South Africa - a deal gone wrong?
By Udo W. Froese
Over twenty years ago, on
February 11, 1990, South
Africa’s retired president and
Nobel Peace co-laureate,
Nelson R. Mandela, left the colonial-
apartheid prison of ‘Victor Verster’ outside Cape Town.
South Africans and the international
West considered Mandela
as the African messiah.
The rest of Africa awaited the
outcome from a distance, particularly
as time went on and the
country’s newfound “freedom”
hadn’t accommodated the
black majority on its land and
in its economy.
In stead, it conveniently
passed the buck, insisting that
it would take a very long time
to correct the wrongs. This
means in real terms, it would
take forever to accept African-
South Africans on their own
land, to assist them in their
growth from historical victims
of ‘Bantu education’ to modern
day participants in South African
economic growth.
Meanwhile, the 91-year-old
international icon, heads the
arch-imperial-colonial
‘Rhodes Foundation’, now
named the ‘Mandela-Rhodes
Foundation’.
A brief overview since.
Since then, much has not
happened in South Africa. It is
a country with an internationally
negotiated democracy, all
the foreign dictated trimmings
and a liberal, un-African constitution,
hailed as the “best in
the world”, versus a centrally
‘colonial-apartheid Caucasian’
owned and controlled
economy and its structured
poverty for the people.
The international West and
its powerful ‘Breton Woods
Institutes’ hail South Africa’s
economy as ‘on course, strong,
stable and well done’. They
define the discriminating structures
as a “Free Market
Economy”.
Whatever that really means
… South Africa’s economy
could at best be described as
an exclusive, oligopolistic,
cartelized, warehouse
economy. Organised criminal
business cartels are allowed to
operate without any shame, to
the disadvantage of the poor
majority as well as to the
country’s economy. In addition,
the owners of this
economy are well known to
manipulate the politics of the
day.
Profits have always been
firmly placed before humans.
This means, the well-heeled are
on the right side of the law. So
much for the ‘rule of law’ and
an ‘independent judiciary’ as
preached by its owners.
Historic and endemic mass
unemployment, abject poverty,
chronic starvation, rampant
HIV Aids and way above-average
illiteracy for the majority
of South Africans as well as
reported crime levels exploited
by an equally historic mediapropaganda
and thin infrastructure
- shown off, as the best in
Africa - is a popular picture.
This created the perception
that all that glitters south of the
Limpopo River is well and
worth it. Africans from all over
the continent flock to this south.
Former president Thabo
Mbeki once defined the South
African economy as “a country
with two economies – one
well-functional and owned by
the well-to-do white minority
and their minions and one poor
one, suffered by the black majority”.
The ANC has remained as a
‘junior partner’ of the local and
the international economic
structures.
This has led to a vulnerability
of the majority of the population
and those, who rush
down south to escape the
unrests and economic hardships
in their countries. It so
happens that most of them are
black Africans. Naturally, this
plays into the hands of those
with hidden agendas.
South Africa seems to be
held hostage through low-key
internal civil strive in the forms
of “xenophobia”, “taxi strikes
and wars”, country-wide violent
“delivery protests” and
hundreds of learners gurgling
for the blood of some young
local Hip-Hop star, who killed
four school children and
wounded two in a bad drag-racing
accident in Soweto.
To add insult to injury, the
colonial-apartheid Caucasian
Boers (white minorities and
their paid up minions) thoroughly
exploit a perceived
loophole in the constitution, that
of “minority rights”. Their attacks
on the ANC, its government
and its structures as “reverse
racists”, “corrupt black
Africans, unfit for their positions
they now hold, incapable
of self-government, let alone
governing the country” are strategic,
race-based and vicious.
And, they win their days in
the courts against historic popular
war-songs of the ANC. This
flies in the face of “national reconciliation”.
They also interfere
in the basic human rights such
as land in souvereign, independent
neighbouring African
countries, using the country’s
judiciary.
Those unashamedly proud
heirs of colonial-apartheid
formed a host of active institutions
throughout the country.
They have openly declared
their war against everything
African, claiming their “democratic
rights to defend minority
rights”.
A hostile, foreign owned and
controlled media – some having
sold shares to national trade
union funds, thus masquerading
as South African - has always
been historically used to
wage a propaganda war-of-attrition
in unison with the imperial-
colonial-apartheid political
opposition against all democratic
African liberation movements.
