Africa's elite are plundering their countries

tay

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A new report based on the Panama Papers reveals how Africa's politicians, generals and business leaders are systematically siphoning off billions of dollars and parking the money offshore.

The investigative report, "The Plunder Route to Panama", highlights how Africa's leaders are doing more than accepting bribes from foreign companies or evading tax. Rather, they are systematically setting up power structures run by favored friends or family members to steal billions of dollars and store the loot outside of their countries, the report finds. This cuts budgets, hinders development and keeps people impoverished.

The investigation by a consortium of African journalists was inspired by the Panama Papers, a massive leak of documents of offshore accounts and companies that included the names of numerous African politicians. This new report attempts to follow the trail back to Africa to see where the money came from.

"We often point fingers at foreign multinationals that come to make a fortune here in Africa," Maxime Domegni, a Togo journalist involved in the investigation, told DW. "But this investigation shows the extent to which African oligarchs are complicit in plundering the continent."

Carried out by the African Investigative Publishing Collective, Africa Uncensored and Zam magazine, the report takes a detailed look at seven African countries: Togo, Mozambique, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Burundi, South Africa and Botswana.


Togo's shadowy dealings in phosphates

Togo, for example, is home to vast reserves of phosphate directly managed from the offices of president Faure Gnassinge, whose family have ruled the West African country for 50 years. Togo earns 40 percent of its export earnings from the mineral, which is crucial for making fertilizers. The investigation found that phosphate would generate more wealth if it weren't being sold for two thirds of the going rate to a "shady" shipping family called Gupta. (The consortium behind the report is researching if this Gupta family is connected to South Africa's Guptas - more about them below.)

"We are critical of the total lack of transparency in the management of the phosphate industry in Togo," said journalist Domegni. In a country where more than 80 percent of the population live under the poverty line, "those benefiting from [phosphate] are those who manage the country with the complicity of their friends," he said.

more

Panama Papers: Africa
 

Blackleaf

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That's why the like of Irish millionaires like Geldof and Bono telling us poorer people to give money to Africa is a waste of time.
 

tay

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Yes, I don't think this is particularly shocking news but now they have the proof on paper.....
 

Curious Cdn

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Hey, they learned from the best. After the way that the European imperial powers looted Africa, those local potentates look like pikers.
 

Danbones

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So when are they gonna clear them selves some NFL fields on the vacant land?
 

Curious Cdn

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So, blame the Europeans, shrug your shoulders, and have another beer?

Cool.

Us "old" North Americans don't have a lot of historic responsibility for the corruption in Africa. Those who caused the problems should be pressed for the solutions.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Us "old" North Americans don't have a lot of historic responsibility for the corruption in Africa. Those who caused the problems should be pressed for the solutions.

Those who caused the problems are dead. And you ain't pressing nobody. Like so many Old Stock lefties, you simply want to assign blame, then get back to the hockey game.

Really, it's as bad or worse than the racism of the righties.
 

Danbones

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Yeah ever since the tribe I am descended from was basically wiped out by the same Rhodesian style white disease and gun humping planet vampires, we have been let off the hook for all the crimes we Njns committed in Africa

Well, except for the ones that went to the christian reserves, they bought into the hook.
 

Blackleaf

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There are tens of millions of black Africans on this continent who would question if they were better off under British rule.

There are tens of millions of them who KNOW they were better off. Just ask the Zimbabweans.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Those who caused the problems are dead. And you ain't pressing nobody. Like so many Old Stock lefties, you simply want to assign blame, then get back to the hockey game.

Really, it's as bad or worse than the racism of the righties.

The descendants of those who caused the problems are living in richly gilded European cities, made that way by looting the Third World.
 

Danbones

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Niger Ambush Came After ‘Massive Intelligence Failure,’ Source Say

WASHINGTON — A senior congressional aide who has been briefed on the deaths of four U.S. servicemen in Niger says the ambush by militants stemmed in part from a "massive intelligence failure."

The Pentagon has said that 40 to 50 militants ambushed a 12-man U.S. force in Niger on Oct. 4, killing four and wounding two. The U.S. patrol was seen as routine and had been carried out nearly 30 times in the six months before the attack, the Pentagon has reported.

The aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak publicly, said the House and Senate armed services committees have questions about the scope of the U.S. mission in Niger, and whether the Pentagon is properly supporting the troops on the ground there

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/africa...resulted-massive-intelligence-failure-n812626

I am guessing there is more to the story then we are being told
 

Blackleaf

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Problem number one was leaving an unnatural patchwork of national borders behind. The Rwandan massacre, for example, is an example of what a dreadful failure that proved to be.

So everything was all hunky-dory before the Europeans turned up and impoverished the previously wealthy Africans and their high quality of life?

Also, we shouldn't be comparing the brutal French Empire with the benign British Empire. Africa and the rest of the world were much better off when the British Empire held sway. And there'd be no Canada today without it, of course.