Robert Mugabe"Obama Is A Puppet For Whites"

Pitfalls0117

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Everything Mugabe said was facts.

Doesn't change the fact that he is the epitome of the neocolonial African dictator who uses revolutionary rhetoric for effect while simultaneously stealing his country's resources and handing them over to bourgeois yes men.
 

CHL

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Even after colonialism, the former colonisers were still everywhere in Africa, “if not physically then through NGOs”, a comment that drew much applause.
He wants to get rid of NGO's? :why: :mindblown:

South African President Jacob Zuma seemed uneasy about the standing ovation, rising to his feet slowly and only after nearly everyone else had.
:dead:
 

Red Shield

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Mugabe is a cac puppet

nah I don't think his a puppet.. but just very self serving.

Dude is just saying all of this shyt now, to try to forge a decent legacy. Funny enough... I think he will be remembered more fondly then mandela....

Well anyway hope dude has groomed a successor, because when he croaks... :whew:
 

TTT

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If he didn't want NGOs in the country he should have managed his affairs better. Complaining about them while asking WFP to help with food aid and even accepting stuff from USAID. Mugabe is the typical old African leader who likes grandstanding, he just has less resources compared to Ghadaffi to fully follow through on what he says with action. International politics is never going to result in equal relations between poorer and rich countries, Malawi and the US are never going to have equal standing. The world will respect you once you have enough economic influence that can be parlayed into political power. The AU is funded mostly by SA, Nigeria, Algeria, Egypt and Libya, it struggles to fund its own basic peacekeeping and security operations. Only when you gain economic influence is when you start seeing political influence you don't get it by shouting for it.
 

88m3

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Meanwhile in Zimbabwe


Zimbabwe's Mugabe declares state of emergency over drought
000_APP2002032476276_0.jpg

Drought and high temperatures have wreaked havoc on the maize crop in Zimbabwe
Alexander Joe / AFP
By Brenna Daldorph
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has declared a state of disaster after a drought hit rural parts of the country. The European Union urged Mugabe to make the declaration because it helps donors raise funds for food aid, which is currently needed by 2.4 million people in Zimbabwe—more than a quarter of the country’s population.


Audio report

Listen (04:15)
more.png



05/02/2016 by Brenna Daldorph


Zimbabwe had extremely low rainfall starting last year. The drought, which has affected neighbouring countries, has been exacerbated by the effects of El Nino.

“Supplies in Zimbabwe are already low because of last year’s situation,” said Jan Vossen, the country director for Oxfam International in Zimbabwe.

The drought has wreaked havoc on the agricultural sector, especially in the south of the country, which is already dry.

“The people that are in trouble are predominantly livestock producers and cattle farmers,” said Hendrik Oliver, the director of the Commercial Farmers Union of Zimbabwe. “Maize farmers have also been affected”.

Maize is Zimbabwe’s most important crop. The situation is already unstable and the drought will cripple next year’s harvest.

“Only 40 percent of the farmers have actually been planting maize,” Vossen told RFI. “And where they have planted, we see that the crops are just not coming. So the harvest will be a great failure.”

The livestock industry is also suffering.

“It’s not just about food for the people, it’s about food for the livestock as well," Vossen said. "We’re seeing farmers using thatch from their roofs to feed their animals”.

Thousands of cattle have already died. When people run out of food for their animals, Vossen says they are often forced to sell.

“They have to sell these animals for a very, very low price between 30 and 50 US dollars, when normally they could get 300 dollars for the animals,” Vossen said.

Compounded issues

Zimbabwe used to be a called the breadbasket of Africa. In the year 2000, President Mugabe enacted a series of controversial land reforms that many say destabilised the sector and flogged the country’s economy. Colonial policy had allowed white farmers to monopolise the agricultural sector, but in 2000, Mugabe broke up about 4,000 farms belonging to established white farmers and re-distributed the land to black farmers, most of whom did not have the same level of expertise as the white farmers.

Even Mugabe himself has admitted to errors in the reform. Oliver of the Commercial Farmers Union agrees.

