Botswana: Japan Benevolence Boon Botswana Development

Gaborone — Minister of International Relations has hailed Japan for its sustained development cooperation, which included technical assistance, grants, concessional loans and capacity-building initiatives.

Speaking at a reception in Gaborone on Thursday to celebrate 66th birthday of His Majesty Emperor Naruhito and 60 years of diplomatic relations between Botswana and Japan, Dr Phenyo Butale highlighted that some of the flagship projects supported by Japan were the Kazungula Bridge and its One-Stop Border Post, describing it as a transformative infrastructure investment that had improved regional connectivity and significantly reduced transit times for trade.

Beyond large-scale infrastructure, Japan has also funded numerous small-scale community projects in remote and disadvantaged areas across Botswana.

These initiatives, he said, had strengthened local livelihoods while fostering deeper people-to-people ties between citizens of both nations.

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Dr Butale further acknowledged Japan's engagement with Africa through the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD), noting Botswana's participation in the August 2025 summit.

He said engagements held during the summit with Japanese government representatives and private sector leaders had already resulted in exploratory visits by Japanese companies to Botswana, signalling growing investor interest.

The minister stressed that such partnerships aligned with Botswana's Economic Transformation Programme, which seeks to build a diversified, high-income, export-driven economy by 2036 through private sector growth, innovation and sustainable job creation.

"We invite the government of Japan and the private sector to partner with us in this important journey," he said.

Japan's Ambassador to Botswana, Mr Shindo Yusuke, who hosted the reception, described 2025 as a "remarkable year" for bilateral relations, citing high-level engagements during TICAD and ongoing discussions aimed at expanding economic cooperation in support of Botswana's development priorities.

He also noted Japan's continued support across infrastructure, renewable energy and social development sectors, as well as educational cooperation programmes, including partnerships between Japanese universities and the University of Botswana.

As Botswana and Japan commemorate six decades of diplomatic relations, both sides expressed optimism that their partnership would continue to grow in pursuit of sustainable development, peace and shared prosperity.

BOPA

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