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Friday 10th September 2010
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       Accident kills 2, injures 5        Audience treated to rib-ticklers        ‘Classical’ Sunday beckons        ‘We don’t only hire foreigners’        Banks rally as miners disappoint        Banks’ asset base contracts- Bob report        Barclays tightens credit policy        BB: The show we love to hate        BCP focuses on unity talks        BG News:BEMA AGM        BIUST shouldn’t be abandoned        BMD did not double-cross BCP - Pilane        Bob and Dave in bitter fight        Bokamoso Hospital faces closure        Bokamoso managers must introspect        BOTEC/RIPCO merger fails deadline        Botswana foreign policy being drafted        Botswana in delicate balancing act        Business Briefs:Barclays, Stan Chart delayed        Church defiant despite condemnation of Koran burning        COMMENTS        Construction grows amid job loss fears        Cops raise alarm over P24m uniform        Cuba appeals for Batswana support        De Beers weighs diamond ETF        Demand for credit back on the rise        Dow corners state in Kgafela’s case        EATING OUT:Good King Edward last lucked out        Firestone’s BK11 exceeds targets        Freedom of Information Act can help        Golf tourney comingEpic clash as Gunners take on Chiefs        Govt. to abandon private sector        Govt. to break SA oil monopoly        Guma lecturers Merafhe on democracy        Hello, it is Dumelang        Instrumentalists bring back memories        Investors jostle for govt bonds        Jazz giants in F/town        K-One soldiering on        Khama concedes opposition threat        Khama, Skelemani accused of fuelling tribalism        Labour pains reach fever pitch        Land of the beautiful people        Monkge doubts poverty will be eradicated        Music industry under-covered        NE Briefs:TV presenter booed        News InBriefs: Shareholders cautioned        Our ‘high profile’ coaches        P7.6m spent on BTC, NDB        PLATFORM:Dear President Khama        PLATFORM:The impact of fiscal adjustment        Poor service delivery worries PS        POT SHOT:All eyes on Boko        POT SHOT:Zebras need more        Pula strengthens against Rand        Rail link between Botswana, Maputo mooted        Rammidi rescues BDP, again        Recovery induces inflation        Regional railway line to cost US$7bn        Retail, wholesale remain flat        SACU’s future lies with these men        SILVER LINE:Rewrite your financial story        SPORTS RUNWAY:The Promised Land in sight        Stan rejects P4.5m        Swaziland: Mswati’s playground        THIRD EYE:Freedom squares in 2014        Third Eye:The beauty of being broke        Tonota North: political careers on the line        UB strike for better pay starts Monday        Veselin praises Zebras coach        Volleyball Clash of Titans        What is wrong with Skelemani?        What the candidates stand to lose        Winfrey tops        Wining and dinning        YOUR TAX:Can we claim both - Bota levy and 200%?        YOUR TAX:Plot transfer tax issuestax        Youth appetite for properties push demand                  
NEWS DETAILS
Category Name BG Comments
News Name COMMENTS
Author
Date 23-07-2010

We take keen interest in the life and health of our people. Anything therefore that advances this quest is very much welcome. We would not want to see our people perish in reckless road accidents due to irresponsible consumption of alcohol. We support any steps towards ensuring that we do not become a nation in a stupor. Uncontrolled and reckless consumption of alcohol cannot take this nation anywhere.  All that we can show for some of its effects is the grown graveyards from people who died because they failed to control or stop drinking. Responsible drinking of alcohol is therefore imperative for the nation to retain its best brains and able people to take up the challenge of developing this country. We as such support the efforts of the Botswana Alcohol Industry Association to promote responsible drinking. We are aware of some of drastic steps taken by government in trying to address this problem. We note the 30% alcohol levy that the government imposed in 2008. While millions of Pula have so far been raised through this levy, its effects are devastating for an industry that was previously contributing handsomely to the economic growth of the country. Many people had been mopped from the streets to work in the alcohol industry. At this stage the main brewer in the country, Kgalagadi Breweries Limited (KBL) cannot any more guarantee future survival with profits having plummeted. There is even talk that the brewer is considering to relocate to countries where the trading environment is more conducive for their kind of business. Who will blame them? Any business needs positive enabling environment and a market to survive.  While still reeling from the effects of the levy, traditional leadership has stepped in to close some of the company’s markets for the traditional beer. We understand and appreciate the need for such measures. However, we equally believe that some form of phased development in which there is positive engagement between the producers and the leadership would have been more helpful to all concerned. We believe stamping out all forms of alcohol and traditional beer abuse is appropriate. However, this must be done in an orderly manner where all stakeholders are involved in the process rather than with reckless abandon – we must consider that some of our people, not businesses, rely on selling alcoholic beverages for their own survival. As we go about the process of eradicating social ills, we should be mindful that other potential investors are also looking in from outside assessing the suitability and safety of investing in the country. If we welcome with one hand and chase with another then we risk losing ground in appealing to any serious investor. We should guard against disrupting our attempts at securing foreign direct investment, however noble our intentions are - lest we fail. Yes, government and traditional leadership should intervene to ensure our people drink responsibly, but at the same time assure investors that they would be able to trade in a conducive environment and not be chased out at the drop of the hat. Lest we be misunderstood, we do not hold brief for any company or organisation doing business in Botswana.

 
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