first time in the history of Lesotho (probably the first in the world) cameras were invited to show the new recruits of National Security Services (NSS) when they began a 6-month training. Shocking
‘Muso o tsokelana mapae le company ea Nikuv, ke ka hoo ho senang IDs, passports, birth or death certificates. Nikuv took their system down e bile muso oa e kolota.
We're appearing before the Portfolio Committee today. Govt maintains that electricity is not a basic necessity and, therefore, will not be zero-rated.
It refuses to disclose how much it has been collecting in VAT from electricity, citing the taxpayer confidentiality policy.
Ha re ntse re keteka letsatsi la basebetsi, ha rea lokela ho lebala hore basebetsi ba bangata ba ntse ba tobane le mathata a maholo —meputso e tlase le maemo a mabe a mosebetsi.
Bohle ha re ikitlaetseng ho sireletsa le ho ntlafatsa maemo a basebetsi bohle naheng ea rona.
BNC offers a valuable platform for diplomacy and development, but its impact is undermined by vague timelines, weak accountability and structural imbalances. Strengthening the planning framework with measurable outcomes can transform it into a real engine for development.
I totally agree with TRC’s position on national reforms partaining amendments on the Lesotho’s constitution as well as on the stance that the government has misinterpreted the Appeal Court on omnibus bill judgement.