Proving that his unannounced visit to Princess Marina Hospital was not an isolated incident, President Duma Boko has doubled down on his “boots on the ground” strategy. Yesterday, keeping up the intense tempo set at the start of the year, the President undertook another impromptu spot visit—this time to Sir Ketumile Masire Teaching Hospital (SKMTH).
This second surprise inspection in as many days cements the narrative of a Presidency shifting gears in 2026. The message from the State House is becoming unmistakable: the era of remote governance is over; the President intends to see the “true state of our healthcare system” firsthand and “without preparation.”
From Diagnosis to Solution
If the visit to Princess Marina was about diagnosing the illness—overcrowding and resource shortages—the visit to SKMTH appears to be about identifying the cure.
Acknowledging that the “healthcare system is under real pressure,” President Boko used this visit to highlight a critical strategic pivot: the transition of SKMTH into a fully operational public hospital.
This move is strategically significant. The President noted that this transition is key to “relieve congestion at overstretched facilities such as Princess Marina Hospital.” By operationalising SKMTH for the public, the administration aims to “significantly expand public access to advanced medical services” and distribute the heavy demand that currently cripples other facilities.
Decisive, Informed Action
The President’s actions this week reflect a leader who is utilising his first year of experience to drive “decisive, informed action.” The spot visits are serving a dual purpose: keeping hospital administration on their toes and allowing the President to gather unfiltered data to inform policy.
“Our healthcare system is under real pressure, and addressing this requires decisive, informed action,” Boko stated regarding the visit.
The immediate goal is clear: improve service delivery and shorten waiting times. However, the long-term vision articulated during the visit is to build a “resilient, accessible, and people-centred healthcare system that responds to the real needs of Batswana.”
A New Standard for Accountability
By personally inspecting both the primary point of pressure (Marina) and the primary avenue for relief (SKMTH) within the same week, President Boko is demonstrating a hands-on grasp of the logistics required to fix the system.
As the new year unfolds, the President’s “random check-in” tour is rapidly evolving into a comprehensive audit of the nation’s critical infrastructure. For the Ministry of Health and beyond, the tone for 2026 has been set: expect the President to show up, expect him to ask hard questions, and expect a demand for results.


