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  1. Tshekedi Khama II. Tshekedi Stanford Khama (born 9 June 1958) is a Botswana politician. He was MP for Serowe West from 2008 to 21 April 2023. He was automatically disqualified from the National Assembly after missing two consecutive sessions because of his self-imposed exile to South Africa.

  2. Tshekedi Khama II ( Serowe, 9 de junio de 1958) es un político botsuano que ejerció como miembro de la Asamblea Nacional de Botsuana en representación de la circunscripción de Serowe West entre 2008 y 2023. Cuarto y último hijo del primer presidente de Botsuana, Seretse Khama (1966-1980), y hermano menor del cuarto presidente, Ian Khama ...

  3. Tshekedi Khama (17 September 1905 – 10 June 1959) was the regent-king of the Bamangwato tribe in 1926 after the death of Sekgoma II. [1] Background. Tshekedi Khama was born in Serowe, the son of Khama III, known as Khama the Great, by his fourth wife Semane Setlhoko.

  4. It concludes that while Tshekedi basically accepted the colonial situation in the Bechuanaland Protectorate, he was determined that the British should make no inroads into the powers of the chiefs as determined at the end of the nineteenth century when his father Khama III had accepted British protection.

  5. The birth of Tshekedi Khama on 17 September 1905 when his father was in his late sixties added a new dimension to the intense rivalries that had torn the royal family apart over the past decade. Although Khama had married three times, only his first wife, his much loved Mma Bessie, had born him a son, whom he named Sekgoma after his own father.

  6. Mary Benson, a writer and activist, shares her personal and professional experience of Tshekedi Khama, the chief of the Bamangwato tribe and a leader of the anti-apartheid movement. She describes his struggles, his ideas, his controversies and his legacy in Botswana and beyond.

  7. 21 de abr. de 2023 · Tshekedi Stanford Khama (born 9 June 1958) is a Botswana politician. He was MP for Serowe West from 2008 to 21 April 2023. He was automatically disqualified from the National Assembly after missing two consecutive sessions because of his self-imposed exile to South Africa.