MASERU-IT would be tempting to dismiss Tšepang Tšita-Mosena, 43, as just another political novice.
Admittedly, Tšita-Mosena is indeed a political greenhorn having only been elected into Parliament just three years ago.
Cool, collected and dressed to the nines, Tšita-Mosena does not look like your typical politician.
She speaks softly during the interview, making it difficult to imagine how she fares during heated debates in a male-dominated parliament where high testosterone levels are often on show.
But beyond that soft underbelly is a wily, combative character who has been aggressively pushing one of the most controversial and radical indigenisation laws ever promulgated in Lesotho.