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Karonda Wins Over Namibian Workers on Bread and Butter Issues
September 8, 2010 4 min. read

It seems that Evilastus Karonda’s re-election as the Secretary General of Namibia’s largest trade union federation at its fifth Congress which ended on Sunday September 5 in the capital Windhoek is a victory for the Namibian workers. Apparently, Karonda’s championship of bread and butter issues affecting the workers earned him enmity among his colleagues in […]

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2010 Failed States Index
September 7, 2010 1 min. read

Foreign Policy recently published its 2010 Failed States Index. Perhaps not surprisingly Africa on the whole does not do well. Of the bottom 20 slots,  Africa has twelve, including the dubious honor of a clean sweep of the worst five, as well as slots 21 through 23. That’s right — Somalia, Chad, Sudan, Zimbabwe, and […]

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At a Crossroads: Unionism in Post-Independence Namibia
September 5, 2010 4 min. read

The National Union of Namibian Workers (NUNW), an umbrella body of affiliated Namibian workers unions in public and private sector, is winding down its national congress in the capital under the theme of “Back to Basics.” Back to basics is a befitting theme because the congress is taking place at a time when Namibia’s largest […]

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Calm Follows Storm
September 3, 2010 1 min. read

Calm has followed chaos in Mozambique. Whether it is going to last we don’t know. But the more salient question is whether or not food shortages across the world are going to lead to similar uprisings. Much of the worst of the global economic crisis has actually missed Africa, in part, at least, because of […]

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Mozambique in Crisis
September 3, 2010 1 min. read

A significant hike in the price of bread and other commodities led to mass protests in Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, which in turn led to trigger-happy police opening fire on crowds of people. The official stance of the state appears to be the the protests were illegal, which in addition to being absurd in and of […]

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So Maybe I Was a Bit Premature . . .
September 2, 2010 1 min. read

Yeah, about the end of the South African public sector strike? Not so fast.

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Riot Watch: Six Dead in Mozambique
September 2, 2010 1 min. read

A riot over price hikes in Mozambique has brought services to a halt  in the capital Maputo. At least six people have been reported dead, and hundred more  injured when the police fired shots to disperse crowds of people protesting  in the streets on Wednesday. The protesters barricaded roads, hurled rocks at cars,  set ablaze […]

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Optimism in Kenya
September 1, 2010 1 min. read

It is exceedingly rare for an event in Africa to be met with near-universal acclaim. But the approval of Kenya’s new constitution seems to qualify. Kenyans are celebrating the news, in which they played a part by their participation in the referendum to approve the constitution. President Mwai Kibaki, who shares some of the blame […]

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Pomp in Southern Africa: Deja vu All Over Again!
September 1, 2010 2 min. read

This time in the Kingdom of Swaziland as Eastern and Southern Africa heads of state and Government convene for the 14th Summit of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, starting tomorrow September 1, 2010. Sounds familiar? A little over two weeks ago, Southern Africa heads of state and government met in Windhoek for […]

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Ending the Strike . . .
August 31, 2010 1 min. read

It looks like the major public sector strike in South Africa might be coming to an end. The government has upped its offer and the unions seem set to accept. There is a prisoner’s dilemma element of every labor action, of course, but at the end of nearly every one across the globe not ended […]

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The UN Mapping Report
August 31, 2010 1 min. read

Last week the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights long-awaited mapping report on the crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo leaked. In it Rwanda is implicated in a range of horrible crimes, the most grimly ironic being genocide. Texas in Africa (welcome back!) has a fantastic response.

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Africa Rising: How the "New Global Challenge” Model Could Serve as a Road Map for Africa to Conquer the International Markets.
August 31, 2010 2 min. read

If you are a company from the overlooked continent, how do you penetrate the international market? For 40 emerging African Challengers, a new breed of ambitious African companies, the answer is to imitate a model based on multinationals from China, India, Brazil, and Russia, referred as “New Global Challengers”, who have recently taken advantage of […]

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