Zille’s folly will lead to civil war and Endgame: Zimbabwe
Watching Helen Zille speaking at a BizNews presentation a few days ago, one can’t help admiring the way she speaks, presents her case, and manages
The missing link in the ’Professionalisation’ drive
President Ramaphosa’s State of the Nation Address last month attracted a lot of attention for his novel remarks on the relative places of the state
Baghdad falls
This Week in History recalls memorable and decisive events and personalities of the past. 11th March 1917 – Fall of Baghdad to British Empire forces When
Where is the recovery?
The narrative that South Africa is starting to head in the right direction has been given a lot of attention recently. In a long overdue
Russian victory and oppression or a Russian defeat and a new era for democracy?
There are basically two broad scenarios for what will happen in Ukraine and the longer-term global impact of the Russian invasion. The first expects that
The first four items of the post-ANC government’s agenda
It might not be in 2024, and it might not even be in 2029, but at some point in South Africa’s future, there will be
Solving the plastic pollution problem
Instead of campaigns that get up everyone’s noses but only tinker around the edges, or investing in costly but ultimately pointless solutions, there are a
How The New York Times covered up famine in Ukraine
Six weeks ago, as Russia prepared to invade Ukraine, this column described how Stalin killed 3.9 million Ukrainians by starvation in the early 1930s. He
Koeberg’s disgrace
Koeberg has disgraced itself. It has just shown almost unbelievable incompetence, as if its senior management does not know what it is doing. I must
Ukraine – the imperative of stopping the war
The greatest danger, says author and Cold War scholar Mary Sarotte, is avoiding inadvertent escalation that could lead to nuclear catastrophe. The challenge is finding