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Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#1: Jul 1st 2021 at 8:46:33 PM

A thread dedicated for all things going on in the southern parts of Africa.


https://lansinginstitute.org/2021/07/01/monarchy-in-eswatini-about-to-fall-china-orchestrated/

Starting off with a Lansing Institute paper on the protests going on in Eswatini (aka Swaziland). The paper mentions that China is going to benefit in the case of Swatini/Swazi monarch being gone as they're pro-Taiwanese.

Never mind that his rule is knonw to be corrupt.

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#2: Jul 13th 2021 at 6:36:45 PM

Riots have started in South Africa in response to Zuma being sentenced. South African troops are being called to assist the police.

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#3: Jul 27th 2021 at 6:26:40 AM

An AJ Start Here assessment to what happened in the riots in South Africa.

RJ-19-CLOVIS-93 from Australia Since: Feb, 2015
#4: Jul 27th 2021 at 5:36:33 PM

Do you know why Eswanti changed its name? I'm so used to it being called Swaziland

Silasw A procrastination in of itself from A handcart to hell (4 Score & 7 Years Ago) Relationship Status: And they all lived happily ever after <3
A procrastination in of itself
#5: Jul 27th 2021 at 5:41:55 PM

I believe the original name, Swaziland was the name because of the British going “well your language is Swazi and you’re on land, so you’re going to be called Swaziland from now on”.

“And the Bunny nails it!” ~ Gabrael “If the UN can get through a day without everyone strangling everyone else so can we.” ~ Cyran
Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#6: Oct 7th 2021 at 5:02:44 AM

Interesting AJ video on Abdullah Haron, a South African imam who took on Apartheid. He's mostly overlooked in modern SA history.

eagleoftheninth Cringe but free from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
Cringe but free
#7: Nov 11th 2021 at 3:03:45 AM

AP: South Africa’s last apartheid president F. W. de Klerk dies.

    Article 
JOHANNESBURG (AP) — F.W. de Klerk, who shared the Nobel Peace Prize with Nelson Mandela and as South Africa’s last apartheid president oversaw the end of the country’s white minority rule, has died at the age of 85.

De Klerk died after a battle against cancer at his home in the Fresnaye area of Cape Town, a spokesman for the F.W. de Klerk Foundation confirmed on Thursday.

It was de Klerk who in a speech to South Africa’s parliament on Feb. 2, 1990, announced that Mandela would be released from prison after 27 years. The announcement electrified a country that for decades had been scorned and sanctioned by much of the world for its brutal system of racial discrimination known as apartheid.

With South Africa’s isolation deepening and its once-solid economy deteriorating, de Klerk, who had been elected president just five months earlier, also announced in the same speech the lifting of the ban on the African National Congress and other anti-apartheid political groups.

Amid gasps, several members of parliament members left the chamber as he spoke.

Nine days later, Mandela walked free.

Four years after that, Mandela was elected the country’s first black president as blacks voted for the first time.

By then, de Klerk and Mandela had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 for their often-tense cooperation in moving South Africa away from institutionalized racism and toward democracy.

Echoing hymn of my fellow passerine | Art blog (under construction)
eagleoftheninth Cringe but free from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
Cringe but free
#8: Dec 25th 2021 at 11:25:16 PM

SBS: Archbishop Desmond Tutu dies aged 90.

    Article 
South African archbishop Desmond Tutu has died aged 90, the country's presidency said.

Mr Tutu won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 and helped end apartheid in South Africa.

"The passing of Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is another chapter of bereavement in our nation’s farewell to a generation of outstanding South Africans who have bequeathed us a liberated South Africa," President Cyril Ramaphosa said.

Echoing hymn of my fellow passerine | Art blog (under construction)
Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#9: Apr 9th 2022 at 2:09:30 AM

AFP article on Biden calling President Cyril Ramaphosa.

