Saturday 3 October 2020

Divisions are deepening in South Africa

 

OPINION

Divisions are deepening in South Africa


FW de Klerk says it is not right that some citizens are regarded as morally inferior on account of their race

Speech by President FW de Klerk, to the Cape Town Press Club, Cape Town, 1 October 2020

Dealing with the past

1 October 2020

It is once again a great pleasure for me to address the Cape Town Press Club.

I shall spend a little more time today on the past than on the future ‐ because, at the age of 84, I have much more past than future ‐ and also because the past has become an increasingly contentious issue, not only for the present ‐ but also for the future.

It is with some trepidation that I venture into this area - since the past has become a minefield - where a single misplaced step can cause grievous reputational damage - not only here - but throughout the whole post-modernist world. I set off a landmine on 14 February when I reacted in anger to the manner in which Elita and I had been treated the previous evening at the opening of Parliament.

I should like to place the remarks I made then in their proper perspective - without, I hope detonating any further explosions. 

We are all, for better or worse, the products of the times into which we were born. This is true of Julius Caesar, of Genghis Khan, of Thomas Jefferson, of King Shaka, of Winston Churchill, Nelson Mandela - indeed, of all of us.   

I was born 84 years ago into a world that was a universe away from where we are today.  My world was rooted in the Afrikaner nationalism and dopper Calvinism of my family. We were passionately committed to the resurrection of the Afrikaner nation. The memories of the Anglo-Boer War were still raw and painful. During that war our people were the victims of a crime against humanity in the course of which we lost almost 10% of our population - most of whom were women and children who died in British concentration camps. We remembered with bitterness Lord Milner’s attempts to deprive us of our language and culture. Our opponents were the British - and Afrikaner ‘Sappe’ - who saw their future in the British Commonwealth rather than in an Afrikaner Republic.

At that time, black people - shockingly - were not included in political equations anywhere. Africa was still under colonial domination. Attitudes to black people - in South Africa and throughout the world - were paternalistic at best - and cruelly repressive and exploitative at worst. 

Although we now find it incomprehensible, before the Second World War, racial, gender and class discrimination were regarded as natural facets of human relationships.

After World War II these attitudes began to change.   A new value system began to emerge that found expression in the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights - which proclaimed that

"Everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration without distinction of any kind such as race, color, sex, language, religion…”

This was one of the most important advances in human history. Within 70 years it led to a world that is freer, kinder and fairer for billions of people.

It also had profound implications for South Africa.

In 1948 - the same year as the Universal Declaration - the National Party came to power. 

Its apartheid policies - rooted in pre-war conceptions of race - were the absolute antithesis of the new universal value system. 

They violated many of its core principles - including the rights to equality, dignity and non-discrimination. They denied non-white people the rights to nationality; to freedom of movement and residence; to marry whomever they wished; to own property; to freedom of expression; - and to take part in the government of their country.

As I stated on 17 February, these policies, codified under the name ‘apartheid’, constituted a crime against humanity in terms of the 1998 Statute of Rome’s definition.

Harold Macmillan drew attention to South Africa’s growing divergence from the rest of the post-war world when he told the South African parliament in 1960 that 

“the wind of change is blowing through this continent, and whether we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political fact.”  

Interestingly, he gave recognition to the nationhood of white South Africans in the same speech: “…here in Africa you have yourselves created a free nation. A new nation. Indeed, in the history of our times yours will be recorded as the first of the African nationalists.”

The next 30 years were dominated by escalating confrontation between what Macmillan had described as this “new” and “free” European-descended nation, on the one hand, and the rising tide of black national consciousness on the other.

Hendrik Verwoerd’s response to this changing world was to embark on what he saw as South Africa’s own process of internal decolonisation. Each black nation would be given its own state - within a mere 13,7% of the country - in which its citizens would be able to develop to any level. These countries would work together with the white South African nation in a ‘commonwealth of Southern African states’.

However, Verwoerd’s policies served only to deepen the injustices of apartheid. His monumental exercise in social engineering - involving countless bureaucratic humiliations - culminated in the forced removal of more than two million South Africans from their homes. It failed to address the political rights of Indian and Coloured South Africans, and it ignored the growing black majority in the so-called white areas. It led to further violations of the human rights - including the removal of the Coloured population from District Six. 

For two decades it deluded young Afrikaners like me into imagining that we had a just solution to the complex problems of our country.

After the 1976 uprisings South Africa entered a vortex of deepening isolation and escalating conflict. 

By the end of the 1970s it had become clear that Verwoerd’s ideology had failed. In 1978 PW Botha became Prime Minister and declared that “we would have to adapt or die”.

Those of us in leadership positions in the National Party were increasingly disturbed by the fundamental injustice and apparent hopelessness of the situation in which we found ourselves. However, the solution that the world was demanding of us was that we would have to surrender our right to national self-determination. The world was asking us to abandon the central goal for which we had struggled for more than 150 years. 

For us, it was like asking the Israelis to accept the outcome of a one-man, one-vote election in the broader Middle East.

We had substantial - and well-founded - existential fears:

how would we be able to ensure the fundamental language, cultural and property rights of minorities in such a situation? What assurance was there that we would be treated fairly by a majority with genuine grievances about the past?

how could we be sure that one-man, one-vote would not lead to the chaos, tyranny and economic decline that had characterised the decolonisation process in so many other parts of Africa? Post-independence Africa was littered with torn-up constitutions. By the mid-1980s there had already been more than 80 coups in Africa and there were only two or three genuine democracies.

