Showing posts with label Rhodesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhodesia. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Zimbabwe's Empty Streets

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ aabout the economy of Zimbabwe. This follows this post about Churchill's leadership. This follows this post about Japan and North Korea. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.
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Zimbabwe's Empty Streets

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Zimbabwe was once the economic powerhouse and breadbasket of southern Africa. Its rich lands allowed the nation to be self sufficient in virtually everything during the days when it was the pariah among nations. Today its economy is in shambles, inflation is in triple digits and starvation and AIDS has sapped the strength and will of its people.

In 2000 I spent several days in the country visiting with some of the people and seeing the remains of a once vital country. There was still some hope that life would get better, but in the four years since more have fled and, worse yet, it seems the will to rise up and push for reforms has all but gone. This article in the Christian Science Monitor has one paragraph that explains why the citizens have not yet appeared in the streets of Harare or Bulawayo…
Nor does it have a figure like Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a unifying moral force in the anti-apartheid struggle. Zimbabwe's churches are divided, as is civil society and the political opposition.
New elections are coming on March 31. Will another sham election arouse the indignation of capable people? We'll see.

http://www.ucg.org/search?query=zimbabwe

Friday, July 11, 2014

Is Africa Dying Before Our Eyes?

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/  about Africa. This follows this post about gay marriage. This follows this post about smuggling across borders.  For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632. You can follow me at blogspot here and at twitter here https://twitter.com/brianleesblog. Please consider following both in case one goes down!


Is Africa Dying Before Our Eyes?





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Entire countries are struggling for survival. Does the world want to help? Is it too late? Has God cursed the continent?

