“If others had used the arguments we are using today when we asked them for their support against apartheid we might still have been unfree.” - Desmond Tutu on Zimbabwe
The new president, Kgalema Motlanthe, may sound tougher than his ever-appeasing predecessor, Thabo Mbeki. But he seems no more willing to turn the screws on his errant northern neighbour, Robert Mugabe. - The Economist
NVDL: Zimbabwe has really exposed not only the lack of leadership of the Southern African region, but also the power-hungry ambitions of its leaders (including the leaders of South Africa). To lead, to govern, in spite of and at the expense of the people who elected them.
Yet Africa wants the world to see Africa differently to the ways Africa has been perceived in the past. Is Africa any different?
The new president, Kgalema Motlanthe, may sound tougher than his ever-appeasing predecessor, Thabo Mbeki. But he seems no more willing to turn the screws on his errant northern neighbour, Robert Mugabe. - The Economist
NVDL: Zimbabwe has really exposed not only the lack of leadership of the Southern African region, but also the power-hungry ambitions of its leaders (including the leaders of South Africa). To lead, to govern, in spite of and at the expense of the people who elected them.
Yet Africa wants the world to see Africa differently to the ways Africa has been perceived in the past. Is Africa any different?
In truth, the ruling African National Congress has always been cosy with some dictators, such as Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi and Cuba’s Fidel Castro, even under Mr Mandela—largely out of gratitude for past help during the struggle against white rule. |
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