Call to “Kill all whites”
The main stream media has totally ignored this month’s hate-speech in which all whites are ordered to be murdered by ex-freedom fighter Sam Nujoma, the founder and ex-president of modern-day neighbouring Namibia. Instead The Sunday Times could not wait to publish a very bad written article about last week’s “Volksvergadering” and blame speakers for hate speech.
Nujoma called on his people , speaking in front of the foreign newsmedia but only in his own language - to ‘beat in the heads of Englishmen with hammers’, and called for the murder of all whites. This has gone ‘apparently unnoticed’ by the Sunday Times and other mainstream news media. The only place the article appeared was in The Namibian.
Whites also threatened with genocide by neighbouring Namibia:
Any of these threatened Afrikaner families in South Africa who are hoping to flee to neighbouring Namibia to try and save themselves from annihilation by South Africa’s many tens of thousands of well-organised, heavily-armed ‘crime’ gangs - better think again.
This gigantic desert-country country of only 2.1-million people - 12.6% percent of whom are white and coloured Afrikaans-speakers.
Nujoma had prepared a speech in English for the benefit of the the assembled foreign news media - but had put it aside, instead speaking in Oshiwambo. The only black journalist who reported this hate-speech was Oswald Shivute from The Namibian.
The British want to be beaten up. Anyone find an Englishman, do so, beat him up,” Nujoma said. He said SADC countries are united and will stand up to anyone who violates the rights of one of its member countries.’Let us beat them … with hammers in their heads…’
“Let us beat them, not with knopkieries, but with hammers in their heads, if they touch one of our SADC countries,” Nujoma said.
“The whites must know that if they continue doing us harm, we will definitely beat them. They must take their hands away from Zimbabwe,” Nujoma told the Swapo crowd.
”They want to take President Mugabe away from his Presidential position in Zimbabwe, and then from there to us here. Be careful. If they come here we will show them and teach them a lesson as we did to South Africa during the liberation war,” Nujoma said. He called on all Namibians to be ready to fight against “the imperialists now killing people in Iraq and Afghanistan”, because it was possible that they would come to Africa next.
”Those (white) newspapers must know, the day God will be away from them, and Satan comes to them, we will deal with them,” Nujoma was quoted by local journalist Oswald Shivute, writing in The Namibian, as saying… (end quoted article)
Namibia imports 50% of all its cereal needs:
Comment: Of course Nujoma is entirely correct when he says that ‘imperialists’ - i.e. industrialising countries which also of course include Russia, China and India these days - want to ‘exploit its natural resources.
But this ‘exploitation’ also keeps his people alive: without the cash from its minerals, Namibians would basically starve to death as they need to import at least 50% of all their food-needs at the best of times. When there’s a ‘drought’ - in Namibia that’s nearly always - they are totally unable to create a sustainable agricultural community although living in a country just over half the size of Alaska - with only 2,1-million people.
Mining accounts for 8% of Namibia’s GDP, but provides more than 50% of foreign exchange earnings
Its rich alluvial diamond deposits make Namibia a primary source for gem-quality diamonds. Namibia is the fourth-largest exporter of nonfuel minerals in Africa, the world’s fifth-largest producer of uranium, and the producer of large quantities of lead, zinc, tin, silver, and tungsten. Yet the highly-mechanised mining sector employs only about 3% of thebest-skilled population while about half of the population depends on subsistence agriculture for its livelihood.
Namibia thus has to import at least 50% of its cereal requirements each year - and in its ‘drought years’ food shortages are at its most severe in rural areas populated by black subsistence-farming tribesmen.
This inability to feed themselves is startling: this gigantic African country has a surface-area of 825,418 sq km - yet in its past 25 years of ‘independence’ it has not bothered to expand one inch of its present 80 sq km of irrigated commercial farm land. And this tiny life-giving patch of reasonably fertile Namibian soil is there only because it was built up over many decades by white Afrikaner and German farmers carting in tons of guano from well-stocked bird-islands next to the bleak Namibian coast.
Just like neighbouring Zimbabwe and South Africa, the Namibian government also seems totally unable to build up any kind of sustainable agricultural sector to keep its own populatiion fed and prosperous - unless they allow experienced agricultural experts, mostly ethnic Afrikaners and other Europeans - to run their commercial-style farms. Yet African countries which have embraced European-style commercial farming and land-ownership registries - such as neighbouring Zambia - show that they can develop a sustainable agricultural sector if they really wanted to.