We have written before about the crisis of western Sudan, where armed militia known as "Janjaweed" (literally, "devils on horseback") raped, murdered and pillaged the people of Darfur. The horror and death continues with no end in sight.
Sudan's government at first denied anything was happening. Then it denied that it licensed or abetted the Janjaweed. Fearing international sanctions imposed by the United Nations, Khartoum (the seat of Sudan's government) finally allowed humanitarian organizations to enter the country to begin to care for the IDPs (internally displaced persons). And Sudan's leaders managed to get the Janjaweed to ratchet down the attacks over which they supposedly "had no control."
U.S. President George W. Bush and then Secretary of State Colin Powell correctly called what was happening a "genocide." But the UN refused to characterize it as such, which would require economic sanctions on the fragile Sudanese economy. The United States subsequently backed off from that language, perhaps because Khartoum has cooperated in the war on terror, providing the CIA with intelligence about terrorists in Muslim countries.
But they are still dying in Darfur. And it's not been easy even to count the victims. The survivors have been hesitant to talk, but the story of the inhumanity is becoming clear.
Marc Lacey of The New York Time s paints a gruesome picture: "Darfur's dead have been tossed into the bottoms of wells, dumped into mass graves, interred in sandy cemeteries and crudely cremated. Children have been snatched from the arms of their mothers and thrown into fires, villagers dragged on the ground behind horses and camels by ropes strung around their necks" ("The Mournful Math of Darfur: The Dead Don't Add Up," May 19, 2005).
Another New York Times writer, Nicholas Kristof, tells of nine young boys the Janjaweed captured, stripped and horribly mutilated, before shooting them and throwing them into the village well as a warning to others to get out (cited by Nat Hentoff, "Darfur: How Many More Will Have to Die?" Jewish World Review, June 20, 2005).
There wasn't either time or means to issue death certificates whereby an accounting could be made for the number who perished. Census figures for Sudan are woefully out of date, so they are no help either.
Many more dead than tsunami victims
Some died in the process of fleeing. Others have died from diseases directly related to malnutrition and to the lack of adequate water. The Coalition for International Justice, a nongovernmental organization (NGO), put together a sophisticated estimate, based upon a combination of sources: 400,000 dead, with people continuing to die at a rate of 500 per day.
Salih Booker, executive director of the Washington-based Africa Action, puts the figure much higher. She says that unless there is immediate help, "up to a million people may be dead by the end of this year" (ibid., emphasis added). If this estimate is anywhere near accurate, the manmade disaster of Darfur has surpassed the death toll of the "Christmas tsunami" of 2004, which so grieved the entire world.
The international community, led by the United States, is mounting the second-largest relief effort in the history of mankind to help the Darfurians. It is second only to relief for survivors of the tsunami. But the Darfur project is severely underfunded, as many are weary of the never-ending need for donations. (Even the contributions for tsunami relief are falling far short of promises made in the emotion of the moment.) Reflecting on the growing phenomenon of donor fatigue, Adam Koons of Save the Children USA lamented, "How many times can the international community bail a country out?" (op. cit., Lacey).
Complicating matters, it will soon begin to rain in Darfur. Normally, rain means life, for it brings the hope of another crop. But a relief organization's delivery of food that would take hours before the rains will take days afterwards. (And, trucks are in constant danger of being hijacked and robbed by roving bandits.) Tragically, up until two years ago, this was one of the most productive farming areas of Africa. Now it is largely paralyzed, all because of man's inhumanity to man.
How did it happen? Competing religious ideas, jealousies between rival tribes and an oppressive government all contributed to this now out-of-control disaster.
And, those who are still alive are dying in a different way: Their hope is lost. They are unable to work or to provide for their families; they see no chance of returning to their homes or lands; they are unsure that they will ever feel safe again; they have no guarantee that they will have food or water in the coming weeks and months—and they have no control over their destiny.
Twice as many dying in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
It is horrifying to see the world's powerful nations quibble over words, while the people of Darfur die. But an even greater tragedy is playing out slightly to the southwest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Warlords, each with his private militia, battle among themselves for control of the country's considerable natural resource wealth.
But the wealth is doing little good to the Congolese who are perishing in the fighting. They are dying at more than twice the rate of Darfurians at 1,000 per day. Inexplicably, this monumental disaster is barely mentioned in the world's media. There is plenty of time and space to report on celebrity and political gossip, but next to none for this crying need.
Even though the problems persist in Darfur, it at least has caught the attention of many. Not so for the Congo. Why don't we hear about this heartbreaking catastrophe? Have the world's nations simply decided that there is no way to stop the fighting, the killing and the dying from disease and starvation?
An entire nation facing extinction
Let's now travel south nearly to the bottom of the continent to the tiny nation of Swaziland, population 1 million. That's not a very large number of people in the context of the rest of Africa. But the problem facing Swaziland is huge in proportion. Therein lies the story of this African tragedy.
A mind-numbing 426,000 of the million citizens are infected with HIV or AIDS. David Blair of The Telegraph (United Kingdom) writes, "Already, one Swazi in every 15 is a child orphaned by AIDS. In five years AIDS orphans... will make up an eighth of the population. An army of orphans can be found in every town and village ("Will This Be the First Country to Die From AIDS?" June 4, 2005).
It will only grow worse. As many of our readers are aware, a dark pall sits over the entire African continent, which is looking at the staggering figure of 80 million AIDS deaths by 2025.
Not under a special curse
Some mistakenly assume that God has cursed Africa for the sins of its ancestors. Of course, this reasoning is false. Such critics are unaware of or overlook the wealthy African empires of ages past. They also forget that the continent thrived as part of the British and other European empires (even though some exploited the people and the land).
A major cause of the current suffering is the dictatorial rule of a few selfish leaders, who enrich themselves at the expense of their people. Additional problems stem from religious superstitions and a lack of education. These lead to sin, which, in turn, leads to suffering.
Mankind is hurting itself in appalling ways. Just as Jesus said to the citizens of Judea in the first century who struggled to understand a tragedy at that time, "unless you repent you will all likewise perish" (Luke:13:3).
James wrote to the scattered Israelite tribes in the first century, taking his readers to task for the suffering their peoples were causing. "Where do wars and fights come from among you? Do they not come from your desires for pleasure that war in your members? You lust and do not have. You murder and covet and cannot obtain. You fight and war. Yet you do not have because you do not ask. You ask and do not receive, because you ask amiss, that you may spend it on your pleasures" (James:4:1-3).
The U.S. government is beginning to funnel its aid through NGOs, rather than through corrupt government officials, to help meet the immediate physical needs. You may choose to contribute to them too. But the needs are too great and the momentum too overpowering for all the wealth in the world to change the course of all the disasters unfolding in Africa.
We must pray that God will send His Son to rescue the dying and to end the evils of this world forever. "Your Kingdom come. Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven" is more than a song and more than a sentiment. It must be the cry of the heart of every believer. Let a chorus of such prayers cascade onto God's throne every day, until He gives Christ the order, "Let's roll!" and our Savior brings true relief.
Read the good news of how God plans to do just that in the booklet The Gospel of the Kingdom . And join this true relief effort. WNP


