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Volcanoes and xenophobia Africana

On winning elections, the conservative wing of the organisation rushed to implement Sharia Law. Egypt’s various elites and business sector panicked; achieving a ‘’popularly invited’’…

On winning elections, the conservative wing of the organisation rushed to implement Sharia Law. Egypt’s various elites and business sector panicked; achieving a ‘’popularly invited’’ military takeover with a volcanic violence never before seen in Egypt.  A simmering civil war, including bombings in the Sinai Peninsula, is smearing blood on Egypt’s credentials as a securer of international peace from the corridors of the United Nations.
Nigeria has a long record of manning UN peace-keeping missions around the world; shedding blood for Liberia and Sierra Leone to mend within ECOWAS. Among fellow Africans and Non-Aligned Movement gladdened by her role in ending racial dictatorships across Southern Africa, she flashes her liberation medal of honour as ‘’a Frontline State’’.
Among those unwilling to reward Nigeria’s record of fighting Euro-American exploitation and denigration of Africa, her wish to wield veto power in the Security Council would hasten determination to wreck the black ship. Massive arms acquired by Boko Haram, and reports of foreign fighters fuelling their horrendous destructiveness, may well be a case of opposing the road leading to the UN Security Council seat. The seeming intent by Liberia’s Patrick Sawyer to broadcast the highly lethal Ebola Virus into Nigeria may have been urged by a conviction that Nigerians are unable to govern their affairs and should be helped to commit mass homicide. While Ebola failed to strike a mortal blow, Boko Haram has gash a nasty wound on her credentials as a global guardian of peace. Finally, anticipations that a storm of 2015 post-election violence would shatter Nigeria, was felled by calm words from President Jonathan acting as a political mechanic.
South Africa as a candidate carries nasty festering wounds. Nelson Mandela was convinced that TIME, HOPE and tenacious effort to disinfect these wounds would yield a ‘’rainbow nation’’. Measures by the ANC to erode unequal share of land is slowed down by lack of personnel to rapidly process enacted measures. A major section of white farmers and their new partners lured from other African countries are resisting equity.
 Corporation owning mines are among those President Obama criticised as mouthing Mandela’s words of human brotherhood but clinging cynically to slave wages for black workers. In 2014, Black and Coloured youths were the highest unemployed at 39 and 35 per cent, respectively; while 65 per cent of graduates were unemployed. The percentage of skilled Black Africans aged between 24 and 34 years decreased from 18 to 16 per cent from 1994 to 2014 while those of whites, Indian/Asians and Coloureds increased. They are angry mobs.
The flight by newly rich blacks into white housing areas; and their exuberant material consumption have aroused feelings of betrayal which Julius Malema and his Economic Freedom Front party have stoked for electoral support.
Finally, the white secret police and military intelligence – who dived into the shadows after 1994 – may well recalled the ‘’Black-on-Black violence’’ to decimate ANC supporters.  Zulu supporters of Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi who were their collaborators are the current xenophobia volcanic eruptions. Julius Malema has not joined them. His eyes are on white owners of wealth, and not poor and struggling immigrants from various African countries.
The xenophobic attacks are serving several useful purposes. It has exposed ANC’s failure to undertake political education for those whom officials of apartheid fed with negative images of independence as exposing Africa to civil wars, genocide, and diseases. The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) gave priority to news about corruption and failed military coups in Africa. With their spies carrying French, German, British, Dutch, Belgian and American passports, apartheid officials penetrated African governments as IMF and World Bank officials. The ANC has ignored mending this history.
The African Union failed to borrow Britain’s colonial strategy of engineering post-colonial politics and economies. A special summit on dredging out pools of infection in the body of South Africa is awaited. When African slaves were freed in Guyana and Brazil they refused to farm for themselves. For them, to work was to remain a slave. Starvation and poverty laughed at their ‘’false start’’ with freedom. As Franz Fanon noted, white oppressors also need cure if they are to creatively build Mandela’s rainbow nation. African diplomacy must climb back to the creativity which invented the Liberation Committee of the OAU, and invest genius into building a healthy, humane and dynamic South Africa.A season of violence has hit Africa’s candidates for seats at the veto-wielding section of the Security Council of the United Nations. Following Obama’s administration adopted the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt as a partner for promoting democracy in Egypt, NGO  groups wielded invisible powers of  Internet and ‘’social media’’ to raise mobs who forced Hosni Mubarak’s military dictatorship off the stage. On winning elections, the conservative wing of the organisation rushed to implement Sharia Law. Egypt’s various elites and business sector panicked; achieving a ‘’popularly invited’’ military takeover with a volcanic violence never before seen in Egypt.  