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Blacks kill White Farmers… so God kills the Blacks….

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2005-04-15  Posted By: Jan

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 4/15/2005 7:07:41 AM
Blacks kill White Farmers… so God kills the Blacks….
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Blacks kill White Farmers… so God kills the Blacks….

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org


Date & Time Posted: 4/15/2005 7:07:41 AM

Blacks kill White Farmers… so God kills the Blacks….

[We Whites don’t have the USA, nor the EU nor the UN on our side… but maybe we don’t need them because we have God on our side… or so it appears to me.

The Mbeki’s ANC, the SACP, SWAPO and Mugabe are doing their best to destroy White Farmers in Southern Africa… but maybe GOD will destroy them…

They estimate 20%-25% of the black farm workers will die from AIDS… though they mention that 20% have died in 5 years already… It mentions AIDS induced famines. I would like to remind people of the analyses by Dr Jan Duplessis in my Photo Gallery archive – near the bottom. He spoke of AIDS-induced famines and a total collapse of infrastructure.
Jan]

Durban – Aids will kill 20 percent of southern Africa’s agricultural workers by 2020, researchers said on Thursday, possibly threatening food production in a region already facing frequent shortages.

But with massive unemployment across the continent, loss of earning power after families lose their adult breadwinners could be more of a problem than a lack of labour, they say.

“It’s not as simple as to say that there will be a one fifth reduction of the crop,” HIV/Aids expert Smangaliso Hllengwa said at a conference on Aids and food security in Durban.

‘People get sick and they cannot work’
“But it’s obviously going to have a significant impact,” said Hllengwa, who is an adviser to Nepad, the programme for Africa’s economic revival.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation echoed Nepad’s figures, researchers at the conference said, predicting 25 percent of agricultural labourers will die by 2025 based on national HIV infection rates and local surveys.

Twenty-five million Africans are infected with HIV.

But in the region’s largest food producer, South Africa, farmers say they have already lost 20 percent of their workforce in the last five years alone, but production is unaffected and they now expect the largest staple maize crop in a decade.

“We are losing workers at a very high rate,” maize grower Bully Botma, chairman of producer body Grain South Africa, told reporters. “But there are so many people looking for jobs, it isn’t impacting on production.”

‘One of the main things is children with deficiencies’
With a third of South Africans out of work, many in rural areas, work is much sought after.

But for dead farm workers’ families – which some aid workers estimate will total as many as 17 million people by 2020 – the loss of earnings could be devastating, experts said.

“The problem may not be labour,” said Stuart Gillespie, research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute. “It may be cash.”

Widespread regional shortages in 2002 led to some predicting an Aids-induced “new variant famine”, with not enough labour available to feed populations.

But so far those fears look not to have been realised, although some fear drought could lead to serious shortages again in Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique and elsewhere this year.

“It’s still a possible hypothesis,” said Gillespie. “It didn’t happen then, but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen. It could happen in 2005. It could happen in 2008.”

In some cases, researchers say, HIV/Aids could reduce rural incomes, as hard-up subsistence farmers drive down wages by working more, others cease employing workers because of the cost of medicine, food or because family members have ceased earning.

“People get sick and they cannot work, and if you cannot work there is no money for food or school fees,” 30-year-old mother Ziphi Mzila told reporters in Msinga, three hours drive from Durban, South Africa’s biggest port.

She was diagnosed HIV-positive in 2000 after Aids-related illnesses forced her to quit growing and selling tomatoes, the main way in which she fed her three children, the youngest of whom she suspects also has the virus.

In the nearby hospital, Dr Tony Moll said Aids was making existing problems worse, with infants in particular suffering.

“One of the main things is children with deficiencies,” he said. “That was here before Aids… Aids has just exacerbated it.”

Source: Independent Online (IOL)
URL: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click…/p>


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