Difference between revisions of "South Africa"
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{{nation state | {{nation state | ||
− | |description=A former | + | |description=A former [[British]] and [[Dutch]] [[colony]] |
|location=Southern Africa, Africa | |location=Southern Africa, Africa | ||
|logo=Flag of South Africa.svg | |logo=Flag of South Africa.svg | ||
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|keywiki=http://www.keywiki.org/South_Africa | |keywiki=http://www.keywiki.org/South_Africa | ||
|constitutes=Country | |constitutes=Country | ||
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}} | }} | ||
− | '''South Africa''', a former British and [[Dutch]] [[colony]], is rated by the [[World Bank]] as an “upper middle income” country. It has considerable resources of [[gold]], [[diamonds]] and other minerals. It has arguably the world's greatest income inequality and the rate of [[unemployment]] at 26 percent.<ref name=rg>https://www.researchgate.net/blog/post/south-africas-student-protests-ignored-by-the-world-a-symptom-of-a-global-loss-in-faith-that-change-is-possible</ref> In it took steps to try to suppress the use of [[ivermectin]] for [[COVID-19]].<ref>https://www.globalresearch.ca/south-african-drugs-regulator-bans-miracle-covid-19-treatment-unsafe/5733766 | + | '''South Africa''', a former [[British]] and [[Dutch]] [[colony]], is rated by the [[World Bank]] as an “upper middle income” country. It has considerable resources of [[gold]], [[diamonds]] and other minerals. It has arguably the world's greatest income inequality and the rate of [[unemployment]] at 26 percent.<ref name=rg>https://www.researchgate.net/blog/post/south-africas-student-protests-ignored-by-the-world-a-symptom-of-a-global-loss-in-faith-that-change-is-possible</ref> In 2020, it took steps to try to suppress the use of [[ivermectin]] for [[COVID-19]].<ref>https://www.globalresearch.ca/south-african-drugs-regulator-bans-miracle-covid-19-treatment-unsafe/5733766</ref> |
− | |||
− | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
− | |||
===Apartheid government=== | ===Apartheid government=== | ||
− | [[image:Apartheid alliances.png| | + | [[image:Apartheid alliances.png|300px|left]] |
− | [[image:Apartheid allies.png| | + | [[image:Apartheid allies.png|300px|left]] |
− | The nation had a system of government supported [[racism]] which was the subject of international protest. | + | The nation had a system of government supported [[racism]] which was the subject of international protest. [[Apartheid]] was formally ended in 1994.<ref name=rg/> One means of protesting this was an embargo on diplomatic contacts, which may have been key in encouraging the government to seek out more clandestine milieu - such as [[Le Cercle]]. |
− | ==South African deep state== | + | ===South African deep state=== |
{{FA|South Africa/Deep state}} | {{FA|South Africa/Deep state}} | ||
The South African deep state is believed to have played an influential role in the development of the [[supranational deep state]], for example by its support for [[Le Cercle]]. | The South African deep state is believed to have played an influential role in the development of the [[supranational deep state]], for example by its support for [[Le Cercle]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Documented Cercle Meetings=== | ||
+ | {{FA|Le Cercle}} | ||
+ | [[Adrian Hänni]] suggests that apartheid South Africa may have been only government that ever sent an official delegation to [[Cercle meetings]]. He wrote that "The official South African delegations, which have been arranged by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) in Pretoria from at least the late 1970s onwards, were largely composed of [[Ambassador]]s to the major Cercle countries ([[Great Britain]], the [[United States]], [[France]] and [[Germany]]), accompanied by senior officials from the DFA, and Foreign Minister [[Pik Botha]] at times attended as a guest. The connection between the Cercle and the South African government had already been initiated in the first half of the [[1970s]], when Cercle leaders had cooperated with the South African Department of Information on a vast secret propaganda program to improve the image of South Africa and the apartheid regime."<ref name=haenni>[[Document:Transnational History of the Cercle Pinay – Research Plan]]</ref> The South African government was a major funder of Le Cercle in the 1980s, up to 1992. | ||
===Assassination of Olof Palme=== | ===Assassination of Olof Palme=== | ||