A simmering civil war, including bombings in the Sinai Peninsula, is smearing blood on Egypt’s credentials as a securer of international peace from the corridors of the United Nations.
Nigeria has a long record of manning UN peace-keeping missions around the world; shedding blood for Liberia and Sierra Leone to mend within ECOWAS. Among fellow Africans and Non-Aligned Movement gladdened by her role in ending racial dictatorships across Southern Africa, she flashes her liberation medal of honour as ‘’a Frontline State’’.
Among those unwilling to reward Nigeria’s record of fighting Euro-American exploitation and denigration of Africa, her wish to wield veto power in the Security Council would hasten determination to wreck the black ship. Massive arms acquired by Boko Haram, and reports of foreign fighters fuelling their horrendous destructiveness, may well be a case of opposing the road leading to the UN Security Council seat. The seeming intent by Liberia’s Patrick Sawyer to broadcast the highly lethal Ebola Virus into Nigeria may have been urged by a conviction that Nigerians are unable to govern their affairs and should be helped to commit mass homicide. While Ebola failed to strike a mortal blow, Boko Haram has gash a nasty wound on her credentials as a global guardian of peace. Finally, anticipations that a storm of 2015 post-election violence would shatter Nigeria, was felled by calm words from President Jonathan acting as a political mechanic.
South Africa as a candidate carries nasty festering wounds. Nelson Mandela was convinced that TIME, HOPE and tenacious effort to disinfect these wounds would yield a ‘’rainbow nation’’. Measures by the ANC to erode unequal share of land is slowed down by lack of personnel to rapidly process enacted measures. A major section of white farmers and their new partners lured from other African countries are resisting equity.
 Corporation owning mines are among those President Obama criticised as mouthing Mandela’s words of human brotherhood but clinging cynically to slave wages for black workers. In 2014, Black and Coloured youths were the highest unemployed at 39 and 35 per cent, respectively; while 65 per cent of graduates were unemployed. The percentage of skilled Black Africans aged between 24 and 34 years decreased from 18 to 16 per cent from 1994 to 2014 while those of whites, Indian/Asians and Coloureds increased. They are angry mobs.
The flight by newly rich blacks into white housing areas; and their exuberant material consumption have aroused feelings of betrayal which Julius Malema and his Economic Freedom Front party have stoked for electoral support.
Finally, the white secret police and military intelligence – who dived into the shadows after 1994 – may well recalled the ‘’Black-on-Black violence’’ to decimate ANC supporters.  Zulu supporters of Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi who were their collaborators are the current xenophobia volcanic eruptions. Julius Malema has not joined them. His eyes are on white owners of wealth, and not poor and struggling immigrants from various African countries.
The xenophobic attacks are serving several useful purposes. It has exposed ANC’s failure to undertake political education for those whom officials of apartheid fed with negative images of independence as exposing Africa to civil wars, genocide, and diseases. The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) gave priority to news about corruption and failed military coups in Africa. With their spies carrying French, German, British, Dutch, Belgian and American passports, apartheid officials penetrated African governments as IMF and World Bank officials. The ANC has ignored mending this history.
The African Union failed to borrow Britain’s colonial strategy of engineering post-colonial politics and economies. A special summit on dredging out pools of infection in the body of South Africa is awaited. When African slaves were freed in Guyana and Brazil they refused to farm for themselves. For them, to work was to remain a slave. Starvation and poverty laughed at their ‘’false start’’ with freedom. As Franz Fanon noted, white oppressors also need cure if they are to creatively build Mandela’s rainbow nation. African diplomacy must climb back to the creativity which invented the Liberation Committee of the OAU, and invest genius into building a healthy, humane and dynamic South Africa.

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