“…While OPC is ‘essential to the exercise of power at the national level’ (Bakir et al, 2019: 311), we argue that studying OPC in the Global South might require a nuanced understanding from the way language is manipulatively used to maintain power, especially in contexts like Botswana, due to diverse political, cultural, and organizational settings. Botswana is a multi-ethnic and multi-tribal country with diverse cultures (Chebanne, 2016), and the government uses the Kgotla system, a pre-colonial town hall-style assembly where leaders and communities dialogue over national discourse (Lekorwe, 2011), for its public relations (Simon, 2023) and information sharing with communities (Thakadu and Tau, 2012). On the other hand, the government and its entities also use Facebook as a political communication and ‘mobilizing tool’ (Masilo and Seabo, 2015: 118).…”