{{FA|Olof Palme/Assassination}} | {{FA|Olof Palme/Assassination}} | ||
− | [[image:SA_Mil_Int.jpg| | + | [[image:SA_Mil_Int.jpg|right|300px]] |
− | A document was published online in 2018 which supported the thesis that [[Olof Palme]] was assassinated by [[South African]] [[spooks]], possibly contracted through [[Le Cercle]]. | + | A document was published online in 2018 which supported the thesis that [[Olof Palme]] was assassinated by [[South African]] [[spooks]], possibly contracted through [[Le Cercle]]. |
− | + | The document, an alleged [[South Africa Military Intelligence]] report, dated 15 October 1985, concluded that [[Olof Palme]] "should be seen as an enemy of the State." He was [[Olof Palme/Assassination|assassinated]] in February 1986.<ref>https://gosint.wordpress.com/2018/03/12/olof-palme-south-african-spies-likely-murdered-sweden-prime-minister/</ref> | |
− | |||
− | [[ | ||
− | ==Nuclear Weapons== | + | ===Nuclear Weapons=== |
{{FA|South Africa/Nuclear weapons}} | {{FA|South Africa/Nuclear weapons}} | ||
In 1975 [[Israel]] offered to sell nuclear weapons to South Africa.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/23/israel-south-africa-nuclear-weapons</ref> After decades of work, South Africa developed [[South Africa/Nuclear weapons|nuclear weapons]] in the 1980s, only for the apartheid government to ship them abroad to US and UK in a [[South Africa/Nuclear weapons/1989 Sell Off|secret deal]] in 1989 to prevent their use by the incoming administration of [[Nelson Mandela]]. This deal, in which [[David Cameron]] and the government of [[Margaret Thatcher]] was highly secret at the time and little known until the last few years.{{cn}} | In 1975 [[Israel]] offered to sell nuclear weapons to South Africa.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/23/israel-south-africa-nuclear-weapons</ref> After decades of work, South Africa developed [[South Africa/Nuclear weapons|nuclear weapons]] in the 1980s, only for the apartheid government to ship them abroad to US and UK in a [[South Africa/Nuclear weapons/1989 Sell Off|secret deal]] in 1989 to prevent their use by the incoming administration of [[Nelson Mandela]]. This deal, in which [[David Cameron]] and the government of [[Margaret Thatcher]] was highly secret at the time and little known until the last few years.{{cn}} | ||
− | == | + | ==Home issues== |
+ | {{YouTubeVideo | ||
+ | |align=right | ||
+ | |width=300px | ||
+ | |code=qBnNrMZOUA0 | ||
+ | |caption=Rape remains a norm in South Africa | ||
+ | |subjects=Rape, South Africa | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | ===Student protests=== | ||
Student protests in 2016 went on for weeks, focusing on increased prices for access to higher education. Numerous students were injured and at least one killed, but {{ccm}} did not report them widely outside of the country.<ref name=rg/> | Student protests in 2016 went on for weeks, focusing on increased prices for access to higher education. Numerous students were injured and at least one killed, but {{ccm}} did not report them widely outside of the country.<ref name=rg/> | ||
− | == | + | ===Cannabis=== |
Prohibitions against the private cultivation and use of [[cannabis]] were declared unconstitutional and invalid in 2017. | Prohibitions against the private cultivation and use of [[cannabis]] were declared unconstitutional and invalid in 2017. | ||
− | === | + | ===Rape statistics=== |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
South Africa has consistently ranked with the highest<ref>https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Rape-rate</ref> amount of rapes on women and children for the [[2010s]] and [[2020s]] in victims per 1000 people.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIfRJel6SoM</ref><ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_violence_in_South_Africa</ref><ref>https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/south-african-constitutional-court-affirms-doctrine-of-common-purpose-in-rape-cases/</ref> | South Africa has consistently ranked with the highest<ref>https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Rape-rate</ref> amount of rapes on women and children for the [[2010s]] and [[2020s]] in victims per 1000 people.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIfRJel6SoM</ref><ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_violence_in_South_Africa</ref><ref>https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/south-african-constitutional-court-affirms-doctrine-of-common-purpose-in-rape-cases/</ref> | ||
