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S. Africa Warned Of Zim-Style
Farm Invasions

From AfricanCrisis.Org
10-5-4
 
Look carefully at the logic here - its terrorism/blackmail of another sort. It goes like this: Give your land to the blacks, or they will come and seize it from you violently... Give your land to the blacks because the blacks are jealous of what you have.
 
Note at the bottom of this story... the outright lie that the blacks are suffering without land? Suffering without it? Look at Zimbabwe... 4 years on... and how much more their suffering has increased beyond measure AFTER THEY STOLE THE WHITE FARMS!!! They were living far better before their mass theft took place.
 
And forget all the nonsense about the "badly managed" Zim "Land Reform"... the thing is not an abortion because it was "badly managed". Its an abortion because the underlying principles and theories on which it is supposedly based... are all LIES. Whether you manage it differently or not, the results will be the SAME.
 
I wrote about this in my book... it's all a replay of my book, Government by Deception, over and over again... these beautiful sounding lies... hiding the real socialist hate which drives this... all the theories about how this will improve the lives of blacks... but instead it plunges them into ever greater poverty... yet the leaders knew all this would happen beforehand.
 
The real game is their desire to STEAL that which the white man created. They cannot create it themselves, so they DESTROY his work... because they don't want him to benefit from it. They can't do better themselves, but the black racists... don't care... they're up to their eyeballs in jealousy and hate that white people can do better than them. Deep in their hearts they know the white man is capable, and deep down, they truly fear his ability... and so he must be DESTROYED... because they fear the White man will one day be at the top again. --Jan
 
Daily Mail & Guardian 10-5-4
 
South Africa must speedily address inequitable land ownership patterns to avoid Zimbabwe-style farm invasions, the International Crisis Group (ICG) has warned.
 
The ICG, which deals with conflicts around the globe, said South Africa faced rising tension over land and should act quickly to avert a grabbing of farms.
 
"South Africa still has time to get it right on land reform and avoid future land-related violence and insecurity," ICG special advisor, John Prendergast, said.
 
"The government, farmers and donors, can take practical steps to accelerate the current land reform programme, contribute to poverty reduction, and reduce landlessness. The stakes are enormous, with implications throughout southern Africa."
 
In a newly-released book titled Blood and Soil: Land, Politics and Conflict Prevention in Zimbabwe and South Africa, the ICG said "tensions over land and race, which have already contributed much to Zimbabwe's political and economic collapse, are rising in South Africa as well".
 
"New approaches are needed if they are not to push tempers to the boiling point across all of southern Africa," the ICG said.
 
"Resolving the challenge of land will be central to getting Zimbabwe back on its feet when that nation eventually experiences a change of government."
 
The ICG, based in Brussels, Belgium, and led by eminent statesmen, said while land reform was an important issue, South Africa should be wary of plunging into a crisis of farm seizures.
 
"For all the understandable international outrage over seizures of white-owned farms in Zimbabwe, the biggest losers of the land programme have been black Zimbabweans -- black farm workers, black members of the opposition, and all those who were not part of the ruling elite," the ICG said.
 
"There are tremendous historical injustices that need to be dealt with both in Zimbabwe and South Africa, but Zimbabwe has demonstrated the deadly dangers of exploiting land redistribution for blatantly political ends."
 
The ICG said Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe had "exploited genuine sensitivities about the land issue to divert attention from growing dissatisfaction with his government".
 
It said the bungling of land redistribution in Zimbabwe "exacerbated racial and ethnic polarisation", as well as precipitating economic decline. The ICG said the disorderly exercise left agriculture in ruins and the country experiencing food shortages. - Zimbabwe Independent
 
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-National&ao=123031
 
 

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