He, so far, has abstained on votes condemning the invasion.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa held telephone talks Friday with US President Joe Biden, a day after the continental powerhouse abstained from voting on a resolution suspending Russia from a UN rights body over its aggression in Ukraine.

Ramaphosa, whose government has been criticised for refusing to condemn Moscow's bloody invasion, had a day earlier blasted the UN Security Council as "outdated" and in dire need of an overhaul.

Hours later, South Africa was among the 58 countries that abstained from voting on the UN General Assembly resolution that suspended Russia from the UN Human Rights Council as punishment for the invasion of Ukraine.

It was the third time South Africa abstained from voting on resolutions adopted over the war.

Ramaphosa tweeted Friday that he had "a productive" telephone call with Biden.

"We shared views on the conflict in Ukraine and agreed on the need for a ceasefire and dialogue between Ukraine and Russia," Ramaphosa wrote.

The White House said in a readout of the call that Biden "emphasized the strength of the bilateral partnership, as well as global challenges brought on by Russia's further invasion of Ukraine".

The American leader stressed "the need for a clear, unified international response to Russian aggression in Ukraine", the statement said.

Local media suggested it was Biden who initiated the call to Ramaphosa.

The high-profile rebuke of Russia at the UN marked only the second ever suspension of a country from the global body's human rights council — Libya was the first, in 2011.

On Thursday, Ramaphosa sharply criticised the UN Security Council for enabling powerful nations to use their clout to make decisions that were at times catastrophic.

"The current formation of the UN Security Council is outdated and unrepresentative," he said. "It disadvantages countries with developing economies."

South Africa has maintained a non-aligned stance on the conflict in Ukraine, touting negotiation as the best option to end the conflict despite international outrage and condemnation.

eagleoftheninth Cringe but free from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
Cringe but free
#10: Jul 8th 2022 at 5:58:32 AM

Washington Post: Former Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos dies at 79.

    Article 
LISBON, Portugal — José Eduardo dos Santos, once one of Africa’s longest-serving rulers who during almost four decades as president of Angola fought the continent’s longest civil war and turned his country into a major oil producer as well as one of the world’s poorest and most corrupt nations, died Friday. He was 79.

Dos Santos died at a clinic in Barcelona, Spain following a long illness, the Angolan government said in an announcement on its Facebook page.

The announcement said dos Santos was “a statesman of great historical scale who governed ... the Angolan nation through very difficult times.”

Dos Santos had mostly lived in Barcelona since stepping down in 2017 and had been undergoing treatment there for health problems.

Angola’s current head of state, João Lourenço, announced five days of national mourning starting Saturday, when the country’s flag will fly at half-staff and public events are canceled.

Dos Santos came to power four years after Angola gained independence from Portugal and became enmeshed in the Cold War as a proxy battlefield.

His political journey spanned single-party Marxist rule in post-colonial years and a democratic system of government adopted in 2008. He voluntarily stepped down when his health began failing.

In public, dos Santos was unassuming and even appeared shy at times. But he was a shrewd operator behind the scenes.

He kept a tight grip on the 17th-century presidential palace in Luanda, the southern African country’s Atlantic capital, by distributing Angola’s wealth between his army generals and political rivals to ensure their loyalty. He demoted anyone he perceived to be gaining a level of popularity that could threaten his command.

Dos Santos’ greatest foe for more than two decades was Jonas Savimbi, leader of the UNITA rebels whose post-independence guerrilla insurgency fought in the bush aimed to oust dos Santos’ Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, or MPLA.

The MPLA had financial support from the Soviet Union and military support from Cuba in its war against UNITA. Savimbi was backed by the United States and South Africa.

The war would last, with brief periods of U.N.-brokered peace, until 2002 when the army finally tracked down Savimbi in eastern Angola and killed him.

Dos Santos abruptly shed his Marxist policies after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s. He moved closer to Western countries, whose oil companies invested billions of dollars in mostly offshore exploration.

His supporters praised his ability to adapt to changing circumstances. His critics called him unscrupulous.