− | <ref>https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/rape-statistics-by-country</ref> | + | |
+ | For the year 2010, South Africa had the highest rate of rape in the world at 132.4 incidents per 100,000 people. In a survey released by the South African Medical Research Council in 2009, approximately one in four men admitted to committing rape. | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, the government in South Africa is working to address this dysfunction, and proponents maintain that the rate has dropped to 72.1 in 2019-20 reporting.<ref>''[https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/rape-statistics-by-country "Rape Statistics by Country 2023"]''</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Foreign affairs== | ||
+ | South Africa is a member of the [[African Union]] and has played a key role as a mediator in [[Africa]]n conflicts over the last decade, such as in [[Burundi]], the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]], [[Comoros]], and [[Zimbabwe]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2010, moving away from [[the West]], it strengthened economic and political ties with [[China]] and in 2011 joined the Brazil-Russia-India-China ([[BRICS]]) grouping of countries, which total $27.65 trillion in GDP and account for 46 percent of the world’s population – over 3 billion people. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Alleging Israeli genocide=== | ||
+ | On 29 December 2023, South Africa instituted [[Genocide Convention]] proceedings at the [[International Court of Justice]] against [[Israel]] for its treatment of [[Palestinians]] in the [[Gaza Strip]].<ref>''[[Document:South Africa institutes Genocide Convention proceedings against Israel]]''</ref> SA’s legal team at the [[ICJ]] are: | ||
+ | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Dugard John Dugard SC,] [https://www.doughtystreet.co.uk/barristers/max-du-plessis-sc-associate Max du Plessis SC,] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tembeka_Ngcukaitobi Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC,] [https://www.thulamela.com/thulamela-members/adila-hassim Adila Hassim SC.] | ||
+ | * Juniors: [https://www.ubunyechambers.co.za/members/sarahpudifinjones Sarah Pudifin-Jones,] [https://za.linkedin.com/in/lerato-zikalala-6564a84a Lerato Zikalala,] [https://za.linkedin.com/in/tshidiso-ramogale-59788132 Tshidiso Ramogale.] | ||
+ | * External: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaughan_Lowe Vaughan Lowe KC] and [https://www.matrixlaw.co.uk/member/blinne-ni-ghralaigh/ Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC.]<ref>''[https://twitter.com/franstaar/status/1741470949403165152 "SA's legal team at the ICJ"]''</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | On 9 January 2024, South Africa's Justice Ministry announced that former [[Leader of the Opposition|UK opposition leader]] [[Jeremy Corbyn]] will join a South African delegation for the [[ICJ]] hearings which begin on Thursday 11 January at [[The Hague]]. On Monday 8 January, [[Corbyn]] expressed support for South Africa’s case against [[Israel]] and criticised the [[UK government]] in a message posted on ''[[X]]'':{{QB| | ||
+ | :“Every day, another unspeakable atrocity is committed in [[Gaza]],” he wrote. | ||
+ | :“Millions of people around the world support South Africa’s efforts to hold [[Israel]] to account. Why can’t our government?”<ref>''[https://apnews.com/article/south-africa-israel-genocide-corbyn-court-5e59a67d7ec109530a74a5e6a888a04a "Former UK opposition leader Corbyn to join South Africa’s delegation accusing Israel of genocide"]''</ref>}} | ||
{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 14:09, 10 January 2024
South Africa, a former British and Dutch colony, is rated by the World Bank as an “upper middle income” country. It has considerable resources of gold, diamonds and other minerals. It has arguably the world's greatest income inequality and the rate of unemployment at 26 percent.[1] In 2020, it took steps to try to suppress the use of ivermectin for COVID-19.[2]
Contents
History
Apartheid government
The nation had a system of government supported racism which was the subject of international protest. Apartheid was formally ended in 1994.[1] One means of protesting this was an embargo on diplomatic contacts, which may have been key in encouraging the government to seek out more clandestine milieu - such as Le Cercle.