Finally, we were worried about communism. This was not “reds under beds”. Throughout the 70s and the 80s virtually all the members of the ANC’s National Executive Committee in exile were also members of the SA Communist Party. The SACP wrote the Freedom Charter and formulated the ANC’s National Democratic Revolution ideology. It controlled the ANC’s armed wing. The Soviet Union was the ANC’s principal supporter and was actively involved in a major military intervention in southern Africa.

We searched desperately for solutions.

We tried reform: 

in the early 1980s we extended trade union rights to all workers;

in 1983 we tried to include the Coloured and Indian minorities in the same polity as whites;

by 1986 we had repealed about 100 apartheid laws and measures - including the hated pass laws and the Immorality Act;

we established the same matriculation standards for all population groups;

we extended substantial powers to black municipalities and restored black property rights; and

throughout the 80s we searched for power-sharing models that could accommodate the political rights of all South Africa’s peoples.

However, these reforms simply poured petrol on already inflamed expectations: the ANC’s battle cry was not “Reform!” - it was “Amandla!” 

The struggle was not merely about the repeal of apartheid laws: it was about power.

Nevertheless, South Africa was already changing. Rapid economic growth during the 1960s and 1970s was impacting economic relationships and political attitudes:

the non-white share of disposable income rose from 29% in 1960 to almost 50% in 1994;

by 1994 three times as many black youths were passing matric as whites - and there were more black students enrolled at university than whites;

the economy was becoming inextricably integrated with more and more young black South Africans moving into white collar jobs;

a whole generation of Afrikaners had moved into the middle class. They no longer shared the fiery nationalism of their parents; they were going to university and were exposed to international influences: as a result, they were becoming increasingly uncomfortable with apartheid.

By 1986 the National Party had accepted that there was no possibility that we would be able to retain our untrammelled right to national self-determination - because there was nowhere in South Africa where we came close to being a majority. We accepted - with enormous trepidation - that the only solution to our problems lay in reaching agreement with the genuine representatives of all South Africans on a new and inclusive constitution.

There are those who claim that we did not enter into negotiations “through the goodness of our hearts” - but were forced to do so by the ANC’s armed struggle and because of our collapsing economy. 

This is not true.

We initiated negotiations at the beginning of 1990 - not because we were weak - but because we were far stronger than we had been for years: 

by 1987 the ANC had accepted that it could not achieve victory through armed struggle;

after the decisive South African victory at the Battle of the Lomba River in southern Angola in October 1987 President Gorbachev pulled the plug on Soviet and Cuban military intervention in southern Africa. He instructed the Cubans and Angolans to reach an agreement with South Africa;

the ensuing Tripartite Agreement of 1988 led to the withdrawal of Cuban troops from Angola and to the successful implementation of the UN independence plan for Namibia;

in November 1989 the fall of the Berlin Wall signalled the collapse of Soviet Communism and left our principal opponent, the SACP, in disarray. It was an enormous victory for liberal democracy and for free market economics;

despite serious challenges - the economy was growing at 2,7% - faster than it has done during the past five years.

But above all, we genuinely wanted to find a just and lasting solution to the vexatious problems that had divided us for generations.  We wanted to create a better country for all our children.

Nelson Mandela realised this: on 15 April 1996 he said that

“Afrikaners had played a special role and occupied a singular position in the transition that our country has made.  It was their leaders who took the unprecedented step of participating in the negotiated transfer of political power.  In the process they - as a group - had to give up their sole right to power and access to economic advantage.”

I realised that the circumstances for successful negotiations would never again be so favourable. So on 2 February 1990, I removed all the possible obstacles to constitutional negotiations. My colleagues and I leapt through the window of opportunity that had been blown open by the winds of change from Eastern Europe.

It was 30 years - less one day - after Macmillan’s ‘Wind of Change’ speech.

Now, 30 years later, the new constitution that we negotiated is still in place - but it is under growing pressure. 

According to the ANC’s Strategy and Tactics documents the breakthrough of 1994 was simply a tactical ploy to achieve state power. Now that the balance of forces has shifted, the ANC believes that it can dispense with some of the sacred agreements that lie at the heart of the 1996 constitution:

the language and cultural rights that we included in the constitution are being seriously eroded; English has become the sole de facto official language and little or nothing has been done to develop our indigenous languages;

the government plans to amend the constitution to make it possible to expropriate property without compensation;

increasingly stringent BEE measures are progressively limiting the economic space within which minorities can operate; and, most seriously

South Africa can no longer be described as a non-racial society. The crucial protection that citizens enjoyed against unfair discrimination has, for all intents and purposes, been stripped away - sometimes by the very courts and institutions to which minorities looked for their protection;

South Africa in 2020 is once again one of the most racially regulated societies in the world.

Instead of healing the divisions of the past - as our constitution requires - we are more deeply divided by differing perceptions of our past than at any time since 1994.

How should we deal with these toxic divisions?

Firstly, the Constitution requires us to acknowledge the injustices of the past. It is essential to do so and to apologise for the harm inflicted by apartheid - as I have done, with genuine sincerity, on numerous occasions.

My apology is not just words and lip service. It is grounded in a deep and growing understanding of the pain, humiliation and damage that apartheid has caused for a majority of all South Africans. 

It is in this spirit that my colleagues and I repealed the last vestiges of apartheid legislation before we opened the way to negotiations on a new and inclusive non-racial constitution.  It is in this spirit that almost 70% of white South Africans supported the constitutional negotiations in the 1992 referendum.

