Book Read Free

Africa

Page 145

by Guy Arnold


  SSIM – South Sudan Independence Movement

  SSU – Sudanese Socialist Union

  SWANLA – South West Africa Native Labour Association

  SWANU – South West African National Union

  SWAPO – South West Africa People’s Organization

  SWATF – South West Africa Territorial Force

  SYL – Somali Youth League

  TANU – Tanzania (formerly Tanganyika) African National Union

  TEC – Transitional Executive Council (South Africa)

  TGNU – Transitional Government of National Unity (Namibia)

  TMC – Transitional Military Council (Sudan)

  TNCs – Transnational Corporations

  TNG – Transitional National Government (Somalia)

  TNP – Transvaal National Party (South Africa)

  TPLF – Tigray People’s Liberation Front

  TRC – Truth and Reconciliation Commission (South Africa)

  TSCTI – Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Initiative

  TTF – Timber Task Forces (Ghana)

  TUCSA – Trade Union Council of South Africa

  UAM – Union Africaine et Malgache

  UAMCE – Union Africaine et Malgache de Co-opération Economique

  UANC – United African National Congress

  UAR – United Arab Republic

  UCPN – Union des Chefs et des Populations du Nord (Togo)

  UDE – Union Douanière Equatoriale

  UDEAC – Union Douanière des Etats de l’Afrique Central

  UDF – United Democratic Front (Malawi)

  UDF – United Democratic Front (South Africa)

  UDI – Unilateral Declaration of Independence

  UDP – United Democratic Party (Gambia)

  UDPM – Union Démocratique du Peuple Malien

  UDPS – Union pour la démocratie et le progrès social (Congo)

  UDV – Union Démocratique Voltaique

  UEAC – Union des Etats de l’Afrique Central

  UGCC – United Gold Coast Convention Party

  UGTA – Union Générale des Travailleurs Algériens

  UGTT – Union Générale Tunisienne de Travail

  UMA – Union du Maghreb Arabe

  Umkhonto we Sizwe – ‘Spear of the Nation’ – militant wing of the ANC (qv)

  UNAMIR – United Nations Assistance Mission in Rwanda

  UNAMISL – United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone

  UNAVEM – United Nations Angola Verification Mission

  UNC – Union Nationale Camerounaise

  UNC – United National Convention (Ghana)

  UNCTAD – UN Conference on Trade and Development

  UNDP – United Nations Development Programme

  UNECA – United Nations Economic Commission for Africa

  UNFP – Union Nationale des Forces Populaires (Morocco)

  UNHCR – United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

  UN-ICC – United Nations-International Chamber of Commerce

  UNIP – United National Independence Party (Zambia)

  UNIR – Union Nationale pour l’Indépendence et la Révolution (Chad)

  UNITA – União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola

  UNOSOM-II – United Nations Operation in Somalia II

  UNPARED – United Nations Programme of Action for Africa’s Economic “Recovery and Development

  UNTAF – United Nations Task Force

  UNTAG – United Nations Transition Assistance Group

  UP – Umma Party (Sudan)

  UPA – Union das Populações de Angola

  UPC – Uganda People’s Congress

  UPDS – Union pour la Démocratie et le Progrès Social (Congo)

  UPN – Unity Party of Nigeria

  UPP – United People’s Party (Nigeria)

  UPRONA – Union pour le Progrès National (Burundi)

  UPS – Union Progressiste Sénégalaise

  USAID – US Agency for International Development

  USC – United Somali Congress

  USIS – US Information Services

  WANS – West African National Secretariat

  WCC – World Council of Churches

  WFP – World Food Programme

  WPE – Workers’ Party of Ethiopia

  WSB – West Side Boys (Sierra Leone)