Thursday, August 9, 2012

Bitter Harvest: Zimbabwe and the Aftermath of its Independence

A very interesting book review from www.Amazon.com about Rhodesia being ruined into Zimbabwe. (Could this happen in the U.S.? )This follows this previous post about it.  This follows this post about how to Report Illegal Immigrants! For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read another very interesting book HERE.


Bitter Harvest: Zimbabwe and the Aftermath of its Independence
Ian Smith (Author)


A wake up call.
By S Smyth

Format:PaperbackThis account of the deliberate destruction of Rhodesia by foreign powers helbent on disastrous political agendas which are also an existential threat to their own states and economies in 2009, is a wake-up-call for people with an interest in such matters. The bulk of Ian Smith's ire is directed towards Great Britain and its determined drive to placate the OAU and maintain the Commonwealth via the policy of No Independence Before African Majority Rule (NIBMAR) irrespective of the reality on the ground that Black-Africans desired any such a thing, or had the slightest ability to administrate it beyond a cadre of Marxiist-Lennist gangsters intent upon looting Rhodesia's capital core, for their own purposes.



As per Henry Kissinger's pragmatic advice and South Africa's disastrous détente policy, as aggressively advocated by John Vorster, Ian Smith accepted the inevitable. Rhodesia became Zimbabwe. And Robert Mugabe in consort with Zanu-PF, rapidly instigated their intended programme to reduce a successful and thriving African state into the catastrophe it now is, whilst pocketing the loot and remaining in power without any possibility of being challenged. Which is the point of Communism, as Ian Smith was reliably informed by a Black-African university graduate when asked why he was an advocate of Communism.



At the heart of this book is the observation that, when those who do not have to suffer the consequences of their actions persist in ignoring principles and sacrifice integrity for political expediency and personal gain, the state cannot survive.

 How liberal guilt leads to more innocent bloodshed!
By Jeffrey S. Ross

Format:Paperback
Amazon Verified PurchasePrime Minister Ian Smith lays out in detail how the Western powers, motivated by an urge to atone for a leftist-inspired guilt complex over the past, have only caused more innocent blood to gush in a land far from them. That, along with South African Prime John Vorster's foolish attempt to appease African Marxist leaders and use Rhodesia as a foil to distract world attention away from his Apartheid regime, has only served to install a brutal thug whose regime has one of the worst human rights records. If Western liberals want a REAL reason to feel guilty, they need only look to Zimbabwe and read Ian Smith's book.

