The government compromises kings

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The government compromises kings
The government compromises kings

Africa-Press – Lesotho. King of Mohale’s Hoek, Taung Ha-Mopoane King Mopooane Mopooane says he has no office and sees the government compromising the village chiefs. Mopooane said it was a sacrifice for him not to have an office because often in the evenings people ask for accommodation from the king, and now when they are not sleeping, he says he often regrets and welcomes visitors to his village who bring the news to the community.

improvement. He also complains that difficult, irritating issues, which are often brought to the attention of the king, are addressed to his children due to the need for an office.

Mopooane said his family home had not been turned into an office, adding that when disaster struck in a village where it may have been a house fire or a house fire, the people went to the king and he could not help them because he too this house is enough.

The king said the government should have provided adequate allowances as it often provided less than a cent from its own pockets. The king said he had asked for help from the office and was tired and now he was asking for help from politicians who were marching around the city even though he did not know if they would eventually succeed.

Mopooane says he has finally taken his shack home and turned it into a public office, but it too has become obsolete because it is too late. The king also said that food aid was available to the king and that he was asking for it from nearby families as he had no store.

He said people ended up confiscating the property of vulnerable people. He also said that public property is being lost as the kings have no place to keep important documents and documents.

He said that often when asked about documents from previous years, he did not know where to keep them. Meanwhile, Teyateyaneng King Thabiso Ramonaheng, of Ha Ramonaheng, has an office built by his community.

Residents have raised M20.00 and more to assist the king with the construction of the unfinished office. Ramonaheng reported to the Voice of the Nation that they needed an office for so long, that they were controlled by the weather as they worked outside. He thanked his people very much for this voluntary act.

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