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Metsi-Maholo is a community council located in the Mafeteng District of Lesotho. Its population in 2006 was 21,480. [3] Villages ... Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct;
The MaKholokoe are a subset of the Kgatla (Bakgatla ba Mmakau) and descend from Morena Khetsi, son of Morena Tabane. The Kholokoe people are historically found in the eastern Free State (Harrismith, Wetsieshoek, Vrede, Kestel, Deneysville, etc.), KwaZulu-Natal (in Nqutu), Mpumalanga (Daggakraal, Amersfoort), Greylingstad, Northwest, Gauteng and in Lesotho.
The municipal council consists of forty-six members elected by mixed-member proportional representation.Twenty-three councillors are elected by first-past-the-post voting in twenty-three wards, while the remaining twenty-three are chosen from party lists so that the total number of party representatives is proportional to the number of votes received.
Instead of retiring, Lekhanya contested the Mantsonyane constituency in the 1993 election as a BNP candidate but lost. Lekhanya then became leader of the Basotho National Party (BNP), an opposition party, replacing Retselisitsoe Sekhonyana, which had only a few seats in the parliament and, according to Lekhanya, was the victim of fraud in several elections.
This was the first of a number of such joint ventures and the "Lekoa Transport Trust" was established. [23] A year later the "Ipelegeng Transport Trust" was also established. In October 1990 seven people died and 27 were injured when a PUTCO bus was attacked at KwaMashu, north of Durban. This was carried out by members of right wing movements ...
The Métis (/ m ɛ ˈ t iː (s)/ meh-TEE(SS), French:, Canadian French: [meˈt͡sɪs], [citation needed] Michif: [mɪˈt͡ʃɪf]) are a mixed-race Indigenous people whose historical homelands include Canada's three Prairie Provinces extending into parts of Ontario, British Columbia, the Northwest Territories and the northwest United States.
Likewise, Francis C. L. Rakotsoane described that Monyohe fulfills the role of a water snake (Noha ea Metsi) "who gives water in times of drought" in Basotho mythology. [ 25 ] Africanist Sigrid Schmidt cited the tale in the context of similar African stories about a maiden's marriage to a deity of waters (often snake-shaped) in order to ensure ...