From a phone call to the high court: Wayeyi visibility and the Kamanakao Association's campaign for linguistic and cultural rights in Botswana

Type Journal Article - Journal of Southern African Studies
Title From a phone call to the high court: Wayeyi visibility and the Kamanakao Association's campaign for linguistic and cultural rights in Botswana
Author(s)
Volume 28
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2002
Page numbers 685-709
URL http://www.kamanakao.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/lydiaJSAsmay4-1.pdf
Abstract
This paper by the Coordinator of the Kamanakao Association reflects upon the Association’s
campaign against tribally discriminatory laws, against the social stigma of past serfdom, and for
human rights and democracy in Botswana. The campaign made Wayeyi from the North West
District highly visible on the national scene. Through litigation up to the High Court, the
Kamanakao Association broke new ground for judicial review in the broad public interest. The
advance was for the cultural rights of ‘minorities’ in general, and not only in the interest of the
Wayeyi. The most favourable High Court ruling recognised Yei cultural distinctness, allowed
them to secede from the tribe of their past overlords, the Tawana, and concluded a landmark
case in the wider fight against state-backed tribal discrimination and denial of language rights.
As an insider’s account mainly about recent events, but seen in a perspective extending to
precolonial times, the paper focuses on strategies for and against change. These are the
strategies effecting the power relations, in turn, between the Yeyi and the Tawana, former
serfs and overlords, the Yeyi and the Government, and the Government and the Tswana
speaking tribes unfairly privileged by the tribally discriminatory laws.

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