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The Constitutuional Protection Against discrimination In Botswana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2008

Extract

At independence in 1966 Botswana, like most former British colonies, adopted a Constitution which included a Bill of Rights. Whilst this tried to reconcile the needs of maintaining public order with that of protecting human rights, it did not entirely remove some of the vestiges of authoritarianism and discrimination that had been associated with the preceding colonial administration. Since independence, the country has had to grapple with many problems caused by constitutionally sanctioned discrimination in many areas of its social, economic, and political life. Despite some half-hearted, improvised and short-term solutions, the problems just would not go away.

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Articles
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Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2004

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References

1 It is necessary to point out here that our discussion is limited to the constitutional position. The Roman-Dutch/English common law principles that apply in Botswana also provide some protection against invidious protection against discrimination in other areas of the law. A good example is the refusal by courts to enforce discriminatory restrictive covenants or conditions in contracts. In administrative law, discrimination by government in administrative decision-making can be challenged in judicial review proceedings by, for example, arguing that the decision-maker took an irrelevant consideration into account or that he reached a decision that is unreasonable.Google Scholar

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11 Ibid 70–5. By contrast, both the European Court of Justice in P v S and Cornwall Country Council [1996] ECR 1-2143 and the European Court of Human Rights in Salgueiro da Silva v Portugal (unreported: ECHR, 21 Dec 1999) have held that discrimination against transsexuals in the former case and sexual orientation in the second case where included in the prohibition against sex discrimination.

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67 See Schneider, D, ‘What Would Happen if Insurance Companies were not Allowed to Underwrite for AIDS?’, in Ditshwanelo, op cit 11–13.Google Scholar

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73 See, Tafa, AB, ‘Right to Sexual Orientation: The Line of the Botswana Government’, in Ditshwanelo, Conference on Human Rights and Democracy, 17–19 Nov 1998, Gaborone, Ditshwanelo, Gaborone (2000) 127–8.Google Scholar

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82 Botswana has an ombudsman who could also perform such functions, but his mandate is presently limited to investigating acts of maladministration. See generally, Fombad, , ‘The Enhancement of Good Governance in Botswana: A Critical Assessment of the Ombudsman Act, 1995’, 27 Journal of Southern African Studies (2001) 5777.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

83 The South African Human Rights Commission established under s 184 of the Constitution has the task of promoting and protecting the fundamental rights encapsulated in the bill of rights. The Commission may, on its own initiative or upon receipt of a complaint, investigate any alleged violation of a fundamental human right. Besides its supervisory role in relation to human rights, the Commission is authorized to provide financial assistance to complainants and other affected persons to enable them to seek redress for grievances in any appropriate forum.Google Scholar

84 See further, Meron, T (ed), Human Rights in International Law: Legal and Policy Issues (OxfordClarendon Press 1984).Google Scholar