Robert Mugabe, Bloodthirsty Thug
By R. Carpenter

Format:PaperbackIan Douglas Smith was born in 1919, the year after WWI ended. He was a relic of what "British" used to mean before socialism, before the nanny state, and before political correctness. For better or worse, he wanted to bring British rule of law, and the British way of thinking, to the Rhodesian Africans along with the resulting prosperity. He succeeded in bringing prosperity; most historians agree the Rhodesian Africans were more prosperous than any others. Smith immediately recognized Robert Mugabe for the savage thug he has always been. The problem was numbers: 270,000 Europeans compared with five million Africans in Rhodesia. Once the AK-47 arrived from Russia in large numbers it was only a matter of time. Rhodesia was something of an embarrassment for the rest of the white world with the civil rights movement in its early years of promise. It was so easy for distant Americans or Europeans to mouth the words "Black Majority Rule" without any understanding of reality. That reality included two very different peoples that whites feel free to lump together as "black", the Shona and the Matabele. The Shona, other than Mugabe and his thugs, are known as artistic, creative, intelligent and friendly people compared with the Matabeles, who are descended from the same folk as the Zulus. Both groups hated white people much LESS than they hated each other. In that sense, white rule was the Africans' second choice. Not good, but better than rule by the other African group. That fact explains why so few whites were able to rule so many Africans for so long, with the able assistance of African soldiers and police, all of whom were volunteers.

Rhodesia was thrown to to wolves by South Africa in order to buy that country's Apartheid system a few more years. Smith had no choice but to take what he could salvage, which included civil rights for white people and a white quota in the parliament for seven years. To give the devil his due, Mugabe waited the seven years to begin killing white people and taking their large farms. The whites knew how to run large farms but the Africans either did not or had little incentive to do so under new price controls. The predictable results include mass starvation and women forced to South Africa and prostitution in order to feed their children. Today there are fewer than 20,000 whites in the country, few of them in the countryside. Like many savages (see Ben Bernanke) Mugabe believed real wealth comes from printing money. Unlike our own Federal Reserve, Mugabe learned his lesson and no longer bothers to print his own worthless currency.

Here are a few telling comparisons between Smith and Mugabe. When Smith lived in the Prime Minister's residence it was often unguarded; he often answered the door himself. Mugabe has always lived there surrounded by sandbags, barbed wire, and machine guns. Smith often drove accompanied by one police officer. Mugabe drives with at least a company of heavily armed bodyguards. Any ordinary driver who does not stop immediately until the entourage passes risks being beaten to a pulp.

Is there a lesson for the future? Mind our own business; stop trying to "help" people we do not understand. Trade and visit, but no military alliances; no sanctions, no "spreading democracy" at gunpoint.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Battle For Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown

A very interesting book review from www.Amazon.com about Rhodesia being ruined into Zimbabwe. (Could this happen in the U.S.? )This follows this previous post about it.  This follows this post about how to Report Illegal Immigrants! For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read another very interesting book HERE.

Battle For Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown


Geoff Hill   freedom was betrayed,
By Henry Berry "Henry Berry" (Southport, CT) - See all my reviews

(REAL NAME) This review is from: Battle For Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown (Hardcover)

Africa correspondent for the Washington Times who grew up in different countries of southern Africa, including Zimbabwe, Hill gives a detailed account of the overthrow of the white-controlled government when the country was known as Rhodesia by indigenous black rebels and the subsequent cementing of the autocratic, often brutal rule of Robert Mugabe. Mugabe was one of the leaders of the insurrection and political leader of Zimbabwe (as the country was named after the end of white rule). To a large extent, this is the story of the murky circumstances whereby Mugabe became leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), including the assassination of its leader, and its role in helping to keep him in power. Instead of a bona fide political party in a democratic system, ZANU became the enforcement arm of Mugabe's one-man rule. Hill's chronicle of unfortunate Zimbabwe and biographical portrayal of its autocratic leader is a set piece in how things have gone wrong in many countries in Africa. Help other customers find the most helpful reviews

 A solid piece, April 8, 2006

By David Persson -
(REAL NAME) This review is from: Battle For Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown (Hardcover)

With a deep understanding and love for this magnificent country, Hill lays out an excellent expos? over Zimbabwe's rise and unfortunate fall under the rule of President Mugabe. By elegantly blending historical events with a large number of interviews from both ZANU-PF officials and the MDC opposition to ordinary Zimbabweans, Hill has created a solid piece that is thorough and analytical but yet easy-to-read. Highly recommended for any reader in search of the root and underlying causes to Zimbabwe's worsening plight. Help other customers find the most helpful reviews

 Indeed worth reading!!!,
By Squish - See all my reviewsThis review is from: Battle For Zimbabwe: The Final Countdown (Hardcover)

