Mokgatlho wa Botswana o o lwantshang tshotlako ya bana le kgokgontsho ya bong

Re A Bua. We speak, for every child in Botswana who can't yet speak for themselves.

Six months old. Already loud.

Re A Bua Foundation was founded in December 2025 to advocate for victims and survivors of gender-based violence, and to create a safe space for them, particularly minors.

We exist because child molestation, abuse, rape and exploitation thrive in silence. Our work is to end that silence: in primary schools, in villages and townships, in courtrooms, and in every conversation Botswana would rather not have.

Our vision is a safer, healthier, more accountable Botswana where every child is protected, empowered, and given a chance to thrive free from abuse and marginalisation.

Our story & governance

How we fight

  1. Re A Bua engages a Botswana community in conversation about protecting children

    Tell Clubs in schools

    Storytelling circles where children learn, through stories, that their voice matters and their body is their own, and where a trusted adult is finally safe to tell.

  2. Re A Bua Founder Kemmy Mpinang donates Different but Equal at a primary school

    Different but Equal

    We donate this child-friendly book about gender-based violence into primary schools, so the first time a child hears about abuse, it's in language made for them.

  3. A young man cups a candle flame at a Re A Bua candlelight vigil

    Survivor support

    Resources, mental-health awareness and a safe space for victims, survivors, and grieving, traumatised families, from the first phone call to long after the headlines move on.

  4. Advocacy that doesn't blink

    Community engagements in grassroots villages and townships, and public pressure for justice in cases Botswana must not be allowed to forget.

    All our programmes

#JusticeForTshepi

A movement, not a moment. We march, petition and stand with the family until there is justice, and until the systems that failed one child are rebuilt for all of them.

Stand with the movement
A young woman at the march holds a hand-painted 'Justice for Tshepi' sign

Built to be held accountable

We ask Botswana's institutions to be accountable, so we hold ourselves to the same bar: registered non-profit, named leadership, a safeguarding-first way of working, and reporting that shows funders exactly where every pula goes.

Support the work