Secondly, we should follow the prescripts of the constitution when dealing with the legacy of the past:

there must be restitution of property that was lost as a result of the racially discriminatory laws;

there is provision for land reform based on payment of just and equitable compensation for expropriated land;

the state may take action to promote the equality of people who were disadvantaged by unfair discrimination (so far, the actions that it has taken have been manifestly unsuccessful); and

we must all work together to improve the quality of life of all citizens and free the potential of each person by ensuring the progressive realization of all the rights in the constitution.

However, in implementing these constitutional prescriptions, we cannot compromise the foundational values of equality, human dignity and non-racialism on which the constitution is based.

We cannot accept a situation where some South Africans, because of their race, are regarded as morally inferior and as targets for perpetual discrimination because of the role that their ancestors played in the past.

Unfortunately, this is exactly what has been happening:

our leaders charge that some of our people, because of their race, are the ‘bearers of original sin’ - that is, sin that is hereditary and indelible - thereby consigning them to a status of perpetual moral inferiority;

they say that white people cannot be the ‘rightful owners of land’ - thereby shredding their right to equality before the law;

they declare that our ancestors should never have come to South Africa in the first place - thereby negating the proposition that South African belongs to all who live in it, united in their diversity;

judges of our highest court question whether white South Africans - and particularly Afrikaners - have a right to their own culture - thereby depriving them of their right to human dignity;

they regard Afrikaans as being tainted because it was ‘the language of apartheid’ - forgetting that most of its speakers were also victims of apartheid - thereby dispensing with the assurance that our languages would enjoy parity of esteem;

a palpably double standard has been established when dealing with racist remarks by black and white South Africans - thereby diluting the right of equality before the law;

the purveyors of a new global racial ideology tell people that because of their race they are automatically the bearers of privilege - regardless of their individual circumstances; that they are morally inferior and that their history and culture have no value. There is no place for such ideologies in a country based on the foundational value of non-racialism.

All of this is deepening dangerous cleavages in our society. It is once again propagating hurtful racial stereotypes and is creating a climate in which radical politicians are openly inciting racial animosity.

This is definitely not the way to deal with our past.

Despite all this, I remain convinced that our constitution still includes the best formula for a harmonious and successful multicultural society. 

That is why the FW de Klerk Foundation - now, and long after I am gone - will stand by that constitution as it was negotiated in our great national accord. That is why we shall continue to monitor compliance with the rights it proclaims and the institutions that it has created - and insist that they should be respected;

the Foundation will also continue to pay special attention to the cultural, religious and language rights that we believe are essential for healthy coexistence in multilingual and multicultural societies;

we shall insist on the moral and legal equality of all our peoples and shall oppose racial discrimination and prejudice of any kind from any quarter; and

the Foundation will, in addition, do everything it can to preserve and promote the heritage of our negotiated transition from the injustices of minority racial domination to the vision of constitutional justice and freedom in our constitution. This was not a victory for this party or that party. It was a victory for us all. All of us played indispensable roles in achieving what was the most remarkable accomplishment in our long and troubled history.

None of us can determine the nature of the worlds into which we are born or the injustices that we inherit from the past.   All that we can do is to wrestle with the political forces of our time and try to leave the world a freer, a more just and a better place than we found it.

In 1994 the baton passed to a new generation of leaders. Their challenge is to take the political, economic and constitutional situation that they inherited and to ensure that they leave a better legacy for the next generation. 

In this regard we all face tremendous problems. South Africa is a traumatized society. Traumatized by the legacy of apartheid. But also traumatized by growing poverty and unemployment, by violent crime and corruption, by gender violence and by an imploding economy.

In addressing these challenges we should learn from our past mistakes and successes:

from colonialism we should learn the arrogance and injustice that comes from asymmetric power relations - of racial domination and of treating with disdain those with little or no political power;

from apartheid we should learn the unacceptability of racism of any kind - of propagating negative racial stereotypes; of seeing and treating people as members of racial groups - rather than as individuals; and of consciously mistreating people on the basis of their race;

from ‘Separate Development’ we should learn the danger of ignoring social and economic realities and the terrible price of trying to force human beings and economic realities to conform with narrow ideological prescriptions; and

from our historic achievement between 1990 and 1994 we should learn that we can solve even the most intractable problems when we reach out to one another - when we understand one another’s reasonable interests and concerns and when we reach agreement on a shared vision for the future.

We achieved such a vision in 1996: it is based on human dignity, the achievement of equality; the advancement of human rights and freedoms; non-racialism, non-sexism; the supremacy of the constitution and the rule of law; and the establishment of genuine multiparty system of government that is open, accountable and responsive.

The current generation of leaders will be judged by the degree to which they learn from our divided past and advance our shared vision of a far more just, a far more united and a far more equitable future.

https://www.politicsweb.co.za/opinion/dealing-with-the-past

Israel’s exposure of Beirut missile sites a warning signal to Hezbollah

By Yaakov Lappin 

www.jns.org 

Jerusalem and the IDF hope that Hezbollah internalizes the risk that it would be taking by attempting another border attack, while bringing attention to its use of Lebanon’s embattled civilians as shields for a dangerous industry of guided missiles.
 
 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressing the 75th U.N. General Assembly via a video message on Sept. 29, 2020. Credit: GPO.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressing the 75th U.N. General Assembly via a video message on Sept. 29, 2020. Credit: GPO.
 

Israel’s latest exposure of the location of three precision-guided missile sites, which are embedded in heavily built-up areas of Beirut, was officially directed at the international community and at Lebanese civilians, and appeared to be a call to action. But it can also be seen as a veiled warning to Hezbollah itself, aimed at getting it to stand down from its dangerous attempts to exact vengeance against the Israel Defense Forces.

