In These New Times

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Posts Tagged ‘British crimes in Africa’

Is Zimbabwe Violence a British Operation?

Posted by alfied on July 5, 2008

By Douglas De Groot

Executive Intelligence Review

African military intelligence sources have told EIR that the brutality and professional, execution-style nature of the killings and violence during the period leading up to the June 27 Presidential run-off election in Zimbabwe were obviously not the actions of misguided youth, but reminded him of the British-style special-forces counterinsurgency operations that were used against the freedom fighters in Zimbabwe before independence, which were carried out by the Rhodesian Selous Scouts. Reports indicate that the gruesome violence, unprecedented since independence (in 1980), that the London-based Anglo-Dutch financial cartel-dominated international press is using to work world opinion into a frenzy against Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, is controlled top-down as a high-level British-run counterinsurgency operation. Read the rest of this entry »

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Morgan Tsvangirai: Out and in for Royal Dutch Courage

Posted by alfied on June 28, 2008

BY Nathaniel Manheru, Zimbabwe Herald

I have no difficulties with Westerners hating President Mugabe, or calling for his head even, as did British MPs in this week’s debate in their House of Commons. That is to be expected, in fact an affirmation that Mugabe is right. White westerners, both for direct and vicarious reasons, have cause to be revulsed by Robert Mugabe, and thus reason to hate him to his grave. He has dismantled what took the empire a good nine decades to build, a plentiful legacy so badly needed in these days of a maddening scramble for natural resources. Read the rest of this entry »

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