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Announcement: The FPA Africa Blog
March 7, 2008 1 min. read

In order to rationalize and expand upon the Foreign Policy Association's coverage of Africa, the FPA has started a new blog with roots extending from the South Africa Blog. The Africa Blog will cover both continentwide issues as well as regional and country concerns. I will be the senior editor/blogger at the Africa blog while […]

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The Free State Mess
March 7, 2008 2 min. read

I have been silent on the fiasco going on at the University of the Free State largely because some stories almost write their own commentary. Mix Afrikaner racism with white and black college students and the possibility of a combustible mix will be present. The Mail & Guardian's “Thought leader” has had a couple of […]

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Welcome to the Africa Blog
March 7, 2008 1 min. read

I would like to welcome you all to the Foreign Policy Association's new Africa Blog. Some of you may be familiar with me from the FPA's South Africa Blog, which I have run for nearly a year now. I will serve as the senior blogger/senior editor of the Africa Blog, but we will also add […]

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George Fredrickson and Stanley Trapido, Rest In Peace
March 7, 2008 1 min. read

Recently elsewhere I wrote about the passing of George Fredrickson, emphasizing the role he played in my own intellectual development. Here is his New York Times obituary. Another leading South African historian, Stanley Trapido, who left South Africa after the Sharpevile Massacre in 1960 and became a lecturer at Oxford, also died recently. You can […]

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Telling Tidbits From Zimbabwe?
March 6, 2008 2 min. read

Two interesting developments in the Zimbabwe election campaign. The first is that it appears that many of Simba Makoni's supporters are hedging their bets, quietly supporting the upstart candidate while avowing their loyalty to Zanu-PF and thus implicitly, it would seem, to Robert Mugabe. One can sympathize with the inclination — crossing Mugabe almost always […]

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US Election Watch
March 6, 2008 1 min. read

South Africans, like people the world over, are beginning to take a great deal of interest in the primary campaigns taking place in the United States. According to a story on NPR (Click on the link to hear the full report.): South Africans have been consumed with crippling nationwide power outages and other issues closer […]

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Makoni v. Mugabe
March 5, 2008 2 min. read

(Zapiro — The Mail & Guardian) The political contest in Zimbabwe continues to mystify observers. Simba Makoni's candidacy has legs, which in and of itself is a cause for surprise, and possibly excitement. A British economist, Professor Gwyn Prins of the London School of Economics, has called for South Africa to threaten to cut off […]

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Makoni, South Africa, and Joyce Mujuru
March 4, 2008 2 min. read

Simba Makoni's comments last week that “South Africa has not offered any support, and I didn't ask for it” probably reaffirmed in the minds of many people Thabo Mbeki and the rest of the South African government's unwillingness to stand up to Robert Mugabe. And yet it seems from where I sit that Mbeki must […]

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Mugabe’s Headaches
February 29, 2008 2 min. read

This is not the run-up to glory that Robert Mugabe anticipated when he surprised everyone by announcing that Zimbabwe would hold elections at the end of March. Mugabe expected a coronation. He expected that the short timetable for the polling and the fact that he had cowed or crushed most all viable opposition would surely […]

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Sarkozy Visits SA
February 28, 2008 1 min. read

France's President Nicolas Sarkozy arrived in South Africa today for a two-day visit, his first to a non-Francophone African nation. Energy will be high on the list of priorities when Thabo Mbeki and Sarkozy sit down to talk, but so too will be agreements in technology, tourism, African relations, and other areas. Mbeki's relationship with […]

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Shaik Points the Finger at Zuma
February 27, 2008 1 min. read

Well, this cannot be good for Jacob Zuma. Schabir Shaik has admitted that he bribed the ANC president “with the intention to corrupt him.” Shaik, who has been convicted of corruption charges, is hardly an unimpeachable witness. And his testimony is not sufficient to put Zuma in a jackpot. But it hardly helps. And Zuma's […]

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Give Zuma a Chance?
February 26, 2008 2 min. read

Malusi Gigaba, a member of the ANC's National Executive Council and the country's Deputy Minister of Home Affairs has an article in the Mail & Guardian calling for South Africans, and especially the ANC rank and file, to give Jacob Zuma a chance to be a successful party leader and presidential successor.: [Zuma's] election represents […]

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