During his on speech on Tuesday to the U.N. General Assembly, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used the global stage to reveal the whereabouts of secret missile sites. His speech was soon followed by a detailed IDF video showing the exact location of the sites under residential buildings and in close proximity to many civilians.

Netanyahu placed Hezbollah’s total infiltration of the Lebanese state, as well as its conversion of Lebanon into a forward Iranian-run attack base, in the wider regional context, stating that Iran’s terror proxies are directly involved in violence throughout the Middle East, including in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Gaza and Lebanon.

This highlighting of the radical Iranian axis is a reminder of the fact that Tehran’s network remains active throughout the Middle East, although it is facing an increasingly well-defined coalition of moderate Sunni states and Israel.

Zooming in on Lebanon, Netanyahu referenced the disastrous Aug. 4 blast at Beirut’s seaport, which killed nearly 200 people, injured thousands and left hundreds of thousands of Beirut residents homeless.

“Now, here is where the next explosion could take place. Right here,” said Netanyahu, standing alongside a map of the Lebanese capital. “This is the Beirut neighborhood of Janah. It’s right next to the international airport. And here, Hezbollah is keeping a secret arms depot. This secret arms depot, right here, is adjacent, a meter away, from a gas company. These are gas canisters. Right here. It’s a few meters away from a gas station. It’s fifty meters away from the gas company. Here are more gas trucks. And it’s embedded in civilian housing here, civilian housing here. For the Janah neighborhood residents, this is the actual coordinates.”

Netanyahu’s next message was intended to stir opposition to Hezbollah’s actions among Beirut’s residents, against their use by Hezbollah as human shields for missile sites: “I say to the people of Janah, you’ve got to act now. You’ve got to protest this. Because if this thing explodes, it’s another tragedy.”

Netanyahu’s address comes just days after a Hezbollah weapons depot exploded in the southern Lebanese village of Ain Qana. In 2019, Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Dannon warned that “Iran and its Quds Force have been exploiting civilian maritime channels, and specifically the Port of Beirut. The Iranian regime is transferring weapons in various ways. They use commercial companies, mainly from Europe, to support Hezbollah and develop its missile program. Unfortunately, the port of Beirut has become Hezbollah’s port.”

A top-priority Israeli security concern

The timing of Netanyahu’s latest statement cannot be divorced from the current impasse between the IDF and Hezbollah. Tensions have been extremely high for months along the Israeli-Lebanese border due to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah’s insistence of enforcing his “equations” on Israel, according to which, any Hezbollah personnel killed in Israeli air strikes in Syria will trigger “proportionate” retaliation by Hezbollah against the IDF.

Hezbollah, as well as the Iranian Quds Force, have repeatedly attempted to implement this “equation” in recent months through failed border attacks, following the death of a Hezbollah member in an alleged Israeli airstrike on an Iranian weapons site in Syria in July. Each time so far, they have run into a prepared IDF on high alert and able to spot the threat in time as a result of an array of field intelligence and situational awareness capabilities.

Now, with IDF officials warning that any successful Hezbollah attack will trigger a firm, painful Israeli response—and that Israel will not accept Hezbollah’s equations—the ball is in Nasrallah’s court.

Israel’s latest message about the location of the missile sites can also be seen as timely reminder of the scope of the IDF’s intelligence penetration of Hezbollah and its deep awareness of the organization’s activities across Lebanon.

Jerusalem has repeatedly warned that it will not tolerate the presence of precision-guided missile factories on Lebanese soil, and the messages must be seen as direct warnings to both Hezbollah and Iran to cease work in the missile-production sites. Such sites could end up being targets in any major future escalation, which could begin with a Hezbollah border strike that triggered an escalation dynamic.

It is worth noting that the precision-guided missile (PGM) program, led by Hezbollah and Iran jointly, forms a top-priority Israeli security concern since allowing Hezbollah to possess such weapons would give it the ability to accurately target strategic sites deep inside Israel.

The PGM project includes the effort to convert existing unguided rockets into guided missiles, as well as building an array of missile manufacturing sites in Lebanon and shielding it by planting the facilities in the middle of civilian areas, often under residential buildings.

In addition to the site in the Janah neighborhood, Israel revealed an underground PGM site that is situated underneath a seven-story residential building, where more than 70 families live. The building stands right next to a medical center and a church.

A third site, build underneath a five-story residential building housing some 50 families, is located next to a mosque.

Ultimately, Israel hopes that Hezbollah internalizes the risk that it would be taking by attempting another border attack, while marking out for the entire world its cynical use of Lebanon’s embattled civilians as shields for a dangerous industry of guided missiles.

Gadgets for groceries: COVID-19 sparks Philippines online barter trade

 02 Oct 2020 10:44AM

www.channelnewsasia.com 

 Gadgets for groceries: coronavirus sparks Philippines online barter trade |  Reuters | Business | The Journal Pioneer 

Grace Lagaday, 31, is photographed with her husband and children at a relative's home, in Rizal province, east of Manila, Philippines, Sep 23, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez)

 

MANILA: In the middle of a coronavirus lockdown in the Philippine capital, Grace Lagaday was struggling to breastfeed her newborn without milk storage bottles and nursing pads.

With shopping centres shut and public movement restricted, Lagaday turned to a centuries-old method of trade with a new tech twist: Online bartering.

