*Comrade Roy,
There indeed is urgent need to get organized here in N America to link up
with these Pan-Africanists on the Continent.

The new colonial agents in South Africa are bent on outdoing even the
apartheid regime. Witness how last year's School text books were dumped
into forests, after the funds to deliver them to schools had been stolen.
As a cover the pass mark in School Leaving Exams in SA has been lowered to
30%.

Imperialism steals and distorts people's rallying cries and symbols. That's
what happened to the ANC. And now the ANC intends to sell out and destroy
Africans everywhere. Not only in S.A.

What do we do with stolen symbols?*

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Africa needs a superstate * [image:
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*Palash Ghosh*
While French military airplanes bomb militant targets in the deserts of
northern Mali, the president of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, has again asserted
his long-held dream of a “United States of

Africa.”
Echoing similar entreaties from the former leader of Libya, Muammar
Gaddafi, President Mugabe called for the formation of a giant continental
superpower in order to compete better with the more advanced nations on
earth, to end chronic regional wars, and to finally block Western
interference and intervention in Africa.

“Get them (African states) to get out of the regional shell and get into
one continental shell,” President Mugabe said in Harare, after a meeting
with Thomas Boni Yayi, Benin’s president and the outgoing chairman of the
African Union (AU), according to the Herald .

“The continent of Africa: this is what we must become. And there, we must
also have (one) African head. Yes, we need one. We are not yet there. This
is what we must go and discuss, but we must also discuss the issues that
divide us.”
Yayi himself called for a Pan-African movement.

“Our vision now is what we can do to strengthen the unity and stability
because without it we cannot move to the prosperity of our people in our
continent,” he said.

“Pan-Africanism is necessary for us to be together. Our regional
communities have to move together, to work together and to strengthen the
unity of the continent. We need to strengthen democracy in our countries.
We need to strengthen good governance. We need to strengthen the peace and
stability and unity of our countries.”

Gaddafi’s original proposal, which he offered publicly in 1999, fell apart
quickly, failing to gather much traction. Some feared that the Libyan
leader was simply making a play to expand his own ‘personal empire’  and
crown himself the King/Emperor of Africa.
But the Colonel was undeterred.

“I shall continue to insist that our sovereign countries work to achieve
the United States of Africa,” Gaddafi said as late as 2009 during an AU
meeting.

During a festival celebrating African culture and identity in Senegal,
Gaddafi grandly declared: “Down with imperialism! Africa must unite, so
that we do not again become serfs or slaves. It is necessary to establish a
unity government for the African continent and that Africa has one army . .
. which could consist of a million soldiers.”

Gaddafi also blasted African leaders who were opposed to the idea of a
united continent, calling them “agents of imperialism, myopic or traitors
who do not think about the future of Africa.”

“It is not enough to dwell on the past of the continent, we were treated
like animals, we were hunted in the forest, they enslaved us . . . they
appropriated Africa,” Gaddafi added.

“But why fight for liberation, if we remain satellites of our colonial
powers?”
Gaddafi, never short on fanciful ideas, even suggested that this African
superstate could include nations in the Western hemisphere, like Haiti,
Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, with large African-descended populations.

Critics, both in Africa and elsewhere, have countered that uniting 54
nations of hundreds of different tribes, a multitude of languages and
economies at vastly different stages of development, would be an
unrealistic goal.

President Mugabe seemed to concede this when he took an obvious stab at the
AU for failing to create the unity among Africans originally envisioned by
the founders of its predecessor entity, the Organisation of African Unity,
50 years ago.

“We really have not become integrated as an African people into a real
union,” President Mugabe said. “And this is the worry, which my brother
(Yayi) has, and the worry I have; the worry perhaps others also have. That
we are not yet at that stage which was foretold by our fathers when they
created this organisation.”

But he added that Africans share enough in common to overcome whatever
issues divide them.
“We are not there yet,” President Mugabe said. “As we stand here people
will look at us, as me (as an) Anglophone, him (Yayi) Francophone, you see.
There is also Lusophone (Portuguese-speaking), but we are Africans first
and foremost. Africans, Africans. Look at our skin. That’s our continent,
we belong to one continent. We may, by virtue of history, have been divided
by certain boundaries and especially by colonialism. But our founding
fathers in 1963, showed us the way and we must take up that teaching that
we got in 1963. That we are one and we must be united.”