I am originally from Zimbabwe, but left in 1981. I was looking for



a book on the history and current situation on Zimbabwe that would



be informative and not dry. I feel very much more educated about



the various issues that have led this beautiful country to the



very sad situation it now finds itself in. I definately would



suggest others read it.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe

A very interesting book review from www.Amazon.com about Rhodesia being ruined into Zimbabwe. (Could this happen in the U.S.? )This follows this post about free speech on univeristy campuses which is being countered by speech codes, harrassment codes, and sensitivity training.  This follows this post about how to Report Illegal Immigrants! For more that you can do to get involved click HERE and you can read another very interesting book HERE!


Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe




Martin Meredith (Author)


Distressing Portrait of a Nation,
By Brian D. Rubendall (Oakton, VA) - See all my reviews

(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME) This review is from: Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe (Hardcover)

Martin Meredith's "Our Votes, Our Guns" is a particlarly depressing work of jouralism covering the descent of post-Rhodesia Zimbabwe into a barbarous authoritarian kleptocracy thoroughly dominated by a corrupt leader who turned his back on ever principle he supposedly had before obtaining power. The world's attention (such as it is) has been focussed on the forcible removal of white farmers from their land with the explict support of the government. But as Meredith demonstrates, President Mugabe's racist policies toward whites is just one of many evils he has perpetrated on his country.

Meredith starts out by setting the historical stage, including telling about the horrific brutality of white rule in what was then Rhodesia before the 1979 "revolution" that brought Mugabe to power. Certainly, Zimbabwe's violent release from colonialism has a lot to do with the country's current situation.



Meredith then goes on to show the early promise that Mugabe showed as president, so willing for reconcilliation that he met with the last white Prime Minister, Ian Smith on numerous occasions to ask adbvice in the early years. Meredith then shows how as Mugabe became increasingly paranoid and obsessed with power his cronys became more and more corrupt. Anyone who believes that third world debts ought to be forgiven should read this book. Zimbabwe is in a state of financial collapse because its president and his associates bled the country dry, not because of IMF or World Bank financial imperialism. If anything, Western aid has helped serve as an enabler for Mugabe's destruction of Zimbabwe.



The book's main drawback is a lack of first hand reporting by Meredith. There is no indication in the narrative that the author has ever visited Zimbabwe and he seems to have relied mostly on second had accounts. Nevertheless, he is an excellent researcherr, and despite this flaw this is still a compelling read for those with an interest in current events beyond the headlines.



 "A cartoon figure of the archetypical African dictator", 

By "michaeleve" - See all my reviewsThis review is from: Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe (Hardcover)

So said Archbishop Desmond Tutu of Robert Mugabe. This is coming from a church leader about someone who often publicly boasts about being a devout christian. If the Archbishop's criticism doesn't bother Mugabe then maybe Nelson Mandela's dissmissive epithet - calling the man "Comrade Bob" hits more to home. Mandela throws cold water on Mugabe's previously illustrious reputation as a freedom fighter and liberator of his people.

Mentioning Mandela is an appropriate starting point for discussing OUR VOTES,OUR GUNS because the author - Martin Meredith - is best known for his authoritative biography of Mandela. Here he applies his writing skills and powers of observation with the same results - a thorough analysis with keen insights into the personality. So who is Robert Mugabe and how is it that from a position of world acclaim as a hero at Zimbabwe's independence in April, 1980 - inhereting "a jewel" as Meredith quotes another African leader as telling him - he has sunk to such a low position today? Meredith says that a lot of this can be explained by over optimism and excessive expectations. In the 1970's he was the guerilla leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union/Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) which wrested control of Rhodesia from the minority, white-ruled government of Ian Smith. Following independence Mugabe emerged as a statesman. He was committed to reconciliation with whites and Meredith refers to Mugabe's speech on Independence day. He promised to "draw a line through the past" and said "if yesterday I fought you as an enemy, today you have become a friend and ally with the same national interest..." Meredith argues however that the hope in Mugabe as a model of the new African leader was badly misplaced. He says that Mugabe was never committed to democracy and his rule increasingly reflected his autocratic tendencies.