A search of Facebook barter trade groups found the supplies she needed for her baby girl and they were in Lagaday's hands the next day, in return for bags of M&M chocolates and a jar of Nutella spread.

"I really needed breastfeeding stuff but very limited goods were available," Lagaday told Reuters. "For a mum who gave birth during this pandemic season, bartering helped me find good deals for my baby."

Lagaday, who has since traded clothes hangers for 5kg of rice and an electric mosquito killer for 2L of cooking oil, is among hundreds of thousands of Filipinos who have joined Facebook barter groups in recent months.

  Gadgets for Groceries: Coronavirus Sparks Philippines Online Barter Trade |  World News | US News
Objects, mostly baby essentials, acquired from Grace Lagaday's online bartering are photographed in Rizal province, east of Manila, Philippines, Sep 23, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez)

Reuters has identified more than 100 barter groups, some with as many as a quarter of a million members, that have sprung up since the Philippines' main island of Luzon, home to half its 107 million population, entered a hard lockdown in mid-March that lasted two months.

READ: COVID-19 – Strict mask, visor rules make Philippine commuters sweat

Among the extreme exchanges: A 36-year-old man from Cebu province in central Philippines traded a 1993 Mitsubishi Lancer for 125,000 pesos (US$2,574) in cash and canned goods, noodles, and sacks of rice that he distributed to the poor, while a 20-year-old college student, also from Cebu, swapped two buckets of fried chicken for a live gamefowl.

Barter trade has a long tradition in the Philippines, an archipelago of more than 7,600 islands that can make transportation of goods difficult at the best of times.

Shifting the practice online was a natural progression in a country that is the most Internet-dependent in the world. Filipinos spend almost 10 hours on the Internet each day, compared with a global average of nearly seven hours, according to 2020 data from social media managers Hootsuite and We Are Social.

Social media browsing accounts for almost four hours of that daily use, the highest in the world, compared to an average of almost 2.5 hours.

Google searches for "barter trade" surged 203 per cent over April and May and with Manila and nearby provinces still subjected to some movement restrictions, the Facebook groups continue to buzz with activity.

Thousands of posts a day vie for attention for swaps of books, clothes, gadgets and accessories, glassware, appliances, cars, groceries and animals.

  Gadgets for groceries: coronavirus sparks Philippines online barter trade
Grace Lagaday, 31, arrives at a relative's home where her children stay while she is at work, in Rizal province, east of Manila, Philippines, Sep 23, 2020. (Photo: REUTERS/Eloisa Lopez)

An hour after offering her father's gamefowl for a trade, Karly Jan Tanola went home with 16 pieces of fried chicken.

"I made a deal with the first person who commented and because of his excitement to get the fighting cock, he hurriedly left work and met me," she told Reuters.

POLICY BACKFLIP

The resurgence of barter trade online is causing some headaches for the government. Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez performed an embarrassing backflip in July to reassure people that swaps for personal gain were fine just a day after he warned that barter trade was a tax-dodging illegal practice.

That stance had drawn the ire of thousands of social media users who lambasted the government for finding new ways to impose taxes even amid the pandemic.

With the economy entering its first recession in almost three decades and unemployment spiking to a record high of 17.7 per cent as a result of the pandemic, people expect to be relying on online barter trade for some time.

"I sorted through old stuff to trade with people in need of it," said Josefa Amadure, who was looking for a baby rocker as she plans for the arrival of her second child. "Bartering is popular and safe because no cash is involved."

 

Friday 2 October 2020

South Africa: Farm murder: Young farmer tortured and strangled to death, Paul Roux

 

South Africa: Farm murder: Young farmer tortured and strangled to death, Paul Roux

Oorgrens veiligheid


FF Plus - 'Minister Cele must say whether farm murder victim deserved to be tortured'
FF Plus - 'Minister Cele must say whether farm murder victim deserved to be tortured'

A farm murder took place on the evening of Thursday 1 October 2020, in Paul Roux, West of Bethlehem, in the Free State province of South Africa. A young farmer, Brendin Horner (21) was attacked and brutally murdered by an unknown number of attackers after leaving his fathers farm on route home at 19:00. At 22:00 the family went looking for him as he never arrived home but found nothing and could not reach him on his phone.

On Friday 2 October 2020, at about 05:35 Brendin’s father and girl friend continued the search and found the young man near the gate of the farm. He was tied to a pole by his neck and had been brutally beaten, tortured and strangled to death.

The bakkie he was driving was later found abandoned along the S194. There is no other information available at this stage. The police are investigating but there have been no arrests.

Information supplied by Oorgrens veiligheid

South Africa Today – South Africa News

https://southafricatoday.net/south-africa-news/free-state/farm-murder-young-farmer-tortured-and-strangled-to-death-paul-roux/

Investors Are Betting Big On Canada’s New Gold Rush

By Chris Stebbings - Sep 30, 2020
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Investors-Are-Betting-Big-On-Canadas-New-Gold-Rush.html


These are unprecedented times of pandemic, US election uncertainty, and the rising fear of the potential for violent upheaval. Even legendary investors are advising people to flee to safe havens like cash or gold--and fast.

With gold now back in the safe haven spotlight like never before, many eyes are swiveling toward Canada, where the makings of a gold boom are just getting started.

Canada--home of the Val-d’Or Gold Rush--is making history.

Again.

And suddenly, a major rush to gold is leading to a surge of investor interest in exploration companies--the riskiest place to pour money into gold-mining, but also potentially the most lucrative.

Liquidity is now moving in major waves into the junior gold-mining sector, and the next big gold discovery is set to mint another round of millionaires, if not billionaires.

