Depressing stories from Africa thread

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Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by redunderthebed » Sun Feb 03, 2013 7:15 am

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/20 ... 41101.html

The balance in cash-strapped Zimbabwe's government public account has fallen to just $217 after paying public workers' salaries last week, Tendai Biti, the country's finance minister has said.

"Last week when we paid civil servants there was $217 (left) in government coffers," Biti told journalists in the capital Harare on Tuesday, claiming some of the workers had healthier bank balances than the state.

"The government finances are in paralysis state at the present moment. We are failing to meet our targets."

Zimbabwe's economy plummeted at the turn of the millennium, after President Robert Mugabe began seizing white-owned farms.

The move demolished investor confidence in the country, paralysed production, prompted international sanctions and repelled tourists.

But after more than a decade - in which the country suffered hyper-inflation of 231 million percent and infrastructure that crumbled as quickly as prices went up - the situation is now more stable.

However, public finances remain a mess and local business battles against unstable electricity supplies, lack of liquidity and high labour costs.

Zimbabwe's government has warned it does not have enough money to fund a constitutional referendum and elections expected this year.

Biti said that left no choice but to ask the donors for cash.

"We will be approaching the international community," he said.

The country's elections agency said it requires $104m to organise the vote.

Government's national budget for this year stands at $3.8b and the economy is projected to grow 5.0 percent.
Zimbabwe seems to stumble from one crisis to another. :(
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/20 ... 88350.html

President Francois Hollande has received a rapturous welcome in Mali as he promised that France would stay as long as necessary to continue the fight against rebels in the country's north.

As troops worked to secure Kidal, the last bastion of the al-Qaeda-linked rebel fighters who occupied the vast desert north before the French intervention, Hollande told Malians it was time for Africans to take the lead but that France would not abandon them.

After stopping in Timbuktu, Hollande visited the capital, Bamako, where he held formal talks with his Malian counterpart Dioncounda Traore on the eventual hand-over of the French operation to a UN-backed African force.

In a press conference addressing the Malian people with President Traore, Hollande said "terrorism has been repelled but not wiped out".

"I'm saying to you the fight has not yet ended, terrorist groups are weakened, they have suffered heavy losses, but have not disappeared. France will remain with you as long as it is necessary."

Hollande also said the Malian people are in charge of their own future as the he called for political transition and elections in July.

"We need France and Mali to be united together... to show that terrorism can be conquered, democracy can prevail and the rights of man are valid everywhere," Hollande said.

The Malian president called Hollande a "brother to all the Malian people" and a "true friend of the whole of Africa".

Traore also called on the Malian people to reject extremism and to not seek vengeance, saying the "army and dignity of the nation is at stake".

He called for national reconciliation between the forces of the north and south, calling it a "historic duty".

UN-backed African force

Hollande, accompanied by his ministers for defence, foreign affairs and development, was on a one-day trip to the Sahel nation to support French troops who in three weeks have ousted fighters allied with al-Qaeda from Mali's main northern towns.

The French president said that his country's operation, which has 3,500 soldiers on Malian soil backed by warplanes, helicopters and armoured vehicles, aims to make way eventually for a UN-backed African force of around 8,000 troops, which is still being deployed.
In-depth coverage of intensifying confrontation in north

Hollande's visit to Mali comes as the French-led military intervention in the country to recapture towns from rebels was swiftly coming to a close.

Al Jazeera's Jacky Rowland, reporting from the airport in Timbuktu, said the final stage of the military intervention was yet to be completed.

"To what extent the mission is accomplished is a pertinent one. The first two legs of the mission as outlined by the French have been accomplished: the drive southwards by the rebels has been stopped, and the French with the Malian army have been able to retake towns taken by the rebels," she said.

"But the final stage of that mission, as outlined by Hollande, to restore the whole of the country as a unified nation under central government control, is still some way off."

Reprisal attacks

Malian troops have come under criticism for alleged summary executions and other rights abuses against light-skinned citizens seen locally as supporters of the rebels.

Malian troops have denied the allegations.

Human Rights Watch said in a report corroborated by other rights groups that Malian troops had shot at least 13 suspected rebel supporters in Sevare and dumped them into wells.

"Neither the Malians nor the French took the required precautions to avoid hitting civilian targets," Gaetan Mootoo, Amnesty's lead researcher for West Africa, told a news conference in Bamako.