South African deep state
- Full article: South Africa/Deep state
- Full article: South Africa/Deep state
The South African deep state is believed to have played an influential role in the development of the supranational deep state, for example by its support for Le Cercle.
Documented Cercle Meetings
- Full article: Le Cercle
- Full article: Le Cercle
Adrian Hänni suggests that apartheid South Africa may have been only government that ever sent an official delegation to Cercle meetings. He wrote that "The official South African delegations, which have been arranged by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) in Pretoria from at least the late 1970s onwards, were largely composed of Ambassadors to the major Cercle countries (Great Britain, the United States, France and Germany), accompanied by senior officials from the DFA, and Foreign Minister Pik Botha at times attended as a guest. The connection between the Cercle and the South African government had already been initiated in the first half of the 1970s, when Cercle leaders had cooperated with the South African Department of Information on a vast secret propaganda program to improve the image of South Africa and the apartheid regime."[3] The South African government was a major funder of Le Cercle in the 1980s, up to 1992.
Assassination of Olof Palme
- Full article: Olof Palme/Assassination
- Full article: Olof Palme/Assassination
A document was published online in 2018 which supported the thesis that Olof Palme was assassinated by South African spooks, possibly contracted through Le Cercle.
The document, an alleged South Africa Military Intelligence report, dated 15 October 1985, concluded that Olof Palme "should be seen as an enemy of the State." He was assassinated in February 1986.[4]
Nuclear Weapons
- Full article: South Africa/Nuclear weapons
- Full article: South Africa/Nuclear weapons
In 1975 Israel offered to sell nuclear weapons to South Africa.[5] After decades of work, South Africa developed nuclear weapons in the 1980s, only for the apartheid government to ship them abroad to US and UK in a secret deal in 1989 to prevent their use by the incoming administration of Nelson Mandela. This deal, in which David Cameron and the government of Margaret Thatcher was highly secret at the time and little known until the last few years.[citation needed]
Home issues
Rape remains a norm in South Africa |
Student protests
Student protests in 2016 went on for weeks, focusing on increased prices for access to higher education. Numerous students were injured and at least one killed, but commercially-controlled media did not report them widely outside of the country.[1]
Cannabis
Prohibitions against the private cultivation and use of cannabis were declared unconstitutional and invalid in 2017.
Rape statistics
South Africa has consistently ranked with the highest[6] amount of rapes on women and children for the 2010s and 2020s in victims per 1000 people.[7][8][9]
For the year 2010, South Africa had the highest rate of rape in the world at 132.4 incidents per 100,000 people. In a survey released by the South African Medical Research Council in 2009, approximately one in four men admitted to committing rape.
However, the government in South Africa is working to address this dysfunction, and proponents maintain that the rate has dropped to 72.1 in 2019-20 reporting.[10]
Foreign affairs
South Africa is a member of the African Union and has played a key role as a mediator in African conflicts over the last decade, such as in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Comoros, and Zimbabwe.
In 2010, moving away from the West, it strengthened economic and political ties with China and in 2011 joined the Brazil-Russia-India-China (BRICS) grouping of countries, which total $27.65 trillion in GDP and account for 46 percent of the world’s population – over 3 billion people.
Alleging Israeli genocide
On 29 December 2023, South Africa instituted Genocide Convention proceedings at the International Court of Justice against Israel for its treatment of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.[11] SA’s legal team at the ICJ are:
- John Dugard SC, Max du Plessis SC, Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC, Adila Hassim SC.