Dos Santos was invited to the White House in 2004 by then-president George W. Bush as the United States has looked to reduce its dependence on oil from the Middle East.

Angola became sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest oil producer after Nigeria, producing close to 2 million barrels per day. It also unearthed more than $1 billion worth of diamonds each year.

However, the wealth never reached the Angolan people, who during and after the civil war were at risk from large areas of unmapped minefields and had little access to basic amenities, such as running water or roads. Education and health care were — and remain — sparse.

More than $4 billion in oil revenue vanished from Angolan state coffers between 1997 and 2002, New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a 2004 report, based on an analysis of figures from the International Monetary Fund.

The U.S. State Department said that wealth in Angola is “concentrated in the hands of a small elite, who often used government positions for massive personal enrichment.”

Dos Santos was believed to own valuable real estate in Brazil, France and Portugal, as well as foreign bank accounts.

Under his rule, and despite the general poverty, street protests were rare and quickly broken up by the heavily armed riot police known popularly as “Ninjas.” A well-paid and well-equipped presidential guard was garrisoned inside dos Santos’s palace and lined the city’s grimy, potholed streets whenever he emerged.

A bricklayer’s son from Luanda, Angola’s coastal capital, dos Santos began his political life with boots and a rifle in 1961 as an 18-year-old guerrilla for the MLPA in the fight for independence from Portugal.

MPLA bosses pulled him from combat in 1963 and sent him to the Soviet Union for training as a petroleum engineer and military communications specialist.

When he returned to Angola in 1970, he skillfully negotiated compromises to keep the MPLA from breaking up into splinter groups and as a reward was appointed to the party’s central committee.

When independence arrived in 1975, dos Santos became foreign minister and later planning minister and deputy prime minister in the single-party Marxist state.

In a surprise choice, the MPLA elected dos Santos at 37 as president upon the death of Agostinho Neto, Angola’s first leader, in 1979. Dos Santos was seen as a consensus figure between squabbling party veterans, but few anticipated his political longevity.

Dos Santos never sought to establish a personality cult and remained a mysterious figure. He reportedly once said in private he felt his true vocation was that of a monk.

Nor was he known for political sensitivity: He built a multimillion-dollar mansion on the fringe of a Luanda shantytown while millions of Angolans were fighting starvation during the civil war.

He was considered a sure loser against Savimbi in the country’s first democratic elections in 1992, following a peace treaty signed the previous year.

Margaret Anstee, a former U.N. special representative to Angola, described dos Santos as being almost the opposite of Savimbi.

“His demeanor was grave and reserved, to the point that I traced a sense of shyness or timidity, absurd as this seemed. The contrast with Dr. Savimbi’s flamboyant personality could not have been more vivid,” she wrote in her 1996 book on Angola entitled “Orphan of the Cold War.”

But in further evidence of his staying power dos Santos held on again, narrowly outpolling Savimbi for president while leading the MPLA to a parliamentary majority in the simultaneous legislative election.

When Savimbi rejected his defeat at the ballot box and returned to his armed struggle, Western support gradually swung behind dos Santos.

The foes signed another peace deal, brokered by the United Nations, in 1994, but that also unraveled four years later.

Meanwhile, dos Santos — with an army of around 100,000 troops, many with years of jungle combat experience — essayed a role as a regional power broker, starting with neighboring countries.

He sent 2,500 troops to Republic of Congo in 1997 to help President Denis Sassou-Nguesso seize power and the following year sent a contingent to Congo to help President Joseph Kabila’s government fight rebels backed by Rwanda and Uganda.

The end of Angola’s civil war in 2002 brought an opportunity for broader economic development in the southern African country, which is more than three times the size of California.

But public infrastructure was devastated; 4 million people — about one-third of the population at the time — had fled their homes because of the fighting; and oil and diamond wealth continued in the hands of the political and military elite.

Berlin-based Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index 2005 named Angola as one of the world’s 10 most corrupt countries.

