Continuing Colonialism: World Bank Funds Mining in Africa
The private finance sector arm of the World Bank Group announced last month that it would invest $300 million to promote mining in Africa.
The private finance sector arm of the World Bank Group announced last month that it would invest $300 million to promote mining in Africa.
The United Nations’ response to the conflict in Libya may have persuaded members of the Gaddafi regime that they have no option other than to fight for their survival.
While the People’s Revolution in Tunisia and Egypt was largely non-violent, the revolution in Libya may turn more violent as the last of the palace guard circle around Colonel Qaddafi, his family and a small number of people with tribal ties to him.
The inspiring overthrow of Hosni Mubarak is only the first stage of the Egyptian struggle for full liberation. As earlier pro-democracy movements have learned the hard way, much can be lost in the key months and years of transition from one regime to another.
The lesson of Tunis, Sanaa, and Cairo is that democracy rhetoric is more than a strategy for the assertion of American dominance. On the contrary, it is a language that fuses moral and political power into a radical claim that every human being deserves a voice in the decisions that affect their daily lives.
All of this week a historic referendum is taking place in which the people of Southern Sudan are casting their votes to determine whether to secede from the North, likely becoming Africa’s newest independent nation.
Copyright Toward Freedom 2019