When it comes to the next discovery, the smaller the company is that is sitting on it, usually the bigger the reward.

Try a 7000% payback on for size …

That’s what investors earned recently when they piled money into Amex Exploration (TSX.V:AMEX).

Amex surged 7000% in the past year alone on a giant gold discovery in Quebec at its Perron Gold Project.

Now, with Canada’s gold-mining boom just getting underway, the next potential discovery is already being anticipated.

This time, we like the chances of Starr Peak Exploration Ltd. (TSX:STE.V; OTC:STRPF), which is parked right next to the Amex discovery on one side and a major past-producing mine (which it now owns, too) on the other side.

And its shares have jumped 300% in the past 12 months.



Why Warren Buffett Loves Canadian Gold

The observers of legendary investors were shocked in July when Warren Buffett--a long-time value hunter who has never much liked gold--bought big on Canadian major gold producer Barrick Gold (NYSE:GOLD) (TSX:ABX).

That surprise move gave legs to an already emerging Canadian gold boom.

Buffett sees Barrick as a premier hedge against inflation and volatility and he was willing to go to a Canadian based miner to get it.

Buffett’s move speaks volumes about what is likely to come in Canadian gold companies, and why gold is back in fashion as the only serious hedge against the wild uncertainty on our doorstep.

This could be one of the best barometers telling us where gold is going.

But the real money to be made isn’t in a simple hedge against inflation with a giant gold miner like Barrick.

The real risk/reward potential is in the next junior explorer to make a huge discovery.

And some real money is betting on Quebec and the Abitibi Greenstone Belt which is pumping out “world-class” deposits and is still largely underexplored.

Investors are ready for a repeat discovery, but hoping this time through Starr Peak Exploration. That’s why some of the Amex directors have jumped on as shareholders themselves.

Then, Starr Peak (TSX:STE.V; OTC:STRPF) bought up the past-producing gold mine on the other side.

Figure 1: Geological Map of the NewMetal property with the newly acquired claims blocs with respect to Amex Exploration’s Perron Project.



Now, it’s got 74 mineral claims on some 2,280 hectares in probably the world’s best-play gold venue.

And it’s getting ready to drill.

Because of the money pouring into the Canadian junior mining segment, and because this has turned out to be such a compelling discovery narrative, Starr Peak is fully funded for a drill campaign.

Last month, it secured a top geological consulting firm in Quebec, Laurentia Exploration to move things forward. The best news: this is the same firm behind the AMEX discovery.

On September 9th, Starr launched VTEM (Versatile Time Domain Electromagnetic) system surveys on the main bloc of its NewMétal property, which includes the past-producing Normetal mine. It also just launched high-resolution drone mag geophysics surveys over the entire property, including its new plays of Rousseau and Turgeon Lake Gold.

Quebec’s Normétal Mine has turned out millions of tons of ore containing high-grade gold, copper, and zinc. The adjacent mine, Normetmar, shows a historic resource of 306,000 t grading 11% zinc, of which only ~48,000 t has been mined since 1990. It also shows several gold intersections.

Rousseau is a bloc of 12 claims covering over 470 hectares in the Rollmac gold zone of 31,298 tonnes grading 11.99 g/t Au (historical) …

And Turgeon Lake gives Starr Peak two more claims covering almost 113 hectares with samples at the water line assaying up to 168.3 g/t Au, 30.2 g/t Au and 23.7 g/t Au (GM 52490) and a drill hole assaying 18.7 g/t Au over 3.09 m, including 68.9 g/t Au and 10.48 g/t Ag over 0.4 m.(historical). Because these figures are historical, Starr Peak is relying on them just as great indicators of gold mineralization. The company will do its own drilling to get current figures.

Starr Peak (TSX:STE.V; OTC:STRPF) gained exposure after buying up the neighboring property to Amex’s right before Amex’a big discovery. But now it’s going mainstream, and once the drill bit hits the rock, it’ll be completely out of the closet.

What Could Starr Peak Find?

If the Amex discovery is anything to go by, Starr peak has the potential for another world-class, high-grade gold find that would push the Canadian gold boom over the edge.

AMEX’s Perron Gold Project is a massive 45 square kilometers boasting two significant faults that cover more than 15 kilometers of strike.

Now, Amex is in the middle of its own massive, 300,000-meter drilling campaign, and that campaign (cashed up with $25 million) is operating six rigs, nonstop, with four more rigs being added in the coming weeks.

And they’re working their way closer and closer to Starr Peak’s property line. The closer they get, which is less than a kilometer away right now, the higher the grades are getting and the shallower the depths.

With each meter closer that finds high grades, Starr Peak’s potential increases.

If you missed the speeding train that was Amex, which now has a ~$254 million market cap and whose early-in investors have already sucked up all the outsized upside, Starr Peak is one place to look.

Its market cap is only ~C$40 million, which leaves a ton of room for upside in the event of a discovery.

Canadian Gold Exploration: The Best Game In Town

Follow the money.

It will take you directly to Canada’s gold mines.

By 31 July this year, the TSX Venture Exchange (dominated by junior explorers) raised C$1.7 billion year-to-date.

To put that into perspective: That’s 86% more than they had raised by the same time last year.

It also means that junior explorers on the TSX are basically responsible for raising nearly half of all cash raised by miners from January-July.

The money is going to the junior explorers, where lots of the upside is at a time when gold is a real safety net, and when Canada is the most promising venue in the world.

