 
  From the left: Dr WP Wahl, Tungamirai Kufandirori, 
Sayaka Kono, Eddie de Wet and Emme-Lancia Faro 
at the first academic conversation of 2017, hosted 
by the Student Communities Office. 
Photo: Eddie de Wet
    
How can we  ensure humanity across borders – even if they don’t truly restrict us? 
This was one of  the discussions at the first academic conversation of 2017, hosted by the Student Communities Office, a  division of Student Affairs. The  discussions included the issue of Lesotho’s incorporation into South Africa,  focusing on how ethnicity has mattered in ongoing arguments.
Basotho ethnicity
Students and  staff were invited to engage with Sayaka Kono, a research  fellow at the Department of Historical Studies at National  University of Lesothoa, and guest speaker, on 14 February 2017  in the Equitas Senate Hall on the Bloemfontein Campus. The topic was Reconsidering Border Issues in Africa:  Ethnicity, apartheid and the political independence of Lesotho.
Kono completed  her Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in International and Cultural Studies at Tsuda  College in Japan. Her research interests lie in the area of ethnicity and she  is currently completing her PhD on Basotho ethnicity and the former Bantustan system  in South Africa.
Legacies of colonialism 
A series of  academic conversations was started in 2016 and aims to get top academic  achievers and leaders to rub shoulders with renowned international scholars and  leaders. This investment hopes to create a sense of responsibility to stretch  boundaries and get the engagement culture flowing at the UFS.
According to  Kono, borders of African countries are one of the living legacies of  colonialism. They have reshaped the local society in various ways such as  causing ‘ethnic’ or natural resource conflicts. The aim of her research is to reconsider these border issues  in Africa through the perspective of ethnicity in the eyes of Basotho who have  been divided by the border with South Africa for more than 100 years.