In 1995,
Lydia Nyati-Ramahobo, a professor at the
University of Botswana, founded the
Kamanakao Association, an organization that aims "to develop and maintain the Shiyeyi
language and culture." The
Wayeyi are a
Bantu minority group under the
Batawana umbrella. Due to feelings of oppression under the Batawana, the Wayeyi, with the help of the Kamanakao Association, installed their own
paramount chief,
Shikati Calvin Kamanakao, on 24 April 1999, which was in disagreement with the
Chieftainship Act, the
Tribal Land Territory Act, and sections 77-79 of the
Constitution of Botswana. The Deputy Attorney General Ian Kirby responded by letter to the Wayeyi on 15 July 1999, writing that since the Wayeyi are not a recognized tribe, they could not have their own chief. Because of the Wayeyi conflict and a parliamentary motion by
Olifant Mfa on 17 February 1995 to rewrite sections 77-79 of the
Constitution to be "tribally neutral", President
Festus Mogae appointed twenty-one people to the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into Section 77, 78 and 79 of the Constitution of Botswana, otherwise known as the Balopi Commission after the chairman of the commission
Patrick Balopi. The commission was charged with three tasks: "(a) To review sections 77, 78, and 79 of the
constitution of Botswana and to seek a construction that would eliminate any interpretation that renders the sections discriminatory; (b) To review and propose the most effective method of selecting members of the
House of Chiefs; and (c) To propose and recommend measures to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the House of Chiefs." ==Methodology==