Michael Dingake

Michael Kitso Dingake (born 11 February 1928, in Bobonong) is a Botswana political activist and writer.[1]

Michael Kitso Dingake
Born (1928-02-11) 11 February 1928
Botswana, Bobonong.
OccupationWriter, Political activist
NationalityBotswana
Genre

Novelist

Life

Educated in South Africa, Dingake joined the African National Congress in 1952. In 1966 he was sentenced to 15 years on Robben Island. Released in 1981, he worked at the University of Botswana. In 1992 he entered national politics, becoming vice-president of the Botswana National Front in 1993 and entering the National Assembly as MP for Gaborone Central in 1994. In 1998 he led the breakaway Botswana Congress Party, but lost his seat to Margaret Nasha of the Botswana Democratic Party in 1999. Retiring from politics in 2004, he became a weekly columnist for the newspaper Mmegi.[2]

gollark: Oh dear. Blattidus is inoperative.
gollark: We have rules against spam. We *didn't* have rules against just posting invites in general.
gollark: No. You cannot. Nobody is asking you to.
gollark: There are vaguely horrible things going on now in various places; this doesn't make them correct.
gollark: "Everyone else does X" is poor justification for X which could, at various times in the past, justify basically every bad thing ever.

References

  1. Michael Kitson Dingake (1928-) Archived 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Morton, Fred; Ramsay, Jeff; Mgadla, Part Themba (2008). "Dingake, Michael Kitso (1928-)". Historical Dictionary of Botswana. African Historical Dictionaries. 108 (4th ed.). Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press. pp. 92–3. ISBN 978-0-8108-5467-3.


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