  WSLF – Western Somalia Liberation Front

  WTO – World Trade Organization

  ZANLA – Zimbabwe National Liberation Army

  ZANU – Zimbabwe African National Union

  ZANU-PF – Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front

  ZAPU – Zimbabwe African People’s Union

  ZAPU-PF – Zimbabwe African People’s Union-Patriotic Front

  ZCTU – Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions

  ZIPRA – Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army (military wing of ZAPU – qv)

  ZUM – Zimbabwe Unity Movement

  Notes

  Prologue

  1 Edward Mortimer, France and the Africans 1944–1960 Faber and Faber, 1969, p.29

  2 Mortimer, op. cit., p.29

  3 Mortimer, op. cit., p.34

  4 George Bennett, ‘Settlers and Politics in Kenya’ in History of East Africa vol. II, eds. Vincent Harlow and E. M. Chilver, OUP, 1965, p.331

  5 John Middleton, ‘Kenya: Administration and Changes in African Life’, in History of East Africa vol. II, eds. Vincent Harlow and E. M. Chilver, OUP, 1965, p.386

  6 Middleton, op. cit., p.386

  7 Waruhiu Itote ‘General China’, Mau Mau in Action TransAfrica, 1979 p.6

  8 Cyril Ehrlich, ‘The Uganda Economy’ in History of East Africa vol. II, eds. Vincent Harlow and E. M. Chilver, OUP, 1965 p.469

  9 J. E. Flint, ‘Zanzibar 1890–1950’, in History of East Africa vol. II, eds. Vincent Harlow and E. M. Chilver, OUP, 1965, p.667

  10 William F. Gutteridge, ‘Military and police Forces in Colonial Africa’, in Colonialism in Africa 1870–1960, vol. II ‘The History and Politics of Colonialism 1914–1960’, eds. L. H. Gann and Peter Duignan, C.U.P. 1979, p.309

  11 Gann and Duignan, op. cit. p.19 (note)

  12 Gutteridge, op. cit., p.290

  13 West Africa, 17/11/1945

  14 Mortimer, op. cit., p.392

  15 Middleton, op. cit., p.392

  16 Jomo Kenyatta, Suffering Without Bitterness, East African Publishing House, Nairobi, 1968 p.47

  17 George Bennett, Kenya: A Political History The Colonial Period, OUP, 1963, p.112

  18 David Rooney, Kwame Nkrumah: The Political Kingdom and the Third World, I. B. Tauris, 1988, p.23

  19 West Africa, 3/11/1945

  20 Lord Hailey, An African Survey, OUP, 1957, p.204

  21 Roger Anstey, ‘Belgian Rule in the Congo and the Aspirations of the Evolue Class’ in Gann and Duignan, op. cit., p.213

  22 James Duffy, ‘Portuguese Africa, 1930 to 1960’ in Gann and Duignan, op. cit., p.175

  23 Duffy, op. cit., p.181

  24 Hugh Kay, Salazar and Modern Portugal, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1970 p.215

  25 Basil Davidson, ‘Africa in Historical Perspective’ in Africa South of the Sahara 1980–81, Europa Publications, 1980

  26 Peter Hennessy, Never Again: Britain 1945–1951, Jonathan Cape, 1992, p.432

  27 Professor John Gallagher, 1974 Oxford University Ford Lectures, quoted in Hennessy, op. cit., p.216

  28 Hennessy, op. cit., p.216

  Introduction: Independence

  1 Iain Macleod, Hansard, 15 July 1960

  2 New African, February 2000

  3 New African, February 2000

  4 Ludo de Witte, L’assassinat de Lumumba, Paris, Karthala, 2000

  5 New African, February 2000

  6 Madeleine G. Kalb, The Congo Cables: The Cold War in Africa, from Eisenhower to Kennedy, New York, Macmillan 1982

  7 New African, February 2000

  8 See Guy Arnold, Historical Dictionary of Civil Wars in Africa, Lanham, Maryland, Scarecrow Press, 1999 />
  9 Edward Mortimer, France and the Africans 1944–1960, Faber and Faber, 1969, p.201

