The second
President of Botswana, Sir Ketumile Masire, has died at the age of 91 after
being admitted in hospital since last Friday in Bokamoso with critical
condition.
A statement
by his family and the trustees of the Sir Ketumile Masire Foundation (SKMF)
confirmed the death.
“He died
peacefully at Bokamoso Private Hospital surrounded by his family at 10:10pm on
22 June 2017,” the statement said.
The
Botsana’s first Vice President after independence in 1966 has been considered
as the main architect of what has been one of Africa’s most successful economic
transition.
He replaced
President Seretse Khama in 1980 and served as president for 18 years until
voluntarily stepping down in 1998.
He was
succeeded by Festus Mogae, who had been his vice president.
Masire
played a leading role in the independence movement and thereafter in the
southern Africa country’s steady financial growth and development.
Razia Khan,
a well-known commentator on African markets and Africa chief economist at
Standard Chartered Bank shared her condolences to the family on Twitter saying:
“He may have overseen the most impressive economic transition in Africa, but he
was always humble. A true leader. Loved by his people.”
Ruling
Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), which has been in power since Independence,
said Thursday night that his leadership example deserved to be celebrated.
Masire had
been actively involved in numerous diplomatic initiatives, leading efforts to
resolve political crises in a number of African countries including Mozambique,
DR Congo, Lesotho and Kenya.
He was also
the chairman of the International Panel of Eminent Personalities investigating
the circumstances of the 1994 Rwanda genocide, from 1998 to 2000.
He founded
the Sir Ketumile Masire Foundation in 2007 to promote the social and economic
wellbeing of the Botswanans.
Sir Masire
was born on July 23, 1925 in a small village Kanye, southwest of Botswana’s
capital, Gaborone.
He was
knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1991.
Source:
Africa Review
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