President Mugabe even referred to conflicts within his own nation.
“In my country, yes, we have also had divisions, political divisions, but I
am glad that we all appreciate that whatever political affiliations we
belong to, we are Zimbabweans,” he declared.
But the revival of this dream of African unity was panned by others.

*“I don’t foresee a single United States of Africa with a single president
because we are so diverse politically and otherwise,” said Lindiwe Zulu,
international relations adviser to Jacob Zuma, the president of South
Africa, according to the Guardian newspaper.*

*“It is very desirable in the long term, but I don’t see it any time soon.
There is a lot more to be done. We are still agonising over sovereignty.*”

Zulu discussed obstacles to the idea.
“When you call for one president, you are calling for ministers to serve
under them, one parliament and one legislative process,” she added.

“There are too many things that divide us on political, social and economic
levels. We need to have a common agenda and approach to human rights and
development before we can talk about one president. We need to deal with
democracy on the continent and leaders who think beyond themselves.”

Richard Dowden, director of the Royal African Society, took an even more
sceptical view of African unity.

“The idea that one government could rule the whole of Africa at this stage
is silly and unworkable,” he told the Guardian.

“They need to build from the bottom economically rather than imposing a
notion of unity from the top down; it’s absurd. It is a dream of
totalitarian fantasists, not the people.

“Africa is becoming increasingly local. I’m in Kenya at the moment and the
forthcoming election is all about ethnic arithmetic.”

Alpha Oumar Konaré, former President of Mali and former chairperson of the
African Union Commission, supported the notion during the commemoration of
Africa Day in 2006.

The former President of Senegal, Abdoulaye Wade, even set a target date for
the formation of the United States of Africa — as early as 2017.

“We ask . . . for the establishment of the United States of Africa, the
only solution to free our peoples and  . . .   make Africa a major
cultural, economic, political and social whole, which will be respected,”
Wade once said.

Trevor Manuel, South Africa’s Minister in the Presidency in charge of the
National Planning Commission, said unifying Africa — at least economically
— would be crucial to the continent’s survival.

“It’s not about EU, not about the US (United States), not about the IMF
(International Monetary Fund) and World Bank, its about us and the way we
relate to each other, and in this context it is fundamentally important
that we talk to each other as Africans about some of the hard truths that
confront us,” he said at a conference in Harare last November.

“As individual countries, we will not make it in the world. We will be
picked off and become markets for the rest. So we can’t look to the rest of
the world. We have to look to each other in our neighborhood and understand
that’s where change will be driven from. As we learn from Europe we look at
ourselves in understanding what we should not do.”

In the event the African continent united into a single sovereign state,
geographically it would comprise the world’s largest nation (even bigger
than the Russian Federation). In terms of population, Africa’s 1 billion
people would rank it third in size behind China and India.

However, such vital statistics as population and economic power are wildly
uneven across the continent.

For example, almost one-third of the continent’s entire population
currently lives in just three states: Nigeria, Ethiopia and Egypt.

In 2011, according to the IMF, Africa produced a total GDP of about $1.9
trillion (roughly equal to that of India or Russia). However, just three
countries — South Africa, Nigeria, and Egypt — account for almost half of
that amount, suggesting that economic power is concentrated in very few
hands and many nations lag behind.

For example, consider that the Democratic Republic of Congo, which boasts a
large population of some 68 million and some of the world’s richest natural
resources, delivered a GDP in 2011 of only US$16 billion — meaning South
Africa (with a population of about 51 million) has an economy 25 times
bigger.

Thus, in a “United States of Africa,” South Africa would likely enjoy far
greater economic and political influence over continental affairs than DR
Congo would.

On the whole, 40 percent of all people on the continent — some 400 million
people — live below the poverty level, according to the African Development
Bank Group. Again, poverty rates diverge wildly across the continent — for
example, in Chad and Liberia, close to 80 percent of the population live
below the poverty line, while in North African countries, such rates are
much lower. — International Business Times/Southern Times.
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