- Juniors: Sarah Pudifin-Jones, Lerato Zikalala, Tshidiso Ramogale.
- External: Vaughan Lowe KC and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC.[12]
On 9 January 2024, South Africa's Justice Ministry announced that former UK opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn will join a South African delegation for the ICJ hearings which begin on Thursday 11 January at The Hague. On Monday 8 January, Corbyn expressed support for South Africa’s case against Israel and criticised the UK government in a message posted on X:
Related Quotation
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Afrikaner Broederbond | “Do you realize what a powerful force is gathered here between these four walls?..Show me a greater power in Africa. Show me a greater power anywhere, even in your so-called civilized world."” | H. J. Klopper | 1968 |
Events
Event | Description |
---|---|
2022 Parliament of South Africa fire | The South African Parliament was destroyed by fire. |
Equatorial Guinea/2004 coup d'état attempt | |
Le Cercle/1977 (South Africa) | 4 day Cercle meeting, exposed in 2017 after a report surfaced on the internet |
Le Cercle/1984 (Capetown) | 4 day meeting of Le Cercle in Capetown exposed after Joel Van der Reijden discovered the attendee list for this conference and published it online in 2011 |
Le Cercle/1988 (South Africa) | Little known Cercle meeting |
Le Cercle/1991 (South Africa) | Little known Cercle meeting |
Muldergate | South African political scandal involving the Department of Information |
Groups Headquartered Here
Group | Start | End | Description |
---|---|---|---|
"Stellenbosch Mafia" | A network of wealthy Afrikaners with connections to the South African deep state. | ||
African National Congress | 8 January 1912 | South Africa's governing political party since 1994. | |
Afrikaner Broederbond | 1918 | Deep state organization. Many prominent figures of South African life, including all leaders of the government, were members of the Afrikaner Broederbond. | |
Armscor | Apartheid South Africa arms production an procurement company. Major node for SA and Western deep state activities. | ||
BOSS | 1969 | 1995 | The main South African state intelligence agency |
Civil Cooperation Bureau | |||
Diocesan College | 1849 | Interesting for Rhodes Scholarship / Milner group networks; embraced apartheid military role | |
South Africa/Deep state | The South African deep state was installed by the Milner Group and anwered to London. The group hosted many meetings of Le Cercle and is believed to have carried out assassinations for the Supranational Deep State. | ||
South African Defence Force | |||
South African Reserve Bank | 1921 | The privately owned central bank of South Africa | |
Stellenbosch University | 1918 | A key institution in the deep state Broederbond during the Apartheid era. | |
University of Cape Town | 1829 | Public university in Cape Town, South Africa | |
University of Fort Hare | 1916 | A key institution of higher education for students from across sub-Saharan Africa from 1916 to 1959, creating a black African elite. | |
University of Pretoria | 1908 | Former Afrikaans-speaking university, by 2016 changed to English as education language | |
University of South Africa | 1873 | Mega university with over 400,000 students in South Africa | |
University of the Free State | 1950 | Former Afrikaans university which made English the primary medium of instruction in 2016. | |
University of the Witwatersrand | 1896 | Has its roots in the important South Africa mining industry |
Job here
Event | Job | Appointed | End | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Black | Visiting Professor | 1997 | 1999 | Faculty of Law |
Employees on Wikispooks
Employee | Job | Appointed | End | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
F. W. de Klerk | President of South Africa | 15 August 1989 | 10 May 1994 | |
Magnus Malan | South Africa/Minister of Defence | October 1980 | 1991 | Founder of the Civil Cooperation Bureau which assassinated anti-apartheid activists. |