  10 Alistair Horne, Macmillan 1957–1986, vol. II, Macmillan, p.177

  11 Mortimer, op. cit., p.204

  12 Mortimer, op. cit., p.341

  13 Mortimer, op. cit., p.311

  14 Mortimer, op. cit., p.314

  15 Mortimer, op. cit., p.333

  16 Mortimer, op. cit., p.371

  17 David Rooney, Kwame Nkrumah: The Political Kingdom in the Third World, I. B. Tauris, 1988 pp.131–2

  18 Michael Scott, Africa Digest, vol. IV, No. 5, April 1957

  19 Ghana Times January 1960 reported in Africa Digest, vol. VII, No. 4, February 1960

  20 Horne, op. cit., p.177

  21 Horne, op. cit., p.182

  22 The Daily Service (organ of the Action Group in Nigeria), reported in Africa Digest, vol. VII, No. 5, April 1960

  23 Africa Digest, vol. VII, No. 6, June 1960

  24 Peter Hennessy, Never Again: Britain 1945–1951, Jonathan Cape, 1992, p.219

  Part I The 1960s: Decade of Hope

  Chapter One Problems of Independence

  1 Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, MacGibbon & Kee, 1965, p.49

  2 Gwendolyn M. Carter, Independence for Africa, New York, Praeger, 1960, pp.167–9

  3 For discussion of an African ‘Personality’ see Georges Balandier, Ambiguous Africa, Chatto and Windus, 1966

  4 Julio Finn, Voices of Negritude, Quartet, 1988 (see preface)

  5 Balandier, op. cit., pp.264–5

  6 Ronald Segal, The Race War, Jonathan Cape, 1966, p.104

  7 John Hatch, The History of Britain in Africa, Andre Deutsch, 1969, p.283

  8 Fanon, op. cit., p.177

  9 See René Dumont, False Start in Africa, Andre Deutsch, 1966, for a discussion of these problems.

  10 Christopher Stevens, The Soviet Union and Black Africa, Macmillan, 1976, p.196

  11 Balandier, op. cit., p.258

  12 For a discussion of this problem see Margery Perham, The Colonial Reckoning (The Reith Lectures), Collins, 1961

  13 See Ruth First, ‘Political and Social Problems of Development’, Africa South of the Sahara 1980–81, Europa Publications, 1980

  14 First, op. cit.

  15 Fanon, op. cit., p.137

  16 Fanon, op. cit., p.139

  17 Dumont, op. cit., p.141

  18 For a detailed study of civil service problems in post-colonial Africa, see A. L. Adu, The Civil Service in New African States, George Allen and Unwin, 1965

  19 Dumont, op. cit., p.88

  20 Segal, op. cit., p.113

  21 Eddie Agyemang, ‘Freedom of Expression in a Government Newspaper in Ghana’, Reporting Africa, editor Olav Stokke, The Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, 1971, p.50

  22 Dumont, op. cit., p.277

  23 Fanon, op. cit., p.135

  Chapter Two The Congo Crisis

  1 Guardian, 10/12/1960

  2 The Times, 12/12/1960

  3 Observer, 07/05/1961

  4 Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth, MacGibbon & Kee, 1965, p.192

  5 Ronald Segal, The Race War, Jonathan Cape, 1966, p.91

  6 Segal, op. cit., p.93

  7 Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja, The Congo, p.101

  8 Nzongola-Ntalaja, op. cit., p.115

  9 Nzongola-Ntalaja, op. cit., pp.126–7

  10 Conor Cruise O’Brien, Observer, 06/12/1964

  11 William Attwood, The Reds and the Blacks, Harper 7 Row, 1967, pp.218–19

  12 George Thayer, The War Business, New York, Simon & Schuster, 1969, p.169

  13 Guardian, 08/05/1961

  14 The Times, 22/12/1961

  15 Observer, 29/08/1965

  16 For a detailed history of mercenaries in Africa see Guy Arnold, Mercenaries: The Scourge of the Third World, Macmillan, 1999

