
2 September 2025
The United Nations has pledged comprehensive support to Botswana as the country confronts a nationwide shortage of essential medicines, a situation declared a public health emergency by the government.
In a statement issued on Monday, the UN in Botswana confirmed it is engaging with national authorities to implement both immediate and long-term measures to mitigate the crisis. Coordination will take place through two established structures — the National Task Force and the National Steering Committee — in order to strengthen collaborative responses across government, health institutions, and civil society.
The initiative will be spearheaded by the World Health Organization (WHO), with key contributions from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), and other relevant UN agencies and partners.
According to Yang Wenyan, the UN Resident Coordinator in Botswana, the priority is to safeguard public health by accelerating coordinated action while leveraging the UN’s convening power to mobilise resources and expertise.
The government has already begun efforts to secure funding. On 25 August, President Duma Boko announced the creation of a national medical fund to pool resources aimed at meeting urgent supply needs. The fund seeks to bridge short-term gaps while also supporting structural reforms in Botswana’s healthcare procurement and distribution systems.
Medicine shortages have been an intermittent challenge across several African health systems, linked to factors such as disruptions in global supply chains, dependency on imports, currency fluctuations, and inefficiencies in procurement processes.
In Botswana, the shortage has raised concerns given the country’s longstanding commitment to universal healthcare access, including its widely recognised achievements in HIV/AIDS treatment coverage.
Analysts note that the UN’s intervention could provide Botswana with both technical and financial support, while also reinforcing regional approaches to health security. Southern Africa has experienced periodic shortages of medical supplies, illustrating how the resilience of national health systems is often tied to broader continental challenges in pharmaceutical sovereignty and supply chain dependency.
While the current focus remains on addressing urgent needs in Botswana, health observers argue that sustainable solutions require pan-African strategies to strengthen local manufacturing, ensure diversified procurement channels, and reduce reliance on international markets vulnerable to price volatility and geopolitical tensions. The Botswana case underscores the importance of integrated approaches that go beyond crisis management, situating the issue within Africa’s broader pursuit of self-sufficiency in healthcare provision.
Source: https://shorturl.at/rjO4Q



