Kabir,
Unlike our colleagues Dr. Jaiteh and Karim, I actually think it valuable for
you to share Pro-Bob notes with us. I refer here to the simple act of
sharing variety, not the content of the variety because I haven't read the article
from the Herald. So you will forgive me if I do not see significance in conten
t. I think your efforts to share variety with us does deserve commendation
however.
Your note below caught my eye:
"More and more people are coming to the realisation that Britain's is all
just a big pack of lies. Not all are contented to always play second fiddle
even in matters hinging on their very own existence. However much it irks
you, the people of Zimbabwe are going to continue to stand up to injustice
and progressive minded Africans are going to continue to give them our moral
support." Kabir.
Like you and the Herald, I too think much of what Britain does is not only
burdened with lies, but the objective is to represent British in Zimbabwe and
to the extent Zimbabweans can yield value from Britain's position and
efforts, it will have been secondarily collateral. I want to share with you and my
colleagues that the ubiquitous recognition of Britain's position in and of
itself is not terribly significant. What you and I and Zimbabweans do with that
knowledge is the devil's detail. And from our variety of readings and
experiences, it appears that there is enormous strain and hardship in ZImbabwe, not
to mention persecution for nil etcetera. Therefore, either tBob or the Herald
or their sympathisers are retarded or are incapable of processing mundane
and acknowledged information. I'm afraid Britain neither has the desire nor the
inclination to assist Bob and his crew in that regard. And we the other
Africans seem to be driving home our inherent malaise.
Bear with me for a moment: If Zimbabwe confiscates all the Land belonging to
British Zimbabweans and re-distributes it to Zimbabweans and repatriates all
Zimbabweans to Britain. Then Britain seizes all land and property belonging
to Zimbabweans and other Africans in Britain, and repatriates all of them
back to their homelands, the scenario I envisage is that the different tribes of
Zimbabwe, (all African) will not enjoy equitable sharing of their nation's
land and therefore the ensuing civil strife will produce calls for Britain and
America to stop the genocide. Or more to the extreme, the tit for tat will
have been viewed as the fault of Britain for colonizing Rhodesia in the first
place. And so the circus of depravity, hopelessness, and degeneration,
possibly re-colonization by China will ensue to the detriment of the Zimbabwean and
the Pan-African. This does not yield a solution. It is foolhardy gallantry
and mis-directed acumen.
Thank you for your audience. Haroun Masoud. Al Mu'Umin. MQDT. Darbo. I
encourage you to join me in prayer for the people of California as they go through
the current devastation by fire.
The struggle contines. Aluta continua.
Kabir.
In a message dated 10/24/2007 10:14:38 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
Malanding,
If this below is all you had to say on this forward I doubt there was any
need for you to clog our mail boxes.
No, the Herald of Harare cannot be 'horomsi,' rather, try 'kanigi'.
If you had contested the validity of the information contained in the
forward instead of saying nothing just to say something, I'd have taken you
more seriously. That is also beside the fact that you have no qualms
forwarding an article or two, now and then, from Jammeh's own 'horomsi' but
won't see similar from a pro-Zimbabwe government paper.
The issue here is that independent minded, inward-searching Africans and
their leaders continue to stand by the people of Zimbabwe in their just
struggle against the people who have wreaked havoc on their lives for
centuries and want to continue to dip their fangs into their bloodstream.
More and more people are coming to the realisation that Britain's is all
just a big pack of lies. Not all are contented to always play second fiddle
even in matters hinging on their very own existence. However much it irks
you, the people of Zimbabwe are going to continue to stand up to injustice
and progressive minded Africans are going to continue to give them our moral
support.
Kabir.
On 10/24/07, Malanding Jaiteh <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> My brother Kabir,
> This is not to question your independence or clarity on the Zimbabwe
> issue but The Herald (Harare) is certainly nothing but a Mugabe
> government-owned "Bulfaleh Horomsi" news service:)
>
> Malanding Jaiteh
>
>
> Kabir Njaay wrote:
>
> >EU Deals Brown a Body Blow
> >
> >
> >The Herald (Harare)
> >
> >
> >NEWS
> >24 October 2007
> >Posted to the web 24 October 2007
> >
> >By Sydney Kawadza
> >Harare
> >
> >THE European Union has dealt British Prime Minister Gordon Brown a body
> blow after its parliamentarians invited President Mugabe to attend the
> EU-Africa Summit set for Lisbon, Portugal, in December.
> >
> >EU parliamentarians and their Pan African Parliament counterparts jointly
> announced the invitation in South Africa last Friday.
> >
> >
> >Head of the EU parliamentary delegation Mr Michael Gahler and PAP
> chairperson of the Ad Hoc Committee on Relations with the European
> Parliament Mr Marwick Khumalo announced at a joint Press conference that
> they had discussed, and resolved that Cde Mugabe should attend the summit
to
> give his side of the story and discuss challenges confronting Zimbabwe with
> other leaders.
> >
> >The announcement by the EU and PAP MPs came barely 24 hours after Mr
> Brown -- still smarting after Africa and other EU states refused to endorse
> his anti-Mugabe stance -- clambered from his high horse, saying he would
not
> oppose President Mugabe's attendance.
> >
> >Mr Brown -- who held informal talks with South African President Thabo
> Mbeki ahead of the rugby World Cup final in France on Saturday --
reportedly
> assured Mr Mbeki that he was not trying to stop anyone from attending the
> summit.
> >
> >The EU and PAP parliamentarians will hold a pre-summit meeting a day
> before the official opening of the EU-Africa Summit as they hope to
> influence deliberations by the heads of state and government.
> >
> >The announcement by Mr Gahler, first vice president of the ACP-EU Joint
> Parliamentary Assembly, is significant given that he hit the headlines for
> the wrong reasons in June this year after conspiring with the German
embassy
> in Harare to deny visas to the Zimbabwean delegation to the 13th Session of
> the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Forum in Wiesbaden, Germany.
> >
> >The delegation was supposed to present a draft resolution condemning EU
> sanctions on Zimbabwe for consideration in Wiesbaden.
> >
> >PAP has also, on numerous occasions, tried to sponsor anti-Zimbabwe
> resolutions in its meetings.
> >
> >Mr Brown has cut a lone figure as most EU member-states, the AU, Sadc,
> Comesa and other regional groupings have refused to endorse his campaign
to
> have President Mugabe excluded from the summit.
> >
> >He has, however, found sympathisers in the Nordic countries that have not
> echoed his boycott threats.
> >
> >EU president and summit host Portugal has said it respects Africa's
> position that President Mugabe should attend the summit and said Britain's
> stance on Zimbabwe was against European interests.
> >
> >Portuguese Foreign Minister Mr Luis Amado said no country "can be pushed
> aside from dialogue and from the development of long-term strategic
> relations between the EU and the continent".
> >
> >European Commission chief Mr Jose Manuel Barroso concurred, saying the
> summit should not be derailed by the standoff between Britain and Zimbabwe.
> >
> >German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said all African leaders, including
> President Mugabe, should attend the summit.
> >
> >The last EU-Africa Summit was held in Cairo, Egypt, in December 2003, and
> there has been no other summit for the past four years as Africa refused to
> give in to British demands to hold a summit excluding Zimbabwe.
> >
> >Africa has maintained that the summit should involve leaders from the
> continent and invitations should not be selective.
> >
> >いいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいいい
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