The book is very clear however in showing that Zimbabwe is not a one-party state. It is a functioning democracy with the required basics of regular elections, a free press and an independent judiciary. Mugabe also has achieved some notable successes. In keeping with their president's love of education (Mugabe has seven degrees) Zimbabwean's are generally very well educated and highly literate. The country has one of the highest rates of literacy in Africa (nearly 90%). Despite being an avowed marxist and thus seeking radical solutions to economic problems, and his very ugly attack on Matabeleland where his army killed thousands of civilians in an attempt to quash dissent, Mugabe could nevertheless always count on international and domestic support (especially in rural areas). In recent years his support both at home and abroad has evaporated, largely due to his increasingly violent land reform policies. 'Reconciliation' is no longer a word in Mugabe's vocabulary and he now calls Zimbabwe's white farmers racists and neocolonialists.



Meredith goes into all the social, economic, and political underpinnings of Mugabe's 22 year rule and the concomitant decline of Zimbabwe. One of the telling indicators of economic collapse is that this is a country that once had productive farms (albeit white-owned in a majority black country) and a booming agricultural sector. Today there are starving Zimbabweans. This book was no doubt published now because of its relevance in the lead-up to next week's electionsm - the most important in Zimbabwe's short history. As OUR VOTES, OUR GUNS clearly shows the events of March 9-1Oth will go a long way to deciding what kind of future Zimbabwe has and whether a line can in fact be drawn through the past.



Decline and Fall of Zimbabwe,
By A Customer



This review is from: Our Votes, Our Guns: Robert Mugabe and the Tragedy of Zimbabwe (Paperback)

This is a super-readable book about the career of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, whose corruption, brutality, and paranoia have wrecked Zimbabwe's democratic institutions and have brought the country to the brink of economic ruin. The book is refreshingly free of cant, and the author has a sharp eye for political grotesqueries, which have abounded in post-independence Zimbabwe. My only complaint (and hence the rating of 4 stars) is the lack of footnotes or any real analysis of the social or economic currents underlying Zimbabwean politics. Instead, journalist Meredith is content to chronicle events newspaper-style.


Thursday, February 23, 2012

In Brief World News Review Zimbabwe a Crisis Torn Country

An interesting article from www.ucg.org  about the status in the old Rhodesia. This follows this post about unrest that happened in Kenya. For a free magazine subscription or to get this book for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886-8632.

In Brief World News Review Zimbabwe a Crisis Torn Country






article by Cecil Maranville, Darris McNeely, John Ross Schroeder





Zimbabwe, a once prosperous African nation, is seriously short of food.



Zimbabwe, a once prosperous African nation, is seriously short of food, and its lack of fuel has brought industry to a standstill. The country's infrastructure is fraying badly at the edges with schools and hospitals struggling to survive. Most blame these humanly caused misfortunes on President Robert Mugabe's brutal regime.



As The Sunday Telegraph reported, "With the country's economy in tatters, thanks to years of misrule, Mugabe thought he had a guaranteed vote winner when his loyal constitutional panel drew up clause 57, to enshrine land confiscation and demand compensation for white farmers by [from] the old colonial power: Britain."



Zimbabwe's government was in shock after the people produced the courage to stand up to the regime by voting "no" in the recent constitutional referendum. Yet there are reports of the illegal occupation of quite a number of white-owned farms in spite of that national vote.



Moreover, the Zimbabwe dollar was worth 50 British pence when President Mugabe assumed power. It is now valued at 1.5 pence. And as The Independent on Sunday reported, "Every week 1,200 Zimbabweans die of AIDS and life expectancy since 1980 has fallen from 59 to 42."



A beautiful country has apparently been laid waste and many of British descent are applying for passports at the British High Commission in the nation's capital, Harare, preparing to emigrate. ( The Sunday Telegraph, The Independent on Sunday, The Daily Mail (all London).)

.