Foreign Policy Blogs

Sub-Saharan Africa

Mugabe Steals the Show at the SADC Summit

Forget about all the talk about political repression, human rights violations, and economic suffering in Zimbabwe. The real excitement on Facebook is Mugabe’s speech, at the just-concluded Windhoek SADC summit in Namibia, that people are talking about. Mugabe was the summit’s keynote speaker, a summit that also saw former Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda deliver an […]

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Update:Namibia Non-governmental Organisations Forum (Nangof) Trust Challenges the SADC Demo Ban

This is just a quick update about the SADC summit underway in Windhoek, Namibia. The chairperson of the Namibia Non-governmental Organisations Forum (Nangof) Trust, and fellow trustees have asked the Windhoek High Court to declare both the SADC demonstration ban and section 2 of the Public Gatherings Proclamation, AG 23 of 1989 unconstitutional. Nangof Trust’s […]

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The SADC People Summit

WHILE SADC heads of state and government meet in Windhoek this week, civil society organisations from the region are also holding a two-day meeting in Windhoek called ‘The SADC People’s Summit’. The two-day event started yesterday and is organized by the Southern African People’s Solidarity Network (SAPSN). Read more at http://allafrica.com/stories/201008170634.html

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The SADC 30th Jubilee Summit Starts in Windhoek, but No Demonstration Allowed

The Heads of State and Government of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) are meeting in Namibia’s capital city Windhoek for SADC’s 30th Summit yesterday August 16 and today August 17, 2010. Apparently, high on the summit agenda is the organization’s pledge to address the region’s “hotspots” such as Lesotho, Madagascar, Zimbabwe and the east […]

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South Africa Bietjies

Just a few stories from South Africa, with brief commentary as appropriate: Public sector employees in South Africa went on strike last week. They were asking for a wage hike and increased housing allowances. Expect heightened labor activity across South Africa in the weeks and months to come. South Africa was able to avert potentially […]

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ID + DA = Strengthened Opposition

The long-discussed merger of Helen Zille’s Democratic Alliance (DA) and Patricia De Lille’s Independent Democrats (ID) is another step closer to happening as the DA has signed a “memorandum of understanding” that is supposed to lead to a full merger by 2014. Four years is a forever in South African politics (think of how things […]

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Democracy Without Independent Voters

Last Monday, August 9, 2010, Rwanda’s incumbent President Paul Kagame scored another landslide similar to his margin of victory in 2003. In Namibia, the ruling Swapo party smashed a fifth tsunami-like victory this past November. South Africa’s African National Congress (ANC), the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) and the Liberation Front of […]

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Bafana Beat Black Stars

International friendlies in the immediate aftermath of the World Cup have to mean the least of all friendlies. Nonetheless, Bafana Bafana defeating Ghana’s Black Stars 1-0 in Pitso Mosimane’s coaching debut has to mean something, right?

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Central Africa Watch

Two grim stories are continuing to develop in Central Africa. In Rwanda, just a couple of days after Paul Kagame’s practically pre-ordained re-election a grenade went off in Kigali, wounding a score of people. It is not yet known if the attack is connected to the election, which observers noted was free of violence, though […]

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Africa’s One-Horse Election Races

Paul Kagame’s landslide victory in Monday’s presidential elections highlights Africa’s multiparty democracy problems. Across the continent elections are predictable, and continue to produce landslides victories for ruling parties. According to media reports, Kagame received 93 per cent of the votes in an election criticized for being marred by political intimidation, repression and violence. But more […]

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Onanism Alert! (South African Sport Edition)

Onanism Alert! (South African Sport Edition)

The newest issue of The Georgetown Journal of International Affairs is out, and the theme of its “Forum” section, which leads off each issue and provides the cover stories, is “Match Point: Sports, Nationalism, and Diplomacy.” It includes an article by yours truly, “The Death of Doubt? Sport, Race, and Nationalism in the New South […]

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Rwanda's Election Results In! (Yeay?)

I guess it is understandable that the narrative about Rwandan politics is dominated by the aftermath of the 1994 genocide and that the prevailing narrative ignores most of what happened before and has happened since (hint: violence did not just spring from the ether in April 1994). But the feel-good post-1994 narrative is not the […]

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Rwanda Election Watch: Dictators Don’t Step Down, But They Are Brought Down

Those are not my words, but a quote attributed to Patrick Karegeya (the former Rwandan intelligence chief who was jailed twice, stripped of his colonel rank, and forced into exile by the Kagame government) calling for the defeat of President Paul Kagame of Rwanda. Kagame, the rebel-hero who defeated the genocidal government in July 1994, […]

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African Politics Roundup

Stories that have crossed my desk in recent days with brief commentary as applicable: I think there is no getting around it. ANC Youth League president Julius Malema is a South African politics version of Rasputin: it is seemingly impossible to kill his career, even by self-inflicted wounds. Obvious But It Probably Had To be […]

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The Zimbabwe Government’s Bizarre Air Plane Crash Prank

I was going to let this pass, but after some thoughts I am left puzzled as to why a country teetering on the verge of economic collapse and political turmoil would – out of the blue – conduct this kind of publicity stunt. The only conclusion that I can come up is that this seems […]

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