“As land mine-maimed children begged in the streets, politicians’ wives flew to New York on the government health budget for nip-and-tuck cosmetic surgery,” wrote John Mc Millan, a Stanford University economics professor, in a 2005 study on Angolan corruption.

Under pressure to finally hold a ballot, dos Santos announced legislative elections in 2008 and a presidential election the following year.

Dos Santos’s MPLA won the most votes for parliamentary seats. But then the head of state changed tack, first postponing the presidential ballot and then scrapping it.

He altered the constitution so that the president is chosen by the party which wins the parliamentary elections. That kept him in power for another eight years.

However, with his health reportedly worsening, Dos Santos announced in 2016 he would retire.

He was replaced by Lourenço, an MPLA stalwart, who has made an anti-corruption drive his flagship policy. He has targeted dos Santos’ grown children, who possess fabulous personal wealth, but not his predecessor.

Dos Santos, who was married four times, was survived by his current wife, Ana Paula, by whom he had three children. He is known to have at least three other children and various grandchildren.

Echoing hymn of my fellow passerine | Art blog (under construction)
Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#11: Jan 24th 2023 at 3:23:18 AM

Upcoming military exercises in South Africa with China and Russia. SA officials are defending their right to do so.

Diana1969 Since: Apr, 2021 Relationship Status: Non-Canon
#12: Mar 20th 2023 at 5:38:20 PM

Well, protests are exploding due to the ongoing economic crisis, power outages, and various other societal ills that have been plaguing the country for years now. Julius Malema and the EFF are leading the protests, demanding that President Ramaphosa resign. Police are already out dealing with the protesters.

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
megarockman from Sixth Borough Since: Apr, 2010
#14: Aug 24th 2023 at 7:53:07 AM

As are Egypt and Ethiopia (presumably not to exacerbate their standoff regarding the latter's massive dam project on the Nile), and the UAE and Argentina.

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#15: Aug 24th 2023 at 5:43:02 PM

Seeing more analysts publish commentaries that BRICS can be a Global South version of the G7.

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
#16: Aug 25th 2023 at 8:27:29 PM

BBC report on BRICS. Basically some analysis that it can one day challenge G7.

Reminds me of the dedollarization drive.

Forenperser Foreign Troper from Germany Since: Mar, 2012
Foreign Troper
#17: Feb 4th 2024 at 2:11:38 AM

Hope this fit's here, crossposting from the RIP thread:

Namibia's president Hage Geingob dies at age 82

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2024/02/03/africa/namibias-president-hage-geingob-dies-at-82-intl/index.html

Certified: 48.0% West Asian, 6.5% South Asian, 15.8% North/West European, 15.7% English, 7.4% Balkan, 6.6% Scandinavian
HallowHawk Since: Feb, 2013
#18: Feb 6th 2024 at 8:39:28 AM

On Zambia: Copper deposits discovered in Zambia

Quoting only the important excerpts (a "[...]" will be used to omit the not-so important excerpts):

KoBold Metals, a California-based metals exploration company backed by billionaires including Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, said it has discovered a vast copper deposit in Zambia.

The rare discovery of a large-scale copper deposit could help in the global race to secure a supply of materials critical to the energy transition. Copper is in high demand due to its use in renewable energy and electric vehicles.

A spokesperson for KoBold Metals told CNBC on Monday that the company believes its Mingomba copper project in Zambia “will be one of the world’s biggest high-grade large copper mines.”

“It is Kakula-scale in size and grade,” KoBold Metals President Josh Goldman said in a statement shared on the firm’s account on social media site X. The giant Kamoa-Kakula copper mine is situated just across Zambia’s northern border in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

[...]

KoBold Metals says it uses artificial intelligence to create "Google Maps" of the Earth's crust to help find new deposits of copper, lithium, cobalt and nickel.

Edited by HallowHawk on Feb 6th 2024 at 9:12:32 AM

Ominae (4 Score & 7 Years Ago)
HallowHawk Since: Feb, 2013
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