Citizens of South Africa on Wikispooks
Title | Born | Died | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Iris Adams | 28 September 1956 | 18 September 2021 | The first nurse to have the COVID-19/Vaccine at the hospital she worked at. Months later she died from COVID days before retirement. |
Niel Barnard | 1949 | University professor and leader of the apartheid National Intelligence Service during the dirty wars in the 1980s. | |
Hendrik van den Bergh | 27 November 1914 | 16 August 1997 | South African police official |
P. W. Botha | 12 January 1916 | 31 October 2006 | South African politician |
Pik Botha | 27 April 1932 | 12 October 2018 | South African deep state operative |
Peter Casselton | February 1997 | ||
A. K. Chesterton | 1 May 1899 | 16 August 1973 | |
Shankara Chetty | South African doctor who says that the Covid 19 vaccine is a method of depopulation.<a href="#cite_note-1">[1]</a> | ||
Sean Cleary | 26 October 1948 | spooky South African | |
Angelique Coetzee | 1950 | South African physician who discovered the Omicron variant. | |
Mick Davis | 15 February 1958 | South African/British businessman. He was the Chief Executive of mining company Xstrata until mergers Glencore, a company is deeply tied to the Israeli intelligence service Mossad. | |
Patrick Duncan | 21 December 1870 | 17 July 1943 | Member of the Milner Group/Inner Circle, sixth Governor-General of South Africa |
Pumza Dyantyi | 5 September 1948 | 7 December 2020 | South African health politician stated to have died from Covid-19 in December 2020. |
Colin Eglin | 14 April 1925 | 29 November 2013 | South African apartheid politician best known for having served as national leader of the opposition. |
Paul Ekon | 1959 | South African businessman listed in Jeffrey Epstein's black book. | |
Roger Federer | 8 August 1981 | Tennis champion. WEF/Young Global Leaders 2010. Associate of Bill Gates. | |
Brand Fourie | 1916 | July 2008 | "One of the most remarkable diplomats South Africa ever produced" |
David Frankel (WEF) | 1970 | South African businessman, WEF GLT 2001 | |
Pop Fraser | 6 April 1915 | 18 December 1994 | South African military commander who attended Le Cercle. |
Ivan Glasenberg | 1957 | CEO of Glencore, a mining company with close ties to Mossad. | |
Richard Gnodde | March 1960 | Multi millionaire South African money man. Attended his first Bilderberg in 2019 | |
Neil Peter Van Heerden | 30 July 1939 | Retired South African diplomat, Le Cercle | |
Basil Hersov | 18 August 1926 | "A man with considerable influence". Banker, Le Cercle, Patron of The Institute Of Directors in Southern Africa | |
Robert Hersov | 1961 | Billionaire banker in Epstein's black book. His father attended Le Cercle | |
Tina Joemat-Pettersson | 16 December 1963 | 5 June 2023 | Scandal ridden ex-minister form South Africa who died suddenly |
Theunis Willem de Jongh | 1913 | Internationally well connected South African banker in Apartheid era | |
Safura Abdool Karim | Lawyer who has researched COVID-19 lockdowns and argued about mandatory COVID vaccination | ||
Lesetja Kganyago | 7 October 1965 | Attended multiple WEF AGMs as Governor of the South African Reserve Bank | |
F. W. de Klerk | 18 March 1936 | 11 November 2021 | last state president of apartheid-era South Africa. |
Eugene de Kock | 29 January 1949 | South African apartheid-era killer dubbed 'Prime Evil' by the media | |
Cameron Mackenzie | 12 August 1960 | 7 July 2021 | The 14th South African MP to die from COVID. |
Geoff Makhubo | 8 February 1968 | 9 July 2021 | The Mayor of Johannesburg died suddenly of COVID in July 2021. |
Joyce Maluleke | 25 April 1961 | 16 July 2021 | The 15th South African MP to die from COVID. |
Nelson Mandela | 18 July 1918 | 5 December 2013 | South African ANC leader and President of South Africa. |
Trevor Manuel | 31 January 1956 | World Economic Forum Global Leader for Tomorrow 1994. South African Minister of Finance from 1996 to 2009. Married to bankster Maria Ramos, a WEF Leader 1998. In April 2020 he was appointed an African Union Special Envoy on Covid-19. | |