  Chapter Three African Unity and the Formation of the OAU

  1 D. K. Chisiza, Realities of African Independence, The Africa Publications Trust, 1961

  2 West Africa, 26/04/1958

  3 West Africa, 06/12/1958

  4 West Africa, 13/12/1958

  5 West Africa, 20/12/1958

  6 See Colin Legum, Pan-Africanisn: A short political guide, The Pall Mall Press, 1962

  7 David Rooney, Kwame Nkrumah, I. B. Tauris, 1988, p.214

  8 Legum, op. cit., p.130

  9 Quoted in Legum, op. cit., p.111

  10 Alan Rake, 100 Great Africans, Scarecrow Press, Metuchen, N. J., 1994

  11 Rooney, op. cit., p.224

  12 Keith Kyle, Spectator, 14/06/1963

  Chapter Four The Coup d’Etat and the One-Party State

  1 Ruth First, The Barrel of a Gun, Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1970, p.40

  2 First, op. cit., p.31

  3 J. M. Lee, African Armies and Civil Order, Chatto & Windus, 1969, p.19

  4 First, op. cit., p.432

  5 Lee, op. cit., p.117

  6 First, op. cit., p.420

  7 Guardian, 01/01/1964

  8 West Africa, 29/02/1964

  9 The Times, 25/02/1966

  10 Guardian, 18/04/1967

  11 Africa Digest, vol. XVI, No. 1, February 1969

  12 Guardian, 05/01/1966

  13 West Africa, 21/01/1967

  14 Lee, op. cit., p.78

  15 Observer, 18/12/1963

  16 Economist, 28/08/1963

  17 The Times, 24/12/1960

  18 The Times, 22/12/1958

  19 Julius Nyerere, ‘Democracy and the Party System’ in Freedom and Unity, OUP 1967, p.194

  20 Nyerere, op. cit., p.203

  21 Frene Ginwala, Spearhead (editorial), Dar es Salaam, February 1963

  22 Tunlikki Pietila, Sanna OjalammiWamai and Liisa Laakso, ‘Elections at the Borderland: Voter Opinion in Arusha and Kilimanjaro, Tanzania’, Multi-party Elections in Africa, editors Michael Cowen and Liisa Laakso, Oxford, James Currey 2002, p.279