“This year, we can talk about a drought but the problems have also compounded,” Oliver said. “Part of the problem has been a political problem in terms of the land reform program. The infrastructure and facilities were damaged.”

Many of Zimbabwe’s small-scale farmers don’t have irrigation systems, making them susceptible to weather patterns.

Despite the announcement about the state of emergency, the Zimbabwean government has urged people not to panic and assured them that authorities would import enough food. Yet the drought has hit the whole region, and the United Nations World Food Programme has said some 14 million people face hunger in southern Africa.


Zimbabwe's Mugabe declares state of emergency over drought


How, Sway?
 
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smfh lol i've been reading your username wrong for ages. my stupidass mind was like what kinda name is thern broom?
then one day my mind finally acted right and realized it's the rnb room :dead:
i'm a fukking dumbass:heh:
I thought it was the rn broom...like he's a nurse breh and his last name is broom or he got beat w/ a broom when he was a kid so that became his nickname.
 
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Meanwhile in Zimbabwe


Zimbabwe's Mugabe declares state of emergency over drought
000_APP2002032476276_0.jpg

Drought and high temperatures have wreaked havoc on the maize crop in Zimbabwe
Alexander Joe / AFP
By Brenna Daldorph
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has declared a state of disaster after a drought hit rural parts of the country. The European Union urged Mugabe to make the declaration because it helps donors raise funds for food aid, which is currently needed by 2.4 million people in Zimbabwe—more than a quarter of the country’s population.


Audio report

Listen (04:15)
more.png



05/02/2016 by Brenna Daldorph


Zimbabwe had extremely low rainfall starting last year. The drought, which has affected neighbouring countries, has been exacerbated by the effects of El Nino.

“Supplies in Zimbabwe are already low because of last year’s situation,” said Jan Vossen, the country director for Oxfam International in Zimbabwe.

The drought has wreaked havoc on the agricultural sector, especially in the south of the country, which is already dry.

“The people that are in trouble are predominantly livestock producers and cattle farmers,” said Hendrik Oliver, the director of the Commercial Farmers Union of Zimbabwe. “Maize farmers have also been affected”.

Maize is Zimbabwe’s most important crop. The situation is already unstable and the drought will cripple next year’s harvest.

“Only 40 percent of the farmers have actually been planting maize,” Vossen told RFI. “And where they have planted, we see that the crops are just not coming. So the harvest will be a great failure.”

The livestock industry is also suffering.

“It’s not just about food for the people, it’s about food for the livestock as well," Vossen said. "We’re seeing farmers using thatch from their roofs to feed their animals”.

Thousands of cattle have already died. When people run out of food for their animals, Vossen says they are often forced to sell.

“They have to sell these animals for a very, very low price between 30 and 50 US dollars, when normally they could get 300 dollars for the animals,” Vossen said.

Compounded issues

Zimbabwe used to be a called the breadbasket of Africa. In the year 2000, President Mugabe enacted a series of controversial land reforms that many say destabilised the sector and flogged the country’s economy. Colonial policy had allowed white farmers to monopolise the agricultural sector, but in 2000, Mugabe broke up about 4,000 farms belonging to established white farmers and re-distributed the land to black farmers, most of whom did not have the same level of expertise as the white farmers.

Even Mugabe himself has admitted to errors in the reform. Oliver of the Commercial Farmers Union agrees.

“This year, we can talk about a drought but the problems have also compounded,” Oliver said. “Part of the problem has been a political problem in terms of the land reform program. The infrastructure and facilities were damaged.”

Many of Zimbabwe’s small-scale farmers don’t have irrigation systems, making them susceptible to weather patterns.

Despite the announcement about the state of emergency, the Zimbabwean government has urged people not to panic and assured them that authorities would import enough food. Yet the drought has hit the whole region, and the United Nations World Food Programme has said some 14 million people face hunger in southern Africa.


Zimbabwe's Mugabe declares state of emergency over drought


How, Sway?
Blame mother nature on Mugabe, brehs.
 
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