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Digital transformation group, T-Connect, on Wednesday this week celebrated Earth Day by organising a clean-up and networking campaign in Maseru.
Earth Day, celebrated annually on April 22, is the world’s largest environmental movement dedicated to protecting the planet from pollution, climate change, and deforestation.
Founded in 1970, it serves as a global day of action to raise awareness, promote sustainability, and encourage stewardship of nature through activities like cleaning up, recycling, and planting trees.
T-Connect believes that the true strength of a nation is reflected in the condition of its communities.
As the company celebrates Earth Day, they are reminded that their digital ambitions must be matched by responsible environmental stewardship. They are also conscious that the
environment in which they operate is the very foundation upon which innovation, productivity,
and growth are built.
T-Connect Customer & Stakeholder Relationship Manager (Strategic Projects & Partnerships), Keiso Mohloboli, said their aim is to clean the environment and restore its visual appeal.
She indicated that this initiative seeks to cultivate a strong culture of shared ownership and pride in the spaces where people live and work.
By bringing businesses, employees, and residents together for a common purpose, the goal is to shift mindsets from ‘someone else’s problem’ to ‘their collective responsibility’, ensuring that the environment is not just cleaned for one day, but respected and maintained long after the event.
Mohloboli also noted that at T-Connect Lesotho, they believe that meaningful transformation begins at the community level.
A clean-up initiative is a practical and visible demonstration of collective responsibility, aligned with the Earth Day 2026 theme of environmental stewardship and sustainable living, she added.
By starting with a clean-up, they are not only addressing immediate environmental concerns but also fostering a culture of care, pride, and shared ownership among community members.
“A clean environment is foundational to dignity, public health, and social cohesion, key pillars for any nation seeking sustainable development,” Mohloboli said.
She also pointed out that their work in digital inclusion is deeply interconnected with the environments in which people live and work.
A clean and organised physical space promotes improved productivity, focus, and overall well-being, conditions that are essential for effective participation in the digital economy, she indicated.
By creating cleaner communities, they are simultaneously preparing the ground for digital engagement, innovation, and access.
T-Connect’s vision is holistic: they do not see digital transformation in isolation, but as part of a broader ecosystem where environmental, social, and technological progress reinforce one another.
Mohloboli further stated that the clean-up campaign reflects their belief that sustainable development begins with intentional, community-driven action, where clean, productive environments and digital empowerment go hand in hand.