  23 Africa Digest, vol. XII, No. 2, October 1964

  Chapter Five Problems of Development

  1 I. M. D. Little, Aid to Africa, Pergamon Press, 1964

  2 Andrew Shonfield, The Attack on World Poverty, Chatto & Windus, 1961, p.17

  3 Reginald H. Green and Ann Seidman, Unity or Poverty, Penguin Books, 1968, p.127

  4 Walter Rodney, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Bogle L’Ouverture Publications, 1972, pp.236–7

  5 Jeanneny Report, Official text, Paris, 1963

  6 See René Dumont, False Start in Africa, Andre Deutsch, 1966

  7 Basil Davidson, Can Africa Survive?, Heinemann, 1974, p.24

  8 Davidson, op. cit., p.24

  9 Professor Arthur Lewis, The Legon Observer, 24/05/1968

  10 Dumont, op. cit., p.70

  11 Green/Seidman, op. cit., p.32

  12 Davidson, op. cit., p.101

  13 Paul Lewis, Financial Times, 04/04/1968

  14 Green/Seidman, op. cit., p.187

  15 The Economist, 16/03/1968

  16 The Times, 30/10/1967

  17 Dumont, op. cit., p.104

  18 The Times, 02/09/1964

  19 Green/Seidman, op. cit., pp.32–3

  20 Dumont, op. cit., p.61

  21 Andre Philip, Bulletin de L’Afrique Noire, 21/02/1962

  22 Common Market correspondent, Financial Times, 21/06/1966

  23 Barclays Bank Overseas Review, November 1962

  24 Christopher Stevens, The Soviet Union and Black Africa, Macmillan, 1976, p.28

  25 Stevens, op. cit., p.74

  26 Reported in Kenya Weekly News, 10/06/1966

  27 Stevens, op. cit., p.74

  28 Richard Lowenthal, Model or Ally?, OUP, 1977, p.272

  29 Davidson, op. cit., p.122

  30 Africa Digest, vol. IX, No. 6, June 1962

  31 The Economist, 01/09/1962

  32 The Observer, 26/08/1962

  33 Stevens, op. cit., p.86

  34 Guy Hunter, The New Societies of Tropical Africa, OUP, pp.181–2


  35 Green/Seidman, op. cit., p.95

  36 ‘The Arusha Declaration: Socialism and Self-Reliance’, quoted in Julius Nyerere, Freedom and Socialism, OUP, pp.235–41

  37 West Africa, 05/08/1970

  Chapter Six North Africa

  1 The Economist, 19/08/1961

  2 Ronald Segal, Africa Profiles, Penguin Books, 1962, p.394

  3 Peter Mansfield, The Middle East, OUP, 1973, p.233

  4 Samir Amin, The Maghreb in the Modern World, Penguin Books, 1970, p.214

  5 Alan Rake, 100 Great Africans, Metuchen, N. J., Scarecrow Press, 1994, p.376

  6 Darsie Gillie, Guardian, 31/10/1963

  7 Rake, op. cit., p.273

  8 Mansfield, op. cit., pp.351–2

  Chapter Seven The Nigerian Civil War

  1 John Hatch, The History of Britain in Africa, Andre Deutsch, 1969, p.269

  2 Walter Schwarz, Nigeria, Pall Mall Press, 1968, p.xiv

  3 Schwarz, op. cit., p.xiv

  4 James O’Connell, ‘The Political Class and Economic Growth’, Nigeria Journal of Economic and Social Studies, vol. 8:1 (March 1966), p.129

  5 Ali A. Mazrui, Violence and Thought, Essays on Social Tensions in Africa, Longmans, 1969, p.129

  6 West Africa, 03/06/1961

  7 Hella Pick, The Guardian, 25/02/1962

  8 Schwarz, op. cit., p.31

  9 Schwarz, op. cit., p.14

  10 Clyde Sanger, Guardian, 29/10/1963

  11 Patrick Keatley, Guardian, 22/01/1962

  12 West Africa, 14/01/1961

  13 West Africa, 27/03/1965

  14 Ali A. Mazrui, op. cit., p.113

  15 Olusegun Obasanjo, General, My Command, Heinemann, 1980, p.6

  16 J. D. F. Jones, Financial Times, 05/05/1966

  17 John de St. Jorre, The Nigerian Civil War, Hodder and Stoughton, 1972, p.57

  18 Fed. Min. of Info., PR.610/1966, of 24/05/1966

  19 St. Jorre, op. cit., pp.73–74

  20 Obasanjo, op. cit., p.8

  21 Schwarz, op. cit., p.218

  22 Obasanjo, op. cit., p.155

  23 Obasanjo, op. cit., p.56

  24 West Africa, 28/10/1967

  25 West Africa, 02/12/1967

  26 West Africa, 07/12/1968

  27 St. Jorre, op. cit., pp.316–18

  28 See Guy Arnold, Mercenaries: The Scourge of the Third World, Macmillan, 1999, for a detailed study of mercenary activity in Africa

  29 Margery Perham, ‘Nigeria’s Civil War’, Africa Contemporary Record 1968–69, editors C. Legum and J. Drysdale, Africa Research Limited, 1969, pp.1–12

  Chapter Eight West and Equatorial Africa

  1 Paul Fordham, The Geography of African Affairs, (4th edition), Penguin Books, 1974, pp.77–8

  2 Fordham, op. cit., p.103

  3 Ken Post, The New States of West Africa, Penguin Books (revised edition), 1968, pp.43–4

 

‹ Prev