Original Vintage 1980s/1990s Bophuthatswana Police Tracksuit. Made of Polyester or Poly/cotton blend (no content label). The jacket is Maroon & Grey/Green featuring two pockets and a zip front. Knit cuffs, waist and collar. The jacket features the Bophuthatswana Police logo embroidered on the left breast with the motto “Lemoga mme o dire” which translates to “Recognize and Act” in Northern Sotho. The jacket also features a Mainstreet Casual tag, size medium label stitched below the collar. The pants are a Grey/green with two pockets, a elastic waist and knit cuffs. Only a size M label present inside the pants. Both pieces are a matched set, size medium.
- The jacket measures 38" across chest. The Pants are a 30-32" waist X 31" inseam.
- Model in last photo is 6’3”.
The Republic of Bophuthatswana (Repaboleki ya Bophuthatswana; Republiek van Bophuthatswana) was a tribal homeland in the northwestern region of Republic of South Africa from 1977 until 1994. The region was actually set aside for Tswana-speaking people in 1961, allowed nominal self-rule in 1971, and nominal independence in 1977.
The Bophuthatswana Defence Force (BDF) was formed in late 1976 as a National Guard unit, officially becoming the armed forces of the independent nation in December 1977. At its height, the BDF consisted of 1 Infantry Battalion, a Maintenance Unit, an Air Wing, Technical Services Unit, and the Military School. A Special Forces Regiment (including a Parachute Battalion) and two mobile counterinsurgency battalions were later also formed. The Bophuthatswana Police also included a Special Task Force trained in counterinsurgency tactics.
Bophuthatswana was wracked by a series of attempted coups d'etat during its latter years of existence. In February 1988, Rocky Malebane-Metsing and his supporters took over the government for a single day, but an intervention by the SADF reinstated the president and restored order. In 1990, however, a second coup involved as many as 50,000 protesters who demanded the president's resignation over poor handling of the economy. Local security forces and another intervention by the SADF was required to quell the insurrection. And in 1994, when military personnel fired on protesting civil servants, this prompted the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) - an extremist Afrikaaner paramilitary secessionist movement - to mobilize in an effort to restore order. Subsequently, several deaths occurred as both sides fired at each other.
With the end of apartheid in 1994, all of the bantustans were dismantled and their territories incorporated into existing provinces of South Africa.
The Bophuthatswana Defence Force (BDF) comprised approximately 4,000 personnel in two infantry battalions, with support personnel. An Air Force of about 150 personnel had very limited equipment. Additionally, law enforcement and internal security were relegated to the Bophuthatswana Police.
The Northern Sotho Language also known by its native name Sesotho sa Leboa, is a Sotho-Tswana languagegroup spoken in the northeastern provinces of South Africa. It is commonly referred to in its standardized form as Pedi or Sepedi and holds the status of an official language in South Africa. This language group includes dialects like Sepedi (Serota), KheLebedu, Setlokwa, Sekone, GaDikgale, and GaMatlala.