That same cacophony of
media propaganda went all out
to ridicule President Jacob
Zuma and reduce him to a buffoon
like Idi Amin of South
Africa.
The timing of the aforementioned
is obvious. All of the
above-mentioned is rolled out
just before the global FIFA
World Cup hosted by South
Africa in June/July 2010. Global
media focus is on South
Africa.
To date, nothing has changed
in sunny South Africa, but for
some Broad Based Black Economic
Empowerment Africans
(BBBEEA), sitting in boardrooms,
being used as shareholders
to upkeep the old doctrine.
Africans have also been
recruited into the newsrooms,
writing exactly what their white
predecessors wrote before
them. They were created by
foreign white capital and made
to form the buffer between
Black and White.
Without a doubt, it is colonial
and race-based and it is
deliberately and intentionally
undermining not only the ruling ANC, but the ruling
SWAPO Party of Namibia,
Mozambique’s Frelimo, the
governing MPLA of Angola,
ZANU-PF in Zimbabwe, as
well as Swaziland’s King
Mswati III and his government.
There seems an all-out effort
to achieve a “new” South Africa
under “new” white rule by
2014, this time possibly accepted
by South Africa’s angry,
hungry and tired black majority,
the Southern African Development
Community (Sadc), the
African Union, as well as the
international West.
Imagine, Germans would attempt
to further Nazi doctrines
and policies after the Nurnberg
Trials in post WW2 Germany
and the European Union (EU),
enjoying foreign funded and
directed “civil society’s” propagandistic
support?
A legacy deal.
Senior researchers of South
African history explain that a
transformation in the ANC
leadership took place from
1980. Many in the leadership
had become over-compromised
during talks with a host
of imperial colonial-apartheid
representatives across the
board, South Africa’s powerful
foreign owned and controlled
industry as well as the international
West during the ‘Cold
War Era’. It was thus transformed
to a capitalist elite.
The established senior advocate
and anti-apartheid veteran,
George Bizos, also known as
Mandela’s attorney, said on national
television in
Johannesburg, the “SABC TV
2 Morning Life” programme in
the morning of Thursday, February
11, 2010, “Nelson
Mandela was the master of his
own destiny, of his own life
since 1985”.
While Mandela served his
time in “Victor Verster” prison
outside Cape Town, he had a
chef, who cooked for him; free
access to his family and the outside
world; house attendants; to
newspapers, television and radio;
flights to Pretoria to meet
with then State President P. W.
Botha, his Minister of Justice,
Kobie Coetzee and the head of
National Intelligence Services
(NIS), Dr. Niel Barnard, in order
to discuss and negotiate.
In other words, Mandela had
from 1985 to 1990 - five years
before his release - to prepare
for the historic leaving of his
prison. Revered late ANC
President, Oliver Reginald
Tambo, referring to Nelson
Mandela’s meetings with the
colonial-apartheid regime in
the crucial 1980s, observed,
“Prisoners can’t negotiate their
freedom”. He added saying,
“Whilst still in prison, terms
and conditions would be laid
down to accept and agree on a
take-it, or leave-it basis during
talks with the regime”.
Tambo remarked during his
visit to the ANC camps in exile,
“We are singing the same
national anthem, raise the same
flag and talk about our ANC”.
According to aged ANC veterans,
Tambo seemed disturbed
about senior members of the
leadership, who could have
compromised the organisation.
He seemed to question whom
to trust. This, according to those
veterans, eventually led to
Tambo’s first stroke.
The final analysis.
The terms “national reconciliation”,
“free market
economy”, “equality before the
law”, “equal participation” and
even “democracy” including
the hailed “freedoms” remain
an absolute cynical farce for as
long as the imperial-colonialapartheid
beneficiaries, their
economy, the banking cartel
and organised crime structures
dictate the terms and conditions
for the aforementioned without
any compromise, without any
access to land and the economy.
To quote Mayer Amschel
Rothschild, founder of the
Rothschild global banking dynasty:
“Give me control of a
nation’s money supply, and I
care not who makes its laws.”
For as long as Caucasian economic
plunder barons, the
“former” colonial occupiers, all
their minority groups, including
Indians insist on being African
and in return, Africans remain
kept as ‘hewers of wood’ and
‘carriers of water’ with a dysfunctional
democracy, no access
to their land and the economy,
South Africa’s and Africa’s
blacks have simply been betrayed.
National reconciliation
and nation-building remain propaganda.