Investor enthusiasm has never been higher, and that is likely to lead to a great deal of exposure for Starr Peak (TSX:STE.V; OTC:STRPF) once it identifies its drill targets and lines up its campaign. Or even before that, every time Amex releases positive new drill results creeping up to Starr Peak’s border.

Gold is back in the spotlight, and nothing will shine more than the next big potential discovery.

Other gold companies looking to strike it big:


Newmont (NYSE:NEM, TSX:NGT)

As the world’s largest gold mining company, Newmont cannot be ignored. Founded over a century ago, this veteran miner has one of the most impressive executive teams in the business and a global footprint to boot. With operations in Nevada, Colorado, Ontario, Quebec, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Australia, Ghana, Argentina, Peru, and Suriname, Newmont is as diverse as it is powerful.

The big news for the company last year was its acquisition of Goldcorp. Though it was controversial at the time, the $10 billion acquisition has paid off in a big way. As gold climbed to record highs thanks to investors piling into gold due to the COVID pandemic, Newmont has seen a boom in its share price. This year, gold has soared from $1282 to over $2000 at one point, and Newmont’s stock rose with it, earning investors as much as 90% returns on their original purchase.

Tom Palmer, President and Chief Executive Officer noted, “We are pleased to be ramping up operations at our four sites previously placed in care and maintenance and we remain committed to protecting our workforce and neighboring communities,” adding “We continue to respond to this pandemic from a position of strength and Newmont’s diverse portfolio in top-tier jurisdictions provides a long-term, stable production profile with the potential to generate significant free cash flow over time.”

Yamana Gold (NYSE:AUY, TSX:YRI)

Yamana is another gold giant with a massive presence in the industry. And it’s been on a tear this year. Since March, the miner has seen its share price climb by as much as 145%, and it could be heading even higher. That’s great news for investors looking to jump on board the gold rally. Though it weighs in with a modest $5.4 billion market cap, Yamana’s $5.70 per share price is accessible for all types of investors. And if that wasn’t enough, it also has a long history of increasing its dividends which gives investors even more incentive to grab a few shares and hold on for the long haul.

Recently, Yamana released a promising set of exploration results for its Minera Florida, El Peñón, and Jacobina mines, noting that “Exploration results continue to support year-over-year growth, with promising new discoveries in the first half of 2020, indicating excellent potential for new mineral reserves and mineral resources at year end.“

Kinross Gold Corp. (NYSE:KGC; TSE:K)

Kinross is a relative newcomer in the gold world compared to some of its 100+ year old peers, but it’s quickly become a giant in the industry. With operations across the globe, it’s big picture approach is paying off. The $11 billion gold gaint has mines in Brazil, Ghana, Mauritania, Russia and the United States, and it’s looking to expand even further.

Since 2015, Kinross has seen its share price rise by as much as 400%. In fact, this year alone, it’s already up by as much as 85%, and it’s showing no signs of slowing. It has a strong balance sheet, great earnings, and at a time where investors are flocking into safe-haven assets at a record pace, it’s likely to climb even higher.

Even legendary investor Warren Buffett is betting big on the new age gold rush, buying up a $563 million stake in Barrick – a move which could be a sign of things to come.

Barrick Gold (NYSE:GOLD; TSX:ABX)

Barrick is a giant in the gold world, pulling down 140.8 tons of gold in 2018 alone. And while it has been overtaken by Newmont following the company’s merger with Goldcorp, it operates in over 13 countries including Canada, Dominican Republic, United States, Zambia, Saudi Arabia, Papua New Guinea, Cote dIvoire, Chile, and more.

Living up to its massive $54 billion market cap, Barrick Gold is on track to produce a much as 5 million ounces of gold and as much as 500 million pounds of copper this year. At current prices, that could add up to an additional $1.5 billion in revenue from its gold and copper assets alone.

Despite a dip in March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year, Barrick has seen a 56% increase in its share prices. And that’s on top of some of the industry’s most appetizing dividends. And now that the Fed has assured the United States that there will be no more rate hikes in the near future, Barrick could see even more growth.

Eldorado Gold (NYSE:EGO; TSX:ELD)

Eldorado is another Canadian giant that’s having an incredible year. Though the COVID-19 pandemic has forced the company to tread cautiously, Eldorado still managed to pull down a massive $43 million in the second quarter alone. And it’s done so while maintaining a healthy cash flow of $63.4-million in the second quarter, increasing significantly from $4.8-million in from the year before and over $7-million from the first quarter thanks to strong sales and record-high gold prices

“Our outstanding operational performance during the quarter positions us to continue to generate significant value for our stakeholders. Even while managing COVID-19, we achieved strong quarterly production while seeing lower all-in sustaining costs,” said George Burns, President and CEO, adding “We are pleased to have made our first scheduled term loan repayment in June. Additionally, we have issued a redemption notice to repay $59 million dollars of principal in August under the equity clawback provision of our senior secured notes. We are committed to reducing our debt, while at the same time maintaining a strong liquidity position as we continue to grow our business."

