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Saturday, October 20, 2018
What Pieter W. Botha Said About Black Africans is 90% Fact
“By now every one of us has seen it practically that the Blacks cannot rule themselves. Give them guns and they will kill each other. “They are good in nothing else but making noise, dancing, marrying many wives and indulging in sex. Let us all accept that the Blackman is a symbol of poverty, mental inferiority, laziness and emotional incompetence.”
~ Pieter W. Botha, (12 January 1916 – 31 October 2006), leader of South Africa from 1978 to 1989, serving as the last Prime Minister from 1978 to 1984 and the first executive State President from 1984 to 1989.
From Nigeria to Sudan; Rwanda to DRC and other countries in Africa, what Botha said is 90% fact. Even in South Africa, black South Africans are attacking and killing fellow Africans. South Sudan is in chaos since becoming independent of the predominantly Islamic Republic of Sudan and Democratic Republic of the Congo was the location of Africa's first world war, which led to the loss of some five million lives between 1994 and 2003, but many eastern areas are still plagued by violence as various rebel groups continue to operate there.
The First Congo War (1996–1997) was a foreign invasion of Zaire led by Rwanda that replaced President Mobutu Sésé Seko with the rebel leader Laurent-Désiré Kabila. Destabilization in eastern Zaire resulting from the Rwandan genocide was the final factor that caused numerous internal and external factors to align against the corrupt and inept government in the capital, Kinshasa.
The Second Congo War (also known as the Great War of Africa or the Great African War, and sometimes referred to as the African World War) began in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in August 1998, little more than a year after the First Congo War, and involved some of the same issues. The war officially ended in July 2003, when the Transitional Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo took power. Although a peace agreement was signed in 2002, violence has continued in many regions of the country, especially in the east.[7] Hostilities have continued since the ongoing Lord's Resistance Army insurgency, and the Kivu and Ituri conflicts.
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