France has denied responsibility for these attacks, saying they took place before its intervention began.

Many Tuaregs and Arabs had already fled fearing further attacks.

Rebel groups have also come under criticism for rights abuses with HRW and Amnesty saying that children had been recruited as soldiers.
France is doing SFA apart from propping up a govt that can't defend itself i mean kicking out the africa's version of the taliban is a good thing. but what i think is the elephant in the room is that they have done nothing to solve the problem with the touareg of which ansar dine and the other crackpots are just a manifestation of the armed rebellion (which pre-dates the russian revolution) and general disaffection and marginalisation of the touareg which pre-dates al-qaeda etc and of which the nutters were essentially exploiting for there own quite frankly terrifying ends.
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by JimC » Sun Feb 03, 2013 8:03 am

Many northern African countries seem to have a major internal divide between an Arabic, muslim south and a black animist or christian south, from Nigeria to the west and the Sudan in the east...

From all I gather, there is a pretty intense form of racism by the arabic north...
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Feb 03, 2013 12:56 pm

A guy I know runs a rehabilitation center for painted dogs in Zimbabwe. I have no idea how he's doing.
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by Tyrannical » Mon Feb 04, 2013 5:32 am

Blacks are incapable of running a civilized country. They prove it again and again, yet people who claim to beleive in evolution seem just as shocked each time this scenario repeats.

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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by Jason » Mon Feb 04, 2013 5:55 am

Obama is running your country.. granted he's more of a cream colour than 'black'.

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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by FBM » Mon Feb 04, 2013 5:56 am

Obama's doing OK. :coffee:
Făkünamę wrote:Obama is running your country.. granted he's more of a cream colour than 'black'.
Beat me to it.
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by cronus » Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:17 am

Obama is not doing that well. He thinks the US is really a giant glider and switched the engines off. There is the illusion of flight but the water is getting closer if you look out of the passenger windows. :coffee:
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by macdoc » Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:22 am

That's not his doing and he's managing the deflation better than most other nations.

and do you broad brusher bigots know how fucking big Africa is ? :nono:

You can put your first world AND your developing world inside it's boundaries..

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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by Tyrannical » Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:28 am

Obama the Chicago community organizer? Yeah, he's doing just fine. From one of the finest cities in the US to a nigger hell hole in a few decades.

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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by FBM » Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:49 am

:funny: Yeah, it's been a great city since Al Capone whipped it into shape and then Obama came along and fucked it all up. :hilarious:
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by FBM » Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:50 am

Scrumple wrote:Obama is not doing that well. He thinks the US is really a giant glider and switched the engines off. There is the illusion of flight but the water is getting closer if you look out of the passenger windows. :coffee:
In light of recent history, he's doing OK. Not great across the board, but OK. Acceptable.
"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken

"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."

"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."

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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by redunderthebed » Mon Feb 04, 2013 7:13 am

Tyrannical wrote:Obama the Chicago community organizer? Yeah, he's doing just fine. From one of the finest cities in the US to a nigger hell hole in a few decades.
To see someone so openly admitting that they are a racist fuckwit is kinda refreshing in a perverse way...
Trolldor wrote:Ahh cardinal Pell. He's like a monkey after a lobotomy and three lines of cocaine.
The Pope was today knocked down at the start of Christmas mass by a woman who hopped over the barriers. The woman was said to be, "Mentally unstable."

Which is probably why she went unnoticed among a crowd of Christians.
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by cronus » Mon Feb 04, 2013 7:18 am

Half of Africa is the sea floor without water. :coffee:
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by mistermack » Mon Feb 04, 2013 11:35 am

macdoc wrote:That's not his doing and he's managing the deflation better than most other nations.

and do you broad brusher bigots know how fucking big Africa is ? :nono:

You can put your first world AND your developing world inside it's boundaries..
Yes it's big. But not that big. Someone left out all of Russia and lots of Asia, South America and Australia, Antarctica, Canada and Greenland.
Easy to overlook those tiddly bits.
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Re: Depressing stories from Africa thread

Post by Tyrannical » Mon Feb 04, 2013 12:13 pm

redunderthebed wrote:
Tyrannical wrote:Obama the Chicago community organizer? Yeah, he's doing just fine. From one of the finest cities in the US to a nigger hell hole in a few decades.
To see someone so openly admitting that they are a racist fuckwit is kinda refreshing in a perverse way...
I'm no fuckwit.
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