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: 2006-02-28 Posted By: Jan
From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 2/28/2006
Bad luck continues to stalk Zambia"s white farmers, hounded from Zim
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From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 2/28/2006
Bad luck continues to stalk Zambia"s white farmers, hounded from Zim
[Note in this article how the Blacks in Zambia are embarrassed at what 200 White farmers did to the whole country of Zambia. Zambia is about 1 1/2 times the size of France! Two hundred white farmers from Zimbabwe completely turned the currency around and changed the economics overnight. Sadly, other economic factors are now going to break them. But this again brings me back to my point. It took only 6 million White people in Africa to take it out of the Stone Age. Remove us from the equation and Africa returns to the Stone Age. But the Blacks, being falsely arrogant, don’t want anything to do with us these days: To which I say GREAT, you go your way, and we must go ours. If we whites stuck together, we’d do EXCELLENTLY. We don’t need the Blacks. The Blacks need us. It is my view that those white farmers who left Zimbabwe and are trying to make it elsewhere in Africa must be careful because other African Governments will screw them too. It is my view that in the end, whites in Africa must start sticking together because that is the only option that will really work. We must stand together, fight together, live together and make a future for OURSELVES on this African continent – which WE KNOW is a Garden of Eden. The Blacks can’t live in this Garden of Eden. They starve to death in it. We can live without them and we can carve out a great future for OURSELVES right here in Africa. (Of course that will embarrass the blacks too – but tough). African Governments and African economies are always a potential problem – as is crime, etc. Doing business in Africa is NOT EASY. The opportunities look great… but there are plenty of casualties. Just 3 years ago, a company I worked for here in Johannesburg, whose market was all of Africa ended up going under. We had great products – but in Africa – there is little that works, no matter how hard you try. Jan] Currency’s success spells ruin for exporters who are paid in US dollars Rory Carroll, Chongwe When disaster visited them in Zimbabwe it had a name, Robert Mugabe. Now Hounded from Zimbabwe, things went well at first for the 200 farmers who In this peaceful corner of southern Africa the settlers, part of the “There is a real risk people will go under. Our own operation is really In the past three months Zambia’s currency, the kwacha, has surged by a “It feels like a double whammy – the second time something terrible has It is a plight laden with ironies. President Mugabe turned on white farmers to divert attention from his government’s political and economic failures. Now it is success – Zambia’s – which is causing the difficulty. Debt forgiveness, a recovery in copper mining and a boom in agricultural With most farmers locked into a set dollar price for tobacco their income Confusion over a 17.5% VAT on farm inputs – in theory the tax can be claimed back but it cripples cash flow – has compounded the crisis. Some of the 4,000 white people dispossessed in Zimbabwe moved to Australia, Britain and other western countries, farmers no more. Those who could imagine no life except under African skies scattered across the continent, tilling fields in Nigeria, Mozambique, Malawi, South Africa and Zambia. The last, anglophone, politically stable and with a soil and climate similar to Zimbabwe, was initially thought the easy option. Despite the hardship Brent Greatorex stood by his decision to move to His story is typical. A second-generation Zimbabwean, he watched helpless as youth militias and independence war veterans heeded Harare’s call to invade white-owned farms. Salvaging what they could in January 2003, Mr Greatorex, his wife Vanessa and two children moved to Chongwe and took a 15-year lease on 1,300 hectares of a disused dairy farm. With just over $1m borrowed from a bank and a US company, Universal Leaf Tobacco, they built a house, bought equipment and hired labourers. Teething problems in the first two seasons produced disappointing yields. “But now we’re flying,” said Mr Greatorex, standing amid 10-feet high maize. He expected to produce 240 tonnes of tobacco, 280 tonnes of maize and 360 tonnes of wheat. But the profit had all but vanished. Costs were much higher – creaky Meanwhile revenue had dwindled because of the rise of the kwacha, which Their son and daughter missed friends and loathed their adopted country, Nevertheless Mr Greatorex was hopeful of riding out the crisis and paying In addition to the economic woes there is a fear, largely unstated, that Zambia’s authorities are grateful for the farmers’ investment but “The government has been welcoming but it’s not as if they’re singing and The agriculture minister, Mundia Sikatana, praised the settlers’ expertise. “They have contributed a lot to our economy. Our farmers are emulating their methods,” he told the Guardian. But in the next breath he said: “We are giving them the instruction that It was a coded warning that any hint of exploitation or racism would not be tolerated. In Zimbabwe some farmers, self-described “Rhodies” who pined for the days of Ian Smith’s white minority rule, were notorious for their prejudice. But interviews with black Zambians found that the majority respected the new arrivals for the wealth they had created. Mr MacSporran said his compatriots had resolved not to rock the boat. “When you lose everything once, and you get a second chance, you don’t do anything to compromise your chances.” Moving away Mozambique Malawi Nigeria |
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