Thabo Mbeki | 25 June 1942 | President of South Africa replaced in 2008 after dissent about AIDS | |
Tito Mboweni | 16 March 1959 | Selected Global Leaders for Tomorrow by the World Economic Forum in 1995 - Governor of the South African Reserve Bank - Goldman Sachs - Minister of Finance | |
Mpho Moerane | 1969 | 18 May 2022 | The Mayor of Johannesburg died in a freak car crash in May 2022. |
Stella Moris | 1982 | Married of Julian Assange in March 2022 | |
Patrice Motsepe | 28 January 1962 | South Africa's richest man, GLT 1999, very heavy WEF AGM habit | |
Oscar Mpetha | 5 August 1909 | 15 November 1994 | South African Trade unionist and political activist |
Jackson Mthembu | 5 June 1958 | 21 January 2021 | Long running politician from South Africa, dies of Covid. His doctor has a fatal Helicopter crash the same day. |
Connie Mulder | 5 June 1925 | 12 January 1988 | A South African politician brought down by Muldergate. |
Elon Musk | 28 June 1971 | US businessman, Paypal Mafia underboss, big tech kingpin, WEF YGL billionaire | |
Jay Naidoo | 1954 | Anti-apartheid trade union leader, then Minister responsible for the Reconstruction and Development Programme in the first post-apartheid cabinet of President Nelson Mandela | |
Dullah Omar | 26 May 1934 | 13 March 2004 | |
Jonathan Oppenheimer | 18 November 1969 | Scion of the gold and diamond Oppenheimer family, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, WEF/GLT/2002, WEF/YGL/2005... | |
Aziz Pahad | 25 December 1940 | 27 September 2023 | South African Deputy Foreign Minister who stated that South Africa had conducted a nuclear test, but later retracted his statement. |
Ebrahim Patel | 1962 | Trade union anti-apartheid activist. Selected a Global Leaders for Tomorrow by the WEF in 1994. As Minister for Trade, Industry and Competition he was one of the main administrators of the waves of lockdowns that shut down most activities in the country from March 23, 2020 onward.<a href="#cite_note-1">[1]</a> | |
Navi Pillay | 23 September 1941 | UN High Commissioner for Human Rights 2008-2014 | |
... further results |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:A Devastating Indictment of Israel’s War on Gaza | Article | 11 January 2024 | Mike Small Roshdi Sarraj | |
Document:Dikgang Moseneke to join bench of judges in Israel-Hamas world court case | Article | 5 January 2024 | Kgaugelo Masweneng | Should presiding American Judge Joan Donoghue recuse herself when it comes to determining whether US staunch ally Israel has committed genocide in Gaza? |
Document:Ex-Israeli Supreme Court chief Aharon Barak appointed as ICJ judge for genocide case | Article | 8 January 2024 | The New Arab Staff | Aharon Barak argued that the rules of collateral damage permit the killing of Palestinian fighters even if led to the deaths of children. This was approved by Barak himself in a 2006 Supreme Court ruling, as cited in a report by a Canadian news outlet. |
Document:Goliath's Revenge - Israel and Apartheid South Africa | Article | 5 January 2024 | Christopher Nicholson | "During the apartheid years I practised as a human rights lawyer and one of my colleagues defended a young boy, charged with assaulting a police officer. He had thrown a stone at the man, who was on board a tank-like military vehicle, but had arrogantly left his helmet off. A law in force with regard to firearms required a warning shot to be fired in certain circumstances. The prosecutor then demanded of the latter-day David: ‘Why did you not throw a warning stone?’" |
Document:Good Liberation Hero-Bad Liberation Hero | article | 9 December 2013 | Stephen Gowans | |
Document:Has International Law Survived, or Has the Western Political Class Killed It? | blog post | 28 January 2024 | Craig Murray | Now think of this: the very next day after President Herzog made a genocidal statement, as determined by the International Court of Justice, he was met and offered “full support” by Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission and Roberta Metsola, President of the European Parliament |