By. Chris Stebbings




**IMPORTANT! BY READING OUR CONTENT YOU EXPLICITLY AGREE TO THE FOLLOWING. PLEASE READ CAREFULLY**

Forward-Looking Statements

This news release contains forward-looking information which is subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Forward looking statements in this release include that prices for gold will retain value in future as currently expected; that Starr Peak can fulfill all its obligations to acquire its Quebec property, and acquire the additional properties announced; that Starr Peak’s Quebec property can achieve drilling and mining success for gold; that historical geological information and estimations will prove to be accurate; that high-grade targets exist; and that Starr Peak will be able to carry out its business plans, including timing for drilling. These forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking information. Risks that could change or prevent these statements from coming to fruition include that the Company may not complete all the property purchases for various reasons; it may not be able to finance its intended drilling program; Starr Peak may not raise sufficient funds to carry out its plans; geological interpretations and technological results based on current data that may change with more detailed information or testing; and despite promise, there may be no commercially viable minerals or ore on Starr Peak’s property. The forward-looking information contained herein is given as of the date hereof and the Company assumes no responsibility to update or revise such information to reflect new events or circumstances, except as required by law.

DISCLAIMERS

This communication is for entertainment purposes only. Never invest purely based on our communication. We have not been compensated by Starr Peak but may in the future be compensated to conduct investor awareness advertising and marketing for TSXV:STE. The information in our communications and on our website has not been independently verified and is not guaranteed to be correct.

SHARE OWNERSHIP. The owner of Oilprice.com owns shares of this featured company and therefore has an additional incentive to see the featured company’s stock perform well. The owner of Oilprice.com will not notify the market when it decides to buy more or sell shares of this issuer in the market. The owner of Oilprice.com will be buying and selling shares of this issuer for its own profit. This is why we stress that you conduct extensive due diligence as well as seek the advice of your financial advisor or a registered broker-dealer before investing in any securities.

NOT AN INVESTMENT ADVISOR. The writer of this article is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH and consult with a licensed investment professional before making an investment. This communication should not be used as a basis for making any investment.

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The Coconut Whisperer

Sixth sense? Scientists claim to have discovered FIRST animal organs that can ‘see’ magnetic fields

 

Sixth sense? Scientists claim to have discovered FIRST animal organs that can ‘see’ magnetic fields

Sixth sense? Scientists claim to have discovered FIRST animal organs that can ‘see’ magnetic fields
Researchers in Germany claim to have found the first pair of mammalian eyes that can ‘see’ magnetic fields, in a growing but still mysterious area of research into a possible ‘sixth sense.’

Scientists have long-suspected that animals like birds can somehow sense magnetic fields and use them to navigate, while a new research indicates that dogs also navigate using a similar pseudo-extra sensory perception. 

One recent study suggests that magnetotactic bacteria living inside animals might explain this uncanny ability. Some scientists even posit that humans may possess a magnetic sixth sense. Despite all of these intriguing theories, science still can't explain what biological mechanism underpins this strange ability to 'see' magnetic fields. 

Now, however, researchers from the University of Duisburg-Essen in Germany studying the rather unusual Ansell's mole-rat (Fukomys anselli) propose another means by which animals might navigate in the darkness. 

These furry, subterranean cylinders with gigantic teeth that stick out over their closed lips always nest in the south-eastern part of their den. 

Their eyes measure just two millimeters in diameter, and are largely used to distinguish between light and dark but not much else. 

“They do not orient by vision,” zoologist and lead author Kai Caspar says. “Vision is more or less completely unimportant for them.”

To test out exactly how these mole rats made their way through the mucky, murky depths they call home, scientists surgically removed the mole-rats’ eyes (a process called enucleation).

https://www.rt.com/news/502231-eyes-mammals-see-magnetic-fields/


Trump adviser Hope Hicks tests positive for the coronavirus

 

www.reuters.com

(Reuters) - Hope Hicks, a top adviser to President Donald Trump, has tested positive for the coronavirus, the president confirmed in an interview with Fox News on Thursday, adding that he has been tested and may have to quarantine.

Hope Hicks, top Trump aide tests positive for coronavirus | The Times

Hicks travels regularly with the president on Air Force One and, along with other senior aides, accompanied him to Ohio for the presidential debate on Tuesday and to Minnesota for a campaign event on Wednesday.

“She tested positive,” Trump said. “So whether we quarantine or whether we have it ... I don’t know.”

Trump said he and first lady Melania Trump had been tested for the virus again and would know the results later on Thursday or Friday. “I spend a lot of time with Hope, and so does the first lady. And she’s tremendous,” he said.

The president, who is tested regularly, has kept up a rigorous travel schedule across the country in recent weeks, holding rallies with thousands of people, despite warnings from public health professionals against having events with large crowds, in the run up to the Nov. 3 election.

Trump has come under sharp criticism for his response to the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 200,000 people in the United States alone. The president has touted his management of the crisis.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has lambasted Trump for not having a clear national plan to tackle the pandemic. Biden, a former vice president, regularly wears a mask and has eschewed big campaign events. He is leading Trump in national polls.

Trump and his staff regularly do not wear masks, and Trump has denigrated people who wear them often. Health professionals say mask-wearing is one of the key things people can do to help prevent the spread of the virus.

At the White House, people who are around Trump, including some reporters, get tested on a regular basis. But the White House did away with daily temperature checks for everyone who enters the complex months ago, and people who are tested for the virus interact with others in the White House campus who are not.

The White House said in a statement that Trump “takes the health and safety of himself and everyone who works in support of him and the American people very seriously” and that it followed guidelines for limiting COVID-19 exposure to the greatest extent possible.

Vice President Mike Pence’s spokeswoman, Katie Miller, tested positive for the virus earlier this year and suffered from symptoms before recovering.

Trump said he was surprised that Hicks had tested positive.

“She knows there’s a risk, but she’s young,” he said.

Hicks returned to the White House earlier this year after a stint in the private sector. She served previously as White House communications director and as a spokeswoman for Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.

Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Eric Beech; Editing by Peter Cooney and Raju Gopalakrishnan