Vol 44 No 18 | ZIMBABWE War on England 12th September 2003 Protests against the government's land reform programme are growing ahead of the publication next week of a new investigation into corruption headed by former Cabinet Secretary Charles Utete....
Vol 44 No 17 | SOUTH AFRICA Busy bees 29th August 2003 The Oppenheimer mining dynasty clambers on to the black empowerment bandwagon Steam is building in the empowerment debate. Now the Oppenheimer family, which for 100 years has dominated South African gold and diamond production, has made another...
Vol 44 No 17 | SOUTH AFRICA Background to Brenthurst 29th August 2003 In 2002, the draft of government legislation on a mining charter was leaked to reveal that 51 per cent of the mining industry was earmarked for ...
Vol 44 No 16 | BURUNDISOUTH AFRICA Zuma's other hotspot 8th August 2003 Two rebel factions hold the SA-backed peace process to ransom Hopes that the installation in late April of President Domitien Ndayizeye, a Hutu, would hasten an end to the fighting have not been realised. Instead, the conflict has...
Vol 44 No 15 | SOUTH AFRICA Peacekeepers and peers 25th July 2003 Mbeki finds peacekeeping a better bet than dictating democracy to dictators Defying the ever extending setbacks to Africa's peace and security agenda, South African President Thabo Mbeki has again shown his impatience with fellow African leaders over their sluggish...
Vol 44 No 15 | SOUTH AFRICA Sticky US relations 25th July 2003 South Africa's relations with the United States reached a low point over the invasion of Iraq, with both President Thabo Mbeki and his predecessor Nelson Mandela sharply criticising...
Vol 44 No 15 | SOUTH AFRICA NePAD doubts mount up 25th July 2003 With its emphasis on new concepts of African collective responsibility and its promise of strong moral and financial support from Western countries, the New Partnership for African Development...
Vol 44 No 15 | ZIMBABWE Slow to go 25th July 2003 Diplomacy, not urgency, is the Bush-Mbeki formula for regime change in Harare United States President George W. Bush's quick tour of Southern Africa may have strengthened fellow President Robert Mugabe and it has certainly weakened Zimbabwe's opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai...
Vol 44 No 14 | BOTSWANA Mogae plays the Khama card 11th July 2003 Traditional leadership and diamond money keep a stable democracy going Botswana's democratic reputation rests on its constitution, whereby the president is chosen by the governing Botswana Democratic Party and duly voted into office by the elected parliament. Thanks...
Vol 44 No 14 | MALAWIUNITED STATES Kidnapped I 11th July 2003 Churches, the governing United Democratic Front, the United States' Save the Children Fund and the Muslim Association of Malawi were early casualties of Malawi's 'war on terrorism'. Muslim...