Document:ICJ to decide on emergency measures in Israel-Gaza genocide case this week | Article | 24 January 2024 | Al Jazeera staff | South Africa’s Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor will travel to The Hague to be present at the International Court of Justice as it rules on the Israeli genocide in Gaza. |
Document:International justice: the South African complaint against Israel for “genocide” in Gaza | Article | 10 January 2024 | United Nations Regional Information Centre for Western Europe | |
Document:Pan Am Flight 103: It was the Uranium | article | 6 January 2014 | Patrick Haseldine | Following Bernt Carlsson's untimely death in the Lockerbie bombing, the UN Council for Namibia inexplicably dropped the case against Britain's URENCO for illegally importing yellowcake from the Rössing Uranium Mine in Namibia. |
Document:South Africa institutes Genocide Convention proceedings against Israel | statement | 29 December 2023 | International Court of Justice | South Africa's 84-page Application instituting Genocide Convention proceedings against Israel |
Document:South Africa’s Case Was a Display of International Solidarity - We Should Support It | Article | 12 January 2024 | Jeremy Corbyn | At the International Court of Justice, South Africa spoke on behalf of the billions of people who oppose Israel's genocide in Gaza — and put Western governments to shame for their deplorable complicity. |
Document:The Rossing File:The Inside Story of Britain's Secret Contract for Namibian Uranium | pamphlet | 1980 | Alun Roberts | Scandal in the 1970s and 1980s of collusion by successive British governments with the mining conglomerate Rio Tinto to import yellowcake from the Rössing Uranium Mine in Namibia (illegally occupied by apartheid South Africa) in defiance of international law, and leading to the targeting of UN Commissioner for Namibia Bernt Carlsson on Pan Am Flight 103 in December 1988. |
Document:Your Man in the Hague (In a Good Way) Part 1 | blog post | 11 January 2024 | Craig Murray | The fact of genocide is incontrovertible and had been plainly set out. But several of the Judges are desperate to find a way to please the USA and Israel and avoid countering the current Zionist narrative, the adoption of which is necessary to keep your feet comfortably under the table of the elite. |
Document:Your Man in the Hague (In a Good Way) Part 2 | blog post | 14 January 2024 | Craig Murray | "These two days in the Hague were absolutely crucial for deciding if there is any meaning left in notions of international law and human rights. I still believe action by the Court could cause the US and UK to back off and provide some measure of relief. For now, let us all pray or wish, each in our way, for the children of Gaza." |
References
- ↑ a b c https://www.researchgate.net/blog/post/south-africas-student-protests-ignored-by-the-world-a-symptom-of-a-global-loss-in-faith-that-change-is-possible
- ↑ https://www.globalresearch.ca/south-african-drugs-regulator-bans-miracle-covid-19-treatment-unsafe/5733766
- ↑ Document:Transnational History of the Cercle Pinay – Research Plan
- ↑ https://gosint.wordpress.com/2018/03/12/olof-palme-south-african-spies-likely-murdered-sweden-prime-minister/
- ↑ https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/23/israel-south-africa-nuclear-weapons
- ↑ https://www.nationmaster.com/country-info/stats/Crime/Rape-rate
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIfRJel6SoM
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_violence_in_South_Africa
- ↑ https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/south-african-constitutional-court-affirms-doctrine-of-common-purpose-in-rape-cases/
- ↑ "Rape Statistics by Country 2023"
- ↑ Document:South Africa institutes Genocide Convention proceedings against Israel
- ↑ "SA's legal team at the ICJ"
- ↑ "Former UK opposition leader Corbyn to join South Africa’s delegation accusing Israel of genocide"