Sub-Saharan Africa

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Lesser Evils or the Evil of Two Lessers?
June 2, 2008 2 min. read

Amidst Thabo Mbeki's very bad few weeks let us not forget that Jacob Zuma has troubles of his own. The latest? Zuma's presumed choice for the country's chief justice slot, Cape Judge President John Hlophe, faces accusations that he lobbied at least two Constitutional Court judges for a pro-Zuma ruling.  Hlophe now faces possible impeachment. He also […]

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Brain Drain
June 2, 2008 1 min. read

In a short “Editorial Notebook” piece in The Boston Globe Donald MacGillis explores the problem of brain drain in Uganda, which is a nearly universal problem across the continent, and what the west might be able yo do to stanch the flow of talented doctors (and others) without limiting personal freedoms of those who so […]

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Damned If They Do, Etc.
June 2, 2008 1 min. read

More than a week ago I wrote the following: Yet another indicator of how bad things are in Zimbabwe? Even with the recent explosions of xenophobic violence aimed at foreigners and especially Zimbabweans in South Africa,  huge numbers of immigrants continue to cross the border and head directly for the maelstrom in Johannesburg and its […]

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The Many Moods of Thabo Mbeki
June 1, 2008 1 min. read

From Zapiro, The Mail & Guardian 29 May, 2008:

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Tsvangirai Taking Off the Gloves
May 30, 2008 1 min. read

The MDC's Morgan Tsvangirai has taken off the gloves against Robert Mugabe. In what he called a “State of the Nation” address, Tsvangirai pulled no punches in discussing Zimbabwe's “State of disrepair.” Perhaps more perilously, he also declared that there will be no amnesty for those who have engaged in political violence. Such a declaration […]

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Better Late Than Never
May 30, 2008 1 min. read

The United States Congress is finally undertaking to remove the African National Congress from various terrorism watch lists in the United States — a status the ANC, or even Mkhonto we Sizwe, never should have suffered in the first place.

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Freedom From What? Freedom For Whom?
May 30, 2008 2 min. read

At The Mail & Guardian Fikile-Ntsikelelo Moya undertakes a pretty sound (and enjoyable to behold) thrashing of Connie Mulder's Freedom Front Plus party's claims for special recognition for Afrikaners  from the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation (UNPO). Here is a taste: What freedom is Mulder and his chommies asking for? From whom? Freedom is the […]

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Food Policy Shortcomings
May 30, 2008 1 min. read

The United States’ Government Accountability Office has issued a report indicating that food aid to sub-Saharan Africa is woefully insufficient. This comes as no surprise. The optimist in me sees the timing of the report — which comes on the eve of a United Nations summit in Rome to address the global food crisis — […]

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Rwanda and Reconciliation
May 30, 2008 1 min. read

David Ignatius has a column in The Washington Post revealing the ways in which Rwanda has, against all odds, managed in many ways to come to grips with the horrible events of 1994. The Rwanda story is unspeakably incomprehensible for most of us, and yet the last fourteen years have shown the ways in which […]

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Shaking the ANC
May 30, 2008 1 min. read

This analysis in The Mail & Guardian seems to capture pretty well the ways in which recent events — most obviously, but not solely, the explosion of violence against foreign Africans — seem to have shaken the ruling party from its complacency. The responses from Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma have been especially telling. Even […]

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Makoni Calls For Unity
May 30, 2008 2 min. read

Simba Makoni drew a great deal of attention when he stepped out and announced his challenge to Robert Mugabe. He finished third in the recent, and still contested, elections but more importantly he may well have broken the dam of silence and fear. His candidacy simply could not draw from a firm enough base of support […]

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The Springboks Are Number One! Really!
May 28, 2008 1 min. read

As a new international rugby season gets underway, the Springboks stand tall as the defending world champions . And yet the country's fans still have a fixation on New Zealand's mighty All Blacks. Mark Keohane wants to shake South Africans from their rugby inferiority complex and make them realize that they support the greatest team […]

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