Staff Reporter
The message from the State House has rippled through the entire UDC administration with immediate effect: get out of the boardroom and get into the field. Following President Duma Boko’s relentless series of unannounced hospital inspections earlier this week, his Cabinet has now joined the offensive, launching a coordinated, nationwide blitz on the country’s healthcare facilities and supply lines.
The “business as usual” approach of relying on scheduled briefings and sanitised PowerPoint presentations appears to have been discarded. In its place is a new, urgent governance style focused on raw, unfiltered data gathering.
A Coordinated Cabinet Mobilisation
Taking the baton from the President, Minister Moeti Caesar Mohwasa conducted his own unannounced spot checks yesterday, targeting the North-West District. His tour included Maun Letsholathebe II Memorial Hospital and Gumare Primary Hospital.
Simultaneously, the Minister of Health, Dr. Stephen Modise, struck at the logistical heart of the crisis with a surprise inspection of the Central Medical Stores (CMS) in Gaborone.
This synchronised action demonstrates that the President’s earlier visits were not merely a publicity stunt, but the opening salvo of a broader government strategy to expose and rectify the deep-seated rot in the public health sector.
Cutting Through “Doctored Reports”
Government insiders suggest that this shift in tactic is a deliberate move to bypass the bureaucratic filter. For years, the true extent of the healthcare crisis has arguably been obscured by administrative red tape and reports that downplay severity.
By showing up unannounced, the UDC government is signalling that it is no longer interested in the “official version” of events. They want to see the empty shelves, the broken machines, and the overcrowded wards with their own eyes. As Minister Mohwasa noted during his tour, the goal is to listen to “real experiences” to make “people-focused decisions,” effectively cutting out the middlemen who might otherwise sanitise the reality on the ground.
Securing the Supply Lines
While the hospital visits address patient care, Dr. Modise’s raid on the Central Medical Stores addresses the root cause: supply.
The CMS is the critical artery of the nation’s health system; if it is clogged, hospitals across the country fail. Dr. Modise’s unannounced visit was laser-focused on assessing stock levels, dispatch times, and the efficiency of resource optimisation. His presence there sends a stern warning to the supply chain managers: the government is tracking every pill and every bandage from the warehouse to the patient.
An Urgent Prescription
The speed at which the executive branch has mobilised this week indicates that the administration is treating the current state of healthcare not just as a problem, but as a national emergency.
The days of remote management appear to be over. The UDC government has made its stance clear: urgency is the new standard. Whether in the corridors of a referral hospital in Gaborone, a primary hospital in Gumare, or a warehouse floor at the Medical Stores, the government is present, watching, and demanding immediate improvement.


