The failures of Thabo Mbeki


I’m only really interested in politics with the same morbid curiosity that exists when you drive past an accident of indescribable awfulness so this is going to be my last blog on the subject for some time. I guess some small part of me is embarrassed to be a citizen of a country that is complicit in the subjugation of an entire nation and I never would have thought that South Africa would become an unashamed apologist for the Mugabe regime.

Thabo Mbeki’s presidency has been a failure. Putting aside his policy of quiet diplomacy in Zimbabwe that has seen an estimated 3 million refugees flood into South Africa as they leave behind a country in tatters while he continues to lie to the world about the crisis, or his criminal stupidity over the HIV/AIDS pandemic that has left South Africa with one of the highest infection rates in the world, or the simple failure of his government to adequately plan for the country’s energy needs that has quite literally seen the lights go out, I want to highlight the extent of his failure to maintain even basic law and order.

South Africa is one of the most murderous countries in the world. The latest official crime statistics put the number of murders for the year ending March 2005 at 18,793 or 51 people a day! My quick and dirty calculations show that since 2003, the same year as the Iraq invasion, South Africa has seen approximately 96,170** murders. According to the Iraq Body Count website the number of civilian deaths since the Iraq invasion stands at about 90,390. Whatever the exact numbers might be, I think it’s fair to say that SOUTH AFRICA IS EXPERIENCING THE SAME NUMBER OF CIVILIAN CASUALTIES AS IN IRAQ!!

Thabo Mbeki is woefully out of his depth. It’s time for this clown to leave the stage. It’s no longer funny.


** murder calculations
2003          21,553 (official statistics)
2004          19,824
2005          18,793
2006          18,000 (estimates)
2007          18,000
TOTAL        96,170
and stand by for the weapons that are headed for Zimbabwe:

SA won't interfere with arms destined for Zim
Um... so why are you going back?
Hi jenofearth,

Besides the obvious “I believe God is calling me back” (I’d like to think I’d also go to Iraq if I felt he was calling me there), high-crime is a reason for me to go back. Given the poor security environment, I want to be closer to my Mom & Gran for their safety. I also don’t think me staying away from South Africa is going to make these problems disappear. I would much rather be a part of the solution to these issues and agitate for change in my own sphere of influence.

However, I do have a PLAN B. Should the security situation truly become untenable I’ll simply put my Mom & Gran in a suitcase and head for Mauritius......

But ignoring the crime - the lifestyle and the weather in South Africa is fantastic. There is the beach and the sea and the great outdoors and I plan to take full advantage of all of this. And I get to drive my car instead of the tube :)

and last but not least, I will never have to make a cup of tea again. I can ask my Mom, Gran or Romaine to make me one instead, that's just great!
Will that make you cardriver rather than tuberider?
Fair doos :)
it's still going to be tuberider as in surfing the tube on a wave. oh yeah.
and on a lighter note. a joke for the weekend:

SAN FRANCISCO MAN BECOMES FIRST AMERICAN TO GRASP SIGNIFICANCE OF IRONY - An American grappling with significance of irony
 
SAN FRANCISCO - Herdofsheep spoke to Jay Fullmer, 38, who became the first American to get to grips with the concept of irony yesterday. “It was weird,” Fullmer said, “I was in London and, like, talking to this guy and it was raining and @#$% and he said, like, great weather, or something like that.” Said Fullmer: “And I thought - wait a minute, it’s like, no way is it great weather.” Fullmer soon realised that the other man’s ‘mistake’ was deliberate. “This guy was pretty cool about it,” Fullmer said. Fullmer, who is 39 next month and married with two children, aged 8 and 3, planned to use irony himself in future. “I’m like saying it all the time.” he said. “Weekend last I was like grilling steaks and I like burned them to @#$% and I said ‘great weather’.
Make you feel any better? (from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/ 7353929.stm)

"Meanwhile, South African dock workers are refusing to unload a shipment of arms from China destined for Zimbabwe. The South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (Satawu) said it did not agree with the government's decision not to intervene in the matter. "Our members employed at Durban container terminal will not unload this cargo, neither will any of our members in the truck-driving sector move this cargo by road," Satawu's general secretary, Randall Howard, told local media. Reports say the Chinese cargo ship, the An Yue Jiang, anchored off Durban is carrying 3m rounds of ammunition and 1,500 rockets.
I cannot even begin to describe how revolted I am by all of this.

These weapons were consigned by Zimbabwe (where most people are starving) 3 DAYS AFTER the election impasse, in a country which is technically without a government (parliament was dissolved before the elections). I cannot believe the audacity of the Chinese and South African governments to declare at the UN Security Council that the problems in Zimbabwe are an internal matter and not an issue for the international community.

Mugabe’s failing economy is being bankrolled by both China & South Africa. If it wasn’t for the “international community” (by which I mean the support of China & South Africa) Mugabe's regime wouldn't survive. The fact that they are now arming this tyrant is horrific.
 
These are dark days indeed.
This blog pretty much sums up what I feel:

From China, with love

anyway, I'm going to have a long lunch now .....