Richard Molosiwa tells Gaborone officers to protect citizen data

Botswana pushes data protection hard, warning that digital growth collapses without trust, discipline, and public officers guarding personal information like it actually matters.

Digital rollout raises real data risk
  • Botswana flags rising personal data volumes across government systems.
  • Digital expansion increases exposure for citizens and public servants.
  • Weak safeguards get framed as a serious liability.
  • Progress without protection gets dismissed as reckless.
Law over vibes and shortcuts
  • Richard Molosiwa pushes the Data Protection Act as operational law.
  • Compliance gets framed as behavior change, not paperwork.
  • Personal data must sit at the center of government work.
  • Efficiency loses value if privacy gets wrecked.
Public officers as human firewalls
  • Richard Molosiwa tells officers to treat data protection as a personal duty.
  • Staff get framed as the first security layer.
  • Default security and limited access get emphasized.
  • Careless handling gets treated as trust damage.
Trust as the real success metric
  • International Data Protection Day is marked in Gaborone.
  • Citizens must feel safe using digital services.
  • Privacy protection gets framed as innovation fuel.
  • The Data Protection Act is positioned as the backbone of digital trust.
 

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